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"war paint" Definitions
  1. paint put on parts of the body (such as the face) by American Indians as a sign of going to war
  2. MAKEUP

247 Sentences With "war paint"

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

Andy Karl, Groundhog Day Ben Platt, Dear Evan Hansen Denée Benton, Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 28 Christine Ebersole, War Paint Patti LuPone, War Paint Bette Midler, Hello, Dolly!
" Two other new musicals performed: "Bandstand" and "War Paint.
You see that in my first Netflix special, War Paint.
As a study in contrasts, "War Paint" quickly turns monochrome.
"— inspiring a memorable number in last year's musical "War Paint.
You could say all that makeup could be war paint.
Makeup is war paint — that's how I think about it now.
At the final performance of the musical "War Paint" on Nov.
In the industry, basically everyone refers to makeup as war paint.
She is currently starring in "War Paint" in Chicago opposite Patti LuPone.
How to watch: Iliza Shlesinger: War Paint is now streaming on Netflix.
The Broadway musical "War Paint" has changed its closing date to Nov.
But I was sorry to find the score of "War Paint" skunked.
Makeup is her war paint, and her look is confident, unapologetic, and strong.
In Ragnarok, he's sporting a close-cropped buzz along with the war paint.
On the cover, decorating Hendrix's face like war paint, are lines of cocaine.
War Paint is used to mark our horses and warriors to protect them.
Otherwise, "War Paint" is a double portrait of unchanging women during changing times.
After watching Knock Down the House, I get it: AOC's lipstick is war paint.
The musical, "War Paint," stars two beloved Broadway divas, Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole.
War Paint attempts to offer a solution, but its methods are questionable at best.
Andy Karl, Groundhog Day Ben Platt, Dear Evan Hansen Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical Denée Benton, Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812 Christine Ebersole, War Paint Patti LuPone, War Paint Bette Midler, Hello, Dolly!
She saw her brother Alex, his face white with what appeared to be war paint.
" Christine Ebersole, "War Paint" Patti LuPone, "War Paint" Denee Benton, "Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812" Eva Noblezada, "Miss Saigon" Best performance by a leading actor in a musical: Ben Platt, "Dear Evan Hansen" Andy Karl, "Groundhog Day" David Hyde Pierce, "Hello, Dolly!
Kratos gives "Daddy" a whole new meaning No one wears war paint like the god himself.
He wears it like war paint—elegantly nestled in the space between his sea captain's beard.
Then Hersey spotted two men and a woman in war paint and full ersatz battle gear.
" By the time she was 15, Ms. Schild was known on the mountain as "War Paint.
Makeup looked more like war paint than ornament, and hair was teased out — hopeful intimidation-tactic chic.
I imagine you have some strong feelings on the new line of makeup for men called War Paint?
"War Paint," a double-barreled musical starring Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole, will close on Broadway on Dec.
When she performs, she puts on the war paint, and usually goes in for fanciful costumes and serious heels.
Armed with a sweat-proof product that could bring her look to life, Trotter put on her war paint.
Catherine Zuber, who is nominated for a Tony for her costumes in "War Paint," is creating Ms. LuPone's look.
While you don't hear it much anymore, women have been calling makeup war paint colloquially for a long time.
But "War Paint" also pauses to question the social values of a system that forces women to conceal their imperfections.
So, you can see a tank in the actual, original First World War paint, and they're still on the tank.
When the time came, both divas received their mourners there, in full war paint, courtesy of visagistes from their salons.
But the best example of that trick is the one that makes "War Paint" (Ghostlight) a must-have cast album.
Her mugshot's just as edgy as her character on '100' -- albeit with a lot less blood and war paint on her face.
Midler got a nod but will be up against fellow Broadway divas Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole (both nominated for War Paint).
Two groups of football players charged each other in war paint and dandy fashions, a kaleidoscope of velvet, silk and polyester looks.
By the end of the game she's a mess of blood, dirt, and war paint, her awful journey baked right onto her skin.
CHICAGO — For a musical that covers so many years — and so many shades of lipstick — "War Paint" never really seems to move forward.
And in a highly competitive season for new musicals, "War Paint" never broke out to be a hit; during the week ending Oct.
Paloma Young, Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812 Catherine Zuber, War Paint Jane Greenwood, Lillian Hellman's The Little Foxes Susan Hilferty, Present Laughter Toni-Leslie James, August Wilson's Jitney David Zinn, A Doll's House, Part 2 Rob Howell, Groundhog Day David Korins, War Paint Mimi Lien, Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812 Santo Loquasto, Hello, Dolly!
" It's an alternate, insular world where I find myself running through a field, streaked in war paint, chanting: "We have spirit, because we're Blues!
And most recently for "War Paint," he imagined a pink staircase for Christine Ebersole to make her dramatic entrance as the beauty titan Elizabeth Arden.
Paloma Young, Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812 Catherine Zuber, War Paint Best Orchestrations Bill Elliott and Greg Anthony Rassen, Bandstand Larry Hochman, Hello, Dolly!
The creators of "War Paint" appreciate the pulpy appeal of such cinematic fare, in which exaggerated artificial surfaces and badinage conceal ravenous ambition and broken hearts.
The Brewster houses, an emptied housing project that had been painted to look as if the buildings were wearing tribalistic war paint, had been razed completely.
So if you send a model onto a runway with no shirt and wearing war paint, the guys on Metro-North don't know what's going on.
But War Paint — tagline: "Makeup Design By Men, For Men" — likely didn't expect the reactions it's been getting since its new clip was released on Wednesday.
" Mr. Murphy, a creator of television's "American Horror Story" and "Feud," is producing the show along with David Stone, whose Broadway productions include "Wicked" and "War Paint.
So, though my eyes occasionally glazed seeing "War Paint" for the second time, I wouldn't have missed it, if only to hear its leading ladies' climactic ballads.
The War Paint star, 68, also had some choice words for Real Housewives of New York City star LuAnn D'Agostino and former Dance Moms star Abby Lee Miller.
He went on raids along the Siegfried Line with red war-paint under his uniform and a yellow-daubed eagle feather, symbol of his spirit-helper, tucked inside his helmet.
As in "Grey Gardens" and "War Paint," his melodies go their own delicious ways, and Mr. Freedman's lyrics (as in "A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder") handily keep up.
Ever since, she's collaborated with pop's cool kids, including Nick Jonas ("Close"), Kelly Clarkson ("War Paint"), Hailee Steinfeld ("Love Myself") and Jack Antonoff's indie act Bleachers ("Hate That You Know Me").
One girl smears menstrual blood on her face like war paint; another fantasizes about giving birth, smashing her newborn's head on the rocks and force-feeding the corpse to her rivals.
Trotter's addition to the track and field pantheon is her "war paint": the clinquant pattern of glitter paint and stick-on sequins that adorn her cheek and temple during her biggest races.
Two of the most persuasive saleswomen New York has ever seen are peddling their wares with high style and equal determination at the Nederlander Theater, where "War Paint" opened on Thursday night.
Ms. Midler, who first appeared on Broadway in 1967, has a three-to-one lead over her closest competitor, Patti LuPone of "War Paint," in the race for best actress in a musical.
Then parents and teachers dress up the kiddos in faux native garb; they paint their faces in "war paint," and don them with synthetic feathers and paper headbands for some cheap Thanksgiving production.
For Bizu, the fragrance — which looks like a tube of red lipstick, a product a lot of women use as their figurative "war paint" — is about how good it feels to be a woman.
In "War Paint" (now in previews, at the Nederlander), with a score by Scott Frankel and Michael Korie ("Grey Gardens"), they're played by Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole, no strangers to the D-word.
Ms. Ebersole — who collaborated previously with the "War Paint" team to Tony-winning brilliance in "Grey Gardens" — brings not just enameled chipperness but also a startling glimpse of genuine, self-surprising pain to her singing.
Harper had been dubbed "Baseball's Chosen One " by Sports Illustrated and every team, Yankees included, were angling to get him At the time, Harper didn't smear eye black all over his face like tribal war paint.
A number of startups have raced to cash in on men taking care of themselves—Hims, Bulldog, and War Paint market themselves as male-focused wellness brands—and that can muddy the water for any newbie.
" This was a reminder that the unexpected foil in the Arden-Rubinstein showdown was Charles Revson, the founder of Revlon, rendered in "War Paint" by Erik Liberman as "a two-bit carnival barker in an Italian suit.
Nestled on my Instagram feed between a picture of a high school friend living their adult life and one of the Kardashians (they're starting to blur together), was a sponsored post for "makeup for men" entitled War Paint.
As the birthday bash wrapped up, her friends presented her with a "plethora" of gifts, including Tiffany jewelry, presents from Nordstrom and an autographed War Paint poster signed by Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole (two of Chenoweth's idols).
Kretz himself is a sometime lion hunter; in a local newspaper, I found a picture of him sitting on a pickup's tailgate beside a big dead tom, wearing stripes of its blood on his cheeks like war paint.
There's even the part where you have to wake up and go to makeup, two hours before your live shots, so you can have the full war paint put on with the fake eyelashes, and then head to the White House.
A fast bowler wore war paint, another let his long hair bounce as he ran in to bowl, their batsmen hit with abandon, they argued animatedly with one another on the field, and when they celebrated, the world celebrated with them.
More a chat 'n' chew between Tony Award-winning actresses getting the chance to share a Broadway stage for the first time in "War Paint," one of a half-dozen new musicals debuting in a mad cram before the season ends.
But this Sunday, when she makes her entrance as a nominee for best performance by an actress in a leading role in a musical for "War Paint," she will do so in a couture gown that has been twoweeks in the planning.
Woodhead—blond, vivacious, and ample—is the author of "War Paint," a joint biography of the duelling beauty queens Helena Rubinstein and Elizabeth Arden, which has been turned into a Broadway musical of the same title, starring Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole.
Martha SackFort Washington, Pa. To the Editor: It's time to expose those of us, including a lot of elected officials, who attended summer camp in the 1950s and 1960s and whooped around a campfire dressed up as Indians, complete with feathers and war paint.
