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Word: soleil (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...aftershow parties into the wee hours. Its exhibition space opens next month, kicking off with a nine-month run of a King Tut exhibit expected to draw up to 2 million visitors. Also in the works: a British music hall of fame, another nightclub and a permanent Cirque de Soleil theater...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Revival of London's Millennium Dome | 10/26/2007 | See Source »

...eruptions? Nothing. They were back home, or in the studio, or off in India with the Maharishi. Pasting Beatles songs onto this storyline makes no more sense than scoring every Western set in the 1870s with the arias Verdi was composing at the time. At least the Cirque du Soleil's Las Vegas Beatles show, Love, was set in Liverpool and found recognizably English equivalents for Penny Lane and Eleanor Rigby's cemetery. The NBC TV drama American Dreams, also set in the '60s, wove a greater range of period music through its characters' lives, as did American Graffiti...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dylan and the Beatles: Together Again! | 9/16/2007 | See Source »

...wasn’t a scene from Cirque du Soleil but, rather, the final piece of this past Wednesday’s episode of Fox’s “So You Think You Can Dance...

Author: By Giselle Barcia | Title: So You Think You Can Bash Reality Television | 8/10/2007 | See Source »

...Mer” (1966), water rises tranquilly around the legs and torso of a bather and courses in at her waist, forming a delicate liquid skirt jeweled by streaks of glimmering refractions of the midday sun that fall upon her thighs. In another well balanced print, “Soleil sur Marais” (1962), jittery zigzags of light serve as a topographical map, and mark a woman fully submerged just under the surface of the ocean. Because of the high contrast and abstraction of the photograph, the woman is, at first, hidden from the viewer. Discovering her amidst...

Author: By Jeremy S. Singer-vine, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Show Reveals Clergue’s Genius | 3/8/2007 | See Source »

...Haute’s show were Kristen D. O’Neill ’07 and Abigail M. Baird ’08, both of the fashion-oriented Harvard Vestis Council. Baird’s main inspiration for the show was the Montreal-based acrobatic powerhouse, Cirque du Soleil. “The different color schemes” of the show’s 90 or so pieces, says Baird, who is also a Crimson editor, “are supposed to represent the different seasons.” And the mini-ballet performance that opened and closed...

Author: By Peter B. Weston, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Scene and Heard: So Haute Right Now (Last Time We Use That Joke, We Promise) | 12/13/2006 | See Source »

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