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"little woman" Definitions
  1. WIFE

179 Sentences With "little woman"

How to use little woman in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "little woman" and check conjugation/comparative form for "little woman". Mastering all the usages of "little woman" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Who knew this "little" woman would make it this far?!
"Thank God I am not a little woman," she said.
Florence Pugh was a little woman in a big dress.
It's a little futuristic, a little woman warrior, and completely cool.
"Little Woman" is, for me, the heaviest track on the record.
One of those involves a copy of "Little Woman" put to prurient purpose.
Come on, Scott, he looked like he was terrified by a tiny little woman.
"They think I'm just this little woman who's not going to fight back," she says.
"I'm not sitting here, some little woman standing by my man like Tammy Wynette," she said.
But in the real world, the powerful men in bowler hats see only a little woman.
So I asked a donnina ('little woman') if she would go with me, and she said yes.
This has not been lost on the little woman with the little pencil in the little booth.
"I'm not sitting here, some little woman standing by my man like Tammy Wynette," she famously said.
In most movies of this type, the great man kisses the little woman goodbye and sets off.
On "Little Woman" for example, I'm not even sure what the instruments are at any particular moment.
The "Little Woman" star crossed paths with Robbie while they were both taking photos before the show began. 
"You know, I'm not sitting here, some little woman standing by my man like Tammy Wynette," she said.
" On "60 Minutes," she said: "I'm not sitting here some little woman standing by my man like Tammy Wynette.
Before this blonde babe was getting tangled up in Hollywood, she was just another wispy little woman in Nashua, New Hampshire.
"They regarded me as a helpless little woman and, naturally, after a while I started to feel like one," she said.
Though her mother urged her to "behave like a little woman," she preferred to go horseback riding and shoot birds with her brothers.
Hooper takes her place among the acolytes with "The Other Alcott," pushing another little woman to the forefront: May Alcott, Louisa's younger sister.
It's one thing to be a little woman because you are not yet grown; quite another to be belittled by the larger world.
Russian nail artist Nail Sunny recently shared intricate nail art featuring a detailed chair (with stirrups) and a little woman in a pink hospital gown.
And this little woman grabs my hand, looks me in the eye and says, 'I am just terrified and all I can do is cry.
"You know, I'm not sitting here, some little woman standing by my man like Tammy Wynette," she said, sitting on a couch next to her husband.
It felt like a face-off between them — one that the Great Man was losing to the Little Woman, who at last got to outshine him publicly.
But I think that the voice is just this young woman inside of me that's just this creepy little woman with huge eyes who's watching the world.
" The truth, he said, was that Victoria "was a little woman with great decision of manner and a beautiful speaking voice which she used in public extremely well.
The Pretty Woman director proceeds to invite the three witches into his home and introduce them to his "little woman," Penny, who's seated in an armchair, flipping through channels and smoking a cigarette.
"This idea of oh poor little black person, oh poor little poor person, oh poor little woman, oh poor little indigenous person, everybody's a poor little something!" he declared, his voice crackling with excitement.
This is the third remake of the movie, the story of the big male star who plucks the little woman from obscurity and watches her celebrity and relevance rise above his, to tragic consequences.
"Even an efficiency expert would be staggered by the amount of chasing around … that the little woman takes as a matter of course," says a male voice, a disembodied ghost from 1950s television advertisements.
On Monday night, the Little Woman star dished about his dinner with Kim Kardashian West, Kanye West, and Pete Davidson for rapper Kid Cudi's birthday while appearing on the Tonight Show Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.
The first time a man made me feel uncomfortable, I was 12 or 13, that age you are when well-meaning adults start saying you look like a mujercita, a little woman, not a kid anymore.
So I wonder why was the reference here not to Case and Deaton (two VERY accomplished academics) vs to Deaton, in this case the 2nd author, and his WIFE — the little woman — rather than his colleague.
"My little woman, my little lady … my princess, my smart, brilliant, bright future," begins the caption of a photo Hilaria, 32, posted to her Instagram account Friday, depicting Carmen holding a Disney Princess bag and wearing a Rapunzel crown.
But while we appreciate Rousey's body positivity and general badassery, we wouldn't put her on too high of a pedestal — some of her past comments have felt a little woman shame-y, particularly when it comes to her opponent Holly Holm.
"A brisk, pleasant little woman with probably the most important unofficial position in the United States Congress": that is how a newspaper correspondent once described Daley, who was twenty-five, widowed, and raising a young daughter when she took the job.
But the thing that's great about it is a few things happened: Dancing knew about it, so then I didn't feel as guilty or bad or like I was a weak little woman, or like, "Oh, I need to be strong," because they understood me.
Exploring Jezebel – "Since I am on a strict 013 calorie a day diet with extensive exercise and no alcohol, I have the shape of a petite little woman, and my wife has paid for breast implants and facial surgery to make me more acceptable."14.
The two halves of Little Women form a neat before-and-after dyad: The first half shows us the home of childhood, idyllic and cozy, and the second half shows us each little woman leaving home, one by one, as she heads off into adulthood.
"But this one represents his latest chapter, the one in which he became a dad to a little woman who will grow up thinking all men can dance, sink a jump shot and tell great jokes," the actress, who's currently starring in 1984 on Broadway continued.
Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton's "good wife" response - she declared that she wasn't some Tammy Wynette "little woman standing by her man," but that was exactly what she was - still sticks in the collective craw of precisely those women who most deeply want to support what Clinton represents in American politics.
" Carroll said her goal was to collect the stories of many women, because she was "fed up ... with the terrible things that men were doing... and I wanted to get women on the record, I wanted to hear what they thought because I'm one little woman so I wanted hear all the women's voices.
The Hillary that America came to know in the first months of the campaign was the woman who, confronted with Bill's affair with Gennifer Flowers, was not "some little woman standing by my man like Tammy Wynette," who later said she "could have stayed home and baked cookies and had teas" but became a high-powered lawyer instead.
He notes that while CB radio was associated with long distance truckers in the United States, it was very much a spare room and shed hobby in the UK. Over the static, you might chat with Rubber Duck, Grasshopper, Wild Wolf, Snow Drop, Little Woman, Midnight Drifter, Blythe Spirit, Skinny Ribs, or Tango Polecat, who probably had an eyeball card coyly riffing on their nickname.
Little Women is most obviously about Jo's frustrations with the limitations of femininity (as Meredith mentioned above, there's a lot of space for a queer reading of Jo, and especially to read her as a trans man), but it's also about her horror at the idea of growing up and ending childhood, at the idea of no longer being a "little woman" and becoming just … a woman.
" The narrator seems to share with her dead friend a "loss of conviction in the purpose of fiction — today, when no novel, no matter how brilliantly written or full of ideas, was going to have any meaningful impact on society, when it was impossible even to imagine anything like what had led Abraham Lincoln to say, meeting Harriet Beecher Stowe, in 1862, So you're the little woman who wrote the book that started this great war.
I won't run. I'm not the little woman and I'll never be barefoot and pregnant. We all have things to face. This is mine.
"Little Woman Love" is a Wings song released as the B-side of the single "Mary Had a Little Lamb" on 12 May 1972.
A fellow trolley pusher here is a gaunt little woman, her complexion screaming for a good moisturiser, her lankily sparse hair too long unpampered.
A fellow trolley pusher here is a gaunt little woman, her complexion screaming for a good moisturiser, her lankily sparse hair too long unpampered.
"Bingo and the Little Woman" is a short story by P. G. Wodehouse, and features the young gentleman Bertie Wooster and his valet Jeeves. The story was published in The Strand Magazine in London in November 1922, and then in Cosmopolitan in New York in December 1922. The story was also included in the collection The Inimitable Jeeves as two separate stories, "Bingo and the Little Woman" and "All's Well".Cawthorne (2013), p. 57.
Fly By Night is a 1962 Australian TV play broadcast on the ABC. Written expressly for television, it starred Sophie Stewart who was also in The Little Woman. Australian TV drama was relatively rare at the time.
The title of the album is an allusion to the reply that Simon's mother, Andrea Simon, gave to her father, Richard Simon, when they first met. He said "hello little woman", and she replied "hello big man".
