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User:Lolo Lympian

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Lolo Lympian
Here since 1776

Lolo Lympian



"I know not with what weapons World War 3 will be fought, but World War 4 will be fought with sticks and stones."
- A. Einstein

My username is a deliberate alliteration, based on my real name, and related to my interest in the olympics


WThis user prefers to
make cosmetic edits to Wikipedia.
GOT
MAKEUP?
This user likes to use redundant userboxes that are redundant.
A Penguin.This user likes penguins.
band-5This user adores The Rolling Stones.
This user is a participant in WikiProject Rugby union.
This user is a Moon citizen.
漢字-1This user has a basic understanding of the Kanji script.
Since no-one is perfect, this user reserves the right to completely screw up his or her edits.
This user likes to use redundant userboxes that are redundant.
much & manyThis user understands the difference between much & many.
This user plays the piano.
This user has a Degree in Subject.
fan-2This user likes Miles Davis.
to¦goThis user chooses to sometimes use split infinitives.
This user likes to use redundant userboxes that are redundant.

Today's featured picture

The Cheat

The Cheat is a 1923 American silent drama film produced by Famous Players–Lasky and distributed by Paramount Pictures. It is a remake of Cecil B. DeMille's 1915 film The Cheat, using the same script by Hector Turnbull and Jeanie MacPherson. The remake stars Pola Negri and was directed by George Fitzmaurice, and tells the story of Carmelita De Cordoba, a beautiful young South American woman who has been betrothed by her stern father to Don Pablo, whom she despises, and then meets and falls in love with Dudley Drake, a New York City broker. With no known prints of The Cheat remaining, it is considered a lost film, although there is an extant version in novel form, written in the same year as the film by Russell Holman, a Paramount Pictures employee. This color lithograph poster was produced in 1923 by Paramount to promote The Cheat, and depicts Negri as Carmelita with Charles de Rochefort as Claude Mace, an art swindler masquerading as the East Indian prince Rao-Singh.

Poster credit: Paramount Pictures; restored by Ezarate

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