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1 Cinema
Portuguese cinema had its debut in June 1896 at the Royal Coliseum, Lisbon, only six months after the pioneering French cinema-makers, the brothers Lumiere, introduced the earliest motion pictures to Paris audiences. Cinema pioneers in Portugal included photographer Manuel Maria da Costa Veiga and an early enthusiast, Aurelio da Paz dos Reis. The first movie theater opened in Lisbon in 1904, and most popular were early silent shorts, including documentaries and scenes of King Carlos I swimming at Cascais beach. Beginning with the Invicta Film company in 1912 and its efforts to produce films, Portuguese cinema-makers sought technical assistance in Paris. In 1918, French film technicians from Pathé Studios of Paris came to Portugal to produce cinema. The Portuguese writer of children's books, Virginia de Castro e Almeida, hired French film and legal personnel in the 1920s under the banner of "Fortuna Film" and produced several silent films based on her compositions.In the 1930s, Portuguese cinema underwent an important advance with the work of Portuguese director-producers, including AntônioLopes Ribeiro, Manoel de Oliveira, Leitao de Barros, and Artur Duarte. They were strongly influenced by contemporary French, German, and Russian cinema, and they recruited their cinema actors from the Portuguese Theater, especially from the popular Theater of Review ( teatro de revista) of Lisbon. They included comedy radio and review stars such as Vasco Santana, Antônio Silva, Maria Matos, and Ribeirinho. As the Estado Novo regime appreciated the important potential role of film as a mode of propaganda, greater government controls and regulation followed. The first Portuguese sound film, A Severa (1928), based on a Julio Dantas book, was directed by Leitão de Barros.The next period of Portuguese cinema, the 1930s, 1940s, and much of the 1950s, has been labeled, Comédia a portuguesa, or Portuguese Comedy, as it was dominated by comedic actors from Lisbon's Theatre of Review and by such classic comedies as 1933's A Cancáo de Lisboa and similar genre such as O Pai Tirano, O Pátio das Cantigas, and A Costa do Castelo. The Portuguese film industry was extremely small and financially constrained and, until after 1970, only several films were made each year. A new era followed, the so-called "New Cinema," or Novo Cinema (ca. 1963-74), when the dictatorship collapsed. Directors of this era, influenced by France's New Wave cinema movement, were led by Fernando Lopes, Paulo Rocha, and others.After the 1974-75 Revolution, filmmakers, encouraged by new political and social freedoms, explored new themes: realism, legend, politics, and ethnography and, in the 1980s, other themes, including docufiction. Even after political liberty arrived, leaders of the cinema industry confronted familiar challenges of filmmakers everywhere: finding funds for production and audiences to purchase tickets. As the new Portugal gained more prosperity, garnered more capital, and took advantage of membership in the burgeoning European Union, Portuguese cinema benefited. Some American producers, directors, and actors, such as John Malkovich, grew enamored of residence and work in Portugal. Malkovich starred in Manoel de Oliveira's film, O Convento (The Convent), shot in Portugal, and this film gained international acclaim, if not universal critical approval. While most films viewed in the country continued to be foreign imports, especially from France, the United States, and Great Britain, recent domestic film production is larger than ever before in Portugal's cinema history: in 2005, 13 Portuguese feature films were released. One of them was coproduced with Spain, Midsummer Dream, an animated feature. That year's most acclaimed film was O Crime de Padre Amaro, based on the Eça de Queirós' novel, a film that earned a record box office return. In 2006, some 22 feature films were released. With more films made in Portugal than ever before, Portugal's cinema had entered a new era. -
2 audience
noun1) (listeners, spectators) Publikum, dasprivate audience — Privataudienz, die
