After the elegant minuet, the finale's explosive power was unleashed with impressive panache and energy. |
|
From the roaring 20's to the beaches of Normandy, it has always had a certain panache. |
|
Names should always be designated with verve and panache and Scotland, it turns out, has plenty of both. |
|
Gigot, well flavoured and well timed, is carved at the table with concentrated panache. |
|
Smith's prose has lost none of its panache, though it has outgrown its swagger. |
|
Staff are witty and efficient and dispense wonderfully coarsely ground black pepper from a larger-than-life pepper mill with great panache. |
|
Earl Alexander was a military commander with little taste for panache but distinguished by imperturbable confidence. |
|
In dark brown, these are traditionally styled and lack the punch panache and pizzazz hip kids require in a shoe. |
|
You just have to admire a guy who brings style and panache to the otherwise drab world of bank robbery. |
|
This picture shows us how to wear a plumed helmet with a warrior's panache. |
|
Rarely does a performer with such negligible talent flaunt his insignificance with such wanton panache. |
|
He had a strong, consistent serve, he was an accurate placer of the ball, and could lob and volley with equal panache. |
|
Made of a colorful lame fabric the crown is wrapped with brown velvet and adorned at the side with brown ostrich feather panache. |
|
This joint thus functions as a tapas bar, but replaces typical tapas dishes with North African panache. |
|
It is cute, astute, cerebral football, a mirror image of their studious manager though with an added dash of style and panache. |
|
The show is killingly funny and the cast rise to the occasions that are presented to them with a panache rarely seen in ensemble playing. |
|
Think of good Irish food, all local produce, being cooked with flair, enthusiasm and panache. |
|
They enthralled the crowds night after night, giving them expert entertainment with real style and pure panache. |
|
The Prime Minister, who seems to make a fetish of showing that power is not incompatible with panache, is a Stones fan. |
|
With her typical panache and literary style, the author comes at the serial killer genre from a new angle. |
|
|
He brought subtle pianistic colors and fleet-fingered panache to Debussy's magnum chamber opus. |
|
Although saddled with a convoluted plot, he has invested his film with enough grit, panache and edgy style to make it thoroughly gripping. |
|
Smith relied heavily on stylized dialogue, while his visuals show no style or panache at all. |
|
True enough, City perhaps failed to match the style and panache they had displayed just days earlier against Crewe. |
|
It covers a little-known subject with style and panache rather than strict historical accuracy. |
|
The book teems with passion and panache and is graced with an authoritative yet absorbing style. |
|
All you need is a few ideas on how to do this with a modicum of panache and flair. |
|
Hutch addressed all of these challenges with his characteristic enthusiasm, energy and panache. |
|
But it was done with enough panache to give one confidence that our world may be unfolding as it should. |
|
What the movie does do, is move quickly with a great deal of style and panache. |
|
Everything was presented with great panache and evening meals were preceded by complimentary canapes and appetisers. |
|
After a less than convincing start, she batted with style and panache to completely alter the course of the game. |
|
High tobymen, or horsed robbers, had yielded the field to low tobymen, or footpads, and roadside thieving had lost its traditional panache. |
|
With competition hotting up, you need some preparation and panache to stay at the head of the queue. |
|
Ascot has royalty, Goodwood offers glorious views towards England's south coast, but, for sheer style and panache, Longchamp is peerless. |
|
She came across the stage with a marvellous slouch, has poise, panache, posture, studied clothes and high beauty. |
|
What gives it panache is the way the flower teeters on its ridiculously long, slender stem. |
|
And look to menswear-inspired tweeds, checks and herringbone patterns for added panache. |
|
If it's any comfort to the beaten finalists it is that they lost to a moment of panache. |
|
The musketeers romantically portrayed by Dumas in the 19th century reflected the flamboyance and panache expected of them and their kind. |
|
|
The finale, with its unexpected modulations, was played with panache and exciting vitality. |
|
Burdened with their heavy fleeces in the sweltering sunlight the sheep still managed to pull off their moment in the spotlight with panache. |
|
He captures with equal panache the drag-queenish vanity of Amalfi and the witty heroics of Count Sirocco. |
|
The Galliard Ensemble plays with sparkle, polish and a good deal of panache. |
|
Fluctuating wildly between bewildered Dr Jekyll and psychopathic Mr Hyde, Dafoe plays the role with unremitting glee, energy and panache. |
