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Her and repertoire
Her material at this time represented a departure from her typical jazz repertoire.
Her chamber music has become part of the Nordic repertoire.
Her repertoire included songs from her films as well as popular songs of the day.
Her time with the orchestra continued the programming of American repertoire from Litton's tenure, which she often introduced to the audience from the podium in the style of her mentor Leonard Bernstein.
Her commercial success peaked in 1959 with " Broken Hearted Melody ", a song she considered to be " corny ", but, nonetheless, became her first gold record and a regular part of her concert repertoire for years to come.
Her repertoire focused on the operas of Mozart, Rossini, Donizetti, Bellini and Wagner.
Her operatic repertoire comprised the title roles in Lucia di Lammermoor, Maria di Rohan, Norma, La sonnambula and La vestale, as well as Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro, Adina in L ' elisir d ' amore and Alice in Robert le diable.
Her repertoire includes contemporary folk-style compositions as well as folk songs.
Her eclectic repertoire included religious music, love songs, folk tunes and ballads.
Her singing and writing repertoire includes subjects of love, war, religion, and mysticism.
Her composition, " That Wonderful Someone ", even found its way into the repertoire of country music singer Patsy Cline, appearing on Cline's 1957 debut album.
Her most noticeable trait is her enormous repertoire of command phrases and peculiar noises, which she seems to pick up very easily.
Her concert repertoire includes Spanish, French, German, and Russian songs.
Her repertoire of over 800 songs earned her a reputation as one of the most versatile and popular Macedonian female artists.
Her musical repertoire consisted largely of American folk music, blues, jazz, and spirituals.
Her most recent releases for Glasgow based Linn Records include Walking In The Sun, 2006 featuring guitarist Eric Bibb, and Just Like a Woman-Hymn to Nina featuring the repertoire of Nina Simone in 2008.
Her Broadway debut was as the Queen in Henry IV ( 1946 ) starring Laurence Olivier and Ralph Richardson during a visit to America of the Old Vic company, which performed a total of five plays from its repertoire before returning to London.
Her repertoire also includes:
Her repertoire included swing tunes from Gershwin, Rogers and Hart, and Cole Porter.
Her repertoire includes music from Aram Khachaturian, Michel Legrand, Boris Pasternak and Yevgeny Yevtushenko who gave her poems to sing.
Her performing repertoire includes Matre's Dance, Drum Dances, Spike, Happy Tachyons and the double concerto for piano and percussion View From Olympus.
Her repertoire also included Zerlina in Don Giovanni, Despina in Così fan tutte, Cherubino and Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro, Liù in Turandot, Cio-Cio-San in Madama Butterfly, Micaëla in Carmen, Marguerite in Faust, the title role in La Périchole, Gretel in Hansel and Gretel, Lisa in The Queen of Spades, The Composer in Ariadne auf Naxos, Antonia in Les contes d ' Hoffmann, Mélisande in Pelléas et Mélisande, Marenka in The Bartered Bride, Desdemona in Otello, Mme Lidoine in Dialogues des Carmélites, the title roles of Salome and Lulu, Jenny Smith in Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny ( directed by John Dexter ) and Marie Antoinette in John Corigliano's The Ghosts of Versailles.
Her home town of Kita is known for love songs, which form a large part of Kouyaté's repertoire.
Her compositions, including " Michi ", " Variations on Japanese Children's Songs ", and " Dream of the Cherry Blossoms ", have become standards of the marimba repertoire.

Her and included
Her education included how to spin and weave and she was forbidden to say or do anything, either in public or private.
Her symbols included the golden bow and arrow, the hunting dog, the stag, and the moon.
Her work was selected for exhibition in six subsequent Salons until, in 1874, she joined the " rejected " Impressionists in the first of their own exhibitions, which included Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas, Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, and Alfred Sisley.
Her books in the late 1920s included the semi-autobiographical The Fairy Caravan, a fanciful tale set in her beloved Troutbeck fells.
Her feast day, at the time, was not included in the Roman Calendar.
Her popularity as a radio performer and vocalist, which included a second hit record " My Dreams Are Getting Better All the Time ", led directly to a career in films.
Her movie career included a bit part in It Happened One Night ( 1934 ) and roles in Outlaw Women ( 1952 ), Glen or Glenda ( 1953 ), Body Beautiful ( 1953 ), The Blue Gardenia ( 1953 ), Count the Hours ( 1953 ), Mesa of Lost Women ( 1953 ), College Capers ( 1954 ), Jail Bait ( 1954 ), The Raid ( 1954 ), This Is My Love ( 1954 ), The Opposite Sex ( 1956 ), The Ironbound Vampire ( 1997 ), and Dimensions in Fear ( 1998 ).
Her reading matter included Tennyson, Wordsworth, Milton, Coleridge, Trollope, Thackeray and George Eliot.
Her stories have been included in numerous anthologies and a few have had radio and television adaptations.
Her later film assignments included Father Goose ( 1964 ), with Cary Grant ; Ken Russell's Valentino ( 1977 ), in the role of silent-screen legend Alla Nazimova ; and Louis Malle's Damage ( 1992 ).
Her major initiatives included education and women's health.
The 583-item Collection La Caze donated in 1869, included works by Chardin ; Fragonard ; Rembrandt – such as Bathsheba at Her Bath – and Gilles by Watteau.
Her sections included Stoechas, Spica, Subnudae, Pterostoechas, Chaetostachys and Dentatae.
Her contemporaries included artist Romaine Brooks, who painted others in her circle ; writers Colette, Djuna Barnes, social host Gertrude Stein, and novelist Radclyffe Hall.
Her brothers included Cesare Borgia, Giovanni Borgia, and Gioffre Borgia.
Her entry would be included in the encyclopedia until 1969, becoming readily accessible to the public, and it was for this reason that her ideas on the subject had such a significant impact.
Her godparents included her father's cousin, Prince Rupert of the Rhine.
Her godparents included her great-aunt the Countess of Devon, Lord Chancellor Thomas Wolsey, and the Duchess of Norfolk.
Her expenses included fine clothes and gambling at cards, one of her favourite pastimes.
Her wardrobe included red so often that the fire-engine shade became known as " Reagan red ".
Her subsequent roles in the 1990s and 2000s included Open Your Eyes ( 1997 ), The Hi-Lo Country ( 1999 ), The Girl of Your Dreams ( 2000 ) and Woman on Top ( 2000 ).
Her cults included agrarian magic, dancing, and rituals.
Her collaborators included Laurindo Almeida, Harold Arlen, Sonny Burke, Cy Coleman, Duke Ellington, Dave Grusin, Quincy Jones, Francis Lai, Jack Marshall, Johnny Mandel, Marian McPartland, Willard Robison, Lalo Schifrin and Victor Young.
Her family pointed out that, although she had been omitted, R & B singer / actress Aaliyah, who died a few months earlier, was included though having been in only one moderately successful film, Romeo Must Die ( Queen of the Damned had yet to be released ).

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