la belle otero dede Provence在成都有店么?

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wanna get a tattoo on my 19th bd
喜欢一个人其实很简单 就是靠近她的时候你想吻她
Mr.Sandman 造梦先生
the sound of silence
In restless dreams I
Neath the halo
My eyes were stabbed by the f
I don'
I don't know where is home.
Flightless Bird, American Mouth
Have I found you? Flightless bird, grounded, bleeding, or lost you...
Good Night :)
God Bless You
下午和Elaine还有Verona去了教堂,虽然之前有去过一次天主教堂,但还是有了很多不同的新感受。我不信基督,也不信天主,可是有信仰总还是好的,精神到达了一定的高度,物质就会变得分文不值。至少现在,我还是愿意相信自己靠努力得来的一切
Good Morning
I love waking up in the morning not knowing what's gonna happen or
圣诞节的时候阿姨送我了一个小铁盒,里面装满了你们留给我的回忆,一封封信,一张张字条,承载着你们对我全部的寄托和祝福,可写给我的人那么多,现在还在联系的却只有几个,那些曾经在我生命里驻足停留的人啊,现在,你们的脚步又停留在了哪里?
BELLE DE PROVENCE
超级喜欢这样有情调的小店,感觉连空气中都弥漫着浪漫的味道,然后自己也就不自觉的变文艺了。
大家好,欢迎来到我的小站!
站长在关注From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see .
Belle de Jour (pronounced: ) is a 1967 French
directed by
and starring , , and . Based on the 1928 novel
by , the film is about a young woman who is compelled to spend her midweek afternoons as a prostitute while her husband is at work.
The title of the film is a pun in French. The phrase "belle de nuit" is best translated by the English phrase "lady of the night", i.e. a prostitute. Séverine works as a prostitute during the day, so she is "belle de jour". It may also be a reference to the French name of the day lily (Hemerocallis), meaning "beauty of [the] day", a flower that blooms only during the day.
It was Bu?uel's most successful and most famous surrealistic "classic." American director
promoted a 1995 limited re-release in America and a 2002 release on DVD. In 2006 the Portuguese director
released , imagining a future encounter between two of the central characters from the original film. In 2010, Belle de Jour was ranked #56 in
magazine's list, The 100 Best Films of World Cinema. It won the
and the Pasinetti Award for Best Film at the
in 1967. Many of Deneuve's costumes were designed by .
Séverine Serizy (), a young and beautiful housewife, is unable to share physical intimacy with her husband, Dr. Pierre Serizy (), despite their love for each other. Her sexual life is restricted to elaborate fantasies involving , , and . Although frustrated by his wife's frigidity toward him, he respects her wishes.
While visiting a ski resort, they meet two friends, Henri Husson () and Renée (). Séverine does not like Husson's manner and the way he looks at her. Back in Paris, Séverine meets up with Renée and learns that a mutual friend, Henriette, now works at a brothel. At her home, Séverine receives roses from Husson and is unsettled by the gesture. At the tennis courts, she meets Husson and they discuss Henriette and houses of pleasure. Husson mentions a high-class
to Séverine at 11 Cité Jean de Saumur. He also confesses his desire for her, but Séverine rejects his advances.
Haunted by a childhood memories, including one involving a man who appears to touch her inappropriately, Séverine goes to the high-class brothel, which is run by Madame Ana?s (). That afternoon Séverine services her first client. Reluctant at first, she responds to the "firm hand" of Madame Ana?s, who names her "Belle de Jour," and has sex with the stranger. After staying away for a week, Séverine returns to the brothel and begins working from two to five o'clock each day, returning to her unsuspecting husband in the evenings. One day Husson comes to visit her at home, but Séverine refuses to see him. Still she fantasizes about having sex with him in her husband's presence. Ironically, Séverine's physical relationship with her husband is improving and she begins having sex with him.