|
Some of this handling panache is a by-product of the roll cage, which is installed while the car is still a bare shell. |
|
The straight, one-armed lifts which are a highlight of this first scene were performed almost matter-of-factly with no obvious panache. |
|
Lucknow was consciously aiming to surpass the glories of Late Moghul Delhi and the Great Imambara shows it could do so with dashing panache. |
|
The picture quality is superb, punctuated by the lush colors of the gang's neighborhood pub and the panache of their respective flats. |
|
Both proved themselves adept farceurs, savouring every idiotic situation and line of dialogue with gusto and panache. |
|
Its young front line ran hard at the Azzurri, harrying hardened defenders with speed and, yes, panache. |
|
Fashion is about fun, style, panache, and feeling good about yourself. |
|
There is very little spectacle, beyond the sumptuous costumes, but the actors approach the verse with such attack and panache that a palpable energy is generated. |
|
There is something gloriously romantic and ineffably affecting about seeing this kind of grand love put up on the screen with such high emotion and visual panache. |
|
The washings of light across skin and cloth have helped to give these bodies a real, toned shapeliness, a kind of theatrical panache. |
|
Behind the panache of his ideas often bunkum, yet sometimes catching acutely the media-dominated triviality of modern life the man was hidden. |
|
What the book lacks in comprehensiveness or even comprehensibility, it more than makes up for in visual panache. |
|
An adventure like this required supreme address: Manuel Rocheman has carried it off with panache, fastidiousness and virtuosity. |
|
In this scene, we see her deal with his disparaging thoughts on education with passive-aggressive panache. |
|
One must be a bad mouth not to admit this young quintet has some kind of panache. |
|
|
It was even an honour to be made fun of by Craig, because he did it with such panache and such joy. |
|
Scientific colleagues are both impressed by his panache and grateful for his efforts. |
|
No other print show in the world sees so many new products promoted with such panache as in Düsseldorf. |
|
But while losing none of his combative, fast-talking panache and his showman style, he's decided he has to clean up his act if he is to survive politically. |
|
Exhibiting uncharacteristic panache, John used this result to question Jacques Loeb's then popular theory of photic orientation in insects, which required paired eyes. |
|
He carried out a Funeral Directing Business, with panache and distinction. |
|
A quick succession of Eastern and Western dances by energetic youths set the scene for the fashion show, which proceeded with professional panache. |
|
Noel Coward couldn't have barfed with this much casual panache. |
|
She serenely showed off the classic panache demanded of the last act. |
|
In the ubiquitous Rachmaninov Prelude in G-sharp he makes no attempt to compete with the fingerpower of Russian masters, but tosses the piece off with near casual panache. |
|
By lunchtime, the home turns into a plush eating joint, where family members come together and relish the sinfully delicious desserts with panache. |
|
The clothes were hideous and without an ounce of panache or style between them. |
|
Brown has long had about him a sportive, Cyrano-esque panache. |
|
Lang achieves his vision with panache, verve and high style. |
|
Yes, it is still the capital of North African style and panache. |
|
Fierce narrative inventions combine and collide with stylistic panache. |
|
A splendid conclusion to the CD is provided by the Op 16 Capriccio, where the opening launches a virtuoso piling up of passagework that has irresistible panache. |
|
It is Charles's job to appear in front of the cameras, grin and bear it and answer sometimes unbearably inane questions with whatever panache he can muster. |
|
He glitters as the wicked Cesare Borgia, giving him a quick wit and devilish panache, which leaves the movie's supposed hero, Tyrone Power, struggling to appear anywhere near as captivating as its villain. |
|
Her sari was borrowed from a friend – who had clearly either been on hand to act as a dresser for the day, or had provided excellent tuition – and the 42-year-old carried the look with panache. |
|
|
Where the Americans have developed a certain panache with a particular style of standing out cliches of a genre which became crowded, they disappoint here by a quite surprising stagnation. |
|
Vyner, who thought giving his treatise, Notitia Venatica, a Latin name would give it panache. |
|
And although Canadian architects eschew spectacle for substance, that does not mean that their designs are not infused with a little pageantry and panache. |
|
Kean was popular with both the nobility, who admired the actor but reproached him for his aversion to stage decorum, and the general public, who applauded his panache and quick-wittedness. |
