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L'Arlésienne (English: The Girl from Arles) is a 1908 French drama film directed by Albert Capellani, based on Alphonse Daudet's eponymous play.It is the first film produced by the Société cinématographique des auteurs et gens de lettres (SCAGL) (English: Cinematographic Society of Authors and Writers) created at the beginning of the same year to produce cinematographic adaptations of ...
The drama is set on the Rhône river, in Camargue, south of Arles, in southwestern Provence. To help give the composition Provençal color, Bizet used three existing tunes from a folk/traditional music collection found in the book Lou Tambourin, Istori de l'Estrumen Prouvençau ( The Tambourin , Avignon , 1864) by writer and tambourinaire ...
On 8 March 1999, BBC Radio 4 broadcast an adaptation of Daudet's play entitled The Girl from Arles, written by and translated from the French by Michael Robson and directed by Enyd Williams, with Frances Jeater as Rose Mamaï, John Woodvine as Balthazar, Mary Wimbush as Madame Renaud, Geoffrey Whitehead as Francet Mamaï, Gavin Muir as Mitifio ...
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The Girl from U.N.C.L.E. is an American spy fiction TV series starring Stefanie Powers that aired on NBC for one season from September 13, 1966, to April 11, 1967. The series was a spin-off from The Man from U.N.C.L.E. and used the same theme music composed by Jerry Goldsmith, in a different arrangement by Dave Grusin.
The Girl from Tomorrow is an Australian sci-fi children's television series produced by Film Australia. The series is based around Alana ( Katharine Cullen ), a girl from the year 3000. At the start of the series, she is kidnapped by Silverthorn , a criminal from the year 2500, and brought back in time to the year 1990.
The subject, Marie Jullian (or Julien), was born in Arles June 8, 1848 and died there August 2, 1911. She married Joseph-Michel Ginoux in 1866 and together they ran the Café de la Gare, 30 Place Lamartine, where van Gogh lodged from May to mid-September 1888. He had the Yellow House in Arles furnished to settle there.
[11] On Metacritic, the series has a score of 56 out of 100, based on 14 reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews". [12] Leila Latif of The A.V. Club gave the limited series a B and said, "...the series still proves more artful than most entries in the genre. [However], many of its larger plot points and mysteries are predictably resolved ...