Séverine becomes involved with a young gangster, Marcel (), who offers her the kind of thrills and excitement of her fantasies. When Marcel becomes increasingly jealous and demanding, Séverine decides to leave the brothel, with Madame Ana?s' agreement. Séverine is also concerned about Husson, who has discovered her secret life at the brothel. After one of Marcel's gangster associates follows Séverine to her home, Marcel visits her and threatens to reveal her secret to her husband. Séverine pleads with him to leave, which he does, referring to her husband as "the obstacle."
Marcel waits downstairs for Pierre to return home and shoots him three times. He flees, but is shot dead by the police. Séverine's husband survives, but is left in a coma. The police are unable to find a motive for the attempted murder. Sometime later Séverine is at home taking care of Pierre, who is now completely paralyzed and in a wheelchair. Husson visits Pierre to tell him the truth about his wife' she does not try to stop him. Afterwards, in an ambiguous ending, Séverine sees her husband as healthy again, and they are happy.
as Séverine Serizy, alias Belle de Jour
as Pierre Serizy
as Henri Husson
as Madame Ana?s
as Charlotte
Maria Latour as Mathilde
as le chauffeur
Michel Charrel as Footman
Iska Khan as Asian client
as Majordomo
Marcel Charvey as Prof. Henri
as The professor
as Hyppolite
as Monsieur Adolphe
Filming locations
1 Square Albin-Cachot, Paris 13, Paris, France
79 , Paris 8, Paris, France
Chalet de la Grande Cascade, , Paris 16, Paris, France
Champs Elysées, Paris 8, Paris, France
Rue de Messine, Paris 8, Paris, France (Serizy's home)
Luis Bu?uel
Venice Film Festival Pasinetti Award for Best Film
Luis Bu?uel
for Best European Film
Luis Bu?uel
Award for Best Film
Luis Bu?uel
Nomination for Best Actress
Catherine Deneuve
. Internet Movie Database 2012.
per DVD extras trailer
. Empire 2012.
. Internet Movie Database 2012.
. Internet Movie Database 2012.
. Internet Movie Database 2012.
Ebert, Roger (). . .
: Hidden categories:From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brooke Magnanti (born November 1975) is an American-born naturalised British research scientist, blogger, and writer, who, until her identity was revealed in November 2009, was known by the pen name Belle de Jour. While completing her doctoral studies, between 2003 and 2004, Magnanti supplemented her income by working as a London
known by the working name Taro. Her diary, published as the anonymous blog Belle de Jour: Diary of a London Call Girl, became increasingly popular as speculation surrounded the identity of Belle de Jour. Remaining anonymous, Magnanti went on to have her experiences published as
in 2005 and The Further Adventures of a London Call Girl in 2006. Her first two books were UK top 10 best-sellers in the nonfiction hardback and nonfiction paperback lists.
In 2007 Belle's blogs and books were adapted into a television programme,
as Belle, with the real name . In November 2009, fearing her real identity was about to come out, Magnanti revealed her real name and occupation as a child health scientist.
Born in the United States to an
father and
mother, Magnanti was born and grew up in . She graduated from the private
where she was named a
She entered university at the age of 16, going on to receive a B.S. in 1996 from . Relocating to the United Kingdom, Magnanti studied for a master's degree in
and Ph.D. in
in England.
Her pseudonym was derived from the 1928 novel
and the 1967
starring , directed by . In the film, "Belle de Jour" is an expression translating literally as "daytime beauty", as Deneuve's character frequented the brothel during the daytime, when her husband was absent from home. The expression is a pun on the French phrase "belle de nuit", which translates as "lady of the night", i.e. a .
The weblog Belle de Jour: Diary of a London call girl first appeared in October 2003 and won the Guardian newspaper's Best British Weblog 2003, in the second year of the award's existence. There was speculation in the media for several years as to the real identity of the author, whether Belle really was a call girl. Guesses as to who Belle was ranged from
according to The Telegraph. In 2004 The Sunday Times featured a front-page headline incorrectly identifying
as the author of the blog based on erroneous textual analysis by .