* * *['o:diəns]1) (a group of people watching or listening to a performance etc: The audience at the concert; a television audience.) das Publikum2) (a formal interview with someone important eg a king: an audience with the Pope.) die Audienz* * *audi·ence[ˈɔ:diən(t)s, AM ˈɑ:-]n1. + sing/pl vb (at performance) Publikum nt kein pl; THEAT also Besucher pl; TV Zuschauer pl; RADIO [Zu]hörer pl; (readership) Leserschaft f kein pl, Leserkreis mto appeal to a large \audience ein breites Publikum ansprechenprivate \audience Privataudienz fto have an \audience with sb eine Audienz bei jdm haben* * *['ɔːdɪəns]n1) Publikum nt no pl; (THEAT, TV) Zuschauer pl, Publikum nt no pl; (of speaker) Zuhörer pl, Publikum nt no pl; (of writer, book) Leserkreis m, Leserschaft f; (RAD) Zuhörerschaft fto have a large audience — ein großes Publikum haben or ansprechen (also Rad, TV etc)
I prefer London audiences — ich ziehe das Publikum in London vor
2) (= formal interview) Audienz f (with bei)* * *give audience to sb jemandem Gehör schenken, jemanden anhörenbe given ( oder granted) an audience (by), be received in ( oder for an) audience (by) in Audienz empfangen werden (von);a) Zuhörer(schaft) pl(f)b) Zuschauer pl:cinema audiences pl koll das Kinopublikum, die Zahl der Kinobesucher;audience participation Zuschauerbeteiligung fc) Besucher pld) Leser(kreis) pl(m)4. (auch als pl konstruiert) Anhänger(schaft) pl(f)* * *noun1) (listeners, spectators) Publikum, dasprivate audience — Privataudienz, die
* * *(with) n.Leserkreis m.Publikum -s n.Zuhörerschaft f. -
3 sophistication
sophistication [sə‚fɪstɪ'keɪʃən](a) (of person, manners, tastes → refinement) raffinement m; (→ chic) chic m, élégance f; (→ maturity) maturité f;∎ the growing sophistication of cinema audiences le fait que le public de cinéma est de plus en plus averti(c) (of system, technology) sophistication f, degré m de perfectionnement mUn panorama unique de l'anglais et du français > sophistication
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4 film
film
1. noun1) ((a thin strip of) celluloid made sensitive to light on which photographs are taken: photographic film.) carrete2) (a story, play etc shown as a motion picture in a cinema, on television etc: to make a film; (also adjective) a film version of the novel.) película3) (a thin skin or covering: a film of dust.) capa, película
2. verb1) (to make a motion picture (of): They are going to film the race.) filmar2) ((usually with over) to cover with a film: Her eyes gradually filmed (over) with tears.) cubrirse; nublarse•- filmy- filmstar
film1 n1. película2. carretefilm2 vb filmar / grabar / rodar
film sustantivo masculino (pl◊ films)b) (Coc) tb' film' also found in these entries: Spanish: acabose - acción - americanada - bastante - bélica - bélico - caca - cepillarse - cineasta - cinéfila - cinéfilo - cinematográfica - cinematográfico - cinta - corta - corto - cortometraje - crítica - dedicar - duración - emocionante - empezar - ser - estrella - exhibir - fanática - fanático - fibra - filmar - filmoteca - ir - hasta - incondicional - intragable - larga - largo - largometraje - miedo - mirar - montador - montadora - novelar - pantalla - película - peor - pestiño - principio - pública - público - recomendable English: allow - appropriate - backwards - blue - by - censor - downbeat - effect - engrossed - epic - extra - eye-opener - family film - fawn - feature film - feeling - film - film fan - film maker - film making - film set - film star - fit - gore - grip - hilarious - horror film - impact - last - less - location - minor - monster - moving - nod - open - out of - scary - setting - sit through - soporific - star - stay up - summon up - suppose - that - walk-on part - worst - X-film - yettr[fɪlm]2 (coating of dust etc) capa, película3 (of photos) carrete nombre masculino, rollo1 (cinem) rodar, filmar; (tv program) grabar2 (event) filmar1 SMALLCINEMA/SMALL rodar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLfilm industry industria cinematográficafilm library cinematecafilm set plató nombre masculinofilm star estrella de cinefilm strip películafilm studio estudio de cinefilm test prueba (cinematográfica)film unit equipo de rodajefilm ['fɪlm] vt: filmarfilm vi: rodarfilm n1) coating: capa f, elícula f2) : película f (fotográfica)3) movie: película f, filme mn.• capa de polvo s.f.• cinta s.f.• filme s.m.• película (Cinema) s.f.v.• cinematografiar v.• filmar v.• hacer una película de v.• rodar v.fɪlm
I
1)a) c u ( Phot) película f (fotográfica)a (roll of) film — un rollo or un carrete (de fotos), una película
b) c ( movie) película f, film(e) m (period); (before n)film buff — cinéfilo, -la m,f
film festival — festival m cinematográfico or de cine
c) u ( cinematic art) cine m2)a) c ( thin covering) película fb) u ( wrap) film m or envoltura f transparente
II
1.
