Notable books from The Kennett Library, a graded series of classics retold for schools, include: Kidnapped, Little Women, Westward Ho!, The Black Arrow, Wuthering Heights and Ben-Hur.
Dear My Girls is a manhwa by Kim Hee-eun, based on the characters of Louisa May Alcott's Little Women.
He is installed in the bedroom of his absent uncle Ramón and spends his time reading Little Women.
During this period, programming included adaptations of Little Women, with June Lockhart and Kim Hunter, and One Sunday Afternoon, with Burgess Meredith and Hume Cronyn.
Sintram and his Companions and Undine are referred to in Little Women by Louisa May Alcott; the character Jo mentions wanting them for Christmas in the first chapter of the book and finally receives them in chapter 22.
When he sees Maya act as Beth in "Little Women" despite a high fever, he is impressed with her strong will and devotion to her acting dreams.
His illustrations for non-religious books included Hammond's Hard Lines (1894), Miss Bobbie (1897), Millionaire (1898), A Queen Among Girls (1900), The Pilgrim's Progress (1903), Westward Ho! (1903), Grace Abounding (1905), Three School Chums (1907), Little Women (1912), Good Wives (1913), A Christmas Carol (1920) and Character Sketches from Boz (1924).
He was the basis for the character John Brooke in Little Women and Little Men.
In 2003, the novel was listed at number 18 on the BBC's survey The Big Read.
Other popular dolls have been 'Pussycat' a large baby doll dressed in fine coat and dress and a Mary, Queen of Scots Portrait Doll as well as Heidi, the characters from Little Women, and a series international dolls in native costumes.
She described automobile rides, with their problems for the girl, hip flasks, petting and all the other "failings" of the modern girl as an unsolvable problem for mothers who were trained in the philosophy of Little Women.
After Polly's death, Ryder starred in a film version of Little Women and dedicated it to Klaas's memory, since the novel had been Polly's favorite book.
In Little Women, a novel by Louisa M. Alcott, Mr and Mrs Bhaer take in a quadroon boy to the school they open.
In 2008, he appeared in the critically acclaimed adaptation of Louise M. Alcott's Little Women, playing the odd-ball Professor Bhaer at the Singapore Repertory Theatre.
Recent performances include Little Shop of Horrors, Annie, Fools, The Diary of Anne Frank, Peter Pan, No Time For Sergeants, Bell, Book and Candle, The Gin Game, and Little Women the musical.
•
In 2009, just before the opening of Little Women the musical, the Theatre of Dare received a grant from the Outer Banks Community Foundation.
It was in this home that Louisa wrote her novel Jo's Boys (1886), a sequel to Little Women (1868).
Zheng is also well known for his translation of American novels, especially his translation of Louisa May Alcott's works (including the Little Women, Little Men, etc.) are still considered as high quality and the best version.
2013 ITF Women's Circuit | Little Women | Women's Tennis Association | 2011 ITF Women's Circuit | National Organization for Women | 2012 ITF Women's Circuit | United States women's national soccer team | List of women in the Heritage Floor | women's soccer | women's rights | Women's National Basketball Association | women's football | Women's College World Series | women's basketball | League of Women Voters | England women's cricket team | Designing Women | Women's One Day International cricket | Women's One Day International | Women's Cricket World Cup | women's | women | New Zealand women's national football team | United States women's national ice hockey team | National Museum of Women in the Arts | International Women's Day | FIFA Women's World Cup | England women's national football team | American Association of University Women | 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup |
Over the next couple of years she played uncredited supporting roles in such films as Little Women (1933) and Anne of Green Gables (1934) before playing the role of Mary in the film adaptation of Lillian Hellman's 1934 stage play The Children's Hour.
Eden's Outcasts: The Story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Father is a 2007 biography by John Matteson of Louisa May Alcott, best known as the author of Little Women, and her father, Bronson Alcott, an American Transcendentalist philosopher and the founder of the Fruitlands utopian community.
Viskontas has performed as a soprano for numerous roles, including Beth in Mark Adamo’s Little Women, Kate in John Estacio’s Frobisher, Heart's Desire in Arthur Sullivan's The Rose of Persia and Aurelia in Purcell's Dioclesian.
She directed several television programmes between 1962 and 1981 and her work includes Out of the Unknown (1965), Late Night Horror (1968), Pere Goriot (1968), Little Women (1970), The Moonstone (1972) and The Omega Factor (1980).
Semi-improvised and cinematic in their approach, their anachronistic style has been applied to various epochs (VIKING WIVES, PILGRIMS) and adaptations of literary classics such as East of Eden, Ethan Frome, Little Women, and Bright Lights, Big City.
RHS produces musicals in the spring time: in 2004, Damn Yankees, in 2005, Guys and Dolls, in 2006, Fiddler on the Roof, in 2007, The Boy Friend, in 2008 Rodgers and Hammerstein's Cinderella, in 2009, Little Women, and in 2010, Thoroughly Modern Millie.
The National Book Award citation compares the novel to Louisa May Alcott's Little Women and E. Nesbit's The Story of the Treasure Seekers.
Work: A Story of Experience, first published in 1873, is a semi-autobiographical novel by Louisa May Alcott, the author of Little Women, set in the times before and after the American Civil War.