A baboon and a monkey are sitting patiently on a pallet awaiting their lift back to the limelight. |
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And after so many years lurking mournfully in the shadows, who could deny Ford the chance to steal some of Daddy's limelight? |
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The oldies hog the limelight, leaving the modern beauties crying for attention. |
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Fashion has turned the clock back to the Eighties, bringing gold, sequins and bold patterns back into the limelight. |
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Surely the film crews are more deserving of the limelight with their technological expertise and patience with the stars. |
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As that group of teenagers continue to hog the limelight, Doumbe is relieved to be emerging from the shadows. |
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Similarly, Nilambur continues to hog the limelight when it comes to earthenware. |
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You crave attention, the limelight, and the fawning admiration of millions. |
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The other two, by contrast, sometimes come over as the Don Kings of rugby, such is their desire to hog the limelight. |
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His delightful bride stole the limelight as she looked simply magnificent as she strolled up the aisle in St Mary's Cathedral. |
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He has admitted harbouring ill-feelings towards his former co-star who, he claims, has a huge ego and hogged the limelight. |
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His international household name status meant that he hogged the limelight. |
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Olga, the Giant Pacific Octopus, is stealing the limelight at the popular aquatic centre. |
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The sun, center of our solar system, is your ruler, giving you a love of the limelight. |
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Normally shy, nocturnal animals, the great crested newts have reluctantly stepped into the limelight to highlight their cause. |
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Instead, Chen's address displayed a sensitivity and astuteness unexpected of a politician who until recently was rarely in the limelight. |
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I've never had any desire to step into the limelight, so climbing on to the stage felt like mounting a scaffold. |
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In fact, schools hog the limelight, by celebrating the festival in a customary manner, involving children and teachers. |
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Never one to hog the limelight or to go in search of the headlines, he did Trojan work for people in a quiet and unobtrusive way. |
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He makes no attempt to hog the limelight, but even among a strong team of actors there's no question who's the most gifted performer. |
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However, it is in his present status as autodriver that he hogs the limelight. |
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The winner is undefeated after three outings and is sure to hog the limelight in the coming months. |
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Many actors just want to hog the limelight and be in front of the camera all the time. |
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How does she feel about cricket hogging the limelight in India, eclipsing achievements of other sportspersons? |
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He crept up the singles draw, away from limelight focussed on the seeded players, till the final when he became an object of curiosity. |
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It was only through the abdication of Edward VIII in 1936, that, suddenly, she was thrust into the limelight, and became our Queen. |
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And the limelight is repeatedly stolen by John Kazek's gloriously brash Bottom and, best of all, Malcolm Shields's mercurially nimble Puck. |
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It was only a matter of time before salsa and merengue's less glamorous sibling earned its recognition in the Latin music limelight. |
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However, it makes me sad to see our fellow brothers and sisters abort Xhosa and adopt other languages when they get into the limelight. |
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As boisterous entrepreneurs, now millionaires many times over, both enjoy the limelight a great deal. |
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Once again it is a mixed bag for the audience with a combination of the old and new generation actors hogging the limelight. |
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Helsinki's habit of keeping a low profile means that its attractions have also stayed out of the limelight. |
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Despite his quiet, diffident manner, the Humberside police chief is becoming used to an unflattering limelight. |
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He had two fights against name opponents where a win would have propelled him into the limelight. |
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One of the most nauseating sights in sport is when a politician suddenly appears on the scene and basks in the limelight of a victorious team. |
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If the show isn't buzzworthy, the e-commercial would have been difficult to propel into the limelight. |
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My Sunday school teacher suggested that maybe the fact that I'm trying to escape notice inadvertently brings me into the limelight. |
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Tonight, amid a galaxy of sporting stars, curling will be back in the limelight. |
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Even then, he shunned the limelight, refusing interviews and steering clear of showbiz events. |
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They are just ordinary kids who often get pushed out of the limelight by other things. |
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If that is done as a joint venture, they could well find themselves catapulted into the limelight on more than one front. |
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He was a reluctant celebrity, less comfortable in the limelight than in the hermit-like world he fashioned for himself off the pitcher's mound. |
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Stoic, perseverant and disciplined, they are a proud people of few words who shun the limelight. |
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It would be Rozema's first feature-length film, however, that would propel her into cinema's international limelight. |