I became an Iliza fan after watching 2013's War Paint — the first in Shlesinger's trio of specials — and knew I needed to chat with the Texas comedian about her latest project, especially since Truth & Iliza is being touted as TV's first feminist, millennial late night show.
Please note that though the musical was inspired by the biography "War Paint" by Lindy Woodhead and the documentary film "The Powder & the Glory," the script by Mr. Wright ("I Am My Own Wife") telescopes, rearranges and modifies history in the service of blunt thematic tidiness.
So many of the images used in the Kansas City games — the arrowhead, which is specifically Native American; the horse called "War Paint" they prance around the field before the game; the beating drums; and that tomahawk chop — are used in disrespectful and often bastardized contexts.
Even more than when I saw them in an earlier version of "War Paint" in Chicago last summer, they look as if they were having a marvelous time, singing solo after solo about the specifics of the beauty business and the penalties of being a successful woman.
What immediately popped out to me is that the foundation's third listed ingredient is coconut oil, an ingredient that notoriously can exacerbate acne in some people, one of the issues that War Paint calls out as a malady men suffer more because their skin is oilier.
Written by Doug Wright (book), Scott Frankel (music) and Michael Korie (lyrics), and directed by Michael Greif, "War Paint" lets you know exactly what it is and where it's going (or not going) in a prologue, so you can decide right away if it's your cup of skin toner.
This is appropriate, since "War Paint" brings to mind many movies of that period, hen flicks (its stars were too regal to be chicks) like "The Women" and "Old Acquaintance," in which female antagonists in to-die-for dresses did fierce battle with one another, tooth and clawed quip.
Taboo's activism shouldn't come as a surprise: Hip-hop heads may recall that when BEP first started as an act on gangster rapper Eazy-E's Ruthless Records in the mid-90s, Taboo actually wore eagle feathers and war paint on stage as an homage to his Shoshone roots.
After all, the creators of "War Paint" — Doug Wright (book), Scott Frankel (music) and Michael Korie (lyrics) — have lovingly custom-tailored roles for Ms. LuPone and Ms. Ebersole in a show that assures them separate ovation-garnering entrances, down a staircase (for Ms. Ebersole) and a gangplank (for Ms. LuPone).
In "War Paint," which is now in previews and opens at the Nederlander Theater on April 6, Ms. Ebersole, 64, plays Miss Arden, née Florence Nightingale Graham: the entrepreneur who made cosmetics, long associated with prostitutes, acceptable and desirable to the American middle and upper classes starting in the 1910s.
This performance of "War Paint" attracted many of the principals involved in its staging, among them the director Michael Greif and the book writer Doug Wright, as well as a sprinkling of theatrical colleagues who had worked with Ms. Ebersole and Ms. LuPone in the past, giving the matinee a party atmosphere.
On the surface, little connects the last three shows in the 2018 edition: Justin Vivian Bond singing the Carpenters; an evening exploring the catalog of Scott Frankel and Michael Korie, the team behind such musicals as "Grey Gardens" and "War Paint"; and Ms. Cash, a literate Americana writer and performer who has stepped outside of her father's long shadow.
Video: University of Oxford/YouTube The authors of the research, led by Eleanor Bath and Stuart Wigby of the Oxford University Department of Zoology, deemed fit to mark their female subjects with colored spots to keep track of them, but it may as well have been war paint given these "ejaculate-induced female aggression," in the words of the paper.
Alex Lacamoire, Dear Evan Hansen Dave Malloy, Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812 Best Costume Design of a Play Jane Greenwood, Lillian Hellman's The Little Foxes Susan Hilferty, Present Laughter Toni-Leslie James, August Wilson's Jitney David Zinn, A Doll's House, Part 2 Best Scenic Design in a Musical Rob Howell, Groundhog Day David Korins, War Paint Mimi Lien, Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812 Santo Loquasto, Hello, Dolly!
As in other cities around the country, there are several nonprofit theaters that are developing musicals with Broadway aspirations: Last fall, Chicago Shakespeare Theater mounted "Ride the Cyclone," a Canadian musical that has received strong reviews as it heads toward a likely production in New York, and next summer, the Goodman Theater is mounting "War Paint," a new musical that features the Broadway stars Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole as competing cosmetics industry titans.
"If this makes men listen up and maybe want to experiment with makeup and this is their gateway, then I'm fine with it." that warpaint for men ad is bad in a Hip Musky Fashy-Fade Gentrified Speakeasy waybut the idea the makeup can be socially normalized for men is inherently a good thing War Paint has not responded to the hoopla beyond that comment on Twitter, and it seems to be deleting comments on its Instagram.
Materials: Moisture-wicking athletic gear, black Worbla (A brand of thermoplastic) Craft foam Mini zip ties "The shiniest gold fabric I could find at Hancock fabrics, which is now closed" Duct tape Makeup: Mehron Paradise Paint (teal, light blue), Mehron setting spray, Mehron Mixing Liquid, Black Moon Cosmetics "Sorrow" lipstick, Surreal Makeup "Evil Queen" liquid lip Tension rod A glove Gold spray paint Puffy paint, fabric paint Used T-shirts Fabric tape Estimated Cost: $64 Watching TaLynn Kel prepare for Dragon*Con felt like watching a warrior prepare for battle: checking weapons, fortifying armor (and war paint) and laying out a battle plan (for photo shoots at the convention, as well as visits to hotel lobbies — ideal places for air-conditioned breaks and, possibly, alcohol.) But everything about Ms. Kel's costume seemed to be giving her problems that day.
That is what actually resulted in a buck-off for Nelson. With War Paint, as Tibbs once said, "He was a horse that allows you no mistakes". Thus, War Paint showed again why he won the title. In 1958 War Paint and a horse named Joker, owned by Harry Knight & Company, tied for the award.
Sommers brought War Paint up as a bucking horse, as he raised many bucking horses. When War Paint was three years old, Hank and Bob Christensen of Christensen Brothers, stock contractors, bought him from Sommers.
Warriors often painted their face and bodies with war paint, as well as their horses, for spiritual empowerment. Each warrior created a unique design for the war paint which they often wore into battle. Feathers from birds, particularly eagle feathers, were also worn in battle as symbols of prestige and for reasons similar to war paint. Before setting out for war, the warriors organized into war parties.
War Paint's preserved body is on display at the museum in the Pendleton Round-Up and Happy Canyon Hall of Fame in Oregon. In 2019, the Idaho Rodeo Hall of Fame inducted War Paoint. In 2011, the ProRodeo Hall of Fame inducted War Paint. In 2001, the Ellensburg Rodeo Hall of Fame inducted War Paint and in 1969, the Pendleton Round-Up and Happy Canyon Hall of Fame inducted War Paint.
I saw evidences of war-paint and a recent war-dance that forerun an Indian attack.
The Christensen Brothers still brought War Paint to the ceremony to be presented for the award. The arena was packed with publicity personnel. Match of Champions The 1957 World Champion Saddle Bronc rider, Alvin Nelson, attended the 1958 award ceremony. Nelson and War Paint had never met up.
In 1966, at the Emerald Empire RoundUp, in Eugene, Oregon, War Paint bucked off Jim Botham. His owners had him unsaddled in the arena, and announced that he was retired. War Paint traveled 540,000 miles in his career. In his last season, he had 28 starts with 25 buck-offs.
"War Paint" debuted at number 46 on the Canada Country chart dated August 6, 2016. It reached a peak position of 13 on the chart dated November 5, 2016, earning Merlo her second consecutive top twenty radio single. "War Paint" also reached number 47 on the comprehensive Canada All-Format Airplay chart.
"You Smell of War Paint, Roar of The Crowd." LexisNexis. The Washington Post, 01/23/83. Web. 13 Sep 2010.
Quilty's experiences as a war artist and the work he produced as a result of it was explored in the ABC TV's Australian Story program "War Paint" screened on 3 September 2012.Transcript of "War Paint", Quilty's "Australian Story" on ABC television He has been described as one of Australia's most famous living artists.
An exhibition ride was slated for the presentation. The chute gate opened, and War Paint jumped out in his typical high jump. Nelson was bucked off in two seconds. The Rodeo Sports News attempted to cover over Nelson's reputation by printing a story several months later that claimed War Paint had also bucked off Tibbs in the same manner.
War Paint lived into his 30s. In his retirement, the Christensen Brothers hauled him with the other horses when they took them to major rodeos to compete. Usually, it was rodeos like California Rodeo Salinas, St. Paul Rodeo, and Pendleton Round-Up. Both the fans and War Paint seemed to appreciate having their pictures taken together.
This attracted the attentions of mainstream media and "War Paint" surpassed 20 million streams in the months that followed. The artist has credited the song's coverage in Nylon magazine as being part of its success. The accompanying music video of "War Paint" was directed by Garen Barsegian. The song has received generally favourable reviews from music critics.
War Paint bucked at the highest professional level which was the Rodeo Cowboys Association (RCA), renamed to the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) in 1975. Christensen Brothers first tried out War Paint, who weighed , in bareback bronc riding competition. However, they soon moved him to saddle bronc riding competition, where he excelled. In the 1950s he became known worldwide for his bucking ability.
War Paint is a musical with book by Doug Wright, music by Scott Frankel, and lyrics by Michael Korie, based both on Lindy Woodhead's 2004 book War Paint and on the 2007 documentary film The Powder & the Glory by Ann Carol Grossman and Arnie Reisman. The musical focuses on the lives of and rivalry between 20th-century female entrepreneurs Elizabeth Arden and Helena Rubinstein.
When War Paint became very old and his health was declining, the stock contractors made the decision to euthanize him so he would not have to endure another hard winter. It was Kent Rothrock, a Pendleton rancher, who had the idea to have his body preserved. War Paint died in October 1975. His owners accepted Rothrock's idea and had his body preserved by a taxidermist.
"War Paint" is a song co-written and recorded by Canadian country music artist Madeline Merlo for her debut studio album, Free Soul (2016). Merlo wrote the song with April Geesbreght and Eric Olson, the latter of whom also produced the track under the moniker EO. "War Paint" was serviced to Canadian country radio on June 24, 2016 as the fifth single from Free Soul.
