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Gingold and was
In 1977, a film version of A Little Night Music was released, starring Elizabeth Taylor, Lesley-Anne Down and Diana Rigg, with Len Cariou, Hermione Gingold and Laurence Guittard reprising their Broadway roles.
" At a meeting of the PLP I accused Ian Mikardo of being ' out of his tiny Chinese mind '— a phrase of the comedienne Hermione Gingold, with which I thought everyone was familiar.
However the sketch was also staged elsewhere, for example in 1953 in John Murray Anderson's Almanac ( the show that also featured Harry Belafonte in the early days of his career ) at Imperial Theatre with Hermione Gingold playing Miss Sophie, Billy DeWolfe as the butler, and apparently featuring four dead friends.
His second teacher was Mimi Zweig, and then he switched to the violinist and pedagogue Josef Gingold after Bell's parents assured Gingold that they were not interested in pushing their son in the study of the violin but simply wanted him to have the best teacher for his abilities.
Satisfied that the boy was living a normal life, Gingold took Bell on as his student.
Maschwitz was married twice: first to Hermione Gingold, who was granted a divorce in 1945, and then immediately to Phyllis Gordon, who remained his wife until his death.
The phrase was coined by Oliver Gingold of Dow Jones sometime in 1923 or 1924.
Company folklore recounts that the term apparently got its start when Gingold was standing by the stock ticker at the brokerage firm that later became Merrill Lynch.
It was revealed in Invasion # 3 that it was a metagene reaction to the Gingold elixir that had always provided him with his stretching powers, meaning that he is, in fact, a metahuman and that an ordinary human would not develop such powers through ingesting the extract.
Josef Gingold ( Russian: Джозеф Гингольд ; January 11, 1995 ) was a Russian-Jewish-born classical violinist and teacher, who lived most of his life in the United States.
Gingold was born in Brest-Litovsk, Russian Empire ( now Brest, Belarus ), and emigrated in 1920 to the United States where he studied violin with Vladimir Graffman in New York City.
In 1937, Gingold won a spot in the NBC Symphony Orchestra, with Arturo Toscanini as its conductor ; he then served as the concertmaster ( and occasional soloist ) of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, and later was the Cleveland Orchestra's concertmaster under conductor George Szell.
Gingold was a founder of the quadrennial Indianapolis Violin Competition.
The winners were announced at an awards show in Los Angeles, California, which was produced by Fangoria's managing editor, Michael Gingold.
Things improved slightly during the Philadelphia run, but by the time the production reached New York, Bergen – who was fighting bitterly with co-star Hermione Gingoldwas experiencing serious vocal problems, and some of her songs would be cut during each performance, creating confusion for the rest of the cast.
Hermione Gingold ( pronounced with a hard G, not as Jingold ; 9 December 1897 – 24 May 1987 ) was an English actress known for her sharp-tongued, eccentric persona, an image enhanced by her sharp nose and chin, as well as her deepening voice, a result of vocal nodes which her mother reportedly encouraged her not to remove.
Born Hermione Ferdinanda Gingold in London, she was the daughter of a high-standing Vienna-born Jewish financier James Gingold and Kate Walter or Walters, an English-born housewife.
Her paternal grandparents were the Turkish-born British subject, Moritz " Maurice " Gingold, a London stockbroker, and his Austrian-born wife, Hermine, after whom Hermione Gingold was named.

Gingold and friend
It was founded by David Staller, a great friend of Gingold for many years.

Gingold and her
The musical premiered in the West End at the Adelphi Theatre on April 15, 1975 and starred Jean Simmons, Joss Ackland, David Kernan, Liz Robertson, and Diane Langton, with Hermione Gingold reprising her role as Madame Armfeldt.
Gingold was also known for her unruly hair.
Gingold played Mayor Shinn's ( Paul Ford ) snooty wife Eulalie Mackechnie Shinn in The Music Man ( 1962 ) ( in which her son Roy Dean ( Leslie Joseph ) also had a small role ), starring Robert Preston and Shirley Jones, and was part of the original 1973 Broadway cast of A Little Night Music in the role of the elderly Madame Armfeldt, a former courtesan, this time Swedish, which she reprised in London ( 1975 ) and in the unsuccessful film version of the musical ( 1977 ).
The most successful was her teaming with namesake Hermione Gingold in Coward's comedy Fallen Angels.

