Paule (name)
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Paule (name)
Paule is both a feminine given name and a surname. Notable people with the name include: Given name: * Paule Andral (1879–1956), French actress * Paule Baillargeon (born 1945), Canadian actress and film director * Paule Baudouin (born 1984), French handball player * Paule Brunelle (born 1953), Canadian politician * Paule Constable, British lighting designer * Paule Constant (born 1944), French novelist * Paule Desjardins, French singer * Paule Gauthier (c.1943–2016), Canadian lawyer * Paule Herreman (1919–1991), Belgian actress and television presenter * Paule Marrot (1902–1987), French textile designer * Paule Marshall (1929–2019), American novelist (born Valenza Pauline Burke) *Paule Maurice Paule Charlotte Marie Jeanne Maurice (29 September 1910 – 18 August 1967) was a French composer. Life and career Maurice was born in Paris to Raoul Auguste Alexandre Maurice and Marguerite Jeanne Lebrun. Registration lists at the Conservato ... (1910–1967), French composer ...
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Paule Andral
Paule Andral (14 September 1879 – 28 March 1956) was a French actress. Andral was born Paule Roucole in Paris and died in Nice in 1956. Selected filmography * '' Tarakanova'' (1930) * ''David Golder'' (1931) * '' The Rebel'' (1931) * '' The Beautiful Adventure'' (1932) * '' Imperial Violets'' (1932) * '' The Star of Valencia'' (1933) * ''The Little King'' (1933) * '' The Ironmaster'' (1933) * ''Judex'' (1934) * ''Street Without a Name ''Street Without a Name'' (French: ''La Rue sans nom'') is a 1934 French drama film directed by Pierre Chenal and starring Constant Rémy, Gabriel Gabrio and Paule Andral. It is based on the 1930 novel '' La Rue sans nom'' by Marcel Aymé.Gobl ...'' (1934) * '' Dora Nelson'' (1935) * '' Speak to Me of Love'' (1935) * '' Nights of Fire'' (1937) * '' The Sinners'' (1949) Bibliography * Alexander, John. ''Catherine the Great: Life and Legend''. Oxford University Press, 1989 External links * * 1879 births 1956 deaths French film actres ...
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Paule Maurice
Paule Charlotte Marie Jeanne Maurice (29 September 1910 – 18 August 1967) was a French composer. Life and career Maurice was born in Paris to Raoul Auguste Alexandre Maurice and Marguerite Jeanne Lebrun. Registration lists at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris report that her father was an office worker and state only that the two were married. Her most famous composition is the suite ''Tableaux de Provence, Tableaux de Provence pour saxophone et orchestre'' written between 1948 and 1955 dedicated to saxophone virtuoso, Marcel Mule. It is most often heard as a piano reduction. It was premiered on 9 December 1958 by Jean-Marie Londeix with the Orchestre Symphonique Brestois directed by Maurice's husband, and fellow composer, Pierre Lantier. Maurice's other compositions include ''Suite pour quatuor de flûtes'', ''Volio'', ''Cosmorama'', ''Concerto pour piano et orchestre'', ''Mémoires d'un chat'', ''Trois pièces pour violon'', and many more. There ar ...
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Tove Paule
Tove Paule (born 11 January 1951) is a Norwegian sports official. She was the secretary general of the Norwegian Gymnastics Federation from 1995 to 2000, and became the president of the Norwegian Olympic and Paralympic Committee and Confederation of Sports in 2007. She withdrew in mid-2011, and instead ran for election to Drammen Drammen () is a city and municipality in Buskerud county, Norway. The port and river city of Drammen is centrally located in the south-eastern and most populated part of Norway. Drammen municipality also includes smaller towns and villages such ... city council for the Conservative Party. She represents the sports club Vestfossen IF. She is a sister of Torbjørn Paule, and aunt of Geir and Tor Håkon Holte. References 1951 births Living people People from Buskerud Norwegian sports executives and administrators Conservative Party (Norway) politicians Politicians from Drammen Norwegian sportsperson-politicians {{Norway-sport-b ...