The show opened at PRISM in Los Angeles on November 19, 2011 and ran through January 7, 2012. A catalog published by PRISM and PictureBox, edited by Mike Kelley and Dan Nadel with an essay by Nicole Rudick accompanied the exhibition. In July 2012, Niagara exhibited her first Detroit show in 6 years, War Paint at Re:View Contemporary Gallery. "Blast Off Nurse", acrylic on canvas, "War Paint" series, Niagara, 2012 "Treat 'Em Rough Boys", acrylic on canvas, "War Paint" series, Niagara, 2012 In 2014 Niagara was the inspiration for a project in March 2014 British Vogue, Cause Célèbre, produced by Kate Moss in which model Daria Werbowy stands in for Niagara.
On 19 August 1971 he did so again, despite the fact that some of the dissidents were in war paint. He was killed shortly after beginning negotiations.
9SC and in mid-September a December 30, 2017 closing date was posted: the musical's closing would in fact be moved up to November 5, 2017, to accommodate LuPone's need for have hip replacement surgery. Including previews, War Paint played on Broadway for 269 performances.Gans, Andrew. " 'War Paint', Starring Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole, Moves Up Broadway Closing Date" Playbill, October 13, 2017 The Broadway production received 4 Tony Award nominations.
According to the Edison catalog, the actors were "genuine Sioux Indians, in full war paint and war costumes." They were also apparently veterans of Buffalo Bill's Wild West show.
War Paint ( - 1975) was a saddle bronc who was a three-time Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association Bucking Horse of the Year. He won the award in 1956, 1957, and in 1958 he tied with another horse. He was inducted into three halls of fame, the most prominent being the ProRodeo Hall of Fame in 2011. War Paint was known for his bucking ability and his buck-off record, which was close to 90 percent.
On November 12, 2015 the Goodman Theatre in Chicago announced its hosting of the world premiere of War Paint which under the direction of Michael Greif previewed from June 28, 2016 prior to its official July 18-August 21, 2016 run.Gans, Andrew. "Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole Apply War Paint, Starting Tonight", playbill.com, June 28, 2016Viagas, Robert. "The Verdict: See How Critics Reviewed LuPone/Ebersole 'War Paint' in Chicago" Playbill, July 18, 2016 The production starred Patti LuPone as Rubinstein and Christine Ebersole as Arden, with John Dossett as Tommy Lewis, Arden's husband, Douglas Sills, as Harry Fleming, Rubinstein's confidante,Gans, Andrew. " War Paint's Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole Find Their Leading Men" Playbill, April 15, 2016 and Erik Liberman as Revlon founder Charles Revson.
The musical had a brief run on Broadway in March and April 2013 after premiering at the La Jolla Playhouse in 2012. He wrote the book for a musical, War Paint, about Helena Rubinstein and Elizabeth Arden. The music is by Scott Frankel and the lyrics by Michael Korie. War Paint premiered at the Goodman Theatre, Chicago, from June 28 to August 14, 2016, with stars Patti Lupone as Helena Rubinstein and Christine Ebersole as Elizabeth Arden.
McCoy's stage show was popular, running eight months in Hollywood and several more months in London and Paris. McCoy returned to his Wyoming ranch, but Irving Thalberg of MGM soon signed him to a contract to star in a series of outdoor adventures and McCoy rose to stardom. His first MGM feature was War Paint (1926), featuring epic scenes of the Wind River Indians on horseback, staged by McCoy and director Woody Van Dyke. (Footage from War Paint was reused in many low-budget westerns, well into the 1950s.) War Paint set the tone for future McCoy westerns, in that Indians were always portrayed sympathetically, and never as bloodthirsty savages. One notable McCoy feature for MGM was The Law of the Range (1928), in which he starred with Joan Crawford.
In April 2019 War Paint made its regional theatre debut with nine performances produced by Community Theatre of Little Rock. A production by the Kalamazoo Civic Players is scheduled for May 3–19, 2019.
As with Carter, Friend designed each tribe to have their own identifiable aesthetic, such as the Jabari Tribe having hair styled with "very straight, clean lines" and war-paint detail, inspired by Senegalese warriors.
The song was supported via Nylon magazine and Fletcher believed that the publications coverage of the single helped to make it successful. A remix titled "War Paint (Young Bombs Remix)" was later released to Spotify.
They were not yet bedaubed with war paint, but they were as restless as panthers in a cage, and it was only a matter of days when they would whoop and howl with the loudest.
"War Paint" was inspired by Merlo's experience losing a friend to mental illness and features "more serious imagery and meaning" than her previous releases. The song is "about fighting for somebody going through a dark time," according to Merlo, and is "somewhat inspired by mental-health issues, but also about the people who have to take those things on." Lyrically, it describes the ways one stands by their loved ones in times of trouble, wearing their struggles "like war paint" so that they can fight together.
An out is a trip out of the bucking chute. A qualified ride is 8 seconds long. Some cowboys who rode War Paint for a qualified ride include Manual Enos who got the first qualified ride on him. Enos rode War Paint a few times. Enos, for example, rode War Paint for a qualified ride in Prineville, Oregon, in 1955 and once in Redmond, California, in 1959. Others who rode him include Kenny McLena in Ellensburg, Washington; Cecil Bedford in Prineville, Oregon, in 1952; Tuffy Federer in Eugene, Oregon, in 1953; hall of famer Bud Linderman in Klamath Falls, Oregon, in 1953; Bill Ward in Klamath Falls, Oregon, in 1954; Les Johnson in Redmond, Oregon, 1957; Jackie Wright in Roseburg, Oregon, in 1957; Les Johnson at the NFR in Dallas, Texas, in 1959; and Kenny McLena at the Pendleton Round-Up in 1962.
His attire in The King of Fighters XIV is a mix of his '99 and XII outfits, with a white tank top and green camouflage cargo pants. His body also sports light green war paint in this.
The international edition of the album features bonus track "Loveable", while Japan-exclusive "War Paint" is a tribal song, with a critic from Est. '97 thinking of it as "an anti bully jam where confidence is key to protecting oneself".
After applying war paint, the Yamasee woke the Carolinians and attacked them. Two of the six men escaped. Seymour Burroughs fled and, although shot twice, raised an alarm in the Port Royal settlements. The Yamasee killed Nairne, Wright, Warner, and Bray.
"War Paint" is the first commercial work from the singer following her stint on reality television show and music competition The X Factor; where she competed as part of the girl group "Lakoda Rayne". It was the first single to be released commercially from her planned "Finding Fletcher" EP. Fletcher took a break from education to concentrate on her music career. She went to Nashville, Tennessee where she secured a writing session with Jamie Kenney. They co-wrote "War Paint" in their first session together, but Fletcher already had the concept of the song in mind.
"War Paint" is the debut single by American recording artist Fletcher. The song was released to digital outlets June 17, 2015. The song is the lead single from her debut EP titled Finding Fletcher. The song is written by Cari Fletcher and Jamie Kenney.
War Paint was foaled c. 1945 in the Klamath marsh on the Klamath Indian Reservation in Northern Klamath County, Oregon. He was raised by a Klamath Tribe member named Orrie Sommers. War Paint's sire was a big-boned Paint stallion who was registered as a Quarter Horse.
Brian Foss, War Paint: Art, War, State and Identity in Britain, 1939 to 1945 (New Haven, Yale University Press, 2007), . During this period he established a close relationship with Eric Ravilious.Anne Ullman, Ravilious at War (Upper Denby, Fleece Press, 2002), . He was appointed a CBE in 1952.
Gans, Andrew. "Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole Apply War Paint, Starting Tonight", playbill.com, June 28, 2016 Among his many directing credits Off-Broadway are Katori Hall's Our Lady of Kibeho, John Guare's Landscape of the Body and A Few Stout Individuals at Signature Theatre,Listing signaturetheatre.
McNiece's demolitions experience with the fire department before the war made him the section sergeant and his mission focus kept him in that rank in spite of his deliberate disobedience and disrespect during training. His first sergeant and company commanders knew he was the man the regiment could count on during combat.Richard E. Killblane and Brian Miller, War Paint; The Filthy Thirteen Jump Into Normandy, Victory Press, 2013 His escapades are documented in his words in The Filthy Thirteen, Fighting With the Filthy Thirteen, and War Paint; The Filthy Thirteen Jump Into Normandy. McNiece went on to make a total of four wartime combat jumps, the first as part of the Invasion of Normandy in 1944.
It was a great deal of money in that time period. In 1959, the first National Finals Rodeo (NFR) took place. War Paint competed at the NFR for the first and only time, where he was ridden twice. He helped Jim Tescher and Les Johnson finish 1–2 in the Average race.
War Paint bucked off 90 percent of his riders over a two decade career. He had a signature dive which occurred within his first three jumps. The handful of riders that did ride him figured out how to get past that dive. He was popular with all the different rodeo personnel and fans.
With Conspiracy, he wore a mesh of black and white line war paint, with some red "blood" made to look like a wound coming out of his forehead. With his album The Puppet Master, he used very little white and mainly had black crosses and inverted crosses going up and down his face.
It was the third Playhouse 90 film produced by Screen Gems. Steve Drumm, a Blackfoot Indian, served as the makeup and hair expert for the actors playing the parts of the Indians. He was in charge of ensuring the use of authentic haircuts, applying war paint, and overseeing scalpings. The production used approximately 75 horses.
This song was also the first track on some versions of I'd Rather Believe in You, and in Australia the track was retitled "Images". A followup to "Pirate", "War Paint and Soft Feathers", did not chart. As with her other two Warner Bros. releases, Cherished has never had a legitimate reissue in any format.
Private Ware applies last second war paint to Private Plaudo in England June 1944. The pathfinders of the 101st Airborne Division led the way on D-Day in the night drop prior to the invasion. These night drops caused a lot of trouble for the gliders. Many crashed and equipment and personnel were lost.
Beaujeu led his small force into the attack, where he was shot dead in the opening moments when the attack was launched on July 9, 1755. However, his patronage to the Native American customs, such as wearing war paint and regalia, helped raise the morale and fighting tenacity of the warriors under his command.
The video for "War Paint" was released via the singer's YouTube account on July 8, 2015. The video was produced in a studio in Brooklyn, New York. It was filmed in one large room and took twelve hours to film. Garen Barsegian directed the video and Oleksii Babenko edited the video in post-production.
