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❤️ The Only Thing You Know 🌱

"The Only Thing You Know is a Canadian drama film, directed by Clarke Mackey and released in 1971."Celebrated film finally gets its due". Queen's Journal, October 20, 2006. Described by critics as a female version of the 1964 film Nobody Waved Good-bye,Geoff Pevere, "Toronto on Film: Part 7". Toronto Star, September 14, 2009. the film stars Ann Knox as Ann, a teenager who is dissatisfied with her suburban Toronto life."Young Torontonian makes perceptive movie". Toronto Star, June 2, 1972. Striking out on her own, she moves in with her boyfriend Scott (Allan Royal) in the downtown St. James Town neighbourhood, but becomes embroiled in a complex love triangle with Scott and his friend Paul (John Denos)."Only Thing You Know: pleasing growing pains". The Globe and Mail, June 5, 1972. The film's cast also includes Hugh McIntyre and Eileen McIntyre as Ann's parents. Production The film was influenced by the then-experimental blend of docufiction techniques innovated by films such as Nobody Waved Good-bye and À tout prendre. Its script consisted solely of a 15-page story outline, around which the actors improvised their dialogue so that the film would feel like a documentary. It was made on a budget of just $23,000. Reaction Knox won the Canadian Film Award for Best Actress, and Mackey won a special jury award for the film."New Quebec film sweeps 8 Canadian film awards". Toronto Star, October 2, 1971. Despite favourable critical response and Knox's award win the film received only limited release, in part because it had been shot on 16 mm film, which very few movie theatres in Canada had the equipment to screen, while Mackey did not have the budget to convert it to the more normal 35 mm film."The Friendly Neighborhood Cineastes". Maclean's, January 1, 1972. Apart from the Stratford Film Festival, the film was never screened theatrically outside of Toronto, and even CBC Television rejected the film at the time as too experimental for a mass-market network television airing."Theatres show a profit but is it all real?" Toronto Star, January 6, 1972. Although the film was strongly championed by The New York Times film critic Bosley Crowther, Mackey was also unable to secure a distribution deal in the United States. The film was screened at the 1984 Festival of Festivals, and was later broadcast on CBC and TVOntario in the 1980s, but was generally not widely seen until it was released on DVD in 2006. References External links * 1971 films 1971 drama films Canadian films Canadian drama films Canadian docufiction films Films set in Toronto "

❤️ Estevan Florial 🌱

"Estevan Haniel Florial (born November 25, 1997) is a Dominican-Haitian professional baseball outfielder for the New York Yankees of Major League Baseball (MLB). He made his MLB debut in 2020. Career =Background= Estevan Florial was born and raised in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. He holds dual-citizenship with Haiti due to his mother being born there. In the first couple of years with the Yankees organization, they mistakenly listed him as being born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, which would have made him a forerunner to become the first Haitian-born Major League player. Florial signed with the New York Yankees under the name "Haniel d'Oleo" in 2014. However the contract was voided after he was unable to provide a birth certificate and he re-signed with the Yankees under the name, Estevan Florial in 2015. He made his professional debut that season with the Dominican Summer League Yankees 1 where he batted .313 with seven home runs and 53 RBIs in 57 games. =Minor leagues= He played 2016 with the Pulaski Yankees, Charleston RiverDogs and Tampa Yankees, batting a combined .227 with eight home runs and thirty RBIs in 67 total games among the three teams. Florial started the 2017 season with Charleston. He was selected to appear in the All-Star Futures Game in July. After batting .297 with 11 home runs, 43 RBIs and 17 stolen bases for Charleston, he was promoted to Tampa in August, where he finished the season slashing .303/.368/.461 with two home runs and 14 RBIs in 19 games. The Yankees promoted him to the Trenton Thunder for their postseason but did not appear in a game. Florial entered 2018 as one of the top prospects in the minor leagues. Playing for Tampa, he broke the hamate bone in his right wrist in May and required surgery, costing him three months of the season. In 2019, the Yankees invited Florial to spring training as a non-roster player. He suffered a non-displaced fracture in his right wrist during spring training. He returned to Tampa in June, where he played for the 2019 season. =New York Yankees= Florial was called up to the majors on August 28, 2020. He played in the first game of a doubleheader that same day against the New York Mets, where he got his first MLB hit. At the end of the day he was sent back to the minors. References External links 1997 births Living people All-Star Futures Game players Charleston RiverDogs players Dominican Republic expatriate baseball players in the United States Dominican Republic people of Haitian descent Dominican Summer League Yankees players Glendale Desert Dogs players Gulf Coast Yankees players Haitian baseball players Haitian expatriate sportspeople in the United States Haitian people of Dominican Republic descent Impostors Major League Baseball outfielders Major League Baseball players from the Dominican Republic New York Yankees players People from Barahona Province Pulaski Yankees players Scottsdale Scorpions players Tampa Tarpons players Tampa Yankees players "

❤️ Georges de Saint-Foix 🌱

"Georges de Saint-Foix (2 March 1874 – 26 May 1954) was a French musicologist, connoisseur of Mozart and specialist of the 19th centuryAntoine Albalat, Gustave Flaubert et ses amis, Plon, 1927 page 16, note 1. Accessdate 7 April 2017. and the beginning of the 20th century. He is the son of the Count of Saint-Foix of the same name, the very same one who in 1858 served as a guide to Gustave Flaubert in Carthage while he was preparing his novel Salammbô.Antoine Albalat, Gustave Flaubert et ses amis, Plon, 1927, pages 12 à 16. Accessdate 7 April 2017. A student at the Schola Cantorum of Paris, he studied the violin and music theory with Vincent D'Indy. A jurist by training, he became one of the most brilliant French musicologists of the first half of the twentieth by making himself known by his studies on Mozart, Cherubini, Bach, Clementi, Gluck and Boccherini.(es) Jaime Tortella (Dir.), Luigi Boccherini : Diccionario de Términos, Lugares y Personas, Madrid, Asociación Luigi Boccherini (no 3), 2008, 484 p. (, OCLC 731149670). Main works * W. A. Mozart : sa vie musicale et son œuvre de l'enfance à la pleine maturité, 1756-1777, essay of critical biography, with Théodore de Wyzewa. * . Reissue of Louis Picquot's book,(1804-1870) author of the first biography of Luigi Boccherini entitled Notice sur la vie et les ouvrages de Luigi Boccherini, suivie du catalogue raisonné de toutes ses œuvres, tant publiées qu'inédites, Paris, chez Philipp (= Camille Prilipp), 1851. with a 45 pages introduction and updated annotations. References External links * Georges de Saint-Foix on Babelio * Georges de Saint-Foix on Encyclopédie Larousse * MOZART - vol 1, 1756–1777, L'enfant prodige - Le jeune maître at Éditions Robert Laffont, * Georges de Saint-Foix on IMSLP * In Memoriam Georges de Saint-Foix on JSTOR 20th-century French musicologists Writers from Paris 1874 births 1954 deaths "

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