Amour

Amour (French for love) may refer to:

  • Amour (1970 film), a Danish film
  • Amour (2012 film), a French-language film directed by Michael Haneke
  • Amour (musical), a 1997 stage musical by Michel Legrand
  • Amour (Stockhausen), a 1974–76 cycle of clarinet pieces by Karlheinz Stockhausen
  • Amour (Vidhan Sabha constituency), an assembly constituency in Purnia district, Bihar, India
  • Amour Patrick Tignyemb (born 1985), Cameroonian footballer
  • "Amour", a song by Rammstein from Reise, Reise
  • See also

  • "Amour, Amour", a song by Plastic Bertrand
  • L'Amour (disambiguation)
  • Saint-Amour (disambiguation)
  • Amore (disambiguation)
  • Armour (disambiguation)
  • Love (disambiguation)
  • Amour (musical)

    Amour is a musical fantasy with an English book by Jeremy Sams, music by Michel Legrand, and lyrics by Didier Van Cauwelaert, who wrote the original French libretto.

    The musical is adapted from the 1943 short story Le Passe-Muraille by Marcel Aymé and set in Paris shortly after World War II. It centers on a shy, unassuming clerk who develops the ability to walk through walls, and who challenges himself to stick to his moral center and change others' lives, and his own, as a result.

    Production

    In 1997, Legrand, a noted film composer and jazz musician, and a newcomer to stage musicals at age 65, brought the musical (under its original title, Le Passe Muraille) to Paris where it won the Prix Molière for Best Musical.

    The Broadway production, directed by James Lapine and presented without intermission, opened on October 20, 2002 at the Music Box Theatre. The show closed after 17 performances and 31 previews. The cast included Malcolm Gets and Melissa Errico.

    The musical received mostly negative reviews in America, although Errico, Gets and the score were praised. Ben Brantley, in his review for The New York Times, wrote: "Even charming is too weighty a word to describe the wispy appeal of Amour" The Talkin' Broadway reviewer, however, wrote: "Broadway's Music Box Theatre may have found its most ideal tenant in quite a while. The delightful little jewel box of a musical, Amour, ...deserves a lengthy stay there, where it may enchant audiences for a long time to come." Cary Wong in filmscoremonthly wrote: "The lyrics are mostly pedestrian and uninvolving, and they make the already stock characters even more one-dimensional."

    Amour (1970 film)

    Amour (also known as Ways of Women) is a 1970 Danish drama film directed by Gabriel Axel.

    Cast

  • Svend Johansen (actor) - Diderik
  • Tine Bjerregaard - Gundelil
  • Ole Guldbrandsen - Kjartan
  • Helmer Johansen - Ebbesen
  • André Sallyman - 1. karl
  • Berd Jönsson - 2. karl
  • Ghita Nørby - Elisa
  • Jacques Mauclair - Elisas mand
  • Ejnar Hans Jensen - Elisas elsker
  • Kim Meyer - Sønnen
  • Kirsten Lyngholm - Datteren
  • Paul Hüttel - 1. tyv
  • Eddie Karnil - 2. tyv
  • Hans W. Petersen - Frisørmesteren
  • Karl Stegger - Konditoren
  • Dirch Passer - Gas- og vandmesteren
  • Lone Helmer - Hans kone
  • Jesper Langberg - Kulmanden
  • Addy Lund - Kulmandens kone
  • Ove Sprogøe - Gammel, døv dame
  • Svend Erik Jensen - Politimesteren
  • Carl Ottosen - Betjent
  • Preben Nicolaisen - Betjent
  • Gerd Vindahl - Betjent
  • Ib Sørensen - Betjent
  • Morten Grunwald - Brandmajoren
  • Paul Hagen - Brandmand
  • Klaus Pagh - Brandmand
  • Kurt Andersen - Brandmand
  • Svend Krogh - Brandmand
  • Nadine Alari - Constance Vernon
  • Bernard Noël - Adolphe Vernon
  • Philippe Étesse - Philippe Despres
  • Martini

    Martini may refer to:

  • Martini (cocktail), a popular cocktail
  • Martini (vermouth), a brand of vermouth
  • Martini (surname)
  • Martini (automobile company), a Swiss automobile company
  • Martini (quartet), the 2012 Sweet Adelines International champion quartet
  • MARTINI, a molecular dynamics force field in chemistry
  • Martini Cars, a French manufacturer of racing cars
  • Martini Racing, motor racing teams sponsored by Martini & Rossi
  • Mārtiņi, a Latvian holiday
  • See also

  • Martini & Rossi, the producer of the Martini brand
  • Martini Shot, a term used during film production for the last shot of the day
  • Martini–Henry, a rifle used by 19th century British empire soldiers
  • Martini–Enfield, a .303 calibre version of the Martini–Henry introduced in 1895
  • Martiny Township, Michigan
  • Pink Martini, an American music group
  • Martini lattice, a regular two-dimensional lattice used in statistical mechanics problems such as percolation
  • Martini (cocktail)

    The Martini is a cocktail made with gin and vermouth, and garnished with an olive or a lemon twist. Over the years, the Martini has become one of the best-known mixed alcoholic beverages. H. L. Mencken called the Martini "the only American invention as perfect as the sonnet" and E. B. White called it "the elixir of quietude".

    Preparation

    By 1922 the Martini reached its most recognizable form in which London dry gin and dry vermouth are combined at a ratio of 2:1, stirred in a mixing glass with ice cubes, with the optional addition of orange or aromatic bitters, then strained into a chilled cocktail glass. Over time the generally expected garnish became the drinker's choice of a green olive or a twist of lemon peel.

    A dry Martini is made with dry, white vermouth. By the Roaring Twenties, it became common to ask for them. Over the course of the century, the amount of vermouth steadily dropped. During the 1930s the ratio was 3:1, and during the 1940s the ratio was 4:1. During the latter part of the 20th century, 6:1, 8:1, 12:1, or even 50:1 or 100:1 Martinis became considered the norm.

    Martini (quartet)

    Martini is the barbershop quartet that won the Sweet Adelines International Quartet Championship for 2012 on October 21, 2011, in Houston, Texas. SAI, "one of the world's largest singing organizations for women", has members over five continents who belong to more than 1200 quartets.

    History

    Martini formed in July 2007 at Sandy Marron's home in Tacoma, Washington. Singers Sandy Marron (tenor), Lisa Myers (lead), Shannon Harris (bass) and DeAnne Haugen (bari) were the "original blend" of voices. In April 2008, Martini competed at the Sweet Adelines International Region 26 Convention in Vancouver, British Columbia and placed first with a regional record-breaking score of 623 points. Later that year, they made their International Competition debut in Honolulu, Hawaii, placing 8th in the world. In October 2009, Martini returned to the International stage in Nashville, Tennessee where they finished 4th. In early 2010, this original version of Martini also recorded their debut CD “It's Martini Time!”.

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