"My Night to Howl" is a song recorded by American country music artist Lorrie Morgan. It was released in March 1994 as the first single from the album War Paint. The song reached number 31 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. The song was written by Charlie Black, Austin Roberts and Rick Giles.
Michael Park, who originated the role of Larry in the Arena Stage production, returned for the Broadway production (replacing John Dossett who went on to the musical War Paint). All other cast members from the Second Stage production returned for the Broadway engagement.Viagas, Robert. " 'Dear Evan Hansen' Announces Broadway Theatre, Date and Cast" Playbill, June 7, 2016Gordon, David.
She is rescued but Bobby cannot remember anything. During the night Bobby feels compelled to sneak out his window to the beach and his sister Missy follows him. The adults search for them and find the dead body of Riley, formerly their main suspect. They find Chief Whalen covered in war paint attempting to kill Missy.
Up to 500 people usually played Pasuckuakohowog at one time, while many games had up to 1000 players. Pasuckuakohowog was a dangerous game and was played almost like a war. Players would often have to quit due to broken bones or other serious injuries. Pasuckuakohowog players wore ornaments and war paint to disguise themselves from retaliation after the game.
His debut as Tim McCoy in War Paint was announced under the banner "He's the real McCoy!" In order to maximize the economics, the film was shot simultaneously on location with another film, Winners of the Wilderness.Eames, John Douglas, The MGM Story, 1981 The film is considered lost. A trailer however is preserved at the Library of Congress.
The artist had envisioned the concept for the song before she began working with Kenney. They wrote and recorded "War Paint" in Nashville, Tennessee. The song was released digitally only, but was also made available via music streaming service Spotify. It became a viral success and was listed as the most shared song on the application for two weeks.
The musical featured scenic design by David Korins, costume design by Catherine Zuber, lighting design by Kenneth Posner, sound design by Brian Ronan, orchestrations by Bruce Coughlin, and choreography by Christopher Gattelli. On October 13, 2016 it was announced that War Paint would be produced on Broadway playing at the Nederlander Theatre in previews from March 7, 2017 and officially opening April 6.
The Rodeo Sports News presented the winner with a silver mounted bucking horse halter, which was decorative but also functional. War Paint won the award again the next year in 1957. The award ceremony was again held in January of the following year, 1958. Stock contractors Beutler Brothers furnished all of the bucking horses for the National Western Stock Show's rodeo.
Leading a small force composed of regular soldiers, Canadian militia, and a majority of native Indians, he managed to defeat the British troops. Although killed at the beginning of the confrontation, he remained famous for having used Indian habits, such as the use of war paint during the ambush. He was buried under the walls of Fort Duquesne (today Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania).
War Paint, goodmantheatre, accessed June 7, 2016 It ran on Broadway in 2017. The musical received four Tony Award nominations for Ebersole, LuPone, for its set design and costume design. For television, Wright worked on four pilots for producer Norman Lear and teleplays for Hallmark Entertainment and HBO. In film, Wright’s credits include screenplays for Fine Line Features, Fox Searchlight, and DreamWorks SKG.
Free Soul is the debut studio album by Canadian country music artist Madeline Merlo. It was released on April 29, 2016 via Open Road Recordings. The album includes the singles "Sinking Like a Stone", "Alive", "Honey Jack", "Whatcha Wanna Do About It", "War Paint", and "Over and Over". Upon release, the album debuted at number 88 on the Billboard Canadian Albums Chart.
She believed it was a "killer concept" and had previously been undecided about keeping the song for herself or selling it to another artist. Fletcher has explained that her concept enabled the creation of a strong chorus. They then spent three days working on aspects of the hooks featured on "War Paint. Fletcher described the song as having "a beautiful meaning.
Rubin, showing a total lack of concern or worries, lightheartedly blew soap bubbles as members of Congress questioned his Communist affiliations. He subsequently appeared before the HUAC as a bare-chested guerrilla in Viet Cong pajamas, with war paint and carrying a toy M-16 rifle, and later as Santa Claus.A Yippie Manifesto by Jerry Rubin . History & Political Science Department.
War Paint is a 1953 Western film directed by Lesley Selander and starring Robert Stack and Joan Taylor. A U.S. Cavalry lieutenant is assigned to deliver a peace treaty to a powerful Indian chief, but two Indians have vowed to kill the officer before he completes his mission. The film was shot in Pathecolor and filmed on location in Death Valley National Park.
Shoal bass are generally olive green to nearly black along the back. A dusky dark blotch about 50 to 67 percent of the size of the eye occurs on the back edge of the gill cover. Three diagonal black lines radiate along the side of the head looking like war paint. Ten to fifteen vertical blotches appear along the sides with tiger-stripes often appearing in between.
They released a greatest hits album entitled Follow Your Bliss: The Best of Senses Fail which featured music from all of their previous albums and came with an added four-track EP of new songs. The album was released on June 19, 2012 in a double-CD package and it is limited to 10,000 copies. On June 15, they released "War Paint" from their Greatest Hits album.
In 1958, War Paint was approximately 11 years of age. The Christensen Brothers had bucked the horse for eight years, mostly in California and in the states north of it. Hank Christensen was known to say that the horse had no distinctive bucking pattern but just tried his hardest. The stock contractor spent $10,000 to insure the horse with Lloyd's of London, the first to do so.
The cover of War Paint; The Filthy Thirteen Jump into Normandy shows a copy of a commissioned painting by Joel Iskowitz, depicting the Filthy Thirteen getting ready for their jump into Normandy. The Stephens County Currahee Military Museum in Toccoa, Georgia commissioned a bronze bust of Jake McNiece. Andrew Jones wrote and directed a low budget film about the unit titled, "D-Day Assassins" released in 2019.
Its adherents wore face-paint like the war-paint of Native Americans and dressed like hippies. The emphasis was on "stare insieme" (being together), spontaneity and the arts, especially music. The group was active in Rome, during the occupation of the university La Sapienza in 1977. On 11 March 1977, riots took place in Bologna following the killing of student Francesco Lorusso by police.
When the contingent of Wild Westers and the Carlisle Cadets and Band came into view, President Roosevelt vigorously waived his hat and all in the President's box rose to their feet to behold the powerful imagery of the six famous Native American Chiefs on horseback adorned with face paint and elaborate feather headdresses, followed by the 46-piece Carlisle Indian School Band and a brigade of 350 Carlisle Cadets at arms. Leading the group was Geronimo, in full Apache regalia including war paint, sitting astride his horse, also in war paint, in the center of the street. It was reported that: "The Chiefs created a sensation, eclipsing the intended symbolism of a formation of 350 uniformed Carlisle students led by a marching band," and "all eyes were on the six chiefs, the cadets received passing mention in the newspapers and nobody bothered to photograph them."Robert M. Utely, "Geronimo" p.
According to Morse, Aazhawigiizhigokwe wore war paint, carried full weapons, and took part in battles, raids and hunting parties. She was a full member of the war council, performed war dances, and participated in all warrior ceremonies. Shortly after father's death in 1855, her village was ambushed by her Mdewakanton uncle, Chief Shák'pí. In this ambush, she defended her village and killed a son of Chief Shák'pí, her cousin.
At Vincennes in 1810, Tecumseh loses his temper when William Henry Harrison refuses to rescind the Treaty of Fort Wayne. In August 1810, Tecumseh and 400 armed warriors traveled down the Wabash River to meet with Harrison in Vincennes. The warriors were all wearing war paint, and their sudden appearance at first frightened the soldiers at Vincennes. The leaders of the group were escorted to Grouseland, where they met Harrison.
War Paint is a 1926 Western film directed by W. S. Van Dyke. The film stars Tim McCoy. Louis B. Mayer observed the profits made by other studios with western franchises such as Tom Mix, Buck Jones or Hoot Gibson. He selected a genuine army officer who had lived with Indian tribes to come to Hollywood as an advisor on 1922's The Covered Wagon: Colonel Timothy John Fitzgerald McCoy.
The lightning bolt on his cheek and the hailstones on his body were to become his war paint. Curly was to follow the warrior’s role to dress modestly and to do as the warrior's prophecy said so he would be unharmed in battle. For the most part, the vision was true and Crazy Horse was rarely harmed in battle, except for when he was struck by an arrow after taking two enemy scalps.
They had war paint on their faces. Her immediate thoughts were to get Annie, her small baby in the other room, and run for it, but she realized that would only make the Indians pursue her. Instead, she went to the rear door and greeted the Indians with some food. “Please come into my house and share my food,” she said to the braves, smiling and holding out some great smelling fresh bread.
""Though remote, the area is easily accessible by following the creeks that run parallel to the mountains. It is likely that the earliest Native American visitors traveled this path of least resistance, passing through and even settling here: an Indian cemetery has been found in the vicinity. The area was well known to the Cherokee, who used the red clay deposits on the banks of Potts Creek for pottery and war paint.
After consulting with the local chief, Storm Cloud, Evans learns he must locate the relic and use it in ritual combat against the monster. Once Sheriff Evans acquires the relic, Johnny Black Hawk attempts to take it from him and use it to get vengeance on the town; Evans is forced to kill him in self-defense. After donning war paint, Evans goes on to fight and ultimately defeat the Bone Eater.
Her single "War Paint" from Free Soul resonated with fans on social media, and was the No. 1 Most Added country song in Canada in its debut week. The song was written from a very personal place. It was in response to the loss of one of her friends to mental illness. She dedicated the song to all those who suffer alone, hoping it might bring them hope, and a will to battle and survive.
In another project, he took photographs of the scientists responsible for the discoveries of the New Horizons probe. In 2012, Cassidy released War Paint: Tattoo Culture & the Armed Forces, a book of photographs and interviews with tattooed veteran soldiers. In 2013, he became involved with the North Dakota Man Camp Project, a project to document the lives of oil workers in the area around the Bakken formation. Photos from the project appeared in a Slate.
No cowboy could get past the second jump for his first few years of bucking. Bronc rider Manual Enos is known as the first to make a qualified ride on the horse. One pickup man named Denny Jones, who worked at the Pendleton Round-Up in Oregon, compared the horse to ProRodeo Hall of Fame horses Midnight and Five Minutes to Midnight. "War Paint was still buckin' when he was 20 years old", claims Jones.