Adapted from "Jeeves and the Greasy Bird" (collected in Plum Pie) and "Bingo and the Little Woman" (collected in The Inimitable Jeeves), all written by P. G. Wodehouse. The title was written for television by Clive Exton.
While "Mary Had a Little Lamb" was dismissed by the critics, it climbed to the top 10 in the United Kingdom. In the United States, however, radio stations also played "Little Woman Love." As a result, the picture sleeve for "Mary Had a Little Lamb" was revised by Apple Records to have a separate listing for the flip side. The single reached number 28 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the US. On the Cash Box chart, which listed single sides separately, "Little Woman Love" only appeared for one week at number 95.
"Red Light" (1984) and "The Little Woman" (1985) appeared in issues #1 and #2 of The Files of Ms. Tree. "Louise" (1992) and "Inconvenience Store" (1994) appeared in the prose anthologies Deadly Allies and Deadly Allies #2, respectively.
She died from breast cancer at Hume Street hospital on 26 June 1957, and is buried in Glasnevin Cemetery. Senator Frank Purcell remembered Dowling as "the nicest and most sincere little woman I ever met…a grand character".
Princess Mara. Pg. 1914 The collapse of the (Army). Berlin. 1922. Little Woman: Novels and Stories. Pg. 1918. Millions Burlakova. Riga. 1929. Tinsel. 1916. On the Volga. Shanghai. 1937. Petrograd outline: Essay / / Breaking News. Revel. 06.5.1921, № 106. pp. 1–2.
The track was later released as "Great Cock and Seagull Race" on the 2012 special edition of Ram. The album was first released on CD by EMI's budget Fame label, on 5 October 1987. In addition to naming the previously hidden tracks ("Bip Bop Link" and "Mumbo Link"), this edition added "Oh Woman, Oh Why" (the B-side of "Another Day"), "Mary Had a Little Lamb", and "Little Woman Love" as bonus tracks. In 1993, Wild Life was remastered and reissued on CD as part of 'The Paul McCartney Collection' series with singles "Give Ireland Back to the Irish" and "Mary Had a Little Lamb" as well as B-sides "Little Woman Love" and "Mama's Little Girl" — all recorded in 1972 except for "Little Woman Love", which was a Ram outtake — as bonus tracks, and also two hidden tracks: "Bip Bop Link" (an acoustic guitar piece) between "I Am Your Singer" and "Tomorrow"; and "Mumbo Link" (an instrumental jam) after "Dear Friend".
Mickey plans to date Tammy, a little woman. Johnny Bigiano, another little person stand-in who envies Mickey, breaks into Mickey's locker and finds the lifts. Mickey is ostracized by the other little people. As Tammy leaves with Johnny, Mickey angrily attacks Kramer.
I have all my cousins and brothers and my mum here; I don't think she's ever going to get over it. He was bred by mum. My mum is the little woman in a flood of tears. What a legend she is.
On February 22, 2018, Twin Shadow announced the release of the new album, alongside two new singles "Little Woman" and "Saturdays", which features a collaboration by Haim. On March 16, 2018, the next single "Brace" was released, with a collaboration by Rainsford.
This incident is often recounted in later stories, with the number of cats being exaggerated as twenty-three. In "Bingo and the Little Woman", Glossop corroborates a claim that Bertie is mentally unsound. These stories appear in The Inimitable Jeeves.Cawthorne (2013), pp.
"Little Woman Love" was never released on an album until 1993, when it was included as a bonus track to Wild Life in The Paul McCartney Collection. It was included on the Special and Deluxe editions of Ram and Red Rose Speedway.
A fictional gentlemen's club, the Senior Liberal Club is where Bertie Wooster and Bingo Little dine while the Drones Club is closed for cleaning in "Bingo and the Little Woman" (in The Inimitable Jeeves).Ring & Jaggard (1999), Wodehouse in Woostershire, p. 195.
Woman Lake is a lake in Cass County, Minnesota, United States. The lake has 3 public accesses. The lake is part of a 4 lake chain called the Woman Lake Chain. Other lakes in the chain include Child Lake, Girl Lake and Little Woman Lake.
Loup Garou includes a duet with Brenda Lee (“You’ll Never Know”). DeVille said about recording with Lee: > She’s amazing, and so professional. She's just this tiny little woman who > has this great big voice. I had to cool out her accent a little bit.
" The group Preserve LA has described Casler as "perhaps the only woman involved in heavy construction in Los Angeles at the time." The Los Angeles Times cautioned the city's businessmen in 1931 not to underestimate "this nice maternal little woman, in a soft green suit, a black and white hat with a feminine white rose beneath its brim." It also noted: "She seems to be pleasantly unaware what a remarkable little woman she is. She went right along with her plumbing while the babies were coming along and she marvels that there could ever be any discussion as to whether women should try to combine both careers and matrimony.
The Funny Little Woman is a book "retold by" Arlene Mosel and illustrated by Blair Lent. Released by E. P. Dutton, it was the recipient of the Caldecott Medal for illustration in 1973.American Library Association: Caldecott Medal Winners, 1938 - Present. URL accessed 12 January 2013.
"Sheree North Joining All-Star Cast at 20th Hopper, Hedda. Los Angeles Times 19 Jan 1955: B6. Johnson later said in an interview he was "handed" North, and knew nothing about her. Johnson called the script "a mess, and Sheree, nice little woman, but unbelievably untalented.
Perugini exhibited her work at the Palace of Fine Arts and The Woman's Building at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. Perugini is particularly known for her portraits of children, that include: A Little Woman (1879), Feeding Rabbits (1884), Dorothy de Michele (1892), and A Flower Merchant.
The Little Woman is a 1961 Australian comedy TV play written by Patricia Hooker and broadcast on the ABC. It was one of the rare Australian dramas on TV at the time. It starred Sophie Stewart who had also been in the ABC's live play Fly by Night.
In June 2008, Strong graduated from high school, where she was that school's final salutatorian before it was converted to Union Hill Middle School. Following graduation, she attended the Cali School of Music at Montclair State University, where she majored in musical theater.Staab, Amanda (April 5, 2009). "A local 'little woman'".
According to her reading, Alcott wrote this story to subvert the fantasy of the perfect, "little woman". Cheri Louise Ross provides another feminist reading in her scholarly article in which she points out that Alcott created dangerous, independent, and intelligent female characters to subvert the patriarchal society in which they live.
The city's prosecutor and the board declined to press charges. Board president Anthony Fontana described the incident as a "set up" and blamed "the poor little woman" for the incident, saying, "She could have walked out and nothing would have happened." As a result, Fontana resigned around ten days later.
Dolina began a solo career in 1985, working with the Leningrad based composer Viktor Reznikov. She began to produce her own concert shows, including "Zatyazhnoy Pryzhok" (Long Jump), "Kontrasty" (Contrasts), "L'dinka" (Little Icicle), and "Malen'kaya Zhenschina" (Little Woman). In 1990, Dolina played the lead role in the rock opera "Giordano" opposite Valery Leontiev.
Cover of the sheet music for Sweet Little Woman o' Mine, 1914 Floy Little Bartlett (1883 – March 7, 1956) was an American composer. She wrote many compositions, with one of them appearing in the 1925 silent film The Big Parade. Bartlett also wrote a book for children in 1931 titled The Busy Book.
She also realizes that she is not a helpless little woman after all, that she has an inner fire that might not be showy but is just as roaring as anyone else's, giving her the strength to stand on her own two feet, finally opening her restaurant, and letting herself seek her much dreamed happiness.
Arlene Tichy Mosel (August 27, 1921 – May 1996) was an American children's librarian who wrote the text for two award-winning children's picture books illustrated by Blair Lent, both retelling traditional material. Tikki Tikki Tembo won the annual Boston Globe–Horn Book Award and Lent won the annual Caldecott Medal for The Funny Little Woman.
The story is set in Japan. The title character (which is a little old woman) likes to laugh ("Tee- he-he-he") and makes dumplings out of rice. One day, one of her dumplings rolls down a hole. The funny little woman chases the lost dumpling and ends up in a strange place underground lined with Jizo (guardian statues).
