Mysterious Girl
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
Little girl 'desperately missing mummy' after British tourist mysteriously disappears in Paris
Little girl 'desperately missing mummy' after British tourist mysteriously disappears in Paris Hair and beauty worker Lucy Stemp, 28, who was also described as vulnerable, vanished after she travelled to France for a music festival and has not been heard from in a week A little girl has been left desperately waiting for her mum after a British tourist vanished in Paris. Lucy Stemp, from Tonbridge, Kent, was reported as missing after travelling to France for a music festival. The hair and...
Peter Andre reveals 'very important' aspect of co-parenting he's learned to deal with
Peter Andre reveals 'very important' aspect of co-parenting he's learned to deal with Peter Andre, who has two children with Katie Price and three with wife Emily MacDonagh, has addressed a "very important" aspect of parenting he has had to deal with over his years of being a father Peter Andre has addressed a "very important" aspect of parenting he has had to deal with over the years. The Mysterious Girl singer, who was initially married to Katie Price and has Junior, 20, and Princess, 18...
‘Stood in the way’: Mother, boyfriend kill 6-year-old girl in Bengaluru
In a chilling turn of events, the Kadugodi police have launched a murder investigation into the mysterious death of a six-year-old girl, three months after she was reported dead under highly suspicious circumstances. The girl's mother, P Priyanka—a practicing advocate—and her alleged boyfriend, GM Mohan, a prominent real estate developer, are now facing murder charges. Mohan has been taken into seven-day-police custody while cops are looking for Priyanka, who is incommunicado.
The Surprising, Liberating History of Marriage
A few months ago, one of my best friends told me that she and her boyfriend had gotten engaged. She has two young kids and has never been married; he’s older; they each have their own apartment; she seemed happy with the way things were. I said, because he’s a good person, and I love my friend.
Seven Books You’ll Never Outgrow
This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Some books stay with us long after we first read them. Many endure because of their humor or imagination; others capture unnameable feelings that grow as we grow.
Dark of the Moon review – bluegrass girl meets emo witch boy and their songs soar
Charing Cross theatre, LondonThe power and personality of its singers and music lift this Twilight-esque story into the realms of enjoyably ridiculousThe origins of this supernatural musical are in ancient British folklore but it plays out as a teen love story in small-town America. Young, spirited – and human – Barbara Allen (Lauren Jones) falls in love with John the Witch Boy (Glenn Adamson), from a community of Witches and Conjur People.She is willing to incur the wrath of parents and...
The Art of the Joyful Tearjerker
Last fall, while leaving a critic’s screening of the film Hamnet, I was confronted just outside the door by the production company’s chirpy PR handler. she asked, as if the rivers of mascara streaming down my cheeks weren’t a clear enough signal. “Oh God,” I blurted out, before turning heel toward the bathroom.
Archaeologists find ancient matrilineal society in Turkiye’s Catalhoyuk
Archaeologists find ancient matrilineal society in Turkiye’s Catalhoyuk About 9,000 years ago, the Neolithic settlement of Catalhoyuk was an egalitarian, matrilineal society with no evidence of organised violence. Catalhoyuk, Turkiye – About an hour southeast of Konya lies one of the most exciting Neolithic finds of the 20th century – the densely populated settlement of Catalhoyuk. Occupied for 1,000 years from about 7000 to 6000 BC, Catalhoyuk has drawn archaeologists since its discovery in...
Bharathiraja: The Aladdin of Tamil cinema
CHENNAI: Like Aladdin rubbing the magic lamp to set the genie free, Bharathiraja liberated an intense version of Tamil cinema that had long remained bottled up within studio sets and shooting floors. With 16 Vayadhiniley (1977), he blazed a trail and revealed the rugged and lush beauty of Tamil Nadu’s countryside to both filmmakers and moviegoers. It was a cult film that marked the beginning of a new era in Tamil cinema.