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Sabin sold the portrait to the collector Sir Thomas Merton in 1941 for a five-figure sum. [2] During Merton's ownership the portrait was first described as a work by Botticelli. [1] The attribution to Botticelli was doubted later, as prominent monographs on Botticelli did not include the portrait as one of his. [9]
It is the second film in the Amityville Horror film series and a loose prequel to The Amityville Horror (1979), set at 112 Ocean Avenue and featuring the fictional Montelli family, loosely based on the DeFeo family. It follows the Montelli family's decline under apparent demonic forces present in their home.
Santiago Miguel Montelli (born 3 May 1988) is an Argentine field hockey player who plays as a forward for Belgian Hockey League club Royal Daring. At the 2012 Summer Olympics , he competed for the national team in the men's tournament .
Strange Portrait was a film shot in Hong Kong in 1966. [2] [3] It was directed by Jeffrey Stone and starred Jeffrey Hunter, Barbara Lee, Mai Tai Sing and Tina Hutchence.Stone and his wife went searching for a distributor, hoping to enter it into the Asian Film Festival; [2] however, the film was never released, with sources differing as to the reason.
Chess for Girls! – A parody of gender-based marking of children's toys, this chess set (unrelated to the chess game in general) features pieces with Barbie doll-style bodies and chess piece heads, an accompanying dollhouse, beachwear, minivan, bubble blower, and so on. The tag line: "A classic game of strategy and wits… and bubbles!"
As Matt and Greg Romano entered their mid-20s, they began to feel stuck. The identical twins, who are the sons of “Everybody Loves Raymond” star Ray Romano, had dropped out of college after ...
William H. Mumler (1832–1884) was an American spirit photographer who worked in New York City and Boston. [1] His first spirit photograph was apparently an accident—a self-portrait which, when developed, also revealed the "spirit" of his deceased cousin.
Neagle measured everything in Lyon's shop, including the sitter: "five feet six inches and three quarters in his boots." [24] At Lyon's request, Neagle introduced the Walnut Street Gaol into the portrait: It was seen with its cupola through the window of his shop, which stood on Library street. This was a whim of Lyon, to commemorate his unjust ...