Aaaskivi died on 17 January 2007 after a period of illness. In a short in memoriam post on Eesti Päevaleht written after her death, former President of Estonia Toomas Hendrik Ilves called her "a big little woman", remarking her influence during her time on the Riigikogu. She had three children: daughters Birgit and Signe, and son Urmas.
By early 1971, the project was completed, along with "Another Day" and its B-side, "Oh Woman, Oh Why". The sessions also produced songs such as Sounes, p. 290. "Little Woman Love", as well as tracks featured on Wings' 1973 album Red Rose Speedway: "Get on the Right Thing", "Little Lamb Dragonfly"Benitez, p. 45. and "Big Barn Bed".
And besides, there was no place to go now. Her family was dead, as were her beloved neighbors. She decides that she will stay with her new, Seneca, family. They renamed her Little-Woman-of-Great-Courage, in honor of her courage to stay with Native Americans instead of going to stay with white people, like her.
It states that Beverley herself suffered business failure, but gained success with what were known as her "Dramatic Metamorphoses", consisting mainly of verse recitals. Elsewhere she describes herself as a teacher of elocution to "the Pulpit, Bar, Stage, and Drawing Room", but also as "that Odd Little Woman". Some of her material is repeated in different pamphlets.
Sara was a graduate of the Juilliard School in New York with a Master's in Music and Piano.Juilliard graduate Ephraim and Sara Kishon got married in 1959.Sara and Ephriam Kishon Sara Kishon was known in Kishon's books as the "Little Woman" or "The Best Wife of All". Sara was a significant driving force in Ephraim Kishon's career and international success.
The song was attacked by rock critics at the time, although a few critics thought it to be deliberately ironic.Dempsey, J.M. "McCartney at 60: a body of work celebrating home and hearth", Popular Music & Society, February 2004. It reached the top 10 in the UK, peaking at number nine. Some US radio stations also played the pop/rock B-side, "Little Woman Love".
He is always serious and keeps to himself. He feels guilty for not being able to protect Princess Alia and there is a rumor among his fellow creatures that he was in fact in love with the princess. ;Reca : :A little woman who follows Shall, Eri and Yuko. She is Shall's fiancée but Shall's behavior makes her question if they truly do have a future together.
Bingo nervously changes the subject every time his wife's books are brought up in conversation. Initially mentioned in "Jeeves in the Springtime", she first appears in "Bingo and the Little Woman", in which she marries Bingo Little after meeting him in the Senior Liberal Club. Afterwards, she is known as Mrs. Little in private life, though she continues to write as Rosie M. Banks.
In 1901 Canton's daughter Winifred died suddenly at the age of 10. He resigned from Isbister and took up the offer to write the official history of the Bible Society, which he hoped would comfort him. The nine volume history took five years to complete. He also published literature about Winifred: The Invisible Playmate, recollections of his daughter, W.V.: Her Book and Rhymes About a Little Woman.
In another collaboration with illustrator Blair Lent, Mosel's 1972 story The Funny Little Woman, published by E. P. Dutton, won the Caldecott Medal for illustration,"Caldecott Medal Winners, 1938 – Present", American Library Association. Retrieved February 3, 2009. and was recognized as an Honor Book for the Globe–Horn Book Award and the 1974 Hans Christian Andersen International Children's Book Awards. Mosel died in May 1996 in Indianapolis.
Retrieved 14 November 2018.Lazzaro, Kellie (13 May 2018) Gippsland's accidental feminist Eva West 'just got on and did what needed to be done', ABC News. Retrieved 14 November 2018.(17 March 1936) Little woman accountant has many other jobs, The Herald. Retrieved 14 November 2018. West is most notable for being one of the first female accountants to be admitted to the Incorporated Institute of Corporate Accountants.
On 3 May 1567, she was given judgement against Bothwell in the Protestant commissary court on the grounds of his alleged adultery with her maid and seamstress, Bessie Crawford.Fraser, p.370 Bessie was described by Jean's witness as a bonny little woman, 20 years old, black-haired and pale, often wearing a black gown. She had been a servant of Jean's mother and her father was a blacksmith.
Robert Cabot Sherman Jr. (born July 22, 1943) is an American singer, actor and occasional songwriter who became a teen idol in the late 1960s and early 1970s. He had a series of successful singles, notably the million-seller "Little Woman" (1969). Sherman retreated from his show business career in the 1970s for a career as a paramedic and a sheriff's officer, though he occasionally performed into the 1990s.
"If she was just a little woman, she wouldn't have been killed."Women play dual role in pushing Mafia into a brave new world , The Irish Examiner, March 19, 1998 Santapaola's rival Giuseppe Ferone (who had become a pentito) was one of the killers. Nitto Santapaola forgave his wife's killer in a letter he publicly read in court. Ferone's son and father had been killed on the orders of Santapaola.
During its filming, Rosa met his future wife, Angela Alvarado. Like Rosa, Alvarado was also born in New York to Puerto Rican parents. Rosa also appeared alongside Christopher Mitchum in a German film entitled Gummibärchen küßt man nicht. Rosa wrote, produced and performed two songs ("Angela" and "Little Woman") for the soundtrack of the latter film, which was released by RCA Records under his publishing company, Ceiba Tree Music.
In 1965, Little left the magazine world and formed Sara Little Design Consultant. At the time, she wrote a trade article for Housewares Review entitled "Forgetting the Little Woman". Her premise was that most companies created products for retail buyers, instead of considering the people who were actually going to use them. The story caught the attention of prominent executives, including the heads of General Mills, 3M and Corning Glass.
She also performed her own compositions on WEAF on January 26, 1924, which The Brooklyn Citizen wrote was "in her delightful soprano voice". In 1928, Bartlett was again featured on WMAQ. The score of her song "Sweet Little Woman o' Mine" was played in the 1925 silent film The Big Parade. Her songs "At Dusk", "A Boy's Philosophy", and "Naughty Boy" have been sung by Ida Geer Weller.
Burke says because he directed, things were not misunderstood. Johnny Rohan was cast as Daniel after Burke saw him singing on a pop show. For the role of Lola, Burke wanted to cast an actress who could sing, and picked New Zealander Brigid Lenihan, who had appeared in shows such as Little Woman, Revue 61 and A Night Out. It was filmed in the ABC's Southbank Studios in Melbourne.
Diminutives in -ie, burnie small burn (stream), feardie/feartie (frightened person, coward), gamie (gamekeeper), kiltie (kilted soldier), postie (postman), wifie (woman, also used in Geordie dialect), rhodie (rhododendron), and also in -ock, bittock (little bit), playock (toy, plaything), sourock (sorrel) and Northern –ag, bairnag (little), bairn (child, common in Geordie dialect), Cheordag (Geordie), -ockie, hooseockie (small house), wifeockie (little woman), both influenced by the Scottish Gaelic diminutive -ag (-óg in Irish Gaelic).
Meg, the eldest sister, is 16 when the story starts. She is referred to as a beauty and manages the household when her mother is absent. She has long brown hair and blue eyes and has particularly beautiful hands, and is seen as the prettiest one of the sisters. Meg fulfills expectations for women of the time; from the start, she is already a nearly perfect "little woman" in the eyes of the world.
The battles she fought at home were those of nearly every Southern woman, but her burdens were heavier than most. Left in complete charge of a large plantation, this little woman, who was the mother of ten children, was as brave a soldier at home as ever her husband was on the Virginia battlefields. She saw to it that the crops were gathered, the children fed and clothed, and the Negroes cared for.
Songs: "Little Woman Love", "C Moon", "My Love" Part 5 Another music video segment, this time for "Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey". The "Admiral Halsey" section of the song was not included in the final broadcast version, however. Songs: "Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey" Part 6 A short voice-over from McCartney introduces a segment set in the Chelsea Reach public house near Liverpool. This features members of his family and Wings in a pub singalong.
His obituaries not only singled out his business acumen but also his good humour. Colin McDowell said that almost uniquely for a personality in the centre of the fashion industry, no journalist ever had a bad word to say about him. He was also held in affection by the British couturiers he promoted. Norman Hartnell used to send Christmas cards bearing the inscription: 'to the cobbler from the Little Woman Round The Corner'.
