Romania has many radio stations, television stations, live theaters, opera houses, cabarets, and entertainment establishments. |
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They are all fugitives and people who were expelled, who lived and formed opposition groups in cabarets and nightclubs. |
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In the film's madhouse passages, the grim mise en scene contrasts starkly with the warm glow of nightclubs and cabarets. |
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The island has plenty of entertainment with world-renowned cabarets, nightclubs and piano bars that stretch late into the night. |
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The city centre nightspot caters mainly for the over 25s with cabarets such as those shown at Funny Girls in Blackpool and the Birdcage in Leeds. |
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But ask him to sit through some hotel cabarets and his hair will rise to the perpendicular and his face will turn a chalky shade of green. |
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Lautrec lived in the Montmartre section, the nightlife quarter of cabarets, cafes, restaurants, sleazy dance halls and brothels. |
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Mainly we played for our own entertainment as well as church socials and cabarets. |
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In Nueva grandeza mexicana, the walkers venture into the pulquerias, taquerias, cabarets, and other hallmarks of mass urban culture. |
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Now it offers a plethora of bars, restaurants, cabarets, clubs and sports grounds. |
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Their songs were born to dwell in long-lost cabarets and quaint bars that fall just short of seediness. |
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After all, what does a mall consist of other than restaurants, discos, cabarets? |
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These days things are a lot better if only because there are several zoos and a choice of transvestite cabarets. |
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The Carnival will include workshops, teach-ins, concerts, conferences, cabarets, street theatre, protests, and direct action. |
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Male prostitution became better organized and there were tetki cabarets, restaurants, and bars as well as bathhouses catering to tetki. |
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In his early 20s, Greco supported himself dancing in cabarets and running show tickets for a Broadway scalper. |
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Over 30 years later, the bittersweet words still resound in the cabarets of Europe and America. |
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On Sundays and Mondays, some workers may have skipped the fair to go to the cabarets or taverns in the suburbs, though the extent of this custom should not be exaggerated. |
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He's a regular at cabarets, comedy clubs and impromptu band openings. |
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Even the most tolerant travel writers hate most hotel cabarets, perhaps for no other reason than that they never like to be mistaken for tourists. |
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I go to cabarets and get a beer and set up my camera, and I'm working. |
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The exaltation of female desire and sin and of the nightlife of clubs and cabarets clearly symbolized Mexico's new cosmopolitanism and the first waves of developmentalism. |
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Live music, cabarets, papare bands, free beer, cash bar with discounted prices, food stalls, entrance gifts will see you through to the wee hours of the morning. |
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The cabarets radically transformed the artistic scene, greatly influencing the live entertainment industry of Quebec. |
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Most notably in the novel, we find Biff Musclewhite, who makes a profession of imprisoning art forms, frequenting Harlem cabarets such as The Cotton Club. |
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