transitive verb \<\<scene\>\> filmar; \<\<novel/play\>\> llevar al cine
2.
vi rodar*, filmarfilming starts tomorrow — el rodaje or la filmación empieza mañana
••
Cultural note:
film rating (US), film certificate (UK)Una calificación que se otorga a las películas y videos. Establece la clase de público autorizado para verlos. En EEUU pueden tener seis calificaciones: G ( general audiences) para todos los públicos; PG ( parental guidance) es decir que los padres deciden si sus hijos pueden verlos; PH-13 ( parental guidance for children under 13); R ( restricted) es decir que los menores de 17 años sólo pueden verlos si están acompañados de uno de los padres o de su tutor; NC-17 ( no children-17) que están prohibidos para menores de 17 años; X que sólo los pueden ver los mayores de 17 años. En Gran Bretaña las películas y los videos pueden tener 5 calificaciones: U, para todo público; PG, pueden verlos los niños si están acompañados de un adulto; 12, sólo para mayores de 12 años; 15, sólo para mayores de 15 años; 18, sólo para mayores de 18 añosUn premio de gran prestigio que se otorga anualmente a los éxitos más destacados en el mundo del periodismo, la literatura y la música norteamericanos. Fue establecido en 1917, por Joseph Pulitzer, director de periódico y editor. Cada año se entregan trece premioso El nombre que recibe la bandera del Reino Unido. Está formada por las cruces de San Jorge ( St George), patrono de Inglaterra, de San Andrés ( St Andrew), patrono de Escocia, y de San Patricio ( St Patrick), patrono de Irlanda. Gales y su patrono San David no están representados en ella[fɪlm]1.N (=thin skin) película f ; [of dust] capa f ; [of smoke etc] velo m ; (Cine, Phot) (=negatives) película f ; (=roll of film) carrete m, rollo m ; (at cinema) película f, film m, filme m ; (full-length) largometraje m ; (short) corto(metraje) msilent film — película f muda
to make a film of — [+ book] llevar al cine, hacer una película de; [+ event] filmar
2.VT [+ book] llevar al cine, hacer una película de; [+ event] filmar; [+ scene] rodar3.VI rodar, filmar4.CPD [camera, festival] cinematográfico, de cinefilm buff N — cinéfilo(-a) m / f
film censor N — censor(a) m / f cinematográfico(-a)
film company N — productora f (de cine)
film critic N — crítico(-a) m / f de cine
film fan N — aficionado(-a) m / f al cine
film festival N — festival m de cine
film library N — cinemateca f
it's the best film noir I've seen in a long time — es la mejor película de cine negro que he visto desde hace tiempo
film première N — estreno m oficial, premier f
film producer N — productor(a) m / f (cinematográfico)
film rating N — (Brit) calificación f (de películas)
film rights NPL — derechos mpl cinematográficos
film script N — guión m
film strip N — película f de diapositivas
film studio N — estudio m de cine
* * *[fɪlm]
I
1)a) c u ( Phot) película f (fotográfica)a (roll of) film — un rollo or un carrete (de fotos), una película
b) c ( movie) película f, film(e) m (period); (before n)film buff — cinéfilo, -la m,f
film festival — festival m cinematográfico or de cine
c) u ( cinematic art) cine m2)a) c ( thin covering) película fb) u ( wrap) film m or envoltura f transparente
II
1.
transitive verb \<\<scene\>\> filmar; \<\<novel/play\>\> llevar al cine
2.