According to
a fellow British blogger guessed her identity in 2003 but kept it secret. He made a page on his blog containing the
of Belle de Jour and Brooke Magnanti that allowed him to see if anyone googled the two names. In 2009 he identified IP addresses originating from
that had accessed the page at which point he contacted Magnanti to alert her. Around the same time tabloid reporters had been escorted from the hospital where she worked for breaking into her office.
On 15 November 2009,
revealed in an interview that the author's real name is Brooke Magnanti, who was 34 years of age at the time.
's Paul Gallagher described it as the revelation of "one of the best kept literary secrets of the decade".
's Stephen Adams said it had been "the new millennium's equivalent of the 1980s' ". Such was the nature of the secret, Magnanti's work colleagues did not know until one month before she went public, her publishers had been unaware of her true identity until the previous week and her parents found out on that weekend. After signing her first book deal and starting writing articles for newspapers, only two other people were aware of her identity, her agent Patrick Walsh and her accountant, who handled the financial transactions via a shell corporation. Magnanti commented that she had thought a former boyfriend was on the verge of outing her, and later reported him to the police for threats and harassment against her and her partner.
Writing on her blog on the day of the revelation, Magnanti stated:
It feels so much better on this side. Not to have to tell lies, hide things from the people I care about. To be able to defend what my experience of sex work is like to all the sceptics and doubters. Anonymity had a purpose then - it will always have a reason to exist, for writers whose work is too damaging or too controversial to put their names on
A spokesperson for Bristol University stated, "This aspect of Dr Magnanti's past is not relevant to her current role at the university", while her publisher said, "It's a courageous decision for Belle de Jour to come forward with her true identity and we support her decision to do so".
He: "So why do you do this?"
Me: "I'm not sure I have an answer to that."
"There must be something that you at least tell yourself."
"Well, perhaps I'm the sort of person apt to do something for no good reason other than I can't think of a reason not to."
The Intimate Adventures of a London Call Girl
Magnanti says she worked for 14 months as a ?300-an-hour prostitute for a London
from 2003, after submitting her PhD . She did so due to lack of funds before her
She had previously been a science blogger using her real name and started blogging about sex work under a pseudonym. Diary of a London Call Girl was voted Blog of the Year by
newspaper in 2003. Awards judge
called it "Archly transgressive, anonymous hooker is definitely manipulating the blog medium, word by word, sentence by sentence far more effectively than any of her competitors ... She is in a league by herself as a blogger." Shortly after receiving the award she signed with literary agency
who negotiated a publishing deal with .
Reviews of the books compared her writing to the works of
and , and she frequently quotes from the poems of . Themes of the blog and books focus on isolation and . "Solitude as much as sex propels these books ... Belle's prickly disbelief in any lasting togetherness picks up an almost existential heft." She writes in Playing the Game "it's not all about the sex - never has been - it's about the heart of darkness."
Magnanti's publisher, , printed her first two books as part of its "Non Fiction/Memoir" line. Her third book was classified as fiction and represents a fictional continuation from the first two. Her books have been published in the UK, US, Portugal, Spain, Slovenia, France, Netherlands, Sweden, Germany, Italy, Czech Republic, Romania, Russia, and China.
From November 2005 until May 2006, Magnanti contributed a regular column in . Since her identity had been revealed she has written about UK libel laws and their effect on science for
's website .
On 25 February 2010 Magnanti appeared on the BBC political affairs programme
to discuss the subject of . She is also an occasional guest on The Book Show broadcast on
and has spoken at a number of venues including The Sunday Times Oxford Literary Festival in conversation with . She has also spoken on internet and forensic identity as part of the
and was a guest on the
2011 series Fry's Planet Word.