It was composed by Paul McCartney in 1970 and recorded during the Ram sessions but left off the album. In keeping with McCartney's practice at the time, the composition was credited to Paul and Linda McCartney. Beatle biographer John Blaney describes "Little Woman Love" as a "breezy rocker" with a rockabilly feel. The song is unusual for Wings in that instead of Paul McCartney playing electric bass guitar, jazz musician Milt Hinton plays slap bass.
179 online at books.google.co.uk, accessed 2 July 2008 and Sporting Times: The Pink 'Un World (1938). The paper is mentioned in the novel Burmese Days by George Orwell: In P.G. Wodehouse's short story "Bingo and the Little Woman" Bertie Wooster reveals that, "bar a weekly wrestle with the Pink 'Un and an occasional dip into the form-book, I’m not much of a lad for reading". A Reader of The Sporting Times by Joseph Clayton Clark, c.
Boyd Gilmore (June 1, 1905 or June 12, 1910 - December 23, 1976) was an American Delta blues singer, guitarist and songwriter. Among the songs he wrote were "All in My Dreams", "Believe I'll Settle Down", "I Love My Little Woman" and "If That's Your Girl". Gilmore also recorded a version of fellow Delta bluesman Robert Johnson's track, "Ramblin' on My Mind". He could play guitar, although there is no recorded evidence of his work on that instrument.
She grew up in the town of Port Lincoln in South Australia and trained as a stenographer. She began writing in her spare time and her work began appearing in amateur theatres. She worked as a secretary at the Stevedoring Commission in Sydney and also as a court reporter. Hooker was working as a shorthand typist in a city office in 1959 when she wrote the story for The Little Woman at home in the evenings.
Sherman released 107 songs, 23 singles and 10 albums between 1962 and 1976. In his recording career, he earned seven gold singles, one platinum single, and five gold albums. He had a career total of seven top 40 hits. In 1969, he signed with Metromedia Records. In May 1969, he released the single "Little Woman", which peaked at #3 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart (#2 in Canada) and spent nine weeks in the Top 20.
Their act was considered one of the show's highlights by reviewers, one of whom noted that "Mitti is a slight little woman with a sympathetic face and manner, and a lithe body, as full of grace and energy as a young panther.""Mr. Hornblow Goes to the Play" Theatre Magazine (September 1921): 168. She was part of the elaborate tableaux of stage designer Ben Ali Haggin,"Passion's Altar" Des Moines Sunday Register (August 7, 1921): 27. via Newspapers.
The hen party was her first night out since the birth of her third child. He claimed Mitchell had suffered years of abuse at the hands of her then partner of eight years and had been a 'cowed little woman' in the past. Mr Hind said Mitchell's children might have to go into care if she was sent to prison as she was their sole carer. He continued: 'She tells me she no longer goes out.
Another prestigious resident of this early period was Robert Palmer, who augmented the CPAS sound on Joe Cocker's project.Adding backing vocals on "Sweet Little Woman", along with Jimmy Cliff. Sly and Robbie went on to use some of the CPAS for Black Uhuru and Gwen Guthrie projects, eventually adding Darryl Thompson, Spaceman Patterson, and Monte Brown (guitars) to the core of the band. An attempt to record a band album was made, but ended up as Sly and Robbie's Language Barrier Album.
By the end of the episode their marriage seemed to be back on track. In the third series, Tip was working behind the bar of the Fountain pub, and a supporter of Sal's protest against the building behind her house. ;Rosie Bales :Rosie (Dawn French) is a sweet, if naive, little woman with an alter ego called Margaret, who is angry, rude and hateful towards anyone and everyone. Rosie has at least two sons, apparently, and an unseen husband called Ricky.
Jane Taylour addressed gave public lectures and lecture tours on women's suffrage in London, the North-East of England and in Scotland. She sent in a petition in favour of Jacob Bright's Bill to remove women's electoral disabilities. She was described by women's rights activist Clementia Taylor as "the energetic little woman from Stranraer". In 1869 Clementia Taylor asked Taylour to undertake a lecture tour, and from 1870 she gave public lectures throughout Scotland and Northeast England campaigning for women's equality and suffrage.
Olga Della-Vos-Kardovskaya Little Woman, 1910, portrait of the artist's daughter Olga Lyudvigovna Della-Vos-Kardovskaya () (1875, Chernihiv, Ukraine, then in Russian Empire – 1952, Leningrad) was a Russian painter and graphic artist. From 1891 until 1894 she studied at the Schneider School in Kharkov; from 1894 to 1899 she was a student at the Academy in Saint Petersburg. She went to Munich to study at Anton Ažbe's school, staying there from 1899 to 1900. In 1900 she married painter Dmitry Kardovsky.
6 ,35 In 1827 (after her death), she was called: "a harmless but an eccentric little woman, with an extraordinary fondness for cats and dogs, some indications of the German severity of family etiquette, which gave her household the air of Potsdam, and but a slight share of those attractions which might retain the regards of a husband—young, a soldier, and a prince."Blackwood's Edinburgh Mag. for Feb. 1827 High-stakes gambling is reported to have taken place at Oatlands.
She was subject of a patronising article referring to her as "the buxom, brown-eyed, voluble little woman", by Gordon Beckles, Scoop! biographical dictionary of journalistsFleet Street, press barons and politics: the journals of Collin Brooks, 1932-1940, ed. N. J. Crowson, Camden Fifth Series, Vol.II, University of Cambridge, 1998, published in the 12 July 1947 issue of Leader Magazine under the title of "Housewife of England!".Housewife of England, by Gordon Beckles photo article in Leader Magazine, 12 July 1947.
Back Door Men was recorded at Universal Recording Studio in Chicago IL, in late 1966. The album was recorded as a quick follow-up to the Shadows of Night # 10 debut release Gloria. By the time of this recording, Warren Rogers and Joe Kelley had traded instruments and David Wolinski had been added on keyboards. "Bad Little Woman", a cover of the Belfast band The Wheels, backed by "Gospel Zone" was released as the first single, but only charted as high as # 91.
Denig entered into several "country marriages" with Native American women. His first marriage was to Sina Wamniomi (Whirlwind Blanket), a Lakota, with whom he had a son, Robert, and a daughter, Sarah. His second marriage, in 1837, was with Hai-kees-kak-wee-yah (Deer Little Woman), an Assiniboine, with whom he had one son, Alexander, and two daughters, Ida and Adeline. The first wife stayed at Fort Pierre, but the son was with his father and the second wife at Fort Union.
Born in Belfast, he started his musical career there in the early 1960s as guitarist with the Manhattan Showband, alongside his friend Van Morrison. "Demick and Armstrong", Biography by Craig Harris, Allmusic.com. Retrieved 24 April 2020 He became a member of the Golden Eagles, who then became The Wheels. The band gained a residency in Blackpool, and wrote and recorded the original version of "Bad Little Woman", later covered in America by The Shadows of Knight. The Wheels split up in 1967.
"In London" is a song recorded by Australian-born Irish singer and composer Johnny Logan. The song was first released as the B-side to Logan's 1978 debut single "No, I Don't Want to Fall In Love", which failed to chart. The song was released as a double A-sided single with "Sad Little Woman" in June 1980 as the fourth and final single from Logan's debut studio album, In London, following Logan's win at the 1980 Eurovision Song Contest. The song charted in Germany and Belgium.
Rodgers biographer Geoffrey Block, in his book on the Broadway musical, points out that though Billy may strike his wife, he allows her musical themes to become a part of him and never interrupts her music.Block, p. 174 Block suggests that, as reprehensible as Billy may be for his actions, Enoch requiring Carrie to act as "the little woman", and his having nine children with her (more than she had found acceptable in "When the Children are Asleep") can be considered to be even more abusive.Block, pp.