Gingold and from
* Hermione Gingold and Maurice Chevalier performed their duet, I Remember It Well, from the 1958 film Gigi, on the show.
The Elongated Man gets his abilities from a combination of drinking a refined version of a soft drink named Gingold that contains the extract of a ( fictional ) fruit called gingo and his natural latent metahuman physiology.
* " Joseph Gingold Seventyfive ", recordings from 1942 – 1968, including Walton's Sonata for VIolin and Piano, 1984 vinyl LP ( Red Bud RB-1017 ).
* The Artistry of Josef Gingold, a two-CD set on Enharmonic ENCD03-015 contains otherwise unavailable performances of music by Bloch, Arensky, Beethoven ( a live recording of the Concerto from Ohio State ), Francaix, Mozart, Schubert, Tchaikovsky and Ysaye.
According to the Question: Secret Origin backup in 52, this substance was developed using technology lifted from an old Batman foe named Bart Magan ( Dr. No Face ) and Gingold Extract, a fruit derivative associated with the Elongated Man.
*" I Remember It Well "-Maurice Chevalier and Hermione Gingold from Gigi ( 1958 )

Gingold and him
* Elongated Man: Ralph Dibny sells Gingold based sex drugs for men on TV before joining Batman, " the years have not been kind to him.

Gingold and .
The cast included Glynis Johns ( Desiree Armfeldt ), Len Cariou ( Fredrik Egerman ), Hermione Gingold ( Madame Armfeldt ), Victoria Mallory, Judith Kahan, Mark Lambert, Laurence Guittard, Patricia Elliott, George Lee Andrews, and D. Jamin Bartlett.
During the run, Angela Baddeley replaced Gingold, and Virginia McKenna replaced Simmons.
* 1897 – Hermione Gingold, English actress ( d. 1987 )
* May 24 – Hermione Gingold, English actress ( b. 1897 )
Chevalier appeared in the movie musical Gigi ( 1958 ) with Leslie Caron and Hermione Gingold, with whom he shared the song " I Remember It Well ", and several Walt Disney films.
Some notable musicians who were members of the orchestra include violinists Samuel Antek, Henry Clifton, Felix Galimir, Josef Gingold, Daniel Guilet ( concertmaster 1952-54 ), Harry Lookofsky, Mischa Mischakoff ( concertmaster 1937-1952 ), Albert Pratz, David Sarser, Oscar Shumsky, Herman Spielberg and Andor Toth ; violists Carlton Cooley, Milton Katims, William Primrose, and Tibor Serly ; cellists Frank Miller, Leonard Rose, Harvey Shapiro and Alan Shulman ; double bassists Homer Mensch and Oscar G. Zimmerman ; flutists Carmine Coppola, Arthur Lora and Paul Renzi ; clarinetists Augustin Duques, Al Gallodoro, David Weber and Alexander Williams ; saxophonist Frankie Trumbauer ; oboists Robert Bloom and Paolo Renzi ; bassoonists Elias Carmen, Benjamin Kohon, William Polisi, Leonard Sharrow and Arthur Weisberg ; French horn players Arthur Berv, Harry Berv, Jack Berv and Albert Stagliano ; and tuba player William Bell, among others.
* " The Mask Factor " by Michael Gingold, Fangoria magazine # 317, October 2012, pages 60-62.
Among his more respected pupils are Josef Gingold, former concertmaster of the Cleveland Orchestra and Professor at Indiana University, the viola virtuoso William Primrose, the violin virtuoso Nathan Milstein ( who primarily studied with Pyotr Stolyarsky ), Louis Persinger, Alberto Bachmann, Mathieu Crickboom, Jonny Heykens, Charles Houdret, Jascha Brodsky, Oscar Shumsky and Aldo Ferraresi.
* A 1975 Deutsche Grammophon recording featuring Hermione Gingold as narrator, accompanied by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Karl Böhm.
Mr. Baker has been commissioned by more than 500 individuals and ensembles, including Josef Gingold, Ruggerio Ricci, Janos Starker, Harvey Phillips, the New York Philharmonic, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, Beaux Arts Trio, Fisk jubilee Singers, Louisville Symphony, Ohio Chamber Orchestra, the Audubon String Quartet, and the International Horn Society.

