Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 18 February 1909. (1909-02-18) (aged 84) Montmartre, France. Nationality. French. Élisabeth-Céleste Venard, countess of Chabrillan (27 December 1824 – 18 February 1909), better known by her stage name Céleste Mogador and often referred to simply as Mogador, was a French dancer and writer.

    • French
    • 18 February 1909 (aged 84), Montmartre, France
  2. Élisabeth-Céleste Vénard, épouse de Chabrillan, née le 27 décembre 1824 à Paris et morte le 18 février 1909 à Paris 18e 1, est une prostituée, galante, courtisane, comédienne, danseuse, actrice, autrice, chanteuse, propriétaire et directrice de théâtre, française, connue sous le nom de scène de « la Mogador ».

    • Élisabeth-Céleste Venard
  3. Céleste de Chabrillan (1824-1909), courtesan and author, illegitimate daughter of Anne-Victoire Vénard, was born on 27 December 1824 in Paris. Her childhood was unhappy and at 15 she was imprisoned for vagrancy.

    • 3
  4. Chabrillan, Céleste de (1824–1909) Parisian-born dancer, courtesan, novelist and autobiographer whose five volumes of memoirs scandalized France. Name variations: Comtesse de Moreton de Chabrillan; Celeste or Céleste Mogador, Mme Mogador, La Mogador.

  5. 17 de may. de 2016 · Céleste Mogador, Comtesse Lionel de Chabrillan, ca. 1850s. Céleste de Chabrillan by Nadar, ca. 1850s. Céleste de Chabrillan (1824-1909), courtesan and author, illegitimate daughter of Anne-Victoire Vénard, was born on 27 December 1824 in Paris. Her childhood was unhappy and at 15 she was imprisoned for vagrancy.

  6. This manuscript translation of Céleste de Chabrillan’s little one-act comedy— her second produced play and first with an Australian setting—came to light purely by chance. Decades after the death in 1994 of Dennis Davison, a Senior Lecturer in the English Department of Monash University, the room that had

  7. 8 de jun. de 2016 · This chapter first makes the case for a courtesan novel sub-genre by outlining its characteristics, and then explores how Céleste de Chabrillan’s La Sapho (1858) serves as a model for Isola (1876), a text in which Valtesse de la Bigne portrays her protagonist as an active reader.