|
One variant is that Nicolas Sarkozy, the president of France, intervened with panache and elan to prevent catastrophe, brokering a ceasefire deal in a way that only a big European country could have done. |
|
Though the cocktails are clever, delicious and prepared and served with panache and pomp, the true genius of Hop Sing is the theatre: It's a faux speakeasy in Chinatown, with an unmarked door whose bell must be rung. |
|
The judges said the Guardian had relaunched in its new Berliner format with enormous panache, producing a sharp, readable, quirky and literate paper. |
|
His hair is tied back with a bit of silver galloon, and he is dressed with panache in a blue velvet jacket, white silk hose, buckled pumps. |
|
He died in Italy in 1969, cared for by the truly devoted Frank Magro. In spite of the dismaying nature of its subject, this is an elegant, racy and entertaining book, written with zestful panache. |
|
He reflected with dramatic panache that since he had got to his feet 100 children had been born – he's thinking about tomorrow, you see – but in truth this was a short speech: 49 minutes and right to the point. |
|
Cannas, which we're also bringing in now, fulfil the same sort of function and add real panache too. |
|
There is a glide and panache to Mr. Draghi, who favors hand-cut black suits and has the assured pace of the basketball player he was in his youth, that set him apart from the general frumpiness of his fellow central bankers. |
|
He had the best answer, he had it first, and he delivered it with panache. |
|
The SAQ Wine and Dine Experience presented by Air France will be honouring female talent, giving carte blanche to women who have so skilfully-and with such panache! |
|
Surrounded by his ruffianly Mescaleros, the old groaner bigs it up on a convincing batch of rebel-rockabilly songs with added rainbow colourings, with the feisty opening track Johnny Appleseed setting the scene with panache. |
|
All that is excellent in Audiard is present in the film: his flair, his style, his brio, the sheer panache with which he swoops in on detail and leaps back for the bigger picture. |
|
The mills of the Decoration Collection have plenty of panache and pizzazz. |
|
As history would prove, that was just as the tide was about to turn, and no one rode the bull market wave that followed with more style and panache than Gross, a man of outsize personality. |
|
And Leigh does explore it as Turner shockingly adds his scarlet daub to the seascape Helvoetsluys as if he were vandalising his own work – until, with targeted panache, he turns the blob into a recognisable buoy. |
|
The feminine, yet sporty collar with decorative buttons and tab can be zipped up for extra warmth or worn open across the shoulders for a little panache. |
|
|
With Senscience's latest collection, we have brought to life three simple yet elegant hairstyles that can go from catwalk to boardwalk to night club with style, panache and a sense of freedom in their easy creative ability. |
|
Escamillo, the toreador, is a modern equivalent: a hedge-fund manager whose extreme panache is matched by the danger to which his risk-taking exposes him. |
|
Entirely designed from recycled Polartec® 200 yarn, this polar fleece jacket has a lot of panache with a ruched effect on the standup collar and sleeves obtained using an ultrasound technology. |
|
With its offhand beauty, Montreal increasingly plays up its diversity as a major asset, and attracts a growing number of people drawn by the city's multihued cultural panache and the inventiveness of its creative sector. |
|
Streep is quite the trouper, putting across her songs with a thoroughly winning mix of spite, panache and wit – and is bound to win yet more awards nominations for her efforts. |
|
Solo violin and viola delivered the final lively Rigaudon with panache and verve. |
|
As my body flushed with unexpected heat and my heart palpitated, with hip-thrusting panache I shot my load all over the TV screen. |
|
It has less panache, but it is definitely very effective. |
|
Namely, to not only win but win easily, with panache. |
|
Yet he bounced back from it, redeemed: partly because it was almost impossible to imagine the District without his charisma, shamelessness and panache. |
|
It's hardcore gourmandising with an equine twist and a liberal dash of apple spirit, all served with the kind of panache only Johnny Frenchman can truly muster. |
|
Spyboy, her backing band, proved capable of rocking and approximating the atmospherics of her recent collaborator Daniel Lanois with equal panache. |
|
If Mlle de la Salle is still developing an individual personality as a musician, Sir Andrew is one of the great personalties in classical music, oozing enthusiasm and panache. |
|
I had taken the panache from my shako so that it might escape notice, but even with my fine overcoat, I feared that sooner or later, my uniform would betray me. |
|
Cumberbund enjoyed himself immensely, playing Sherlock with great panache. |
|