In 1956, saddle bronc world champion and hall of famer Casey Tibbs suggested an award for bucking horses. War Paint was voted the inaugural RCA "Bucking Horse of the Year" in 1956. The award presentation took place at the National Western Stock Show in Denver, Colorado, in January, 1957. Any horses that had bucked in 1956 were eligible to win even though the award ceremony took place the following year in 1957.
By definition the underground scene tends to be slightly apart from the mainstream and this is reflected in the politics of some of the artists and musicians associated with it. Robert Del Naja, one of the most influential artists and musicians of this scene has openly declared his opposition to the Iraq War for example. Del Naja and Banksy have both submitted art works to the War Paint exhibition which showcases anti-war art work.
Patti Cohenour (born October 17, 1952 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.) is an American actress and singer. She last performed as the standby for Elizabeth Arden the Broadway musical War Paint, a position she also held in the pre Broadway run. Previously she was seen in the Broadway production of The Light in the Piazza as Signora Naccarelli. She was also the alternate for Victoria Clark in the leading role of Margaret Johnson.
An origin myth from the Murri people of Queensland, cited by Andrew Lang, describes how the Australian pelican acquired its black and white plumage. The pelican, formerly a black bird, made a canoe during a flood to save drowning people. He fell in love with a woman he thus saved, but her friends and she tricked him and escaped. The pelican consequently prepared to go to war against them by daubing himself with white clay as war paint.
It was an old Native American friend of his, and several other natives, in war paint. The natives told Mr. Robinson and his family to leave the settlement, as the people there and of the surrounding territory were to be massacred. The natives also warned to not tell anyone, especially Mr. Hunt, as Robinson's Native friend wanted to scalp him personally. Days passed, and Mr. Robinson noticed there was an absence of natives in the area.
McGraw was finally given a leading role in RKO's Armored Car Robbery (1950) directed by Richard Fleischer. He played a gangster in His Kind of Woman (1951), then had the lead in Roadblock (1951) as "Honest Joe," the insurance investigator turned thief by love. Fleischer used McGraw in the lead of The Narrow Margin (1952). He was a sergeant in One Minute to Zero (1952) and War Paint (1953) and was a villain in Thunder Over the Plains (1954).
Nightwolf has often been unfavorably discussed in the context of the portrayal of Native Americans in video games. Boon's 1995 description of the character to VideoGames provoked a comment from the magazine: "For a character described by Midway as a 'nontraditional Indian,' he certainly has all the trappings of one. Let's see, he wears feathers and war paint, swings a hatchet, shoots arrows...could there be a 'Scalp' Fatality?"VideoGames: The Ultimate Gaming Magazine #77 (June 1995).
They were led amongst large buildings until they stood before a blood-caked altar, where many of the city's inhabitants crowded around. The Indians piled reeds before the visitors; this act was followed by a procession of armed Maya warriors in full war paint, followed by ten Maya priests. The Maya set fire to the reeds and indicated that the Spanish would be killed if they were not gone by the time the reeds had been consumed.
Patti LuPone, who voices Yellow Diamond, unofficially confirmed the character in 2017 by telling a fan that her War Paint co-star Christine Ebersole was the voice of White Diamond. White Diamond's Pearl is also voiced by Ebersole, marking the first time Deedee Magno Hall does not voice a Pearl character. Sugar stated that the character would be further explored in future episodes and that fans would also learn more about Pink Diamond through White's story.
In the American Civil War set The Blue, The Gray and the Bat, Captain Bruce Wayne is aided by a Native American named Redbird. Redbird's family were killed by white men, and, until he got his revenge, he wore war paint in a design similar to a domino mask. In the futuristic Robin 3000, Earth is controlled by despotic aliens. Batman (Bruce Wayne XX) is killed trying to stop them, but his mission is continued by his nephew, Tom (Thomas) Wayne.
That year, they also continued releasing remixes, including those for Nick Jonas ("Teacher"), Secondcity ("I Wanna Feel"), and Fletcher ("War Paint"). In 2016, the pair played in Las Vegas for the first time, again opening up for The Chainsmokers at Hakkasan. New remixes that year included those for acts like Billie Eilish ("Ocean Eyes"), Troye Sivan ("Wild"), and Rozes ("Burn Wild"), among others. In 2017, Young Bombs played numerous festivals, including Lollapalooza, the Firefly Music Festival and the Shaky Beats Music Festival.
Photos of the men wearing Indian-style "mohawks" and applying war paint to one another excited the public's interest in this unit. The inspiration for this came from McNiece, who was part Choctaw. During the Normandy Invasion of Europe in June 1944, the group was airdropped with the 3rd Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment by aircraft of the 440th Troop Carrier Group of the United States Army Air Forces. They were ordered to secure or destroy the bridges over the Douve River.
He appeared in such films as War Paint (1953), The Steel Cage (1954), Ten Seconds to Hell (1959), and Under Ten Flags (1960). He returned to the University of Minnesota and earned his doctorate degree in 1966. He taught at the University of Minnesota from the mid-1960s through the late 1990s. He wrote the play Do Not Pass Go, which was produced off-Broadway, and wrote the librettos for two operas by Dominick Argento, The Voyage of Edgar Allan Poe and Valentino.
Some of the most notable include Rock of Ages, Boeing-Boeing, Lend Me a Tenor, A View From the Bridge, and The Merchant of Venice. The Araca Group also continues to provide merchandising services to many productions, both on Broadway and around the world. Some of the most notable merchandising opportunities include The Book of Mormon, Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, War Paint, Groundhog Day, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Come From Away, Anastasia, Matilda the Musical, Rodgers and Hammerstein's Cinderella, and The Humans .
Her single "Honey Jack" became a national hit across Canada, landing her the opening slot on The Road Trip Tour alongside Dean Brody and Paul Brandt. In 2015 Madeline Merlo won the CCMA Rising Star Award, and the BCCMA Female Artist of the Year. After those big wins, Madeline released a series of successful singles including "War Paint", "Over and Over", and "Whatcha Wanna Do About It" which entered into the top 10 at Canadian Country Radio. Her debut album Free Soul was released in 2016.
It was announced at Black X-Mas 2010 that he was part of Lyrikal Snuff Productions. Insane Poetry collaborated on a song with Las Vegas-based hip hop group War Paint, titled "Wasted", in 2013 on the Bloodstepp track "Underground All-Stars (The Anthem)" from the album Bass And Bubblegum and in 2014 on Ware-Wolff's "Lycanthropy (TMTM Remix)". Insane Poetry has also been on numerous Grim Reality Entertainment CDs since, including Grim Reality Entertainment Music Collection Vol. 1, GRE for the Radio Music Collection Vol.
Although each species coloration is nearly identical, the patterns which form from these colors are not. The northern sunfish tends to have more of a lateral stripe and speckled turquoise pattern along its sides, while the longear sunfish tends to have spotting on its sides, still in turquoise. Each fish also has "war paint" all the way from the mouth to the edge of the gill flap in the same color as the speckles or spots. Both also contain olive sides and bright orange bellies.
The patrol, who are unaware of the fate of Kirby and his party, have nine days to get the treaty to the chief, lest a new uprising start. At the trading post is Taslik, who offers to lead the patrol to the chief. Taslik is wearing war paint that he explains is from his killing members of a rival tribe who have trespassed on his tribe's land. Unknown to the patrol, Taslik and Wanima, who is shadowing the patrol, are strongly against the peace treaty.
Their romantic aspirations are cut short when an Indian party wish to have a talk with the cavalry but wearing war paint is spotted by Autry and his scout Rufe. Though Autry and Rufe prevent an Indian attack by opening fire on the small party of Indians when they attempt to signal a larger party to attack, the larger party escapes without being seen. Autry is demoted to trooper and Rufe has loses one month's Army Scout pay. A peace treaty is signed with the help of Duval (Monte Blue), the fort's interpreter.
Clarkson fell in love with the song's lyrical message of "having that person in your life—or people in your life—who can be a shoulder to cry on." Co-writing with Clarkson, Kurstin also produced the ninth song, "Tightrope". Originally penned as a simple piano ballad, Clarkson wrote the song about feelings people are unable to prove by themselves in a relationship; Kurstin added an orchestral element with its production. Produced by Halbert, the tenth track, "War Paint", was written by Julia Michaels, Joleen Belle, and Sir Nolan.
A figurehead was the philosopher Antonio Negri, considered the theorist of the movement, later imprisoned for suspected links with the Red Brigades and accused of having a moral responsibility for the violence associated with the Autonomists. The apex of the movement took place in 1976 and 1977, and manifested itself with urban guerrilla activity, and occupations of universities, high schools and factories. The Indiani Metropolitani were the so-called creative wing of the movement. Its adherents wore face-paint like the war-paint of Native Americans and dressed like hippies.
Some aspects of the episode are references to the novel Lord of the Flies (a pig's head on a spear, kids using primitive weapons and wearing war paint, and a burning effigy). The scene where Kearney beats a drum to make the campers work in the sweatshop is taken from the slave galley scene in the 1959 film Ben-Hur. The episode ends with the song "South of the Border". According to the DVD commentary, the song is not sung by Frank Sinatra but by another artist impersonating him.
", and although "there's fashion here that makes the clothes exciting", it is the clothes that tell the story. "I've said this many times before and I'll say it again here," he added, "a good costume makes a good actor a great one. Costumes make a show's world real." Maureen Ryan of Variety, formerly of The Huffington Post, stated that the "most enduring image of Lexa is one of her sitting on a throne made of intertwined branches, her enigmatic eyes looking out from a face half-covered in elaborate war paint.
The Indian Actors Association was formed around 1936 and was a non-profit Hollywood based organization. They formed after and were influenced by the War Paint Club, an organization meant to protect rights of Native American actors. Additionally, driven by the Hollywood practice of occasionally casting non- native actors as Indians in films, the Native actors working in Los Angeles at the time seized their opportunity to establish a pool of “authentic” Indian actors to work in film. Their goal was also to keep Indian portrayals and culture from being misrepresented on the screen.