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Some have dropped down to continue playing, while others have been plugging away outside the limelight for all their careers. |
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Did she not realise that the cost of being an actor is to burn forever in the limelight of intrusive media questioning? |
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That's why everyone has a story about a Wise Man corpsing at a key moment, or a showboating Shepherd hogging the limelight. |
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Nagano Prefecture was brought into the limelight with the successful 1998 Winter Olympics which were held at various locations in the prefecture. |
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And what has brought about the return of the prodigal son more than a year after he stepped out of the limelight? |
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Takuma Sato made the most sensational start off the grid, stealing the limelight as he scorched his way from 7th to 4th. |
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In direct contrast, feminist accounts have pushed Shajara into the limelight at the cost of the events themselves. |
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At 18, she ducked out of the limelight, but after several years in retirement, she picked up her skills again. |
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So the limelight was off us a bit and we were able to prepare quietly and save our best for last. |
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It took time for the event to grab the limelight, but its potential was soon to be realised. |
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Bangalore is just one city, which on account of its IT bigwigs, is in the limelight. |
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Anthea has not been on the television for years so is aching to get back into the limelight. |
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There are plenty of celebrities who own racehorses but many avoid the limelight by keeping their name out of the racecards. |
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He's had a taste for the limelight and is now leaving Wellywood to try his luck in Hollywood. |
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Keaton prefers anonymity to limelight, belonging to conflicting, going with the flow to striving against it. |
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As Delhi prepares for its annual date with razzmatazz, the fashion-conscious are debating who would be in the limelight this year. |
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If that is the case, it will thrust the reclusive billionaires into a limelight they have spent years avoiding. |
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Principals may take the limelight in a musical but chorus work is the lifeblood of it. |
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Four people eventually managed to zip him into it and he emerged belatedly into the limelight still rippling from his previous endeavour. |
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He is also responsible for bringing a number of actors out of obscurity and into the limelight, including James Dean in the film East of Eden. |
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It is also a sober commentary on an event that has dragged the town once again into the limelight. |
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These are people who are already famous or rich enough not to have to hog the limelight. |
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He wants to hog the limelight and shout about what he believes, and to do that you have to be populist, brash and confident. |
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The cases he has taken on and won have propelled him into the public limelight. |
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Horton was a national hero who had pushed into the limelight the Submarine Service and gained media attention. |
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But this is more a case of a junior minister trying to hog the limelight and getting frazzled through idiocy. |
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I think there is a window of opportunity while the issue is still in the limelight. |
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He admits that he is quite the showman and that he now has to vent his love of the limelight in public speaking engagements. |
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But there is no easy exit from the public limelight for Cullen, now the transport minister. |
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While Wilkinson has been shunning the limelight, Dawson is relishing the attention that has been lavished on him. |
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He said the company wished to avoid the limelight because of the public's negative perception of big oil. |
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Sometimes people in the public limelight after a few marriages go off and get married. |
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They themselves have fallen from grace in recent years, with the exploits of their junior footballers taking most, if not all, of the limelight away from the hurlers. |
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In a short period of time, both bands have been trust into the limelight of the New Zealand rock scene, and have earned their reputations as New Zealand's best live acts. |
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Ever since she pranced into the limelight last summer, Sarah Palin has been making liberals like me crazy. |
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Also taking the limelight is the British premiere of a multi-media septet set to a compilation of tracks performed to Scarlatti's bright and rhythmic pieces for harpsichord. |
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He avoids confrontation and the limelight, but he could not suppress his dismay about the absences that inaugural day. |
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Let's take her words as proof that there's a creative itch hidden somewhere, anxious to pester her back into the lippy limelight in which she glowed in the first place. |
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In the limelight, every glitch and wart becomes an eyesore for an international audience. |
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China in the limelight with its magic act making Uighurs, dissidents, falun Gong and weibo blogs disappear without a trace. |
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He made her tone it down so she would not steal the limelight. |
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She should enjoy the limelight while it lasts, because she will soon be expected to produce a foal a year. |