However the Housewives' League has as a founding principle that it is not party political and will not be used to promote any political party. Crisp was subject of a patronising article referring to her as "the buxom, brown-eyed, voluble little woman", by Gordon Beckles,Gordon Beckles Willson, (1901-1954) wrote under the name Gordon Beckles, was a Daily Express journalist, and later Asst. Editor of the Daily Mail. He authored numerous popular books in the 1930s and 1940s as well as a film script.
This was republished under the title Little Woman the next year and adapted as a 20-episode television miniseries in 1999. She also published two books on Peking opera, both of which she wrote after her second operation for lung cancer in 2007. In 2007, Li was one of four recipients of the Great Achievement in Performing Arts award from the All-China Association of Literature and Arts, considered one of the "few living masters of the dan role". Li died on 11 July 2008 in Shanghai.
He is also brought to court after tripping a policeman in Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, and calls himself Ephraim Gadsby. In one scene in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, he is said to be a thief named Alpine Joe, which is mentioned again in Aunts Aren't Gentlemen. He also impersonates three other people in different stories, namely Rosie M. Banks in "Jeeves in the Springtime" and "Bingo and the Little Woman", Oliver "Sippy" Sipperley in "Without the Option", and Gussie Fink-Nottle in The Mating Season.Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 129.
O'Connor's gravestone Eric Johns described O'Connor as > ... a frail little woman, with enormous eyes that reminded one of a hunted > animal. She could move one to tears with the greatest of ease, and just as > easily reduce an audience to helpless laughter in comedies of situation. She > was mistress of the art of making bricks without straw. She could take a > very small part, but out of the paltry lines at her disposal, create a real > flesh-and-blood creature, with a complete and credible life of its own.
"A New View of the Empress Dowager of China; Tsu Hsi, the Little Woman Who Rules the Celestial Empire and its Three Hundred Millions of People". The New York Times. June 26, 1904. Today’s anachronistic use of "Dragon Lady" in such cases may lead the modern reader to assume that the term was in earlier use than appears to be the case. Anna May Wong was the contemporary actress to assume the Dragon Lady role in American Cinema in the movie “Daughter of the Dragon,” which premiered in 1931.
Halide Edip's account of her inspectorship emphasizes her humanitarian efforts and her struggles to come to terms with the violence of the situation. However an American witness for The New York Times, describing her as "this little woman who so often boasts of her American ideals of womanhood and of which her Western friends make so much", accused Halide Edip of "calmly planning with [Cemal Pasha] forms of human tortures for Armenian mothers and young women" and taking on "the task of making Turks of their orphaned children."New York Times, page 97.
Southern spokesmen greatly exaggerated the power of abolitionists, looking especially at the great popularity of Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852), the novel and play by Harriet Beecher Stowe (whom Abraham Lincoln reputedly called "the little woman that started this great war"). They saw a vast growing abolitionist movement after the success of The Liberator in 1831 by William Lloyd Garrison. The fear was a race war by blacks that would massacre whites, especially in counties where whites were a small minority. The South reacted with an elaborate intellectual defense of slavery.
Liner notes from the Dave Mason compilation Scrapbook. (The B-side was "Little Woman" on which he was backed by Family, whose first album he produced, rather than the other Traffic members.) The single was released after Mason left Traffic the first time, following Mr. Fantasy. "Medicated Goo" and "Shanghai Noodle Factory" were the A and B-sides of a UK Traffic single released in December 1968. The single version of "Medicated Goo" is a shorter edit with false ending that is not heard on the stereo album.
Alecto and Amycus Carrow are siblings who participate in the assault on Hogwarts at the end of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Amycus is described as being squat and lumpy, with a lopsided leer and a wheezy giggle; Alecto is described as a "stocky little woman" and shares her brother's squatness and laugh. It is said that after Voldemort's first downfall, they believed that he was gone forever. In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Alecto and Amycus become "teachers" at Hogwarts, severely disciplining students who oppose Voldemort.
On March 20, 1917, the Asbury Park Press said that Bartlett is "one of the most talented of America's women composers" about her later performing at the First M.E. Church. Bartlett sang some of her songs that were for children at the church. On February 14, 1920, Buffalo Evening News wrote "The author of "This Little Woman of Mine" has a marked gift for melody" in a review of one of Bartlett's recitals. On April 14, 1921, Bartlett was an accompanist and singer of her songs that she composed for children.
A refinery was in operation by January 1899, through the efforts of Joseph S. Cullinan. The Powell oil field, was discovered in 1900, a few miles east of Corsicana. Rotary drilling, used to drill water wells, was introduced to the oil industry by M.C. Baker and C.E. Baker, with tools manufactured by the American Well and Prospecting machine shop, owned by N.G. Johnson, E.H. Akin, and Charles Rittersbacker.Dick Platt "And so spake The Little Woman... ", Corsicana Daily Sun During World War II, an airman flying school called Corsicana Air Field trained thousands of pilots.
How far is it from here?” She answered, “Kind sir, I have come > straight from there. It is an awfully long way. Here, look at this,” and she > opened the basket that she was carrying on her arm. “All these shoes and > slippers I have already worn through, so far is it.” At this, the devil put > down his hefty stone and stormed off in a huff, quite beside himself. This > sly little woman, though, was the Bundenbach cobbler’s wife who had been > going about gathering up business for her husband.
Born in Prestatyn in north Wales, Demick moved with his parents to Belfast, Northern Ireland, aged 5. He learned guitar and at the age of 11 joined his first band, the Vibros, who later became the Telstars (or Tony and the Telstars). In 1963 he joined another Belfast band, The Wheels, and moved with them to England the following year. With Demick on rhythm guitar, harmonica and vocals, the band released several singles, including "Bad Little Woman", later recorded by The Shadows of Knight, and supported visiting American musicians such as John Lee Hooker.
" The women are, according to Captain Jat, "Ud-women, boy... Devil-women... Priestesses of the Ud, that's Devil in their talk." Jat recounts how in a previous visit four years ago, he met "one of the priestesses alone one time, a little woman an' pretty, not like them!" Hodgson blurs the line between artifice and true monstrosity as he makes it unclear if the women are mutated or merely wearing costumes: "You sh'd see the pearls them hag-women was dressed with. You mustn't be feared of their claws, boy.
Appeared to take place right after the events of Demonic Toys, an unknown stranger with a pair of gloved hands picks up the pieces of the destroyed toys and starts stitching them together. The only toys the perpetrator could fix correctly were Baby oopsie daisy and Jack Attack. The unidentified man then puts the toys in a crate, and is handed over a suitcase full of cash by another man, who then leaves with the toys. Also with Dr. Lorca is his sweetheart Lauraline and her stepson David, and a little woman named Lillith, who is a psychic of some sorts.
The Wheels were a 1960s R&B; and blues-influenced rock band from Belfast, Northern Ireland, who came from the same music scene that produced the better- known band, Them, led by Van Morrison. Their best-known membership consisted of Brian Rossi (keyboards and vocals), Rod Demick (rhythm guitar and vocals), Herbie Armstrong (lead guitar), Tito Tinsley (bass guitar), and Victor Catling (drums). Morrison was a member of the band, briefly, before they became known as the Wheels. They are best remembered for writing and recording the original version of "Bad Little Woman", later covered in America by The Shadows of Knight.
Rose died aged 58 on 9 May 1905 at Brooklyn House, 11 Marine Parade, St Mary in the Castle, Hastings. The cause of death was recorded as “carcinoma of mediavinal and mesentent glands 10 months” and pneumonia. Flora was present at her sister's death, although still recorded as resident in London. Rose was buried on 13 May 1905 in Tower Hamlets. She was described in her obituary in The Chemist and Druggist as “not by nature a fighter, but a bright and charming little woman, of an affectionate nature.” In 2019 she was added to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
NYU Press, 2009. This is shown in the movie when Ford Malotte tells her "Go home, get laid, have a baby" and says to Colt, her male companion, "Tell your liberated little woman ..." By doing this, he is dismissing her using her gender role and telling the man to control her. Unfortunately, that isn't the only bout of sexism that she or the other women in the film encounter. When Cloris's death is said to happen, because of a drug scandal, Friday tries to tell the police differently and he dismisses her by repeatedly asking her about the drugs.
