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Cabaret and ",
* Mohamed Soweid, 2004: " Cabaret Suad ", Beirut: Dar al-Adab
Over time the name evolved into " Cabaret Au Lapin Agile ", or, the Nimble Rabbit Cabaret.
Also, in The Sandman issue " Calliope " written by Neil Gaiman and pencilled by Kelley Jones, a character, Richard Madoc, writes a book " The Cabaret of Dr. Caligari ", an obvious pseudonym.
As co-founder of the Cabaret Voltaire in Zürich, he led the Dada movement in Zürich, and is one of the people credited with naming the movement " Dada ", by allegedly choosing the word at random from a dictionary.
Influenced by bands like Cabaret Voltaire, Killing Joke, and The Cure, the EP is described by Our Band Could Be Your Life author Michael Azerrad as " cold, dark, and resolutely unlistenable ", with the lyrics describing crack addicts and child abusers, and Albini later regarded the effort as one of his few artistic regrets.
From of these onstage battles, Tony Allen and Alexi Sayle founded " Alternative Cabaret ", with other Comedy Store regulars.
", is featured in UNKLE's song " UNKLE ( Main Title Theme )", and also in the Cabaret Voltaire song " Project80 " ( as part of a larger sample from that interview ).
He eventually went to New York City, and made records for King Records under the name Al Grant ( one in particular, " Cabaret ", appeared in the Variety magazine charts ).
In the past, they have performed such plays as ‘’ A Chorus Line ", " Cabaret ", and " West Side Story ".
He went on to join the Piwnica pod Baranami Cabaret, composing such hits as " Znów wędrujemy ", and released his first album, Naprawdę nie dzieje się nic (" Really, nothing is happening ") in 1991.
* " Kino ", a song by Cabaret Voltaire
The narrator, who defines a threesome as " the socialist utopia of sex ", describes not only the sociology, psychology and ethics of their ménage à trois ( for example by comparing it to the love triangle depicted in the film Cabaret ) but also, in some detail, the technicalities and what he calls " sexual etiquette ".
Another example is " Tomorrow Belongs to Me ", which is performed by a young man in the movie Cabaret.
The season marked a banner year for the company, which took home five Dora Mavor Moore Awards ( for outstanding production, lighting design, set design, sound design and direction ) for its production of " Blasted " on the same night as founding artistic director Sky Gilbert's Cabaret Company received awards ( best new play and outstanding performance ) for its production of " The Situationists ", which premiered as part of Buddies ' season in the spring of 2011.
* " Walls of Jericho ", a song by industrial pioneers Cabaret Voltaire
In the late 90's, he had major roles in musicals like " Cyrano de Bergerac ", " Cabaret " and " The Showboat " for which he earned prize nominations and good critical receptions.
Alan Cumming in Cabaret (" Wilkommen ", Kander-Ebb )

Cabaret and 1921
Grossmith then partnered with George Edwardes's former associate, Pat Malone, to produce a series of mostly adaptations of imported shows at the Winter Garden between 1920 and 1926: Sally ( 1921 ), The Cabaret Girl ( 1922, with book by Wodehouse and music by Jerome Kern, The Beauty Prize ( 1923, with Wodehouse and Kern ), a revival of Tonight's the Night ( 1923 ), Primrose ( 1924, with music by George Gershwin ), Tell Me More ( 1925, with words by Thompson and music by George Gershwin ) and Kid Boots ( 1926 with music by Harry Tierney ), many of them featuring Leslie Henson.

Cabaret and painting
* Cabaret Voltaire, a 1916 painting by Marcel Janco
Aristide Bruant in his Cabaret painting by Toulouse Lautrec