Bloody Knife blamed the death of his son on Gall. Many of the Arikara on the expedition wanted to avenge the attack and when they found signs of a band of Sioux in the Black Hills, they began to sing war songs and adorned their horses and themselves with war paint. Custer was not interested in solving tribal feuds and ordered the scouts not to attack any Sioux unless fired upon first. Bloody Knife and twenty-five other Arikaras were sent out for more scouting and found a small camp of five lodges.
The musical War Paint dramatizes her rivalry with competitor Helena Rubinstein. After a successful out of town tryout at Chicago's Goodman Theater, the show opened on Broadway at the Nederlander Theatre on April 6, 2017, earning four Tony Award nominations, including Best Actress in a Leading Role for Christine Ebersole's portrayal of Arden as well as for Patti Lupone for her role as rival, Rubinstein. and closed on 5 November. Elizabeth Arden, as Florence Nightingale-Graham, appeared on the October 1, 2018 episode of the CBC period drama Murdoch Mysteries, portrayed by Kathryn Alexandre.
In 1994, she portrayed the lead role in a television pilot for CBS called Lorelei Lee. The show focused on a country music-singing detective, but the pilot was not picked up for series. The following year, she appeared in the ABC TV movie The Stranger Beside Me. BNA issued her next studio album, War Paint, in 1994. The album's singles were unsuccessful on the charts, with "My Night to Howl" peaking at number 31 on Hot Country Songs, "If You Came Back from Heaven" failing to reach top 40, and "Heart Over Mind" stopping at number 39.
Rivera joined the now independent IWA, upon returning to Puerto Rico. He wrestled as Savio Vega, though often ended feuds by wearing war paint in the final matches and changing his wrestling persona to El Hombre Dinamita (a reference to his "TNT" gimmick, which the WWC had trademarked and disallowed him to use). On July 16, 2001, Vega defeated Jesus Castillo, his former Los Boricuas stablemate and now a member of a stable called "Los Intocables" with Miguel Pérez, for the IWA Hardcore Championship. He was forced to vacate the title after being unable to wrestle.
The Paint Creek–Cabin Creek Strike, or the Paint Creek Mine War,Paint Creek Mine War 1911-1923 was a confrontation between striking coal miners and coal operators in Kanawha County, West Virginia, centered on the area enclosed by two streams, Paint Creek and Cabin Creek. The strike lasted from April 18, 1912 through July 1913. After the confrontation, Fred Stanton, a banker, estimated that the strike and ensuing violence cost $100,000,000. The confrontation directly caused perhaps fifty violent deaths, as well as many more deaths indirectly caused by starvation and malnutrition among the striking miners.
Diana tries to get there, but members of the Circle hit her with the arrows to stop her, knocking her unconscious. Waking up some time later, she realizes the Circle is using the old way of combat, so she takes her blood, uses it as war paint to make a "W" on her face, and heads out again. Moment now before the funeral begins; Diana uses the same old ways the Circle is using against them. Soon, Diana makes it to the Funeral pyre, and shows Alkyone the weapons the Circle were carrying, symbolizing that the other three women were defeated.
I was on the S/S Pacific and we arrived > at Hong Kong four days later. We signed British Articles, pulled down our > old Danish flag, and hoisted the Union Jack. Our neutrality markings were > covered with war paint and we left immediately for a repair job on the high > seas. On our main mast was a sealed document with this inscription: 'Thirty > days from this date, the C/S-Pacific will be a Prize of War, belonging to > his Majesty King George VI.' After this, the cable steamer, C/S Pacific was > a Man-of-War, according to the Geneva Conference.
" Some in the Canadian press were however unhappy about the 1925 sculpture, with one paper writing "it is time that Canada should cease to be advertised by representations of Indians in war paint.” Shortly after the end of World War II, the Ontario Cream Producers Marketing Board and the Dairy Producers of Canada began a campaign to promote their products. Butter sculpting was initiated as part of this campaign along with the slogan "It's better with butter". This was intended to increase butter's market share in competition to the high-powered advertising for margarine in the late 1940s.
There was a certain rodeo historian who wrote that many bronc riders would say after "seeing the paint go was–'That spotted horse is the one I want'–but generally, after a seat on him, they'd be out there checking their eyesight the next time they got a chance to see him go"! War Paint was an elite prospect of the Christensen Brothers from the beginning. It did not take long for the spotted horse to develop a reputation. His first jump out of the chute was potent, and he followed it up with a high, forceful kick.
At the time of the restoration the Keller, Washington 4-H, having been saving money for a project for several years, decided to sponsor one of the horses. Having only $400 of the needed $1,000, the club successfully petitioned the Colville Confederated tribes for the rest. In honor of that contribution, painter Sandy Shiflett painted "Running Brave" as an Appaloosa mustang with traditional feathers in the mane and war paint on the rump. She designed the blanket with a 4-H Clover on the saddle blanket and a sunflower carving on the saddle in honor of the Keller area.
In Manitoba, the Cree were first contacted by Europeans in 1682, at the mouth of the Nelson and Hayes rivers by a Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) party traveling about inland. In the south, contact was later. In 1732 in what is now northwestern Ontario, Pierre Gaultier de Varennes, sieur de La Vérendrye, met with an assembled group of 200 Cree warriors near present-day Fort Frances, as well as with the Monsoni, (a branch of the Ojibwe). Both groups had donned war paint in preparation to an attack on the Dakota and another group of Ojibwe.
While brushing her hair, she froze at the flashing glimpse of war paint and war bonnets moving through the forest. Gathering up baby Fred, she realized she could not escape while carrying him, so she hid her baby in a stack of green corn shocks, running fast and deceptively to evade the Sioux war party. She reached a friendly homestead six miles away in time to see the smoke of her cabin. Returning the next morning with armed neighbors, Rebecca saw her burned-down cabin and she found her baby Fred still in the corn husks and still alive.
Leading the group was Geronimo, in full Apache regalia, riding a horse also in war paint. It was reported that: "The Chiefs created a sensation, eclipsing the intended symbolism of a formation of 350 uniformed Carlisle students led by a marching band," and "all eyes were on the six chiefs, the cadets received passing mention in the newspapers and nobody bothered to photograph them."Robert M. Utely, "Geronimo" p.257, 2012; The Carlisle Band were led by Claude M. Stauffer and cadets led by Captain William M. Mercer, superintendent of the school and member of the 7th Cavalry.
The London Times reported that the Sioux were greatly frightened by its horror. In the premier theater of London, Red Shirt, considered the "Chief of the Show Natives by the press, was seated in the royal box suggesting an aura of nobility for the cowboys and Natives in attendance. Irving used the occasion to his own advantage, inviting the performers onstage after the show. Irving remarked to the theatrical paper Era that it was novel to "see Native chiefs in the full panoply of warpaint, holding the scalp–fringed banner in one hand and eating sugar plums with the other.
The name Maungakaramea was given to the area by local Māori. There are two interpretations of the meaning of the name, one is that "Karamea" means speargrass (Aciphylla), hence the "speargrass mountain", the other is that Karamea is a coloured clay of a reddish type used for war paint on the face and body. A safe interpretation is "Red Ochre Mountain". The area from Whangarei to Waipu, Waihonga and Tangihua, was taken from Ngaitahuhu by a Ngapuhi chief, Te Ponaharakeke, who joined with Te Ngarokiteuru to drive all the Ngaitahuhu out in the mid-18th century.
He declared: "Any treaty with the governor… is null and void if I do not approve it, for I give them so many reasons against it that they absolutely condemn what they have done." Strongbox belonging to Rale (Note Rasle spelling) Rale wrote to Vaudreuil for reinforcements, and 250 Abenaki warriors from near Quebec arrived at Norridgewock, reliably hostile to the Colonists. On July 28, 1721, over 250 Indians landed at Georgetown in war paint and flying French colors from a flotilla of 90 canoes. With them were Rale and Superior of the Missions Pierre de la Chasse.
Clyde Bellecourt, when director of the American Indian Movement stated: "It's the behavior that accompanies all of this that's offensive. The rubber tomahawks, the chicken feather headdresses, people wearing war paint and making these ridiculous war whoops with a tomahawk in one hand and a beer in the other; all of these have significant meaning for us. And the psychological impact it has, especially on our youth, is devastating." A study done by the Emory University Goizueta Business School indicates that the growing unpopularity of Native American mascots is a financial drain for professional teams, losing money compared to more popular animal mascots.
The show, adapted from the film by Todd Haynes, subsequently received a production at Playwrights Horizons in 2013. Most recently, Frankel and Korie wrote the music and lyrics, respectively, for the musical War Paint, about Helena Rubinstein and Elizabeth Arden. The musical, with the book by Doug Wright and directed by Michael Greif, premiered at the Goodman Theatre, Chicago, in the summer of 2016 with stars Patti Lupone as Helena Rubinstein and Christine Ebersole as Elizabeth Arden.War Paint, goodmantheatre, accessed June 7, 2016 The musical is based on the 2003 book by Lindy Woodhead and on the 2007 documentary The Powder and the Glory by Ann Carol Grossman and Arnie Reisman.
Fernand Léger wrote of that period: "man…relaxes and recaptures his taste for life, his frenzy to dance, to spend money…an explosion of life-force fills the world." Woodhead, Lindy, "War Paint: Madame Rubenstein and Miss Elizabeth Arden, Their Lives, Their Times, Their Rivalry," Wiley, 2004, p. 128 They came to Montparnasse from all over the globe - from Europe, including Russia, Hungary and Ukraine, from the United States, Canada, Mexico, Central and South America, and from as far away as Japan. Manuel Ortiz de Zárate, Camilo Mori and others made their way from Chile where the profound innovations in art spawned the formation of the Grupo Montparnasse in Santiago.
The Nauset School Committee voted to get rid of the Native American logo representing the "Warrior" but will keep the name "Warrior" as the official mascot. The original mascot depicted a Native American man viewed from the side with Black & Gold war paint on his face, and a feather head-dress on his head, very similar to the Washington Redskins Native American logo. The logo for the school is now a block "N" with one half of the "N" painted black, and the other half painted gold. The 2016 boys' soccer team finished the season ranked ninth in the nation by USA Today on its final Super 25 Expert Rankings.