Watkins also briefly reported on the noted Leopold and Loeb kidnapping and murder case, which sensational qualities quickly overshadowed the coverage of the Belva Gaertner verdict. Soon after, she returned to school to study again under Baker, who had moved to Yale University, to help start the Yale School of Drama. As a class assignment in his famous 47 Workshop course, she wrote a thinly fictionalized account of the two murders. She first called it The Brave Little Woman, then Chicago, or Play Ball (first copyrighted version: pre-production manuscript), and finally Chicago (second copyrighted version: post-production script).
Dangerfield wrote of the suffragettes that "what they did had to be done", but he offered a highly gendered and dismissive analysis, accusing them of "asserting their masculinity", "disorder, arrogance, and outrage", and "pre-war lesbianism". They were "odious to men" and women too, "melodramatic" and "hysterical". He described Emmeline Pankhurst as a "fragile little woman, not more distinguished in her appearance than other pretty little women who have worn well". Suffragette actions were portrayed as "the swish of long skirts, the violent assault of feathered hats, the impenetrable, advancing phalanx of corseted bosoms".Dangerfield, George (2017) [1935].
Schulenburg associates it with the elder bush and describes it as a woman dressed in white with long braided hair and red eyes:Zeitschrift für Ethnologie, vol. 18, 1886, p. 140 digitized by Google Books > Sambucus nigra; weil einst die Božalość kam, die Gottesklage (die im > Fliederstrauch sitzt), ein Weibchen, weiss gekleidet, mit langem > verwilderten Haar und rothen Augen, als man H. brannte. Nach Hartknoch > glaubten die Litthauer, unter Hollunderbäumen hätten Götter ihren Sitz,... Biren Bonnerjea describes it as a little woman with long hair, who cries under the window of someone who is about to die.
Her performance was said to be successful as later she received many collaboration offers after the festival. Mr. Misachi (music director of Ryochi Hattori Music Festival) gave a comment as: "I didn't expect that little woman like Doan Trang could be able to perform with an energetic voice. Although I don't know Vietnamese but through her demonstration, I got to understand contemporary music genre of Vietnam and she could be considered as Utada Kitaru – a famous Japanese female singer. Hopefully we will have chance to collaborate with her more in the future and to introduce Vietnamese music in Japan".
Ellis directed Horse Play in 1937 and then put on the play Little Woman in 1938 with the junior department at the Negro Little Theatre. Her most notable work as a director as well as an actress is in the all-black production of Tobacco Road in 1950. She played the role of a starving mother which the New York Times singled out as “truthful elements that left a lasting impression”. Through her directing of a youth play and her creation of the drama school, Ellis was active in getting younger kids interested in the art of drama.
La Jarochita (Spanish for "The Girl from Veracruz" or "The Little Woman from Veracruz") is the ring name of a Mexican luchadora enmascarada, or female masked professional wrestler. She currently works for Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) where she works as a técnica (fan-favorite character, or Face). She previously worked for Lucha Libre AAA Wrestling where she won the 2012 Quién Pinta Para La Corona ("Who is looking for the crown") talent search. Her legal name is not a matter of public record, as is often the case with masked wrestlers in Mexico where their private lives are out of the public eye.
Chicago is a 1926 play written by Maurine Dallas Watkins that is best known as the inspiration for the 1975 Broadway musical of the same name. The play is a satire and was based on two unrelated 1924 court cases involving two women, Beulah Annan and Belva Gaertner, who were both suspected and later acquitted of murder, whom Watkins had covered for the Chicago Tribune as a reporter. Watkins wrote the script (originally titled Brave Little Woman) as a class assignment while attending the Yale Drama School. The play debuted on Broadway at the Sam Harris Theatre in late December 1926, directed by George Abbott, where it ran for 172 performances.
At a meeting in New York to honour the executed Invincibles in May 1885, she was presented with a "well-filled purse" and pronounced a "brave little woman" who was "as true as steel to all those heroic ideas of womanhood which typify the feminine character of Ireland." She became a member of an American ladies’ committee which erected a monument to Patrick O’Donnell, a man executed for killing James Carey, in Glasnevin in April 1887. Byrne developed paralysis three years before the death of her husband in 1894. Believing she was near death, she told an American journalist that Parnell was unconnected to the Invincibles in June 1894.
Senator Charles Sumner credited Uncle Tom's Cabin for the election of Abraham Lincoln, an opinion that is later echoed in the apocryphal story of Lincoln greeting Stowe with the quip "So you're the little woman who wrote the book that made this great war!" (see American Civil War). Frederick Douglass praised the novel as "a flash to light a million camp fires in front of the embattled hosts of slavery". Despite Douglass's enthusiasm, an anonymous 1852 reviewer for William Lloyd Garrison's publication The Liberator suspected a racial double standard in the idealization of Uncle Tom: > Uncle Tom's character is sketched with great power and rare religious > perception.
She is soon attended by a plump little woman in an apron called Mrs Gardner and an elderly doctor who both call her "Hannah" and say that she had a seizure two days previously and has been unconscious ever since. She will soon be up and about but she's not to worry about her work as a Mrs Roberts has been helping Mrs Gardner. When they have gone, Mrs Rymer goes to the window and sees that she is in a farmhouse. Later she questions Mrs Gardner who tells her that she has lived there for five years and even shows her a photograph of her and the other residents together.
Jordan, Wilkinson declares her the 'very best' he has seen, surpassing her predecessor in youth and grace. 'Her face,' he says, 'is more than pretty, it is handsome and strong featured, not unlike Bellamy's; her person is rather short, but take her altogether she is a nice little woman'. She married John Edwin the younger and she joined with her husband the mixed company of actors and amateurs assembled by the Earl of Barrymore at Wargrave.Robinson, John Robert, The Last Earls of Barrymore, 1894, pp.111–113 accessed 13 October 2012 She appeared with her husband at the Haymarket Theatre, 20 June 1792, as Lucy in An Old Man taught Wisdom.
He is apt to turn his back on what he has been sniping at to > demolish what he has just been defending. He is contemptuous of everybody > except the opportunist and the unscrupulous little woman who, at some point > in every picture, labels the hero a poor sap. That the invariable fairy > godfather of each picture is not only expressive of his own cold-blooded > cynicism but of typical Hollywood fantasy is an example of how this works. > Another phase of his attack is shrouding in slapstick the fact that the > godfather pays off not for perseverance or honesty or ability but merely > from capriciousness.
Blair Lent (January 22, 1930 – January 27, 2009), who sometimes wrote as Ernest Small, was an American illustrator and writer of children's books, perhaps best known for those with Chinese themes such as Tikki Tikki Tembo (1968). He won the 1973 Caldecott Medal for U.S. picture book illustration, recognizing The Funny Little Woman by Arlene Mosel. Lent used a wide range of techniques in his illustrations, including acrylic painting, cardboard cutouts, colored pencil and ink and wash. Born in Boston, Lent attended the Boston Museum School where he graduated with a degree in art in 1953, after which he went to Italy and Switzerland on a study grant.
The succeeding books were written in this manner, A Little Woman, A Girl's Money, A Noble Life of the "Allie-bird Series;" Mrs. Hurd's Niece, and A White Hand, the last two not needing, perhaps, so much of Shaw's attention, because of Farman's experience. This gave Shaw the opportunity of doing more of the outside labor, allowing Farman time to remain in the house and write. Friends murmured, relatives grumbled and neighbors wondered why Shaw constantly did the hardest and most disagreeable work, but this was to be the time when all the literary aid and fifteen unselfish years of Shaw's life were ignored.
Claire Murphy of The Daily Mirror described Babe as "evil" and a "villain", and her colleague, Natalie Corner, named Babe "one of the most hated characters". Laura-Jayne Tyler of Inside Soap called Babe "wicked", while Sarah Deen of the Metro said that Babe is "that troublemaking, sinister little voice in people's ear that makes bad things happen" and branded her "Halloween personified". Johnathon Hughes of Digital Spy described Babe as a "sinister spinster" and "bitter". A Soaplife reporter labelled Babe as "ruthless", a "twisted witch" and a "devious little woman", while Morgan (Digital Spy) thought Babe is "rotten to the core" and not "a cuddly old dear".
