carmen

listen to the pronunciation of carmen
İngilizce - İngilizce
A female given name borrowed from Spanish in the nineteenth century
A male given name, an Anglicization of the Italian Carmine. (Less common than the female name)
an opera written in 1875 by the French composer Georges Bizet, about a Spanish gypsy woman called Carmen. Margarita Carmen Cansino Kahlo y Calderón de Rivera Magdalena Carmen Frida McRae Carmen Miranda Carmen
{i} male or female name; famous opera composed by Georges Bizet in 1875 that tells a story about a bullfighter and his adulterous wife
borrowed from Spanish in the nineteenth century
An opera(1875) by Georges Bizet
A grand opera composed by Georges Bizet (1838-1875), with libretto by Meilhac (1831-1897) and Ludovic Halévy (1834-1908), and based on a romantic novel of the same name by Prosper Merimée (1803-1870)
carmen figuratum
A visual poem in the shape of an object
Carmen McRae
born April 8, 1920, New York, N.Y., U.S. died Nov. 10, 1994, Beverly Hills, Calif. U.S. singer and pianist. McRae was influenced by Billie Holiday and Sarah Vaughan. She began her career in 1943 singing at Minton's Playhouse in Harlem, absorbing the innovations of the first bebop musicians. Working as a soloist from the mid-1950s, McRae became one of the most accomplished scat singers and ballad interpreters in jazz
Carmen Miranda
a Brazilian actress and singer, who appeared in musicals (=films that use singing and dancing to tell a story) and was famous for her hats decorated with fruit (1913-55). orig. Maria do Carmo Miranda da Cunha born Feb. 9, 1909, Lisbon, Port. died Aug. 5, 1955, Beverly Hills, Calif., U.S. Brazilian singer and actress. In the 1930s she was the most popular recording artist in Brazil, where she appeared in five films. Recruited by a Broadway producer, she starred in The Streets of Paris (1939), then made her U.S. film debut in Down Argentine Way (1940). Typecast as the "Brazilian Bombshell" and given such caricatural roles as "The Lady in the Tutti-Frutti Hat" in The Gang's All Here (1943), she became the highest-paid female performer in the U.S. during World War II. Her final U.S. film was Scared Stiff (1953)
Magdalena Carmen Frida Kahlo y Calderón de Rivera
Her house in Coyoacán is now the Frida Kahlo Museum
Magdalena Carmen Frida Kahlo y Calderón de Rivera
born July 6, 1907, Coyoacán, Mex. died July 13, 1954, Coyoacán Mexican painter. The daughter of a German Jewish photographer, she had polio as a child and at 18 suffered a serious bus accident. She subsequently underwent some 35 operations; during her recovery, she taught herself to paint. She is noted for her intense self-portraits, many reflecting her physical ordeal. Like many artists working in post-revolutionary Mexico, Kahlo was influenced by Mexican folk art; this is apparent in her use of fantastical elements and bold use of colour, and in her depictions of herself wearing traditional Mexican, rather than European-style, dress. Her marriage to painter Diego Rivera (from 1929) was tumultuous but artistically rewarding. The Surrealists André Breton and Marcel Duchamp helped arrange exhibits of her work in the U.S. and Europe, and though she denied the connection, the dreamlike quality of her work has often led historians to identify her as a Surrealist. She died at
carmen

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    () Spanish Carmen, cognate with English Carmel. Made famous outside Spain by the opera Carmen (1875) by Georges Bizet.