Decoy in pre-war paint Decoy was ordered on 2 February 1931 under the 1930 Naval Estimates, and was laid down at John I. Thornycroft & Company's yard at Woolston, Southampton, on 25 June 1931. She was launched on 7 June 1932 and completed on 17 January 1933, at a total cost of £225,236, excluding equipment supplied by the Admiralty, such as weapons, ammunition and wireless equipment. The ship was initially assigned to the 1st Destroyer Flotilla in the Mediterranean and made a brief deployment to the Persian Gulf and Red Sea in September–October 1933. New torpedo tubes were fitted at Malta after her return.
Born in the Dakota Territory near the forks of the Cheyenne River about 1835, Rain-in-the-Face was from the Hunkpapa band within the Lakota nation. His name may have been a result of a fight when he was a boy in which his face was splattered like rain with his Cheyenne adversary's blood. Late in his life, the chief related that the name was reinforced by an incident when he was a young man where he was in a battle in a heavy rainstorm with a band of Gros Ventres. At the end of the lengthy combat, his face was streaked with war paint.
They were dressed in war paint, and their sudden appearance at first frightened the soldiers at Vincennes. The leaders of the group were escorted to Grouseland, where they met Harrison. Tecumseh insisted that the Fort Wayne Treaty was illegitimate, arguing that one tribe could not sell land without the approval of the other tribes; he asked Harrison to nullify it and warned that Americans should not attempt to settle the lands sold in the treaty. Tecumseh informed Harrison that he had threatened to kill the chiefs who signed the treaty if they carried out its terms and that his confederation of tribes was growing rapidly.
From New York City, Russell sang the saber song from La Grande- Duchesse de Gérolstein to audiences in Boston and Washington, D.C. She rode a bicycle custom made for her by Tiffany & Co. It was a gold-plated machine that displayed the jeweler's art at its most opulent and unconventional – the handlebars inlaid with mother-of-pearl and the wheel spokes featuring her initials set in diamonds. She had "a cream serge leg-of-mutton sleeve cycling suit with the skirt shortened by three inches, which caused a sensation and set a trend."Woodhead, Lindy. War Paint: Madame Helena Rubinstein and Miss Elizabeth Arden, Their Lives, Their Times, Their Rivalry, Wiley, 2004, pp.
Shlesinger's first comedy album and video, War Paint, was recorded on December 1, 2012 at The Lakewood Theater in Dallas, Texas, and released on Netflix on September 1, 2013. Her second stand-up special, Freezing Hot, was recorded in Denver, Colorado and premiered on Netflix on January 23, 2015. Her third Netflix stand-up special, titled Confirmed Kills, was recorded at The Vic Theatre in Chicago, Illinois, and premiered on Netflix on September 23, 2016. Her fourth Netflix stand-up special, Elder Millennial, was recorded aboard , at the USS Hornet Sea, Air & Space Museum in Alameda, California on February 23, 2018,International Code of Signals and premiered on Netflix on July 24, 2018.
Howlett received 2 years' imprisonment with 20 months suspended, with Justice Peter Underwood noting, "I have not heard such convincing evidence of self-motivated rehabilitation by a prison inmate". On 24 March 2010, Howlett pleaded guilty to trafficking in methylamphetamine, after a "sting" operation saw him exchange 27.1 grams of the drug and $4,100 for five pistols. Howlett received 2 years' imprisonment for this crime. On 24 June 2018 Howlett took a taxi to the corner of Liverpool Street and Harrington Street, and walked a short distance to Pablos cocktail bar whilst his face was smeared with red war- paint, and armed with a 7.2 × 39-mm-calibre self-loading rifle, fitted with a bayonet.
Fantome in pre-war paint Fantome served on the North America and West Indies Station, including a period in late 1902 and early 1903 when, under Commodore Montgomerie in , she enforced a blockade of the Venezuelan coast. From 1906, Fantome was operated by the Royal Navy Survey Service and conducted survey operations in Australian waters until the outbreak of war in 1914. She was transferred to the Royal Australian Navy on 27 November 1914 as a patrol vessel armed with two and four 12-pounder guns. From September 1915 to September 1917, she operated in the Bay of Bengal and South China Sea, and from late 1917 was based at Suva, Fiji performing police duties.
Coughlin’s first Broadway orchestrations were for revivals of classic Broadway shows including the 1996 revival of The King and I, The Sound of Music (1998), and Once Upon A Mattress starring Sarah Jessica Parker. Later he also orchestrated revivals of On the Town and Annie Get Your Gun (starring Bernadette Peters). Original Broadway musicals he has orchestrated include Triumph of Love (starring Betty Buckley), The Wild Party (Michael John LaChiusa), Urinetown (for which he received a Tony Award nomination), Dolly Parton's 9 to 5, Amélie and War Paint (starring Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole). In 2005, he collaborated with Ted Sperling and Adam Guettel on orchestrations for Guettel’s The Light in the Piazza which became “a surprise popular hit”.
In January 2008 Unkle released More Stories, containing a mix of B-sides, remixes, unreleased War Stories session tracks, and music composed for the film Odyssey in Rome. The same month, Rich File announced he was leaving Unkle after 10 years' collaboration to pursue work with his new band, We Fell to Earth. In March the Lazarides Gallery in London showcased War Paint, an exhibition of artworks inspired by the recent Unkle album War Stories, with works from Robert Del Naja, Warren du Preez, Nick Thornton Jones, Will Bankhead and Ben Drury. Unkle began touring the UK with Zoot Woman and Sebastian and Mr. Flash from the French electro record label Ed Banger Records.
When the prisoner yells at his captors about their callousness, they shoot him and the others dead. In Launceston, Clare valiantly confronts a newly promoted Hawkins about his war crimes in the presence of several of his fellow officers while Mangana watches in hiding. The two then flee town for the night, but Mangana dons war paint, enters the hostel where Hawkins and Ruse are lodged, and kills them both, but not before Ruse horribly wounds Mangana. Clare and Mangana flee the commotion and arrive at a beach where Mangana dances and declares himself a free man, while Clare sings a panegyric Gaelic folk song as the two watch the sun rise.
Killblane followed up both books with a more accurate history of the unit that included nearly all surviving member's accounts in War Paint; The Filthy Thirteen Jump into Normandy (2013). Jerome Preisler wrote an excellent account of the Bastogne jump in his history of the World War II pathfinders, First to Jump; How the Band of Brothers was Aided by the Brave Paratroopers of the Pathfinder Company, in 2014. The Filthy Thirteen has been translated into French, Swedish and Spanish. Maurin Picard included a chapter about Jake McNiece and the Filthy Thirteen in his book, Des Heroes Ordinaires; Au coeur de la Seconde Guerre mondiale (The Ordinary Heroes of the Second World War) published in 2016.
Tunberg was born in Los Angeles on August 15, 1936 to a family of writers. His father, also named William, was a movie, radio, television and short story writer, writing such films and television series as Old Yeller, Savage Sam, Garden of Evil, War Paint, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, The Wild Wild West, and The Monroes. Tunberg's uncle, Karl Tunberg, was a prolific screenplay writer, his most notable work being Ben-Hur. Tunberg obtained college scholarships and fellowships from the University of Idaho, University of the South (Sewanee), and University of Southern California (USC), where he received his Bachelor of Arts in architecture in 1963 and his Master of Fine Arts in sculpture in 1965.
War Paint was the first film of Howard W. Koch and Aubrey Schenck's Bel-Air Productions, who were initially signed to do three films for United Artists. As Schenck was then under contract to RKO Pictures, he did not have his name on the screenplay credits, though he initially wrote the story. Schenck recalled that when it looked as though the film financing wouldn't come in on time, Robert Stack offered to provide the money himself.p. 274 Weaver, Tom Aubrey Schenck Interview in It Came from Horrorwood: Interviews with Moviemakers in the SF and Horror Tradition McFarland, 30/10/2004 The initial draft of the screenplay featured a mercy killing that the Production Code of America objected to.
Trying to infiltrate Ultratech, Eagle joins the Disavowed and enters the first Killer Instinct tournament, and is later reported by Ultratech as having been killed in a match, though they refuse to return his body for burial. Grieving and enraged, Thunder attempts to break into an Ultratech plant and is imprisoned, but the plant is later burned to the ground, destroying any evidence regarding his parents' deaths and Eagle's disappearance, and Thunder is framed for arson. Going into hiding in New Mexico for a year, Thunder goes on another vision quest, this time receiving a vision of a metal eagle. Determined, Thunder dons his war paint and enters the second Killer Instinct tournament in the hopes of finding Eagle's remains and receiving closure.
Some notable cowboys who tried War Paint without success are Dick Pasco in Ellensburg, Washington in 1952; hall of famer Bill Linderman in Klamath Falls, Oregon, in 1953; Bill Ward in Prineville, Oregon, in 1954; Jim Nunes in Red Bluff, Oregon, in 1955; Bob Bailey in Prineville, Oregon, in 1955; Arlo Curtiss in Clovis, California; Joe Chase at the Pendleton Round-Up in 1957; J.D. McKenna in Red Bluff, California, in 1957; Ted Tufares in Lebanon, Oregon, in 1958; Dean Reeves at the Pendleton Round-Up in 1959; Tom Tescher at Red Bluff, California, in 1959, Don L. Jackson in Porterville, California, in 1964; Gene McBeth in St. Paul, Oregon, in 1966; Jim Bothum in Eugene, Oregon, in 1966; Casey Tibbs, and Deb Copenhaver.
During the July 16 episode of Raw, Sarah picked up her first singles victory in WWE with a win over Ember Moon. Logan also debuted a new Viking-inspired gimmick, wearing war paint and the commentary team making several references to her "discovering her Viking heritage". On February 17, 2019, Logan and Morgan competed in a six–team Elimination Chamber match for the inaugural WWE Women's Tag Team Championship, at the namesake pay–per–view, where they were the third team eliminated by Nia Jax and Tamina but the eventual winners were Sasha Banks and Bayley. Logan competed at WrestleMania 35 in a women's battle royal match to decide the winner of a trophy, but after assuming she had won, Carmella eliminated her at the last moment.
