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- Published: 19 Apr 2011
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Rue (Ruta) is a genus of strongly scented evergreen subshrubs 20–60 cm tall, in the family Rutaceae, native to the Mediterranean region, Macaronesia and southwest Asia. There are perhaps 8 to 40 species in the genus. A well-known species is the Common Rue.
The leaves are bipinnate or tripinnate, with a feathery appearance, and green to strongly glaucous blue-green in colour. The flowers are yellow, with 4-5 petals, about 1 cm diameter, and borne in cymes. The fruit is a 4-5 lobed capsule, containing numerous seeds.
It is very bitter. It was used extensively in Middle Eastern cuisine in olden days, as well as in many ancient Roman recipes (according to Apicius), and it is still used in northern Africa. In Italy rue leaves are sometimes added to grappa to obtain grappa alla ruta.
Rue is well known for its symbolic meaning of regret and it is sometimes been called "herb-of-grace" in literary works. It is one of the flowers distributed by the mad Ophelia in William Shakespeare's Hamlet (IV.5):
:"There's fennel for you, and columbines: :there's rue for you; and here's some for me: :we may call it herb-grace o' Sundays: :O you must wear your rue with a difference..."
It was also planted by the gardener in Shakespeare's Richard II to mark the spot where the Queen wept upon hearing news of Richard's capture (III.4.104-105):
:"Here did she fall a tear, here in this place :I'll set a bank of rue, sour herb of grace."
Rue is considered a national herb of Lithuania and it is the most frequently referred herb in Lithuanian folk songs, as an attribute of young girls, associated with virginity and maidenhood.
In mythology, the basilisk, whose breath could cause plants to wilt and stones to crack, had no effect on rue. Weasels who were bitten by the basilisk would retreat and eat rue in order to recover and return to fight.
In the novel The Hunger Games, the female tribute from District 11 is named Rue.
The Tacuinum Sanitatis, a medieval handbook on wellness, lists these properties of rue:
Nature: Warm and dry in the third degree. Optimum: That which is grown near a fig tree. Usefulness: It sharpens the eyesight and dissipates flatulence. Dangers: It augments the sperm and dampens the desire for coitus. Neutralization of the Dangers: With foods that multiply the sperm.
The progressive metal band Symphony X named a song "Absinthe and Rue" on their first album, Symphony X, and Kathleen Battle, American soprano, has recorded the song cycle "Honey and Rue" written by composer Andre Previn in collaboration with the Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison.
Many traditional English folk songs use rue to symbolise regret. Often it is paired with thyme: thyme used to symbolise virginity, and rue the regret supposed to follow its loss.
Una Matica de Ruda is a traditional Sephardic wedding song, dating back to the Middle Ages.
Category:Herbs Category:Medicinal plants
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Name | Yann Tiersen |
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Background | solo_singer |
Birth name | Yann Pierre Tiersen |
Born | June 23, 1970 |
Origin | Brest, Brittany, France |
Instrument | Piano, Violin, Accordion, Guitar, Toy piano, Voice and various others. |
Genre | Minimalist, Avant-Garde |
Occupation | Musician, Songwriter |
Years active | 1995–present |
Label | VirginANTI-Mute Records |
Url | Official website |
Before releasing scores under his own name, Tiersen recorded background music for a number of plays and short films, such as La Vie Rêvée des Anges (1998, Erick Zonca), Alice et Martin (1998, André Téchiné), Qui Plume la Lune? (Christine Carrière, 1999).
He rose to domestic fame upon the release of his third album, Le Phare, but remained relatively unknown outside France until the release of his score for Le fabuleux destin d'Amélie Poulain in 2001, which was a mixture of both new and previously released material.
Tiersen favors the piano, accordion, and violin, but is also known for his experimentation and use of obscure and found instruments like the ondes martenot and the typewriter.
Yann Tiersen's list of collaborators continues to grow album after album (see discography below for details). While composing his fifth album, L'absente, Tiersen lent his musical talent to Françoiz Breut and Les Têtes Raides for their own albums. His 2005 album, Les Retrouvailles, featured vocals from Stuart Staples of Tindersticks, Jane Birkin, and Elizabeth Fraser, formerly of Cocteau Twins. Tiersen also played piano on Staples' solo album, Lucky Dog Recordings 03-04. In 2004 he also released a collaborative CD with American singer-songwriter Shannon Wright.
His live performances vary greatly. Sometimes he is accompanied by an orchestra and many guest collaborators, like Dominique A. Other times, he offers the more frequent minimalistic sessions, usually accompanied only by a drummer/bassist and a guitarist, with Tiersen switching seamlessly between piano, accordion, and violin for his lighter songs, and electric guitar for his louder pieces (where his Avant-Garde Music meet some rock sonorities).Lately, however, he has almost banished piano, accordion and violin and focused more on his electric guitar instead, as visible in his 2009-2010 Live Tours.
Yann Tiersen was married to Belgian actress Natacha Régnier, but they have since been divorced. They have a daughter, Lise born in 2002.
Category:French film score composers Category:People from Brest Category:1970 births Category:Living people Category:French musicians
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Birth name | Eddi-Rue McClanahan parents Dreda Rheua-Nell (née Medaris), a beautician, and William Edwin McClanahan, a building contractor. |
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In 2003, she appeared in the musical romantic comedy film The Fighting Temptations as Nancy Stringer, which co-starred Cuba Gooding, Jr., Beyonce Knowles, Mike Epps and Steve Harvey. She replaced Carole Shelley as Madame Morrible in the musical Wicked on May 31, 2005. She played the role for eight months and departed the cast on January 8, 2006. She was replaced by Carol Kane on January 10, 2006.