Sanger next started a food pantry to deliver groceries to the elderly, and a program to provide them with transportation for shopping and medical care. She raised funds to purchase a 30-foot mobile home which she had fitted with bunks to give street people a place to keep warm. In 1990 she was featured in Grow, a national publication of the Nazarene church. The article begins: > In the Boston area south-shore communities, a dynamite little woman named > Esther Sanger, 65, continually looks for ways to serve throw-away people > like the homeless, hungry, alcoholics, drug users, AIDS victims, battered > women, elderly poor, and deserted mothers with babies.
Henry Clay Frick House, now the site of the Frick Collection The family's home on 5th Avenue was transformed into the Frick Collection in 1935. Helen continued as a trustee, to be active in acquisitions. A small woman, described as a "frail little woman," Helen was often in conflict with the male board members, in particular with John D. Rockefeller, whom her father had also appointed as trustee to the Frick Collection. The two fought over the manner in which the house should be transformed into a museum, whether the costly furniture should be kept (she wanted it, he did not), and Helen resisted his efforts to add pieces from his own collection.
Walker died on February 5, 1931, and her obituary in the New York Evening Post contained this passage: "A great city's water front is rich in romance... There are queenly liners, the grim battle craft, the countless carriers of commerce that pass in endless procession. And amid all this and in the sight of the city of towers and the torch of liberty lived this sturdy little woman, proud of her work and content in it, keeping her lamp alight and her windows clean, so that New York Harbor might be safe for ships that pass in the night.""Tending the Light", New York Evening Post, October 1931. She is interred in Ocean View Cemetery.
Overall, the New York critics disliked the opera, although some noted her technical skill. However, Yohalem notes "whether the music evidenced "femininity" was a matter of no little disagreement" and he goes on to quote The Telegraphs review: :This little woman writes music with a masculine hand and has a sound and logical brain, such as is supposed to be the especial gift of the rougher sex. There is not a weak or effeminate note in ', nor an unstable sentiment."Quoted in Yolahem In contrast, The Daily Mail dissented: "The charm and quaintness of it will appeal more than its attempt to mirror intense human emotion and to this extent it is feminine, according to all tradition.
""DeWolf Hopper's Latest Success," New York Times, May 14, 1893, p. 13 Of Della Fox, the second review noted, "Her songs and dances are encored until the little woman is forced from sheer weariness to decline further responses." When Hopper's new wife, Edna Wallace-Hopper, replaced Fox for performances beginning on July 17, The New York Times critic commented: "At any rate, hands came together all over the house in a long and genial patter when the little Mrs. Hopper appeared, dressed in lace and yellow and looking just a bit timid and apprehensive.... Her voice, like that of conscience, is still and small, but in an opera like Panjandrum nobody notices voices.
The group's first eponymous album, released in 1970, was unlike the work of Fairport Convention and Steeleye Span, as it diverged from a conventional rock band format. The material consisted of original compositions written by the Peggs, together with a Dave Mason tune, 'Little Woman,' and the songs 'Salisbury Plain' and 'Mr Trill's Song' which had music by Bob Pegg and lyrics by Ashley Hutchings. The use of classically trained musicians and the wide variety of instruments (including electric organ, melodeon, tin whistle, terrapin, fiddle, cello, flute, clarinet, bassoon, in addition to electric bass and drums) produced a hybrid sound which was predominantly acoustic in character. The album was well received by the music press and was made Melody Maker folk album of the year.
Derided by the feminist movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s, Wynette in later years defended the song as not a call for women to place themselves second to men, but rather a suggestion that women attempt to overlook their husbands' shortcomings and faults if they truly love them (and in fact, the last line in the final verse says "after all, he's just a man"). Wynette always defended her signature song. The song remained contentious into the early 1990s, when soon-to-be First Lady Hillary Clinton told CBS' 60 Minutes during the "Gennifer Flowers interview" that she "wasn't some little woman 'standing by my man' like Tammy Wynette." The condemnation from the public was immediate, even coming from Wynette herself.
The bonus content included the reconstructed original double LP version of the album featuring different mixes of "Seaside Woman" and "I Would Only Smile" as to those released on Linda McCartney's Wide Prairie and Denny Laine's Japanese Tears respectively, the singles "Mary Had a Little Lamb", "Hi, Hi, Hi" and "Live and Let Die" with their respective b-sides, early and rough mixes of several songs as well as previously unreleased studio and live recordings, with the latter taken from the Wings Over Europe Tour. The songs "Country Dreamer" and "Little Woman Love" included on the reissue are the same versions that were previously released on the Band on the Run and Ram editions of the Paul McCartney Archive Collection.
Marisol was a child star during the 1960s, entertaining high-ranking dignitaries (including Francisco Franco). Director Luis Lucia Mingarro propelled her to national stardom in the film trilogy Un rayo de luz (Ray of Light), Ha llegado un ángel (An Angel Has Arrived) and Tómbola (Lottery). The films featured Marisol singing some of her best-known songs, "La vida es una tómbola" ("Life Is a Lottery"), "Corre, corre, caballito" ("Run, Run, Little Horse"), "Bambina", "Ola, Ola, Ola", "Estando contigo" ("Being with You"), "Chiquitina" ("Little Girl") and "Nueva melodía" ("A New Melody"). In 1963 she starred in Marisol Rumbo a Río (Marisol Is Bound for Rio), where she played twins (similar to Hayley Mills in The Parent Trap) and sang "Bossanova junto a ti" ("Bossanova Close to You"), "Muchachita" ("Little Woman"), "¡Oh, Tony!" and "Guajiras".
Despite the controversy, Liebeswalzer again was voted Album of the Year, and Silly won one argument with the censors over the word Titten (tits) in the song "So 'ne kleine Frau" (Such a Little Woman), which was left unaltered. Bassist Jäcki Reznicek, formerly of Pankow, played fretless bass on the title track to the next album, Bataillon d'Amour (Battalion of Love, 1986), which proved to be one of the best-known songs ever to come out of East Germany (the main bass line was played by Schramm). The album was released on CBS Records in West Germany, although CBS rejected the East German cover artwork as amateurish and supplied their own. The song "Schlohweißer Tag" (Snow White Day) was later used in Heiner Carow's 1989 film Coming Out.
Lo is very petty and is a little woman and has a sworn sister at work Shek Mei (Cutie Mui). Although the two have differing personalities, when Lo joined the company three years ago she quickly became good friends with Mei, who has been neighbours with Yuet since she was young. Mei's parents Shek Tai Chuen (Johnny Ngan) and Chan Kiu (Helen Ma) are old workers at Tung Mat Yuen so Mei grew up with the three Kam siblings and is particularly close to Yat with whom she often discusses her feelings. Yat has seen very early on that Mei is attracted to Yuet, but she has never let on her feelings to him and when she saw that Lo started dating Yuet after joining the company, then she can only put her feelings away in her heart.
A cameraman from Edward R. Murrow's television show See It Now had filmed the Moss hearing, and the case was the subject of the episode broadcast on March 16, 1954. The previous week's show had been Murrow's famous "A Report on Senator Joseph R. McCarthy" broadcast, which was deeply critical of McCarthy (and the subject of the 2005 film Good Night, and Good Luck). Murrow opened the Annie Lee Moss show saying it would present a "little picture about a little woman", and closed it with a sound recording of a speech by Dwight D. Eisenhower in which the President praised the right of Americans to "meet your accuser face to face". The public's response to both shows was highly favorable, and because of them Murrow is widely credited with contributing to the eventual downfall of McCarthy.
Akins worked with film producer Sydney Pollack before losing interest in the film business. Akins then earned a Master of Fine Arts in the creative writing program at Johns Hopkins University. In April 1993, she was awarded the Academy Award of the American Academy of Arts and Letters for her fiction writing; she has also been given grants by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Ingram Merrill Foundation, and won the Whiting Award in 1989. Akins is the author of five books; the novels Home Movie, published in 1988 by Simon & Schuster, Little Woman, published in 1990 by Harper & Row, Public Life, published in 1993 by HarperCollins, and Hometown Brew, published by Alfred A. Knopf in 1998, and the short story collection "World Like a Knife", published in 1991 by Johns Hopkins University Press.