vi rodar*, filmarfilming starts tomorrow — el rodaje or la filmación empieza mañana
••
Cultural note:
film rating (US), film certificate (UK)Una calificación que se otorga a las películas y videos. Establece la clase de público autorizado para verlos. En EEUU pueden tener seis calificaciones: G ( general audiences) para todos los públicos; PG ( parental guidance) es decir que los padres deciden si sus hijos pueden verlos; PH-13 ( parental guidance for children under 13); R ( restricted) es decir que los menores de 17 años sólo pueden verlos si están acompañados de uno de los padres o de su tutor; NC-17 ( no children-17) que están prohibidos para menores de 17 años; X que sólo los pueden ver los mayores de 17 años. En Gran Bretaña las películas y los videos pueden tener 5 calificaciones: U, para todo público; PG, pueden verlos los niños si están acompañados de un adulto; 12, sólo para mayores de 12 años; 15, sólo para mayores de 15 años; 18, sólo para mayores de 18 añosUn premio de gran prestigio que se otorga anualmente a los éxitos más destacados en el mundo del periodismo, la literatura y la música norteamericanos. Fue establecido en 1917, por Joseph Pulitzer, director de periódico y editor. Cada año se entregan trece premioso El nombre que recibe la bandera del Reino Unido. Está formada por las cruces de San Jorge ( St George), patrono de Inglaterra, de San Andrés ( St Andrew), patrono de Escocia, y de San Patricio ( St Patrick), patrono de Irlanda. Gales y su patrono San David no están representados en ella -
5 Theater, Portuguese
There are two types of theater in Portugal: classical or "serious" theater and light theater, or the Theater of Review, largely the Revistas de Lisboa (Lisbon Reviews). Modern theater, mostly but not exclusively centered in Lisbon, experienced an unfortunate impact from official censorship during the Estado Novo (1926-74). Following laws passed in 1927, the government decreed that, as a cultural activity, any theatrical presentations that were judged "offensive in law, in morality and in decent customs" were prohibited. One consequence that derived from the risk of prohibition was that directors and playwrights began to practice self-censorship. This discouraged liberal and experimental theatrical work, weakened commercial investment in theater, and made employment in much theater a risky business, with indifferent public support.Despite these political obstacles and the usual risks and difficulties of producing live theater in competition first with emerging cinema and then with television (which began in any case only after 1957), some good theatrical work flourished. Two of the century's greatest repertory actresses, Amélia Rey-Colaço (1898-1990) and Maria Matos (1890-1962), put together talented acting companies and performed well-received classical theater. Two periods witnessed a brief diminution of censorship: following World War II (1945-47) and during Prime Minister Marcello Caetano's government (1968-74). Although Portuguese playwrights also produced comedies and dramas, some of the best productions reached the stage under the authorship of foreign playwrights: Shakespeare, George Bernard Shaw, Arthur Miller, and others.A major new phase of Portuguese serious theater began in the 1960s, with the staging of challenging plays by playwrights José Cardoso Pires, Luis Sttau Monteiro, and Bernardo Santareno. Since the Revolution of 25 April 1974, more funds for experimental theater have become available, and government censorship ceased. As in so much of Western European theater, however, the general public tended to favor not plays with serious content but techno-hits that featured foreign imports, including musicals, or homegrown musicals on familiar themes. Nevertheless, after 1974, the theater scene was enlivened, not only in Lisbon, but also in Oporto, Coimbra, and other cities.The Theater of Review, or light theater, was introduced to Portugal in the 19th century and was based largely on French models. Adapted to the Portuguese scene, the Lisbon reviews featured pageantry, costume, comic skits, music (including the ever popular fado), dance, and slapstick humor and satire. Despite censorship, its heyday occurred actually during the Estado Novo, before 1968. Of all the performing arts, the Lisbon reviews enjoyed the greatest freedom from official political censorship. Certain periods featured more limited censorship, as cited earlier (1945-47 and 1968-74). The main venue of the Theater of Review was located in central Lisbon's Parque Mayer, an amusement park that featured four review theaters: Maria Vitória, Variedades, Capitólio, and ABC.Many actors and stage designers, as well as some musicians, served their apprenticeship in the Lisbon reviews before they moved into film and television. Noted fado singers, the fadistas, and composers plied their trade in Parque Mayer and built popular followings. The subjects of the reviews, often with provocative titles, varied greatly and followed contemporary social, economic, and even political fashion and trends, but audiences especially liked satire directed against convention and custom. If political satire was not passed by the censor in the press or on television, sometimes the Lisbon reviews, by the use of indirection and allegory, could get by with subtle critiques of some personalities in politics and society. A humorous stereotyping of customs of "the people," usually conceived of as Lisbon street people or naive "country bumpkins," was also popular. To a much greater degree than in classical, serious theater, the Lisbon review audiences steadily supported this form of public presentation. But the zenith of this form of theater had been passed by the late 1960s as audiences dwindled, production expenses rose, and film and television offered competition.The hopes that governance under Prime Minister Marcello Caetano would bring a new season of freedom of expression in the light theater or serious theater were dashed by 1970-71, as censorship again bore down. With revolution in the offing, change was in the air, and could be observed in a change of review show title. A Lisbon review show title on the eve of the Revolution of 25 April 1974, was altered from: 'To See, to Hear... and Be Quiet" to the suggestive, "To See, to Hear... and to Talk." The review theater experienced several difficult years after 1980, and virtually ceased to exist in Parque Mayer. In the late 1990s, nevertheless, this traditional form of entertainment underwent a gradual revival. Audiences again began to troop to renovated theater space in the amusement park to enjoy once again new lively and humorous reviews, cast for a new century and applied to Portugal today. -