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Ross Paule
Ross Paule (born April 4, 1976) is an American former soccer midfielder, who last played for the Columbus Crew of Major League Soccer. Playing career Paule moved from Dallas, TX as a youth and joined the Memphis Futbol Club in Memphis, Tennessee. Paule also starred for Houston High School in Germantown, Tennessee where he was awarded the Commercial Appeal's Best of the Preps title. Paule played college soccer at Creighton University, but left only after three seasons, becoming one of the first players to leave college early for a jump to MLS. He was drafted 11th overall by the Colorado Rapids in the 1997 MLS College Draft, and became a regular right away, a starter by his second season, appearing in 19 games and starting seven. Paule's best year with the Rapids came in 1998, when he tallied ten goals and six assists. He stayed with the team through 2001, running the team's midfield, and was atop the league's assist charts at midseason, when the Rapids traded for midfield maes ...
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Anthony Paule
Anthony Paule (born December 21, 1956) is an American electric blues guitarist, singer and songwriter. He has issued records in his own name, but is best known for his work with others including Boz Scaggs, Charlie Musselwhite, Jackie Payne, Mark Hummel, Home Cookin', Frank Bey and Wee Willie Walker. Biography Anthony Paule was born in Durban, South Africa. His family relocated to Los Angeles, California, United States, when Paul was 10 months old and, by the age of 15, he resettled in the Bay Area where, apart from a short while spent living in Wisconsin, it has remained his home. Paule was self-taught in playing the clarinet in his early teens, but was gifted a guitar from one of his elder brothers when aged 13, and it remained the musical instrument of choice. Paule commented, "The only time I pick up a clarinet now is to take the barrel off it, which makes a perfect guitar slide." In 1968, Paule was presented with a double album of Elmore James from his father, and after l ...
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Antoine De Paule
Fra' Antoine de Paule (c. 1551 – 9 June 1636) was elected the 56th Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller (the Order of Malta) on 10 March 1623. He died on Malta thirteen years later, on 9 June 1636, after a long illness and at the age of 85. His epitaph eulogizes him as a leader who both loved his subjects and was loved by them in return. He is said to have made more resources available to the Order, thus strengthening it. He also sought to fortify ramparts which the Order had erected for defense against the Ottoman Empire. However, de Paule was not without his enemies, some of whom presented a memorial to Pope Urban VIII describing him as "a man of loose life and conversation", "guilty of simony", who had "bought his dignity with money". In response, de Paule sent a delegate to the Vatican to deal with the accusations. As Grandmaster, de Paule acted as a judge when a once-captured ship was re-captured and the original owner claimed the ship, decided whether to release a ...
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Paule Du Bouchet
Paule du Bouchet (born 19 April 1951) is a French writer, novelist and author of several books for youth. She is currently in charge of the Music Department of Gallimard Jeunesse. Career Paule du Bouchet was born on 19 April 1951, daughter of André du Bouchet and , Tina left the poet André and 6-year-old Paule for another poet René Char in 1957. She is passionate about music and pianist. Before working in book publishing, she studied philosophy and music, then she taught philosophy and gave musical training to children. She has been a journalist of the French magazine ' (Bayard Presse) from 1978 to 1985. Later she turned her career towards publishing and youth literature. She has written many novels, including ' in 2004, in 2007, , , et cetera. She currently has published more than 40 works at Éditions Gallimard and is director of “” since 2004, a collection of audiobooks produced by Gallimard. She was also responsible for the series of “Découvertes Gallimard” c ...
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Paule Vézelay
Paule Vézelay (; 1892–1984) was a British painter, known for her abstract art. Early life and education Vézelay was born Marjorie Watson-Williams in Bristol, a daughter of a pioneering surgeon, Patrick Watson-Williams (1863–1938). Before the First World War she trained for a short period at the Slade School of Fine Art and then at the London School of Art. She also studied at Bristol School of Art and Chelsea Polytechnic. Life and work Vézelay first gained recognition as a figurative painter, with her first London show in 1921. She was invited to join the London Group in 1922. Vézelay moved to France in 1926 and changed her name to Paule Vézelay possibly to identify herself with the School of Paris, although she is recorded as saying it was “for purely aesthetic reasons”. In 1928 she abandoned figurative painting and made her first abstract work (which is now lost) and from then on worked exclusively in an abstract mode. She was part of artistic circles that in ...