Her autobiography, My First Five Husbands...and the Ones Who Got Away, was released in 2007.
McClanahan's last acting role was in the cable series on the Logo network, which premiered July 23, 2008, playing Peggy Ingram, the older sister of Sissy Hickey and mother of Latrelle, LaVonda and Earl "Brother Boy".
Rue was a supporter of Gay Rights and was an advocate for same sex marriage in the United States. In January 2009, she appeared in the star studded "Defying Inequality: The Broadway Concert — A Celebrity Benefit for Equal Rights".
McClanahan was devoutly Methodist; when asked if religious in a December 2009 private interview she was stated as saying:
On November 14, 2009, she was to be honored for her lifetime achievements at an event "Golden: A Gala Tribute To Rue McClanahan" at the Castro Theatre in San Francisco, California. The event was postponed due to McClanahan's hospitalization. She had triple bypass surgery on November 4. It was announced on January 14, 2010, by Entertainment Tonight that, while recovering from surgery, she had suffered a minor stroke. In March 2010, fellow Golden Girls cast member Betty White reported on The Ellen DeGeneres Show that McClanahan was doing well and that her speech had returned to normal.
McClanahan died on June 3, 2010, at the age of 76, at New York–Presbyterian Hospital after she suffered another stroke.
She was cremated after her death.
McClanahan's longtime friend Betty White, who co-starred with her on both Mama's Family and The Golden Girls, told Entertainment Tonight that McClanahan was a "close and dear friend" and that her death "hurts more than I ever thought it would".
McClanahan was survived by her sixth husband, Morrow Wilson (from whom she separated in 2009), her son from her first marriage, Mark Bish of Austin, Texas, her sister, Melinda L. McClanahan, of Silver City, New Mexico and a nephew, Brendan Kinkade. There were no funeral services for McClanahan so her family created an official memorial page on Facebook to honor her, and memorial services were held during the summer of 2010 in New York and Los Angeles.
In honor of her memory, WE tv-which airs reruns of The Golden Girls; had a weeklong memoriam for McClanahan airing episodes featuring the best of Blanche from June 7 - 11, 2010.
On January 7, 2011 publicist and gay-rights advocate Jon-Marc McDonald posted on his blog that he would lead the publicity and marketing efforts on behalf of friend Michael J. La Rue and the estate of Rue McClanahan for ten auctions to be held throughout the United States to sell McClanahan’s belongings as, according to McDonald, was McClanahan’s wish. In addition McDonald will assist La Rue, McClanahan’s close friend and, prior to her death, producer of her autobiographical Broadway bound show, My First Five Husbands, with the publicity for a documentary about the actress, release date unknown.
Golden Globe Nominations:
Obie Awards (off-Broadway):
Category:1934 births Category:2010 deaths Category:American Methodists Category:Actors from Oklahoma Category:American film actors Category:American memoirists Category:Oklahoma Democrats Category:American musical theatre actors Category:American soap opera actors Category:American stage actors Category:American television actors Category:American vegetarians Category:American people of Choctaw descent Category:American people of Irish descent Category:LGBT rights activists from the United States Category:Emmy Award winners Category:Breast cancer survivors Category:Deaths from stroke Category:Deaths from cerebral hemorrhage Category:Neurological disease deaths in New York Category:People from Oklahoma Category:People from Carter County, Oklahoma Category:University of Tulsa alumni Category:20th-century actors Category:21st-century actors Category:New York Democrats Category:Animal rights advocates
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Keny Arkana (born 1982 in Marseille, France) is a French rap artist. She is active in the alter-globalization movement with "La Rage Du Peuple", a music collective created in 2004 in the neighborhood of Noailles in Marseilles.
After several solo appearances on various projects, Arkana released her first EP Le missile est lancé (The rocket is launched) in 2004. Her first album Entre ciment et belle étoile (Between concrete and stars) was released in October 2006. Her first single, La rage, released in 2006, pointedly references the 2005 civil unrest in France.
Keny Arkana also launched a series of local social fora through the association Appel aux sans voix (Call to the voiceless).
"Désobéissance" is her latest Street album, released in 2008.
Category:1982 births Category:Living people Category:French rappers Category:French people of Argentine descent Category:Female rappers
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Name | Fat Joe |
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Background | solo_singer |
Birth name | Joseph Cartagena |
Born | August 19, 1970 Around the release of All or Nothing, Fat Joe became involved in a highly publicized feud with another New York City-based rapper 50 Cent, who attacked Fat Joe in his song "Piggy Bank". His most popular song in which he performed was his Remy Ma duet "Lean Back" with Terror Squad. The song was a number-one hit in the summer of 2004. |
Name | Fat Joe |
Date of birth | August 19, 1970 |
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Name | Alex Gopher |
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Background | non_vocal_instrumentalist |
Birth name | Alexis Latrobe |
Origin | Versailles, France |
Genre | Electronic dance musicFunkHouseDance-pop |
Years active | 1994–present |
Label | V2 Records |
Url | www.alexgopher.net |
Alex Gopher (born Alexis Latrobe) is a French DJ who composes electronic dance music and house.
Category:French musician stubs Category:Living people Category:Year of birth missing (living people)
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