was and childhood
We get some clue from a few remembrances of childhood and from the circumstance that we are probably not much more afraid of people now than man ever was.
He was simply writing a story that wanted to be told, and in the writing a childhood fantasy of his own emerged.
Moreover, because of the particular blot on your family escutcheon through what may only have been one unbridled moment on your grandmother's part, and because you had the lean-to kitchen and trundle bed of your childhood to outgrow, what you obviously most desired with both your conscious and unconscious person, what you bent your whole will, sensibility, and intelligence upon, was to be a lady.
A good deal of English was spoken on the beach, most educated Greeks learn it in childhood, and there were also American wives and children of our overseas servicemen.
Victor had been stirred by my account of him in Makers And Finders, for Stephens was one of the lost writers whom Melville had seen in his childhood and whom I was bent on resurrecting.
In the cruel clearness of her memory the boy remained unchanged, quick with the delight of laughter, and the pain with which she recalled that short destroyed childhood was still unendurable to her.
A sense of self-certainty and the freedom to experiment with different roles, or confidence in one's own unique behavior as an alternative to peer-group conformity, is more easily developed during adolescence if, during early childhood, the individual was permitted to exercise initiative and encouraged to develop some autonomy.
She seemed to work to grow close to her son in the few days he spent at home, talking to him about some of the more pleasant moments of his childhood and then trying to talk to him about those things in which he alone was interested.
Its use was taught in the Calmecac to the temalpouhqueh, who were students dedicated to take the accounts of skies, from childhood.
The family was impoverished, and only Alfred and his three brothers survived past childhood.
Another major childhood influence was Heigo Kurosawa, Akira's older brother by four years.
Abner spent his childhood in Auburn and later was sent to Cooperstown to live with his uncle and attend a private preparatory high school.
His father's civil service commission was still active, and during Turing's childhood years his parents travelled between Hastings in England and India, leaving their two sons to stay with a retired Army couple.
As a youngster living in poverty, along with his childhood friends, Johnson was an object of ridicule from members of higher social circles ; as such, he was commonly referred to as " poor white trash " by the elite in Raleigh.
The story that he himself in his childhood was sent to Ireland to be healed by Saint Modwenna, though mythical, may show Alfred's interest in that island.
* Infante Jaime Luitpold Isabelino Enrique Alberto Alfonso Victor Acacio Pedro Maria of Spain ( 1908 – 1975 ), a deaf-mute as the result of a childhood operation, he renounced his rights to the throne in 1933 and became Duke of Segovia, and later Duke of Madrid, and who, as a legitimist pretender to the French throne from 1941 to 1975, was known as the Duke of Anjou.
Alexis Andrew Nicholas Koerner was born in Paris to an Austrian Jewish father and a half-Turkish half-Greek mother, and spent his childhood in France, Switzerland, and North Africa.
Pike was born in Boston, Massachusetts, son of Ben and Sarah ( Andrews ) Pike, and spent his childhood in Byfield and Newburyport, Massachusetts.
Nin was raised a Roman Catholic and spent her childhood and early life in Europe.
This childhood tragedy likely helped shape Capp ’ s cynical worldview, which, funny as it was, was certainly darker and more sardonic than that of the average newspaper cartoonist.
One event that affected ` Abdu ' l-Bahá greatly during his childhood was the imprisonment of his father when ` Abdu ' l-Bahá was eight years old ; the imprisonment led to his family being reduced to poverty and being attacked in the streets by other children.

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