In 2011 Magnanti closed down the Belle de Jour blog and started to use the original url as her official website instead.[] She continued blogging at her two blogs The Sex Myth and The Gyst Of It. The former deals with social and political topics related to sexuality, whereas the latter deals with all things related to
(=gyst), primarily recipes and food preparation.[]
In 2012 Magnanti was selected as ambassador for the
Festival. In the latter half of the year Magnanti, along with , acted as a judge for Fleeting Magazine's Six-Word Short Story Prize. She was interviewed by the magazine in May, where she described her penchant for 'things that ferment'. She was interviewed on Hardtalk on the BBC in October.
Since 2012 she has been contributing blogger to .
Magnanti's PhD thesis, awarded from the
Department of , was entitled Macrobioinformatics: the application of informatics methods to records of human remains. It was submitted in September 2003 and the degree was awarded in 2004. After moving to London and while blogging as Belle de Jour she also worked as a computer programmer in
at . She blogged about this career at Cosmas.
Magnanti went on to work as a biostatistician in the
Paediatric and Lifecourse Epidemiology Research Group (PLERG), researching a possible link between the occurrence of thyroid cancer in under-25s in NE England and radioiodine fallout exposure from
in Ukraine.
After her pseudonymous publishing career Magnanti was identified to be working as a research associate in developmental neurotoxicology and
at the Bristol Initiative for Research of Child Health (BIRCH) at . Specifically she was part of the EU-funded Henvinet consortium, researching the policies for assessing the risks of developmental neuropathology from exposure to . She collaborated on several EU project policy documents regarding human developmental risks of environmental exposure to , , and
In 2011 Brooke Magnanti self-published a statistical re-analysis criticising the Lilith Report on Lap Dancing and Striptease in the Borough of Camden, a study which had found that sexual crimes have increased after the opening of four
venues in the area.[] The independent London newspaper the Camden New Journal highlighted Magnanti's criticism of the Lilith findings.
Brooke Magnanti talking about her book The Sex Myth at Leeds Skeptics
In early 2012, Magnanti published a non-fiction popular science book under her real name entitled The Sex Myth. It covered topics in sexuality studies and sociological research in the effects of adult entertainment and sex work.
Reviewing for
wrote "Magnanti offers a pretty sharp analysis of sexual politics: who fabricates the myths and why, the role of both rightwing and leftwing media in building up moral panics, the vast sums obtained by the pressure groups that profit from them, and, more recently, too, by the pharmaceutical companies that plan to profit from newly invented sexual diseases."
It drew a less favourable review from , who writes of Magnanti's book, "I disagree with just about everything she has to say".
A television series loosely based on the first book was in development with
in the UK, but eventually aired on
as . The first series aired from 27 September 2007 to 15 November 2007 starring
(Belle). It is now being shown in the US on . Magnanti met Piper in the course of preparing for the role but maintained her pseudonymity. A half-hour TV programme covering a meeting and conversation between the two was broadcast on
on 25 January 2010. The second series commenced broadcasting in the UK on
on 11 September 2008.
The third series began broadcasting in the UK and North America in January 2010. The fourth and final series started broadcasting in the UK on ITV2 in February 2011.
Magnanti is married and lives in
in the . She became a
In June 2011, an ex-boyfriend issued a libel writ against The Sunday Times for a claim of defamation caused by his mention in the paper. The writ, filed by Flight Lieutenant Owen Morris of , claimed that following her outing, he was identified as her former boyfriend and therefore mentions of his harassment in the articles had been damaging even though they did not mention him by name. The Sunday Times printed an apology in February 2012, followed by
who agreed to pay damages.
Belle de Jour (2010). Belle's Best Bits. .  .
Belle de Jour (2009). Belle De Jour's Guide to Men. .  .
Belle de Jour (2009). Playing the Game. .  .
Belle de Jour (2006). The Further Adventures of a London Call Girl. .  .
Belle de Jour (2006). Belle De Jour: Diary of an Unlikely Call Girl. .  .
Belle de Jour (2005). The Intimate Adventures of a London Call Girl. .  .
Dr Brooke Magnanti (2012). The Sex Myth. .  .
