Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Bernard Natan's brother, Samuel Tanenzaph known as Émile Natan, was detained at the Miranda de Ebro Gestapo camp before joining the Free French Forces in 1943. Inheritance and memory

  2. To undertake the history of the integrated company jointly designated as “Pathé-Natan” is to confront, in more than one way, a tenacious legend: that of the Jewish swindler of Roumanian descent, Bernard Natan, who acquired the great Pathé firm the better to pillage it.

    • émile natan and associates new york1
    • émile natan and associates new york2
    • émile natan and associates new york3
    • émile natan and associates new york4
    • émile natan and associates new york5
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Émile_NatanÉmile Natan - Wikipedia

    Émile Natan (1906–1962) was a Romanian-born French film producer. He was the brother of Bernard Natan, the head of Pathé-Natan. [1]

  4. Levy and Company (French: Lévy et Cie) is a 1930 French comedy film directed by André Hugon starring Léon Belières, Charles Lamy and Alexandre Mihalesco . [1] The film takes place on a liner which is sailing for New York.

  5. Iu + Bibliowicz is a New York based, creative, full service architectural and interior design firm founded by partners Carolyn Iu, AIA and Natan Bibliowicz, AIA. The firm is comprised of design professionals with project management, architectural, interior design and technical expertise.

  6. The Morgan Library & Museum (originally known as the Pierpont Morgan Library; colloquially the Morgan) is a museum and research library at 225 Madison Avenue in the Murray Hill neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City, New York, U.S. Completed in 1906 as the private library of the banker J. P. Morgan, the institution has more than 350,000 objects.

  7. New York 1988–9 New York, Brooklyn Museum, Courbet Reconsidered, 1988–9 Paris 1949 Paris, Galerie Alfred Daber, Courbet. Exposition du 130e anniversaire de sa naissance 10 Juin 1819–10 Juin 1949, 1949 Paris and London 1977–8 Paris, Grand Palais; London, Royal Academy of Arts, Gustave Courbet (1819–1877), 1977–8 Vienna 2012

  1. People also search for