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Has anyone ever heard of this one-name celeb?
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| 1/21/'13
| Zionist Conspirator
Posted on 01/21/2013 12:14:37 PM PST by Zionist Conspirator
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To: Zionist Conspirator
Those names are from a time long ago when America itself and not indoctrinated yet into becoming entitlement minded government dependent losers.
Was that harsh?
2
posted on
01/21/2013 12:17:48 PM PST
by
A CA Guy
( God Bless America, God Bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
To: Zionist Conspirator
(Google has already indexed this page!)
3
posted on
01/21/2013 12:19:12 PM PST
by
Revolting cat!
(Bad things are wrong! Ice cream is delicious!)
To: Zionist Conspirator
Well, yeah, I’ve heard of all of them. Not that I’m overly familiar with them, necessarily. Margo was a 1930s actress, who was married to Eddie Albert. Dagmar was a fixture on early-50s television, before my time. Annabella starred in the British film “Wings in the Morning,” an early Technicolor movie from 1937. Fernandel and Cantinflas were big foreign film stars.
4
posted on
01/21/2013 12:20:07 PM PST
by
greene66
To: greene66
Ah, I misread the title. I thought you were asking about the ones you named. Not “Lili.” Don’t know a one-name Lili.
5
posted on
01/21/2013 12:22:11 PM PST
by
greene66
To: greene66
Well, yeah, Ive heard of all of them. Not that Im overly familiar with them, necessarily. Margo was a 1930s actress, who was married to Eddie Albert. Dagmar was a fixture on early-50s television, before my time. Annabella starred in the British film Wings in the Morning, an early Technicolor movie from 1937. Fernandel and Cantinflas were big foreign film stars.Yes, I eventually learned about all of these. But who was Lili (Liliane Lewin)???
6
posted on
01/21/2013 12:23:33 PM PST
by
Zionist Conspirator
(Ki-hagoy vehamamlakhah 'asher lo'-ya`avdukh yove'du; vehagoyim charov yecheravu!)
To: Zionist Conspirator
Pictures of Lili helped me sleep at night.
To: Zionist Conspirator; Revolting cat!; Slings and Arrows
To: Zionist Conspirator
When everything under the sun is now on Internet and this Lili ain’t, is it possible that Lili never existed and was somebody’s inside joke when you saw the reference?
9
posted on
01/21/2013 12:26:30 PM PST
by
Revolting cat!
(Bad things are wrong! Ice cream is delicious!)
To: Revolting cat!
(Google has already indexed this page!)
To: Zionist Conspirator
11
posted on
01/21/2013 12:31:47 PM PST
by
Cvengr
(Adversity in life and death is inevitable. Thru faith in Christ, stress is optional.)
To: Zionist Conspirator
Dagmar was actually quite...ahem...memorable.
12
posted on
01/21/2013 12:32:36 PM PST
by
LaybackLenny
(Bibi Netanyahu: de facto "Leader of the Free World)
To: Zionist Conspirator
13
posted on
01/21/2013 12:36:14 PM PST
by
2ndDivisionVet
(I'll raise $2million for Sarah Palin's presidential run. What'll you do?)
To: Zionist Conspirator
Maybe she was on those, you know,
French postcards?
Nobody in polite society would admit to knowing who she was?
-PJ
14
posted on
01/21/2013 12:37:02 PM PST
by
Political Junkie Too
(If you are the Posterity of We the People, then you are a Natural Born Citizen.)
To: Zionist Conspirator
From what I was able to find out, Lilli is a fictional character, originally dreamed up by a German cartoonist in June of 1952 as a filler. The name came to represent a girl that was a lot of fun and a bit of trouble, someone that a man would hang out with, not necessarily date.
15
posted on
01/21/2013 12:38:55 PM PST
by
Eva
To: Zionist Conspirator
“I had never heard of such a thing before.”
ZC, you never heard of Cher? Bono?
To: Zionist Conspirator
I believe Lili was the private laundress of flatulist Le Petomane. She dies of overwork and exhaustion.
To: LaybackLenny
Those things will put yer eye out!
To: greene66
Cantinflas was in “Around the World in 80 Days”
19
posted on
01/21/2013 12:40:56 PM PST
by
DManA
To: 2ndDivisionVet; Zionist Conspirator
As a pioneer of the cinema of Mexico, Moreno helped usher in its golden era. In addition to being a business leader, he also became involved in Mexico's tangled and often dangerous labor politics. Although he was a political conservative, his reputation as a spokesperson for the downtrodden gave his actions authenticity and became important in the early struggle against charrismo, the one-party government's practice of co-opting and controlling unions.[citation needed] Moreover, his character Cantinflas, whose identity became enmeshed with his own, was examined by media critics, philosophers, and linguists, who saw him variably as a danger to Mexican society, a bourgeois puppet, a kind philanthropist, a transgressor of gender roles, a pious Catholic, a verbal innovator, and a picaresque underdog.[citation needed] Although he was a political Conservative, Mexican Hollywood (Mexiwood?) guilted him into pushing a liberal agenda. We have lost America because our entertainers have almost, to a man, been guilted into not standing up for what is right--a valuable lesson to be learned here.
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