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Un solo corazón (English title: A single heart) is a Mexican telenovela produced by Patricia Lozano and directed by Tony Carbajal for Televisa in 1983. [1] It starred Julieta Rosen, Daniel Martin, Beatriz Sheridan, Raymundo Capetillo, and Liliana Abud.
Martí de Riquer i Morera, 8th Count of Casa Dávalos (Catalan pronunciation: [məɾˈti ðə riˈkej muˈɾeɾə], Spanish: Martín de Riquer y Morera) (3 May 1914 [1] – 17 September 2013) [2] was a Spanish literary historian and Romance philologist, a recognised international authority in the field. His writing career lasted from 1934 to 2004.
AaTh 510B, Los vestidos de oro, de plata y de estrellas (Piel de Asno); AaTh 301B, El fortachón y sus compañeros (Juanillo el Oso o Juanillo la Burra); AaTh 302, El corazón del ogro en un huevo; AaTh 425A and variants, El Animal como esposo (Cupido y Psique); AaTh 700, Ganbarcito; AaTh 706, La muchacha sin manos; AaTh 510A, Cenicienta.
Caught in between is Xuchitl, the Aztec princess. Whoever wins her wins the future of the Aztec civilization. Xuchitl identifies the winner by giving him the Aztec talisman known as "el corazon de piedra verde" ("the green stone heart"). This talisman was worn by her father and represents the mystic powers of the Aztec religion.
Don Joan de Serrallonga, 1907; La Santa Espina, patriotic song and sardana, 1907; Cançons populars catalanes harmonitzades, 1910; Titaina, opera, 1912; Tassarba, opera, 1916; Concert per a violoncel i orquestra (cello concerto), 1917; El poema de la nit i el dia i de la terra i de l'amor, symphonic poem, 1920; Cançons de career, 1926
[1] "Big Mama's Funeral" (Spanish: Los funerales de la Mamá Grande) is a short story by Gabriel García Márquez.In the story, an unidentified narrator [2] tells a mythical account of a historical event summarized on the first page.
"Allá en el Rancho Grande" is a Mexican song. It was written in the 1920s for a musical theatrical work, but now is most commonly associated with the eponymous 1936 Mexican motion picture Allá en el Rancho Grande , [ 1 ] in which it was sung by renowned actor and singer Tito Guízar [ 2 ] and with mariachis .
Porges's father, Israel Podgursky, was born in 1885 in the Russian Empire near the eastern border of Poland. He had American associations through his two brothers—Mortimer, a lawyer in Chicago, and Dave, who worked for the Chicago Board of Education—and two sisters, Lilian and Rose, neither of whom married.