"The Amateur Circus at Nutley" by Peter Newell, which appeared in ''Harper's Weekly | An abbreviated version of Kottke's recording of "The Train and the Gate" appeared in ''Days of Heaven | ''43-Man Squamish'' as it appeared in MAD Magazine |
A dim-witted but big-hearted boxer with superhuman strength who appeared in slapstick adventures, he was created and produced exclusively by cartoonist Basil Wolverton, and first appeared in the humor anthology Joker Comics #1 (April 1942).
He first appeared officially with the main squad on 13 December 2011, playing 90 minutes in a 1–0 away win against RCD Mallorca for the campaign's Copa del Rey (1–2 aggregate exit).
The name of Stormalong first appeared in a cycle of sea shanties that Stan Hugill, in his Sea Shanties of the Seven Seas, traces back to African-American folk songs of the 1830s and '40s. Bearing names like "Mister Stormalong", "Way Stormalong John", and "Yankee John, Stormalong", these sailors' work songs generally featured praise for a deceased seaman and for his benevolent son.
The film first appeared on January 20, 2008 at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival.
The family first appeared on March 1, 2012 in the United States on NBC, in "Pilot", and last appeared on May 24, 2012, in "Turtles All the Way Down".
She first appeared on stage at the age of thirteen and trained at the Embassy School of Acting in Swiss Cottage, London.
She first appeared at age 15 in the third season of Slovensko hľadá SuperStar which is based on the British TV-show Pop Idol, where she came in second.
The character Turac first appeared in Dracula Lives! #2 (Sept. 1973).
In 853, the story first appeared in Miscellaneous Morsels from Youyang, which was published shortly after he returned to Chang'an after his term of acting Governor of Jizhou (now known as Ji'an in Jiangsu).
Created by Jonathan Hickman and Stefano Caselli, the character first appeared in Secret Warriors #4 (July 2009), and joined that comic's regular cast.
Ilúvatar was also the only name of God used in earlier versions — the name Eru first appeared in "The Annals of Aman", published in Morgoth's Ring, the tenth volume of The History of Middle-earth.
His son Sandro (born 1989) first appeared professionally with Sturm Graz in 2007, when his father was head coach.
The g-string first appeared in costumes worn by showgirls in Earl Carroll's productions during the Jazz Age.
Moving into television in 1967, he first appeared on the ABCTV This Day Tonight as a reporter before being appointed a news director for the Nine Network in 1975.
Nicholas first appeared on Australian television as a presenter on Channel 9's children's show Here's Humphrey performing songs, dances, stories and games with a large pant-less mute bear.
The comic first appeared in the Flemish newspaper Het Laatste Nieuws, and was later also published in the Netherlands and in Wallonia in French.
Created by Bill Everett, Hydroman first appeared in the premiere issue of Reg'lar Fellers Heroic Comics in August, 1940.
It first appeared on television 21st January 2012 with former Pussy Cat Dolls and Got to Dance Host’s Kimberly Wyatt.
All these first appeared singly, and then either as "Dissertaciones Philologo-Theologicæ" (Basel, 1662), or in Ugolino's "Thesaurus" (xxv.); while several others, such as "De Lepra Vestimentorum et Ædium," "De Poesi Veteri Hebraica in Libris Sacris Usitata," "De Principio Anni," etc., were appended to the translation of the "Cuzari."
"Just Cruisin'" first appeared on the soundtrack, Men in Black: The Album and was also available on the UK release on Big Willie Style.
The character was created by Mick Anglo and first appeared in Marvelman #102 published in July 1955 as one of the sidekicks of the title character.
The three brothers' names are Harlan, Sven and Eric, and they were created by Scott Lobdell and Brandon Peterson and first appeared in Uncanny X-Men #298 (March 1993).
She first appeared on national television in 2003 as a contestant on the American Idol spin-off, American Juniors.
Created by Ken Sugimori, Latios and Latias first appeared as central characters in the film Pokémon Heroes, and later appeared in the video games Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire, also appearing in various merchandise, spinoff titles and animated and printed adaptations of the franchise.
Briscoe first appeared on stage at the age of four and by nine she was touring as Editha in Gus Thomas’ adaptation of Frances Burnett’s children’s story, Editha’s Burglar.
