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    • 1922

      • In 1922 La Chauve-Souris made its first tour to America, through an arrangement with the producer Morris Gest. La Chauve Souris performed on Broadway from February 1922 to June 1922 (153 performances) and January 1925 to March 1925 (61 performances) in productions produced by F. Ray Comstock and Morris Gest.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Chauve-Souris
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  2. La Chauve-Souris (French: The Bat) was the name of a touring revue during the early 1900s. Originating in Moscow and then Paris, and directed by Nikita Balieff, the revue toured the United States, Europe, and South Africa.

  3. La Chauve-Souris (French: The Bat) was the name of a touring revue during the early 1900s. Originating in Moscow and then Paris, and directed by Nikita Balieff, the revue toured the United States, Europe, and South Africa.

  4. The true name should be "chouette-souris" (owl mouse), as the Vulgar Latin was "cawa sorix". But "cawa" became similar to Vulgar Latin "calva" (bald) in several dialects, like "chave" vs "chalve", hence the error.

  5. Jun 20, 2024 · Though scarcely remembered today, the Théâtre de la Chauve-Souris (The Bat Theater) in its heyday (19081943) was an internationally known musical theater under the direction of Nikita Baliev.

  6. In Chicago, Dunham begins to study ballet with Ludmilla Speranzeva, who had come to America with a Franco-Russian vaudeville troupe known as the Chauve-Souris. Speranzeva, one of the first ballet teachers to accept black dancers as students, introduces Dunham to the Spanish dancers La Argentina, Quill Monroe, and Vicente Escudero.

  7. Jan 17, 2017 · The 19th-century classics originally created in Paris, including Giselle, would have been all but forgotten if Russia hadn’t produced its own versions. Now history is repeating itself: the lack...

  8. Sep 25, 2024 · Used as early as the 8th century in Gallic Late Latin calva sōrex (“bald mouse”); the first element ("bald") may originally be an alteration of Vulgar Latin *cawa (“crow, tawny owl”). Equivalent to chauve (“bald”) +‎ souris (“mouse”).

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