Back Door Men is the second album by The Shadows of Knight. Both this album and its predecessor, Gloria, were released in 1966 and are considered to be seminal garage band albums. As noted by one reviewer, "The original LP version of this album, the second by the legendary white Chicago garage punk/blues outfit, was one of the most sought-after artifacts of mid-'60s punk rock. Back Door Men was a loud, feedback-laden, sneering piece of rock & roll defiance, mixing raunchy anthems to teenage lust (Gospel Zone', 'Bad Little Woman'), covers of Chicago blues classics (Willie Dixon's 'Spoonful', Jimmy Reed's 'Peepin' and Hidin'), raga rock ('The Behemoth'), folk-rock ('Hey Joe', 'Three for Love', 'I'll Make You Sorry'), and a blues-punk grab off of commercial Top 40 ('Tomorrow's Gonna Be Another Day'), all on one 12" platter.
Thus, Belle's passion for reading was vastly expanded upon, borrowing from both the Little Woman character Jo March and Woolverton's own love of reading to further demonstrate the character's intelligence and open mind. Both Woolverton and O'Hara encouraged the filmmakers to emphasize the intelligent and book-loving aspects of Belle's personality. However, at times the animators struggled to fulfill Woolverton's vision. Originally, Belle was depicted constantly crying throughout her imprisonment; Woolverton resented this, arguing that the character was much more likely to be either searching for an escape or simply "be intrigued that she was living in an enchanted castle" than crying. "Once everybody realized she wasn’t going to be this typical Disney female, they would go to the extreme ... She became bitchy"; the screenwriter argued that Belle would be "too smart" to act this way.
The women he falls in love with form a diverse group, and include the waitress Mabel, who gives Bingo a crimson tie decorated with horseshoes ("Jeeves in the Springtime"); Honoria Glossop, the formidable daughter of Sir Roderick Glossop ("Scoring off Jeeves"); Daphne Braythwayt, a friend of Honoria ("Scoring off Jeeves"); Charlotte Corday Rowbotham, a revolutionary ("Comrade Bingo"); Lady Cynthia Wickhammersley, a family friend of Bertie's ("The Great Sermon Handicap"); and Mary Burgess, niece of the Rev. Francis Heppenstall ("The Metropolitan Touch"). Bingo is usually rejected within a short amount of time, and generally the girl gets engaged to someone else. In the last short story in The Inimitable Jeeves, "Bingo and the Little Woman", Bingo falls in love again when he sees Rosie M. Banks at the Senior Liberal Club, where Rosie is working as a waitress to gather material for her next book.
Miller was originally slated to produce it, but he was tied up with production of The Rolling Stones' album Beggar's Banquet and he is credited as co-producer on only two tracks, "The Breeze" and "Peace of Mind". The bulk of the album was produced by former Traffic member Dave Mason, and recorded at London's Olympic Studios with engineers Eddie Kramer and George Chkiantz. 18 year old Mike Batt arranged string and brass overdubs, notably on "The Chase", "Mellowing Grey" and "Old Songs, New Songs" but was uncredited. "Old Songs, New Songs" also included an uncredited tenor sax solo from Tubby Hayes. Mason also contributed one composition to the album, "Never Like This", the only song recorded by Family not written by a band member, and the group also backed Mason on “Little Woman”, the B side of his February 1968 single "Just For You".
Throughout 1966 and 1967, the Shadows of Knight were forerunners of the Chicago garage rock scene, and gained prominence with a string of national hits on the Billboard Hot 100, including "Gloria", "Oh Yeah", and "Bad Little Woman". However, by the end of 1967 the classic "Gloria" line-up began to disband when Jerry McGeorge left to join the psychedelic rock group H. P. Lovecraft, Joe Kelley formed his own blues band, and Hawk Wolinski later helped establish Bangor Flying Circus. Lead vocalist Jim Sohns, having authority over the Shadows of Knight's name, dismissed the remaining band members, and formed a new line-up with Woody Woodruff (lead guitar), John Fisher (bass guitar), and Ken Turkin (drums). In 1968, the band signed a recording contract with Super K Productions, a subsidiary of Buddah Records responsible for hits with primarily bubblegum pop bands like 1910 Fruitgum Company and the Ohio Express.
On their first visit, Johnson said: “From Armidel (Armadale) we came at night to Coriatachan, a house very pleasantly situated between two brooks, with one of the highest hills of the island behind it. It is the residence of Mr. Mackinnon, by whom we were treated with very liberal hospitality, among a more numerous and elegant company than it could have been supposed easy to collect.” Corriechatachan ruins interior door on the ground level Boswell recorded that; “Dr Johnson was much pleased with his entertainment here. There were many good books in the house: Hector Boethius in Latin; Cave's Lives of the Fathers; Baker's Chronicle; Jeremy Collier's Church History; Dr Johnson's small Dictionary; Craufurd's Officers of State, and several more…” On their second visit, Boswell recorded, “This evening one of our married ladies, a lively pretty little woman, good-humouredly sat down upon Dr Johnson's knee, and, being encouraged by some of the company, put her hands round his neck, and kissed him.
In addition, he was a confirmed socialist and a close friend of the leftist writer, Herman Gorter This influence may also be reflected in his harsh criticism of Johanna Gezina van Gogh-Bonger while she was organizing in 1892 an exhibition of Vincent Willem van Gogh's, her brother in law's works, hence indirectly criticizing also Van Goghs's work: "Mrs Van Gogh is a charming little woman, but it irritates me when someone gushes fanatically on a subject she knows nothing about, and although blinded by sentimentality still thinks she is adopting a strictly critical attitude. It is schoolgirlish twaddle, nothing more. [...] The work that Mrs Van Gogh would like best is the one that was the most bombastic and sentimental, the one that made her shed the most tears; she forgets that her sorrow is turning Vincent into a god."Quoted in J.M. Joosten, "Van Gogh publicaties (15) deel 6", Museumjournaal 15 (1970), pp.
The story of Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle was inspired by Kitty MacDonald, a Scottish washerwoman the Potters employed over the course of eleven summers at Dalguise House on the River Tay in Perthshire, writes Leslie Linder. Potter was 26 when, in 1892, she visited MacDonald while staying at Heath Park, Birnam. She wrote in her journal: "Went out with the pony ... to see Kitty MacDonald, our old washerwoman ... Kitty is eighty-three but waken, and delightfully merry ... She is a comical, round little woman, as brown as a berry and wears a multitude of petticoats and a white mutch. Her memory goes back for seventy years, and I really believe she is prepared to enumerate the articles of her first wash in the year '71". In 1942, the year before she died, Potter's thoughts returned to Kitty MacDonald when she wrote about a piece of crockery: > Seventy eighty years ago it belonged to another old woman, old Katie > MacDonald, the Highland washerwoman.
"Wagenknecht, 174–5 Longfellow led a privileged childhood growing up in an affluent Cambridge family home. Her mother records of young Alice that, "She likes to take up a book & read stories & says more cunning things than can be remembered"Cambridge, Massachusetts. Longfellow House – Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site, Frances Elizabeth Appleton Longfellow Papers, Box 9, Chronicles of the Children II 1849–1858, 64–7 and that "she is an impetuous little woman full of character & originality.”Cambridge, Massachusetts. Longfellow House – Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site, Frances Elizabeth Appleton Longfellow Papers, Box 9, Chronicles of the Children II 1849–1858, 67–8 Longfellow learned very quickly in her private lessons with her governess or at private schools such as Miss C. S. Lyman's School, and later Professor Williston's School,Wagenknecht, 210. Fanny writes of Alice in September 1857 that she "is the best and brightest of little girls, a great pet of her papa's." and by the age of ten her mother wrote that Alice was "so wise she is quite a companion for me."Wagenknecht, 234. Letter dated February 12, 1861. After the death of her mother in 1861, Longfellow took on something of a caretaker role to her two younger sisters, which arguably solidified her "graveness" as described in her father's 1859 poem.

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