Girl Slaves of Morgana Le Fay (French: Morgane et ses Nymphes) is a 1971 film by Bruno Gantillon, an erotic and parodic tale involving Morgan le Fay and a castle full of women in the French countryside.
Morgan Stanley | Morgan Freeman | J. P. Morgan | Fay Wray | Piers Morgan | Morgan Tsvangirai | John Hunt Morgan | Morgan Spurlock | Morgan | J.P. Morgan & Co. | Harry Morgan | Frank Morgan | Dennis Morgan | Morgan County | Lorrie Morgan | Henry Morgan | Tracy Morgan | Morgan horse | Morgan Fairchild | Michèle Morgan | Augustus De Morgan | Dennis Morgan (songwriter) | Thomas Hunt Morgan | Fay Weldon | Fay Vincent | Rhodri Morgan | Morgan State University | Morgan's Raid | Morgan Motor Company | Morgan, Lewis & Bockius |
As an adult, she appeared as Meelah in Blonde Savage (1947), Ellen Forrester in Rocky (1948), Sophia in Song of My Heart (1948), Yvonne in Naughty Marietta (TV 1955), Morgan Le Fay in A Connecticut Yankee (TV 1955) and Margot in The Desert Song (TV 1955).
The narrators, all characters in relative ignorance, find themselves caught in a struggle between various powers of Arthurian legend, such as Mordred, Morgan le Fay, the Fisher King, and Merlin himself, which stretches across different centuries and different realities, and seems to have as its focus the bones of Merlin and a laboratory investigating quantum mechanics.
Morgan le Fay, now the mother of Arthur's only son, Mordred, has become the focus of Merlin's age-old quest to ensure the survival of the house of Pendragon.
The game begins two years after Spirit of Excalibur left off: Britain has been reunited under King Constantine III, who succeeds King Arthur after the Battle of Camlann, and peacefully rules over the realm after killing Mordred's sons and their aunt, Morgan le Fay.