6 Fischer, E.
[br]fl. 1930s Switzerland[br]Swiss engineer who invented the Eidophor large-screen television projector.[br]Fischer was a professor of engineering at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in the late 1930s. Interested in the emerging technology for television, he was of the opinion that the growth of television would take place through the development and use of large-screen cinema-type displays serving large audiences. He therefore carried out research into suitable techniques. Realizing the brightness limitations of projection systems based on the optical magnification of the image produced by a conventional cathode ray tube, he used the deflected electron-beam, not to excite a phosphor screen, but to deposit a variable charge on the surface of a film or oil. By means of a Schlieren slit system, the consequent deformations of the surface were used to spatially modulate the light from an electric arc or a discharge tube, giving a large, high-brightness image. Although the idea, first put forward in 1939, was not taken up for cinema television, the subsequent requirement of the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration in the 1960s for large colour displays in its Command and Control Centres led to the successful development of the idea by Gretag AG, a subsidiary of Ciba-Geigy: separate units were used for the red, green and blue images. In the 1990s, colour Eidophor projectors were used for large conference meetings and pop concerts.[br]Bibliography1946, "Views on the suitability of a cathode ray tube with a fluorescent screen for projection in cinemas", Bulletin of the Association of Swiss Electricians 39:468 (describes the concept of the Eidophor).Further ReadingE.H.Baumann, 1953, "The Fischer large screen projection system", Journal of Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers 60:344.A.Robertson, 1976, "Projection television. A review of current practice in large-screen projectors", Wireless World 47.KF -
7 play
play [pleɪ]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. noun4. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. noun• there was some good play in the second half on a assisté à du beau jeu pendant la deuxième mi-temps• to bring or call sth into play faire intervenir qchb. ( = movement) jeu mc. ( = drama) pièce f (de théâtre)• to be in a play [actor] jouer dans une piècea. [+ game, sport] jouer à• what position does she play? à quelle place joue-t-elle ?• don't play games with me! ne vous moquez pas de moi !• to play ball with sb ( = cooperate) coopérer avec qn• to play the game ( = play fair) jouer le jeu• he gave up playing the field and married a year ago il a cessé de papillonner et s'est marié il y a un anb. [+ opponent] rencontrerc. [+ chess piece, card] jouerf. ( = direct) [+ hose, searchlight] dirigera. jouer► play + preposition• what's he playing at? (inf) à quoi il joue ?• how much time do we have to play with? (inf) combien de temps avons-nous ?4. compounds► play-off noun (after a tie) ≈ match m de barrage (départageant des concurrents à égalité) ; (US) (for championship) match m de qualification[+ tape] réécouter( = minimize importance of) [+ significance] minimiser ; [+ situation, attitude] dédramatiser[+ sb's emotions, good nature] jouer sur( = give trouble) the engine is playing up le moteur fait des siennesa. ( = give trouble to) his leg is playing him up sa jambe le tracasseb. ( = magnify importance of) exagérer (l'importance de)* * *[pleɪ] 1.2) (amusement, recreation)3) Sport, Gamesthe ball is out of play/in play — la balle est hors jeu/en jeu
4) fig (movement, interaction) jeu m2.transitive verb1) jouer à [game, match, cards]; jouer [card]to play goal — ( in football) être gardien de but
to play the ball to somebody — ( in basketball) passer la balle à quelqu'un
2) Music jouer de [instrument]; jouer [tune, symphony, chord]3) ( act out) Theatre interpréter, jouer [role]4) Audio mettre [tape, video, CD]5) Finance3.to play the stock market — boursicoter (colloq)
1) [children] jouer ( with avec)2) figwhat does he think he's playing at? — GB (colloq) qu'est-ce qu'il fabrique (colloq)?