Lannes at first appeared, by his votes, to be linked to the Legitimist faction (which supported the claims to the Throne of the elder line of the House of Bourbon), but he was soon to join fully in support of the July Monarchy and usually then voted with the Doctrinaires.
1985 Bible Now, a book containing interpretations of Hebrew Bible stories from his personal point of view, which first appeared in the newspaper Haaretz.
This story first appeared in a 1980 work titled Interfaces, edited by Ursula K. Le Guin and Virginia Kidd.
He first appeared in Buenos Aires' vibrant theatre scene in 1995 and became a prolific stage actor, notably in a 1998 local production of German playwright Frank Wedekind's Spring Awakening, and in a compressed Shakespeare production from 2004 to 2006, which earned him Argentine ACE and Clarín Awards.
He first appeared on British airwaves in 1988, when he was invited to co-commentate on the rugby league Ashes series in Australia for BBC Radio 2 with Eddie Hemmings.
The exact phrase "mind over matter" first appeared in 1863 in The Geological Evidence of the Antiquity of Man by Sir Charles Lyell (1797–1875) and refers to the increasing status and evolutionary growth of the minds of animals and man throughout Earth history.
It also starred Zoë Wanamaker returning as Ariadne Oliver (who first appeared in Cards on the Table) and Richard Hope as Superintendent Spence (who first appeared in Taken at the Flood), respectively.
She first appeared in the short film Bhorai: The Maladies of Dawn directed by Subhrajit Mitra produced by NIBS.
She first appeared in The Hard Goodbye before becoming a more prominent character in later stories, most notably That Yellow Bastard.
It first appeared in 1985 in the São Paulo newspaper Folha, when its creator won a contest for new comic artists.
In a hypothesis developed by Wilhelm Solheim, the Nusantao Maritime Trading and Communication Network (NMTCN) is a trade and communication network that first appeared in the Asia-Pacific region during its Neolithic age, or beginning roughly around 5000 BC.
Pardot Kynes first appeared as a character in Dune: House Atreides as "an expert and well-respected ecologist, geologist, and meteorologist, with added specialties in botany and microbiology. Driven, he enjoyed absorbing the mysteries of entire worlds. But the people themselves often remained a complete mystery to him."
Peter Pete Junior (known more commonly as P.J.) is a character who first appeared in the 1942 short Bellboy Donald and later appeared in Goof Troop.
The character of Philo Gubb was created by prolific pulp fiction writer Ellis Parker Butler and first appeared in the May 1913 issue of Redbook magazine.
Almost every song on the EP is from the contemporary album, Ill Communication, with the exception of "Mullet Head", which first appeared only on Japanese versions as a bonus track, then worldwide on the 2009 remaster.
She first appeared on national TV in 1999 on the CBS Early Show, later assuming a full-time role as an expert commentator for several national network and cable programs, including Today, The View, ABC World News This Morning, Fox News Channel, and CNN Headline News.
The video first appeared on YouTube in March 2007, showing a store-bought Kermit puppet performing a version of the Nine Inch Nails song "Hurt" in a style similar to Johnny Cash's version.
Created by writer Robert N. Skir and artist Steven E. Gordon, he first appeared in "Speed And Spyke", episode #5 (December 9, 2000), where he was voiced by Neil Denis.
Created by writer Scott Lobdell and artist Chris Bachalo, he first appeared in Generation Next #2 (1995).
However, not only is the poem very obviously derived from Meissner's German fable, but its original (and unacknowledged) Scottish author, Charles Mackay, nowhere credits it with an Eastern origin in the collection in which it first appeared.
There is a further small panel in Lisbon of a female head, richly or royally dressed, which first appeared in 1907 with the Joseph panel when it was recorded in the inventory of Leo Nardus at Suresnes.
The New Woman, written in 1890–93, first appeared serially in the Warsaw Kurier Codzienny (Daily Courier).
The song first appeared in the 1883 edition of William H. Hill’s Student Songs and may trace its origins to a traditional miners’ song from Cornwall in the United Kingdom.
Prior to Ferrocarril Urquiza, this field was used by the defunct team Sportivo Palermo, where legendary goalkeeper Amadeo Carrizo first appeared.
They first appeared on the Paralympic seen at the 1992 Summer Paralympics, despite women's wheelchair basketball being competed for at the Paralympics since 1968.