X-Nico

unusual facts about coster


Dutch Ceylon

After capturing the Galle Fort Coster, the Dutch Commander went to Kandy and met Rajasinghe.


Alexander Hurley

He went from working in London's docks as a tea packer to boxing in fairground booths, before moving on to the music hall as a coster singer with the song The Strongest Man In The World.

Arthur Cheney Train

Ethel died in 1923 and Train married Helen Coster Gerard, with whom he had one child, John Train.

Hotel Oloffson

Celebrities such as Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and Mick Jagger were regular guests, and like Coster before him, Seitz named favorite rooms at the hotel after the celebrity guests.

Karen Koster

Before an interview with Bradley Cooper, Coster and Cooper engaged in close and awkward silence.

Laurens Janszoon Coster

In 1740 Martin Holtzhey produced a medal to commemorate 300 years of printing and Coster's invention.

Moog Liberation

Other bands include: Didier Marouani of Space, Tom Coster of Santana, Tommy Cyborg of Chrome, Devo, Damon Edge of Chrome, Roy Goudie, Herbie Hancock, Joy Electric, Mark Jenkins, Bryce Kushnier of The Fancy Few, Ascites, Abuse Tactics, Light of the World, John Malloy, The Moog Cookbook, Danny Peyronel of British band UFO, Saga, Tom Schuman, Six Finger Satellite, Stereolab, Spiral-Shaped Mind, Page McConnell of Phish, Jakobínarína, Saga

Nicolas Coster

Coster is currently married, with three children (two from a previous marriage to actress Candace Hilligoss).

Ray Slijngaard

The demo was presented to de Coster and Wilde, leading to Ray joining 2 Unlimited, and "Get Ready for This" was produced as their first single.

Roger De Coster

In 1971, De Coster left ČZ and join the Japanese firm Suzuki.

After his racing career, De Coster moved to the U.S. and remained involved in the sport, becoming the motocross team manager for Honda and Suzuki.

Slim Dusty

The statue was unveiled by country music personalities Anne Kirkpatrick (Dusty's daughter), Jayne Kelly, and Tracy and Russell Coster.

The Legend of Thyl Ulenspiegel and Lamme Goedzak

Wladimir Vogel was a Russian composer who wrote a drama-oratorio Thyl Claes in the late 30s or early 40s, derived from De Coster's book.


see also