Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Dom Joly" ¶ 26
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Joly and wrote
Joly Braga Santos also wrote three operas, chamber music for a wide variety of instruments and ensembles, film scores, and several choral works based on poems from the great classical and modern Portuguese and Spanish poets such as Camões, Antero de Quental, Teixeira de Pascoaes, Fernando Pessoa, Garcilaso de la Vega, Antonio Machado and Rosalía de Castro.
Hector de Joly, the minister of justice wrote to the president of the Assembly, " I have denounced these attacks in the criminal court ; but law is powerless ; and I am impelled by honour and probity to inform you, that without the promptest assistance of the legislative body, the government can no longer be responsible.

Joly and spoof
Since then, Joly has continued to make edgy off-beat television like World Shut Your Mouth for BBC1 and Dom Joly's Happy Hour, a spoof travel show for Sky One.
A spoof documentary about Joly followed, called Being Dom Joly which was produced and written by Joly himself.
However, his first show for the BBC, This is Dom Joly, a spoof chatshow in which Joly played an appallingly egotistical media character who had the same name as him, thereby confusing a lot of the audience as to what was real and what wasn't, did not achieve the same success as Trigger Happy TV, leading to the hidden camera format being revamped on BBC1 as World Shut Your Mouth.
His next project for Sky One was a critically acclaimed spoof travel series supposedly investigating attitudes to alcohol around the world, entitled Dom Joly's Happy Hour, in which Joly teamed up with his friend, Canadian digital artist Peter Wilkins.
A spoof documentary about Joly followed the original three series, called Being Dom Joly which was produced and written by Joly himself.
In the Channel 4 comedy-sketch show Trigger Happy TV, Dom Joly played a spoof of a Guardian Angel on the London Underground railway service and at a bus stop.
This is Dom Joly is a spoof chat show presented by Dom Joly, originally shown on BBC Three in 2003.

Joly and autobiography
Joly relates in his 1870 autobiography that one evening by the Seine he was inspired to write a dialogue between Montesquieu and Machiavelli.

Joly and called
Though Joly did cameo sporadically on the show, he was very unhappy with the programme and called it " Trigger Happy by numbers-take joke, put it in slo-mo, add fluffy animals and random indie soundtrack-it was made by uncaring idiots ".
Joly published a humour travel book called The Dark Tourist: Sightseeing in the World's Most Unlikely Holiday Destinations ( 2010 ) which is about dark tourism.
Joly was the singer in an Indie band called Hang David in the early 1990s.
Letellier then called on leader of the Opposition Joly de Lotbinière to form a government.
The Lieutenant-Governor deposed Boucher de Boucherville, and called on the Leader of the Opposition, Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière, to form a government.
" Though Joly did cameo sporadically on the show ( he appeared to a greater or lesser extent in 4 episodes ), he was very unhappy with the programme and called it " Trigger Happy by numbers ".
The current residents are: youngsters Kai ( Son of Hsaio-Quai ), Dinda ( daughter of Ro-Ro ) Lingga and Joly from France and Russia, respectively and an orphaned baby Sumatran orangutan called Silvestre who was abandoned by his mother.

Joly and At
At the end of 2006 readers of the paper were asked to vote on where Joly would go every week.

Joly and Me
Joly was a contestant on the tenth series of I'm a Celebrity ... Get Me Out of Here!

Joly and published
Joly published the The Dark Tourist in 2010, about dark tourism.

Joly and by
Furthermore, it has been established that a substantial portion of it was taken, without citation, from a 1864 satire on Napoleon III by one Maurice Joly ( his French language work, The Dialogue in Hell Between Machiavelli and Montesquieu )-so that it also constitutes plagiarism.
The cohesion-tension theory is a theory of intermolecular attraction commonly observed in the process of water traveling upwards ( against the force of gravity ) through the xylem of plants which was put forward by John Joly and Henry Horatio Dixon.
Bust of John Joly done in 1930 by Oliver Sheppard.
After his death, his friends subscribed the sum of £ 1, 700 to set up a memorial fund which is still used to promote the annual Joly Memorial Lectures at the University of Dublin, which were inaugurated by Sir Ernest Rutherford in 1935.
He is also remembered by the Joly Geological Society, a student geological association established in 1960.
In 1930 Oliver Sheppard was commissioned by Trinity College Dublin and the Royal Dublin Society to make them copies of a bust of Joly.
* A website featuring recordings and images of a variety of wooden Aeolian harps designed and built by Greg Joly.
For instance, French green politician Eva Joly claimed that during Bongo's long reign, despite an oil-led GDP per capita growth to one of the highest levels in Africa, Gabon built only 5 km of freeway a year and still had one of the world's highest infant mortality rates by the time of his death in 2009.
In 1977, Joly Braga Santos was distinguished with the Order of Santiago de Espada by President of the Republic of Portugal.
Joly was educated in the UK, at two famous independent schools: first to The Dragon School in the city of Oxford in Oxfordshire, and then to Haileybury and Imperial Service College, near the county town of Hertford in Hertfordshire, followed by the University of London ( at the School of Oriental and African Studies ), in Central London.
Following the success of Trigger Happy TV on Channel 4, Joly was secured by the BBC for a rumoured £ 5 million.
* Ian Brown-Golden Gaze, in which Joly made the whole video in one take, making Brown run through the streets of London being chased by gorillas, frog-men and ninjas before he took refuge in the Prince Charles Cinema.
* Goth Recruitment by Dom Joly on Funnyordie. co. uk.
The Quebec Conservative Party, led by Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau, defeated the Quebec Liberal Party, led by Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière.
The Quebec Conservative Party, led by Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau, narrowly won the election, winning one seat more than the Quebec Liberal Party ; however, in the immediate aftermath of the vote, Liberal leader Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière, who was already sitting as premier, secured parliamentary backing to remain in office.
Joly de Lotbinière had become premier two months earlier when the previous Conservative premier Charles-Eugène Boucher de Boucherville had resigned or was deposed by Lieutenant-Governor Luc Letellier de Saint-Just.
The Quebec Conservative Party, led by Charles-Eugène Boucher de Boucherville, defeated the Quebec Liberal Party, led by Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière.

Joly and 2004
Taken August 2004 by Gordon Joly
Photograph by Atelier Joly ( 2004 )
Atelier Joly 10th October 2004
Atelier Joly 10th October 2004
November 2004, photograph by Atelier Joly
November 2004, image by Atelier Joly
Atelier Joly November 2004.

0.332 seconds.