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Paule Mink
Paule Mink (born Adèle Paulina Mekarska; November 9, 1839 – April 28, 1901) was a French feminist and socialist revolutionary of Polish descent. She participated in the Paris Commune and in the First International. Her pseudonym is also sometimes spelled Minck. Early life Adèle Paulina Mekarska was born on 9 November 1839, in Clermont-Ferrand. Her father, Count Jean Nepomucène Mekarski, was a Polish officer who had gone into exile after the unsuccessful Polish uprising of 1830; he was a relative of the last Polish king, Stanislas II. Her mother was an aristocrat, Jeanne-Blanche Cornelly de la Perrière. Adèle's parents were enlightened liberals who apparently became adherents of the utopian socialism of Henri de Saint-Simon. Adèle was well-educated, mostly by private tutors. She had two younger brothers, Louis and Jules; both participated in the Polish uprising of 1863 and in the Paris Commune. Adèle became a republican and an opponent of the régime of Napoléon III so ...
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Paule Marshall
Paule Marshall (April 9, 1929 – August 12, 2019) was an American writer, best known for her 1959 debut novel '' Brown Girl, Brownstones''. In 1992, at the age of 63, Marshall was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship grant. Life and career Marshall was born Valenza Pauline Burke in Brooklyn, New York. to Adriana Viola Clement Burke and Sam Burke on April 9, 1929. Marshall's father had migrated from the Caribbean island of Barbados to New York in 1919 and, during her childhood, deserted the family to join a quasi-religious cult, leaving his wife to raise their children by herself. Marshall wrote about how her career was inspired by observing her mother's relationship to language: "It served as therapy, the cheapest kind available to my mother and her friends. It restored them to a sense of themselves and reaffirmed their self-worth. Through language they were able to overcome the humiliations of the work day. Confronted by a world they could not encompass, they took refuge in language." ...
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Paule Baillargeon
Paule Baillargeon (born July 19, 1945) is a Canadian actress and film director. She won the Genie Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in the film ''I've Heard the Mermaids Singing'', and was a nominee for Best Director for ''The Sex of the Stars (Le Sexe des étoiles)''. Her film roles have included '' August 32nd on Earth (Un 32 août sur terre)'', ''Jesus of Montreal (Jésus de Montréal)'', '' A Woman in Transit (La Femme de l'hôtel)'', '' Réjeanne Padovani'' and '' Days of Darkness (L'Âge des ténèbres)''. Baillargeon received a classical education at the Ursuline Convent in Quebec City and at the École Sophie-Barat in Montreal. She left the National Theatre School of Canada in 1969 without graduating and, along with Raymond Cloutier and others, founded the experimental theatre group Le Grand Cirque Ordinaire. For several years she participated in writing and performing in its collective creations, which had a marked effect on the theatre of Quebec durin ...
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Paule Marrot
Paule Marrot (17 April 1902 – 22 December 1987) was a Parisian textile designer widely known for her textile prints with a flat, two-dimensional, upbeat style — often with a floral pattern. She experienced strong popularity in the U.S. after World War II, worked with Renault to develop the company's textile and color division, and redefined furnishing fabrics in her native country of France. Marrot won the gold medal in the textile category at the International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts in Paris in 1925; the Prix Blumenthal in 1928; and was awarded the French Légion d'honneur (Legion of Honor), as ''Chevalier,'' in 1952. She was the subject of a 2017 retrospective at the Bordeaux Museum of Decorative Arts and Design with its exhibition, ''Oh Color! Design Through the Prism of Color,'' the curator calling Marrot "the Charlotte Perriand of Régie Renault." Early life Paule Marrot was born ''Paule Félicie Hélène Marrot'' in Bordeaux on 17 ...
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