Coughlin has had long-running collaborations with three prominent composers: Michael John LaChiusa, the songwriting team of Scott Frankel (music) and Michael Korie (lyrics), and with opera and theater composer Ricky Ian Gordon. For LaChiusa he orchestrated 6 shows and one opera including Giant (Larry Hochman provided additional orchestrations), The Wild Party, See What I Wanna See, and First Daughter Suite (a co-orchestration with Michael Starobin). For Frankel and Korie, he orchestrated Grey Gardens (for which he received a Tony Award nomination), Far From Heaven, Happiness (directed by Susan Stroman), Finding Neverland (UK version) and War Paint. He co-orchestrated (with the composer) three major Gordon operas (The Grapes of Wrath, 27 and Morning Star) and (as sole orchestrator) three musicals.
Chiefs fans also carry on a tradition that began at Florida State University in the mid 1980s by using the Seminole WarChant as a rallying cry during key moments in their football games.McKenzie, p. 133 Prior to each home game, a former Chiefs player or a famous Chiefs fan (such as NASCAR driver Clint Bowyer or rapper Tech N9ne), called the honorary drum leader, bangs on a drum with a large drum stick to start the Tomahawk chop. The Chiefs' and their fans use of American Indian imagery and stereotypes has been the source of controversy, as some decry usage of symbols like the "war drum," songs and spectacles like the "Tomahawk Chop," and stereotypical dress of fans in faux war paint and headdresses.
This section is inserted in the article because academics and translators dealing with this topic typically give insufficient attention to the relevant technical meanings involved in archaeology, theatre and drama. Most probably the practice of masking is much older – the earliest known anthropomorphic artwork is circa 30,000–40,000 years oldThe oldest known example of the Venus figurines is the Venus of Hohle Fels, carbon-dated as 35,000 to 40,000 years old. – but insofar as it involved the use of war-paint, leather, vegetative material, or wooden masks, the masks probably have not been preserved (they are visible only in paleolithic cave drawings, of which dozens have been preserved).A famous example is the images of the Trois-Frères cave (circa 15,000 years old).
Her first two RCA albums (Leave the Light On and Something in Red) and her BNA album Watch Me are all certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). The 1995 compilation Reflections: Greatest Hits is her best-selling album with a double-platinum certification; War Paint, Greater Need, and Shakin' Things Up, also on BNA, are certified gold. Morgan has made over forty chart entries on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts, including three number-one singles: "Five Minutes", "What Part of No", and "I Didn't Know My Own Strength", along with eleven additional top-ten hits. Morgan has recorded in collaboration with her father, as well as Whitley, Randall, Kershaw, Frank Sinatra, Johnny Mathis, Tammy Wynette, Dolly Parton, Andy Williams, the New World Philharmonic, and Pam Tillis.
Straight Arrow opened with an introduction by announcer Frank Bingman, who remained close friends with Culver for years: :To friends and neighbors alike, Steve Adams appeared to be nothing more than the young owner of the Broken Bow cattle spread, but when danger threatened innocent people, and when evildoers plotted against justice, then Steve Adams, rancher, disappeared. And in his place came a mysterious, stalwart Indian, wearing the dress and war paint of a Comanche, riding the great golden palomino Fury. Galloping out of the darkness to take up the cause of law and order throughout the West comes the legendary figure of Straight Arrow. Jack French recalled Culver in his 1996 essay on Straight Arrow: :McCann Erickson decided the new series would be broadcast from Los Angeles, and they quickly chose their cast from West Coast talent.
Richard E. Killblane and Brian Miller, War Paint; The Filthy Thirteen Jump into Normandy, Victory Press, 2013 After coming back AWOL from Paris after Market Garden,Richard E. Killblane, "A Christmas Present for Bastogne", World War II, September 2003 McNiece volunteered for the Pathfinders thinking he would never make another combat jump.Jerome Preisler, First to Jump; How the Band of Brothers was Aided by the Brave Paratroopers of the Pathfinder Company, Berkley, 2014 These were paratroopers sent in ahead of the main force to guide them in or guide in resupply drops. Half the surviving members of the original Filthy Thirteen followed him into the Pathfinders thinking they would sit out the rest of the war training in England. To their surprise they parachuted into the encircled town of Bastogne at the height of the Battle of the Bulge.
Others are archetypes, like Luis Cervantes, who is an educated man mistreated by the Federales and therefore turning on them, or Güero Margarito, a cruel man who finds justification for his deeds in the turbulence of the times. We can also find La Pintada (translated as War paint) a tough woman, as opposed to Camila, a teenager peasant who is dragged into the conflict by means of subterfuge to become Macías' lover. With a concise, unsympathetic tone, Azuela takes us along with this band of outcasts as they move along the hills of the country, seemingly struggling for a cause whose leader changes from day to night. The rebels, not very certain of what or whom they are fighting for, practice the abuse and injustice they used to suffer in the hands of the old leaders.
The band found its roots when Bear Witness and Ian Campeau realized their home city of Ottawa had dance nights that represented every culture there but their own, so deciding to, "throw a party," was more than just for fun—these Electric Pow Wows were to portray their Aboriginal culture within urban centres where historically, its involvement has been erased. Thus, the band has been involved in activism from its very origin. They have been vocal supporters of Idle No More, a peaceful revolution launched in November 2012 to protest the Harper government's introduction of Bill C-45, which critics, including many First Nations people, claimed threatened both the environment and Aboriginal sovereignty. In 2013, they issued a public statement asking non-aboriginal fans to refrain from cultural appropriation by not wearing headdresses and war paint to their shows.
Alford exhibits work in group and solo shows in galleries including Wimbledon Fine ArtsWimbledon Fine Art Artist Page;Panter and Hall GalleriesPanter and Hall; Chloe Gallery, San Francisco Chloe Gallery Artists Page, Mall Galleries with the Royal Institute of Oil PaintersROI and Duncan Campbell Fine Art.Michael Alford: War Paint, and interview with Michael Alford by Tony Kane, Wimbledon Time & Leisure Magazine, 26 December 2012 Alford has been an official War Artist to the British Military on three occasions. In 2010 he accompanied the Grenadier Guards to Afghanistan where he created a series of watercolors based on his experience in the field. He donated the collection to the Colonel's Fund, the Grenadier Guards' charity for wounded Guards, their families, and the families of Guards killed in actionThe Colonel's Fund website His painting, Patrol at Pan Kalay Police Station, 2016, was acquired by the National Army Museum.
The Australian anthropologist W. E. H. Stanner made the tribe famous by dedicating a paper to one particular member of the tribe, Durmugan, whom he first encountered while following a tribe he was living with, who he noticed had begun to adorn themselves in war-paint, to a full- scale battle, with over 100 warriors arranged in battle lines and hurling spears at each other. As he observed, his attention was drawn to one tall strikingly built skirmisher on the other side who displayed exemplary courage and prowess and stood out from the others. He was a Nangiomeri, who introduced himself once hostilities had ceased, and Stanner realized that he was in front of a man whom Europeans in the area called 'Smiler' with a repute for being 'the most murderous black in the region. Stanner interprets Durmugan's distinctive and powerful character in terms of an initiation he managed to undergo, despite his deracinated past, on the Victoria River, around the time of WW1.
The story behind the image is, in 1924, a young talented author and artist, Wallace Smith, asked for and received permission to gain access to the arena during the rodeo for the purpose of making sketches of bucking horses. After three busy days working in the arena and sitting on the north arena fence, he came up with his answer to the thought of creating a bucking horse that would properly symbolize the round up's slogan, "LET 'ER BUCK". The life of that vivid frontispiece of his Oregon Sketches had pleased the bronco-busters so much that they have adopted it as the official poster of the annual Pendleton Round-Up. In Oregon Sketches Wallace Smith gives glimpses of the new and glorified West, a West that is a revival of all that tradition has contributed to the term, including cowboys and Indians, guns and war paint… As a picture of some of the swiftly changing phases of the West the book is of value.
After spending the latter half of 1942 working in the naval ship yards in Bremerton, Washington, Medicine Crow joined the U.S. Army in 1943. He became a scout in the 103rd Infantry Division, and fought in World War II. Whenever he went into battle, he wore his war paint (two red stripes on his arms) beneath his uniform and a sacred yellow painted eagle feather, provided by a "sundance" medicine man, beneath his helmet. Medicine Crow completed all four tasks required to become a war chief: touching an enemy without killing him (counting coup), taking an enemy's weapon, leading a successful war party, and stealing an enemy's horse. He touched a living enemy soldier and disarmed him after turning a corner and finding himself face to face with a young German soldier: He also led a successful war party and stole fifty horses owned by the Nazi SS from a German camp, singing a traditional Crow honor song as he rode off.
Her expertise has been recognized in directing documentaries on subject matter of classical music and Avant-garde trends in the genre. Peitz’s primary work has been for the German production company Accentus Music (GmbH); most of her films have been released on DVD under the label Accentus Music.“Patti LuPone and Christine Ebersole Thrill, Charge and Fascinate in ‘War Paint’, Observer, July 4, 2017Round table discussion including Anne-Kathrin Peitz. Musikalische Avantgarde im Zeichen der Oktoberrevolution, Deutschlandfunk Kultur, November 4, 2017“FIFA: John Cage – Journeys in Sound”, ICA, September 27, 2013“John Cage: Der Klangtourist”, Musik heute, April 15, 2013“Wichtiger Preis, schlichte Zeremonie: In Mailand wurde der ICMA vergeben. Auch an etliche Leipziger”, Leipziger Volkszeitung, March 21, 2013 Her directorial work on Satiesfictions – Promenades with Erik Satie (WDR/Arte) earned her a nomination for the Grimme-Preis in 2016 and also received the ARD television programming award.Program - “Ausgezeichnet: Die Preise und Bestenlisten 2015/2016”, Preis der Deutschen Schallplattenkritik“, September 2015 ”Befitting its extraordinary subject, Anne-Kathrin Peitz and Youlian Tabakov’s brilliant film about the French composer and hardline agent provocateur Erik Satie aims at more than a standard life-and-works biography”, notes Philip Clark from Gramophone magazine.

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