3) Sport, Games jouer5) Cinema, Theatre [play] se jouer; [film] passer; [actor] jouershe's playing opposite him in ‘Macbeth’ — elle lui donne la réplique dans ‘Macbeth’
6) [fountain, water] couler; Music [record] jouer•Phrasal Verbs:- play off- play on- play out- play up••all work and no play (makes Jack a dull boy) — Prov il n'y a pas que le travail dans la vie
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8 Anschütz, Ottomar
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1846 Lissa, Prussia (now Leszno, Poland) d. 1907[br]German photographer, chronophotographer ana inventor.[br]The son of a commercial photographer, Anschütz entered the business in 1868 and developed an interest in the process of instantaneous photography. The process was very difficult with the contemporary wet-plate process, but with the introduction of the much faster dry plates in the late 1870s he was able to make progress. Anschütz designed a focal plane shutter capable of operating at speeds up to 1/1000 of a second in 1883, and patented his design in 1888. it involved a vertically moving fabric roller-blind that worked at a fixed tension but had a slit the width of which could be adjusted to alter the exposure time. This design was adopted by C.P.Goerz, who from 1890 manufactures a number of cameras that incorporated it.Anschütz's action pictures of flying birds and animals attracted the attention of the Prussian authorities, and in 1886 the Chamber of Deputies authorized financial support for him to continue his work, which had started at the Hanover Military Institute in October 1885. Inspired by the work of Eadweard Muybridge in America, Anschütz had set up rows of cameras whose focal-plane shutters were released in sequence by electromagnets, taking twenty-four pictures in about three-quarters of a second. He made a large number of studies of the actions of people, animals and birds, and at the Krupp artillery range at Meppen, near Essen, he recorded shells in flight. His pictures were reproduced, and favourably commented upon, in scientific and photographic journals.To bring the pictures to the public, in 1887 he created the Electro-Tachyscope. The sequence negatives were printed as 90 x 120 mm transparencies and fixed around the circumference of a large steel disc. This was rotated in front of a spirally wound Geissler tube, which produced a momentary brilliant flash of light when a high voltage from an induction coil was applied to it, triggered by contacts on the steel disc. The flash duration, about 1/1000 of a second, was so short that it "froze" each picture as it passed the tube. The pictures succeeded each other at intervals of about 1/30 of a second, and the observer saw an apparently continuously lit moving picture. The Electro-Tachyscope was shown publicly in Berlin at the Kulturministerium from 19 to 21 March 1887; subsequently Siemens \& Halske manufactured 100 machines, which were shown throughout Europe and America in the early 1890s. From 1891 his pictures were available for the home in the form of the Tachyscope viewer, which used the principle of the zoetrope: sequence photographs were printed on long strips of thin card, perforated with narrow slots between the pictures. Placed around the circumference of a shallow cylinder and rotated, the pictures could be seen in life-like movement when viewed through the slots.In November 1894 Anschütz displayed a projector using two picture discs with twelve images each, which through a form of Maltese cross movement were rotated intermittently and alternately while a rotating shutter allowed each picture to blend with the next so that no flicker occurred. The first public shows, given in Berlin, were on a screen 6×8 m (20×26 ft) in size. From 22 February 1895 they were shown regularly to audiences of 300 in a building on the Leipzigstrasse; they were the first projected motion pictures seen in Germany.[br]Further ReadingJ.Deslandes, 1966, Histoire comparée du cinéma, Vol. I, Paris. B.Coe, 1992, Muybridge and the Chronophotographers, London.BC
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