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The brazen land grab of Crimea was planned while Putin was enjoying the limelight of the Sochi Winter Olympics. |
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Because the games are being held in Ireland, they have brought the most toe-curlingly hypocritical self-congratulatory creeps in the country babbling into the limelight. |
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There were speeches, but not from Joe Sutter, who held back from the limelight. |
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Now even the Trident boats are taking their place in the limelight. |
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Ethan's drumming is less in your face than that of their departed sticksman, allowing crunching, jangling and fuzzy guitars to get a go of the limelight. |
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You can credit him with putting Northern Soul back into the limelight. |
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From the 1920s until the start of WWII a carnival queen was plucked annually from the town's prettiest girls and given a short spell in the limelight. |
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However, the kids could not hide the sense of pride and joy on hogging the limelight while receiving the diploma amid lusty cheers from their parents and friends. |
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When she made her entrance on the stage last week, she was one of the youngest nominees but already an old hand at steering the limelight her way. |
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The home and garden marquee did not just have floral displays but also a little Wivenhoe in a tent as the town took the limelight as the community on display. |
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Perhaps because she's gamine rather than pneumatic, Hollywood has so far been unwilling to allow her to step fully into the limelight, a situation she herself acknowledges. |
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However, Cooke can never really bring himself to see Joplin as ruined by the limelight. |
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These reasons could be anything from slating off other players to transfer rumours to their personal lives, but the fact is that they are the ones mostly in the limelight. |
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A girl in a particularly pretty blue bonnet was dumped at the end of the catwalk by an over-confident boy who was determined to hog the limelight. |
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But Sam more or less managed to stay out of the limelight until he was connected to the star of Sydney White. |
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Zhou has become the pride of Shanghai and in March she was again in the limelight when the city selected her out of 771 women as one of its top 10 women pacesetters. |
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It's an indication, though, of the pressure to produce on such bankable authors as Smith, who dare not let their name fade from the limelight for too long. |
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He has been in the limelight for six years now and knows the ropes. |
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As the pulmonarias pull out of the As the pulmonarias pull out of the limelight, anchusas, another borage relation, step into it. |
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The politician was in the limelight from the moment the scandal became public. |
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Footlights, border lights, groundrows, lengths, bunch lights, conical reflector floods, and limelight spots were mainly used during this period. |
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It had brought Wordsworth and the other Lake poets into the poetic limelight. |
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Ron is jealous that Harry is once again in the limelight and refuses to speak to Harry. |
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As the Pulmonarias pull out of the limelight, Anchusas, another borage relation, step into it. |
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Controversial celebrity Veena Malik has managed to grab the limelight yet again. |
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Such has been the focus on the less mainstream residents that Frankie has had about as much limelight as the pepper pot. |
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Graham is expected to continue to remold BGEA even as his father remains in the limelight a bit longer. |
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This long-tailed macaque strikes a thoughtful pose, the limelight gets the hawk-eagle in a flap and the clouded leopard looks spot on. |
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Now 52, it was Boyle's tear-jerker audition on Britain's Got Talent that threw her into the international limelight. |
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But if she thinks she'll be able to steal the limelight from star Kim Cattrall with a bobble hat and scarf, we reckon she's following the wrong pattern. |
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A wardrobe malfunction is generally used to propel the woman whose wardrobe has malfunctioned back into the limelight, a la Janet Jackson at the Super Bowl. |
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Former GB junior 400m hurdles international, Liam Collins, is one of the ASF men given the task of bringing the former popular side of athletics back into the limelight. |
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Following his de parture released its way s 4 THE SPECIALS A partial reunion brought Coventry Ska legends The Specials back into the limelight last year. |
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The first generation of metal bands was ceding the limelight. |
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At an event dominated by Limousin-sired animals, Tecwyn Jones found himself in the limelight again when his prolific winner Jager Bomb was tapped out as the supreme champion. |
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Although Walpole enjoyed the limelight, he was secretive about his many acts of generosity to younger writers, with both encouragement and financial help. |
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Since coming back into the limelight in 1998 with One Man and the supporting UK tour, King has toured consistently around Europe and as far east as Indonesia. |
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This was an improvement, but in 1837 Macready employed limelight in the theatre for the first time, during a performance of a pantomime, Peeping Tom of Coventry. |
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Fr Edward Daly, 73, was pushed into the limelight when images of him clasping a bloodied handkerchief while tending to the dying in Derry were beamed around the world. |
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