Saunders, M Magnanti, B Carreira, S Yang, A Calamandrei, G Koppe, J von Krauss, M Keune, H Bartonova, A Keune, H Bartonova, Alena (2012). "Chlorpyrifos and neurodevelopmental effects: a literature review and expert elicitation on research and policy". Environmental Health 11 (S5): S5. :.
Magnanti, B Dorak, M. T Parker, L Craft, Alan W.; James, Peter W.; McNally, Richard J. Q. (2008). "Sex-specific incidence and temporal trends in solid tumours in young people from Northern England, ".
8 (89): 89. :.
Magnanti, B Dorak, M. T Parker, L Craft, Alan W.; James, Peter W.; McNally, Richard J. Q. (2008). "Sex-specific patterns and trends in the incidence of hematologic malignancies in 0-24 year olds from Northern England, ".
93 (9): . :.
Magnanti, B Dorak, M. T Parker, L Craft, Alan W.; James, Peter W.; McNally, Richard J. Q. (2008). "Geographical analysis of thyroid cancer in young people from northern England: Evidence for a sustained excess in females in Cumbria".
45 (9): . :.  .
Magnanti, B , A.; , R. (2003). David Arnold and Alan Chalmers and Franco Niccolucci, ed. Multi-Platform Skeletal Visualisation and Reproduction in Stereolithography. 4th International Symposium on Virtual Reality, Archaeology and Intelligent Cultural Heritage. Brighton, United Kingdom: Eurographics Association. pp. 89–92. :.
Brooke Leigh Magnanti (2011).
. Telegraph.co.uk. 28 March .
. Archive.org.
Hannah Betts (13 April 2012). .
Eric Deggans: . Tampa Bay Times,
Zo? Corbyn:
at the website of Times Higher Education,
, retrieved
: . Sydney Morning Herald,
Jacqueline Vickery: . In: John Derek Hall Downing (ed.): Encyclopedia of Social Movement Media. Sage, 2011, , p. 72
Simon Waldman:
at guardian.co.uk,
Champion, Sarah (21 March 2004). . The Observer (UK).
from the original on 24 June .
Addley, Esther (18 November 2009). . The Guardian (London).
from the original on 22 November .
Magnanti, Brooke (28 March 2010). . The Times (London: Times Newspapers) 2010.
Stephen Adams (15 November 2009). .
from the original on 18 November .
Gallagher, Paul (15 November 2009). .
from the original on 13 April .
. . 15 November 2009.
from the original on 19 November .
Ryan Hagen:
- Freakonomics blog. Retrieved 21 November 2009
Arifa Akbar (16 November 2009). .
. BBC. 15 November 2009.
from the original on 16 November .
Rayner, Gordon (15 December 2010). . The Daily Telegraph (London) 2010.
Waldman, Simon (18 December 2003). . The Guardian (UK).
from the original on 7 November .
Guest, Katy (21 January 2005). . The Independent (London) 2010.
Tonkin, Boyd (10 November 2008). . The Independent (London) 2010.
from the original on 22 November .
Magnanti, Brooke (11 March 2010). . The Guardian (UK) 2010.
Magnanti, Brooke (1 April 2010). . The Guardian (UK) 2010.
. BBC News. n.d 2010.
. BBC News. 2 March .
at archive.org (retrieved )
. Retrieved 8 April 2012
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. OpenEye Scientific Software. Archived from
on 7 September .
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on 3 August .
. Newcastle University 2010.
"Geographical analysis of thyroid cancer in young people from northern England: evidence for a sustained excess in females in Cumbria". Eur. J. Cancer (PubMed) 45 (9): 1624–9. June 2009. :.  .
. Norwegian Institute for Air Research 2010.
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retrieved 5 August 2011
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, The Sunday Times, 26 February 2012
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() - Dr Brooke Magnanti reveals all in an interview with
Wikimedia Commons has media related to .
literary agents
- Talk by Brooke Magnanti at the Westminster Skeptics on 7 June 2010 ( audio)
- Interview of Brooke Magnanti at
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