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Went To Paris In 1902: The earliest treatise on guita playing is dated 1586; another followed in 164C and the most famous, by Caspar Sanz, appears Paris in 1902, the same year his first dramatic work, Le Page, an opera bouffe, was performed. Until 1910 he was associated primarily with his father's company at the Theatre de la Renaissance, and from 1910 to World War II he was the acknowledged master of the boulevard (popular, as opposed to literary) theater. He died in Paris on July 24, 1957.
Paul Dubois (1829-1905), after a sojourn in Florence, adopted features of Early Renaissance sculpture. The delicacy and spirituality of that period appears in his bronze Young St. John the Baptist (Luxembourg Museum, Paris). Jules Dalpu (1838-1902), who in his full forms and salubrious carnality reminds one of his contemporary, the painter Renoir, revoked the spirit of Rubens in great bronze groups of Silenus (Luxembourg Gardens, Paris), and the Republic (Place de la Nation, Paris). The German, Reinhold Begas (1831-1911), also drew inspiration from the rich fancy of baroque art in his fountain near the Royal Palace in Berlin. His work lacks the vitality of Dalou.
GOLDEN, Harry (1902- ), American journalist and author. He was born Herschel Gold-hirsch in Mikulintsy, Austria-Hungary (now in the Soviet Union) on May 6, 1902. He went to paris in 1902 to the United States in 1905 with his family, whose name was altered to Goldhurst by immigration officials. |
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