Cabaret and by
This international movement was begun by a group of artists and poets associated with the Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich.
The Cabaret Voltaire fell into disrepair until it was occupied from January to March, 2002, by a group proclaiming themselves Neo-Dadaists, led by Mark Divo.
They have heavily influenced techno, rock, and pop musicians including Pet Shop Boys, The Killers and Moby, and were themselves influenced by the likes of David Bowie, Neu !, Kraftwerk, Cabaret Voltaire and Giorgio Moroder.
* Plasticity ( Cabaret Voltaire album ), an album by Cabaret Voltaire ( band )
The decadent cabaret scene of Berlin was documented by Britain's Christopher Isherwood, such as in his novel Goodbye to Berlin which was later transposed to the musical movie Cabaret.
* Russian — Cabaret Pierrot le Fou is a cabaret-noir group formed by Sergey Vasilyev in 2009 ; The Moon Pierrot was a conceptual rock band active from 1986 to 1992 ; it released its only studio album, The Moon Pierrot L. P., in 1991.
** scenes in the 1972 film Cabaret depict the savage beating of a nightclub bouncer by a group of SA men.
When industrial music developed in England in the mid-1970s with Cabaret Voltaire and Throbbing Gristle, these groups used electronic instruments, percussion with found objects, and looped samples of " found " soundbites, elements later taken up by Front 242.
Never sung in Germany, the Cabaret song was written in the 1960s by John Kander, a Jewish-American lyricist and composer.
UK cassette culture was championed by marginal musicians and performers such as Barry Lamb, Storm Bugs, the insane picnic, Instant Automatons, Stripey Zebras, What is Oil ?, The APF Brigade, Blyth Power, The Peace & Freedom Band, Academy 23, Sean Terrington Wright, Frenzid Melon, Cleaners From Venus, Chumbawamba, 5ive Ximes 0f Dust and many of the purveyors of Industrial music, e. g. Throbbing Gristle, Cabaret Voltaire, and Clock DVA.
Absurdism is also frequently compared to Surrealism's predecessor, Dadaism ( for example, the Dadaist plays by Tristan Tzara performed at the Cabaret Voltaire in Zürich ).
Other examples of music that contain noise-based features include works by Iannis Xenakis, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Helmut Lachenmann, Cornelius Cardew, Theatre of Eternal Music, Rhys Chatham, Ryoji Ikeda, Survival Research Laboratories, Whitehouse, Cabaret Voltaire, Psychic TV, Blackhouse, Jean Tinguely's recordings of his sound sculpture ( specifically Bascule VII ), the music of Hermann Nitsch's Orgien Mysterien Theater, and La Monte Young's bowed gong works from the late 1960s.
Psychic TV's commercial aspirations were managed by Stevo of Some Bizzare records, who released many of the later industrial musicians, including Eistürzende Neubauten, Test Dept, and Cabaret Voltaire.
Early industrial music often featured tape editing, stark percussion and loops distorted to the point where they had degraded to harsh noise, such as the work of early industrial group Cabaret Voltaire, which Journalist Simon Reynolds described as characterized by " hissing high hats and squelchy snares of rhythm-generator.
Dada provided a significant progenitor with the unconventional performances of poetry, often at the Cabaret Voltaire, by the likes of Richard Huelsenbeck and Tristan Tzara.
Nitzer Ebb, influenced by DAF and Cabaret Voltaire, followed soon after.
While not consciously so, Empires and Dance was essentially industrial in its aesthetic, and preceded by a couple of years the industrial-pop crossover of Cabaret Voltaire's album The Crackdown.
* Cabaret Voltaire ( Zurich ), a Swiss cabaret founded in 1916, distinguished by the involvement of Dada artists
The Factory name was first used for a club in May of that year, which featured local bands including The Durutti Column ( managed at the time by Erasmus and Wilson ), Cabaret Voltaire from Sheffield and Joy Division.

Cabaret and Alexander
** Vertinsky, Alexander: Cabaret singer ( 1889 – 1957 )— became known as the " Russian Pierrot " after debuting around 1916 with " Pierrot's doleful ditties "— songs that chronicled tragic incidents in the life of Pierrot.
Claud Cockburn married three times: to Hope Hale Davis, with whom he fathered Claudia Cockburn Flanders ( wife of Michael Flanders ); to Jean Ross ( part model for Christopher Isherwood's Sally Bowles of Cabaret fame ), with whom he fathered Sarah Caudwell Cockburn, author of detective stories ; and in 1940 to Patricia Byron ( née Patricia Evangeline Anne Arbuthnot ( 17 March 1914-6 October 1989 ), married firstly on 10 October 1933 to Arthur Cecil Byron, son of Cecil Byron, by whom she had a son Darrell Byron, who died in Ireland aged two, divorcing in 1940, daughter of Major John Bernard Arbuthnot and Olive Blake ), who wrote the book The Years of the Week and also wrote an autobiography, Figure of Eight, with whom he fathered Alexander, Andrew ( husband of Leslie Cockburn ), and Patrick, all three of whom are also journalists.
Among his many film and TV appearances ( a quite memorable one being NBC's mini-series Peter the Great, portraying the formidable Tsar's lifelong friend and " right hand " Alexander Menshikov, alongside Maximilian Schell ), the Oscar-winning film Cabaret ( 1972 ), in which he played the rich " Baron Maximilian von Heune " is probably the best-known ; other internationally-known performances include his work in The Damned, The McKenzie Break, and Ludwig.

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