Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 19 de jun. de 2024 · Sarah Bernhardt still ‘immortal’ 100 years after her death. The Jewish-born actress, who had a “truly uncanny” grasp of mass culture, was the Madonna or Lady Gaga of her day, historian Carol Ockman told JNS. Photo: Photo of Sarah Bernhardt as Cleopatra by Napoléon Sarony (1891).

  2. 27 de jun. de 2024 · World-wide celebrity, Sarah Bernhardt (1844-1923) was the first actress to travel the five continents. Modern, transgressive and forever remembered as a "monstre sacré", a term Jean Cocteau invented to describe her.

  3. 29 de jun. de 2024 · This essay argues that both Sarah Bernhardt's 1880 sculpture of the drowned Ophelia and her later, on-stage appearance in 1886 as the dead Ophelia contributed significantly to the nineteenth-century obsession with death and sexuality.

  4. 26 de jun. de 2024 · World-wide celebrity, Sarah Bernhardt (1844-1923) was the first actress to travel the five continents. Modern, transgressive and forever remembered as a "monstre sacré", a term Jean Cocteau invented to describe her. Her life, her struggles, her triumphs: we look back at the life and career of a free woman.

  5. 29 de jun. de 2024 · Una mujer que desafió a su propio destino e hizo de su cuerpo, de su voz y de su persona un referente más allá de Francia y Europa.

  6. 20 de jun. de 2024 · Sarah Bernhardt (c. October 22, 1844 – March 26, 1923) was a French stage and early film actress, and has been referred to as the most famous actress the world has ever known. Bernhardt made her fame on the stages of Europe in the 1870s, and was soon in demand in Europe and the Americas.

  7. 10 de jun. de 2024 · Sarah Bernhardt was a French stage actress who starred in some of the most popular French plays of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, including La Dame aux Camélias by Alexandre Dumas fils, Ruy Blas by Victor Hugo, Fédora and La Tosca by Victorien Sardou, and L’Aiglon by Edmond Rostand.