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Caesars Palace is a AAA Four Diamond luxury hotel and casino in Paradise, Nevada, United States, situated on the west side of the Las Vegas Strip, between the Bellagio and the Mirage. The Palace was established in 1966 by Jay Sarno, who sought to create an opulent facility that gave guests a sense of life during the Roman Empire. It contains many statues, columns and iconography typical of Hollywood Roman period productions, including a 20 foot (6.1 m) statue of Julius Caesar near the entrance. Caesars Palace is now owned and operated by Caesars Entertainment Corporation. As of 2015, the hotel has 3,960 rooms and suites in six towers and a convention facility of over 300,000 square feet (28,000 m2). The hotel has a very large range of restaurants, including several serving authentic Chinese cuisine to cater to the wealthy East Asian gamblers.
Caesar our cane corso has really started to show his age this past year (or so). Even now he never stops "guarding" his mom. He follows her around and always places himself behind her looking out to make sure no sneaks up on her.
A beautiful day at Caesar's head, shot with our Hasselblad V to EOS RhinoCam and a Planar f/2.8, 80mm lens.
- Photo by Sean Anderson
Didn’t know caesar salad was Mexican 🇲🇽. Didn’t know it was named after Caesar Cardini - an Italian immigrant 🇮🇹. Didn’t know it was first created/invented/thrown together in 1924 and is therefore almost 100 years old. Did know that tomatoes 🍅 don’t form part of a Caesar salad but do know I don’t care! Do know that it remains at the top of the menu for me 😋
One of many draws leading to Caesar Creek Lake. The beech trees have brown to yellow leaves and the green in the background are the invasive honeysuckle. Total area of this flood control project is 7941 acres. There are 43 miles of hiking trails.
Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. Caesars features 3,348 rooms in five towers and is considered the Vegas flagship property of its owner, Harrah's Entertainment.
History: The hotel dates back to 1962, when Jay Sarno, a cabana motel owner, used US$10 million that had been lent to him by the Teamsters Central States Pension Fund to begin plans for a hotel on land owned by Kirk Kerkorian. Sarno would later act as designer and building of the 14-story hotel began in 1962. That first tower featured 680 rooms
Sarno struggled to decide on a name for the hotel. He finally decided to call it Caesars Palace because he thought that the name Caesar would evoke thoughts of royalty because of Roman general Julius Caesar. Sarno felt that guests should feel they were at a king's home while at his hotel. It is called "Caesars" and not "Caesar's" because every guest is a Caesar. Caesars Palace was one of the first Vegas resort to use themeing that would ultimately become very prevelant in Las Vegas hotel design. Source: Wiki
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Caesars Palace is a hotel and casino located on the Las Vegas Strip. It's one of two locations in the US with circulator escalators. (Wikipedia)
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A hole in the lava - which was quite sharp and I needed to be careful not to drop Caesar, as it was a long way down on the other side.
Augustus of Prima Porta [= Augusto di Prima Porta]. He was the first and one of the most significant emperors of Ancient Rome. The sculpture is displayed in the Vatican Museums.
Status of Caesar Augustus within the Cortile della Pigna (Pinecone Courtyard) within the Vatican.
his bust dates from the time of Augustus, who was Emperor during the time of Christ.
The Hungry Caterpillar ate a pickle. This is the adult version.
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The fountains and the entrance to Caesars Palace in Las Vegas....(to read more, please visit my blog)
Romanian postcard by Casa Filmului Acin, no. 136. Collection: Alina Deaconu.
Geneviève Bujold (1942) is a Canadian actress. She was nominated for an Academy Award in 1970 for her leading role as Anna Boleyn in the historical drama film Anne of the Thousand Days (1969). She has played roles in more than fifty films and played both English- and French-speaking characters. Her other films include The Trojan Women (1971), Earthquake (1974), Obsession (1976), Coma (1978), and Dead Ringers (1988).
Geneviève Bujold was born in 1942 in Montreal in Canada. She was the daughter of Laurette (née Cavanagh), a maid, and Joseph Firmin Bujold, a bus driver. After twelve years of strict education in a Catholic convent, she attended the Conservatoire d'art dramatique de Montréal. Her acting training was classically French. She first rose to prominence in French-language cinema in the 1960s. Her Canadian feature film debut was in the psychological horro-fantasy Amanita Pestilens (René Bonnière, 1963). She appeared in several films by Canadian director and cinematographer Michel Brault, a founder of cinéma vérité. In France, she made two films: Philippe de Broca's Le Roi de cœur/King of Hearts (1966), with Alan Bates, and Louis Malle's crime film Le voleur/The Thief of Paris (1967), with Jean-Paul Belmondo. Bujold won the Prix Suzanne as the Discovery of the Year and Elle magazine called her "The Girl of the Day". Despite having established herself in France, however, she returned to Canada. In 1967, Bujold married the eleven years older director Paul Almond and they had a son, Matt Almond. Matt now also works in the film world, but mainly behind the scenes. Bujold was directed several times by her husband in such films as Isabel (1968), Act of the Heart (1970) and Journey (1972). After their divorce in 1973, she continued to play in his films, such as Final Assignment (1980) and The Dance Goes On (1992). Bujold gave birth to her second son in 1980 with her new partner Dennis Hastings.
Geneviève Bujold earned a Golden Globe Award and an Oscar nomination for the title role of Anne Boleyn in the British production Anne of the Thousand Days (Charles Jarrott, 1969), with Richard Burton. Producer Hal B. Wallis cast her after seeing her in Isabel. In 1971, she was sued by the studio for US$450,000 in damages after she withdrew her commitment to play in Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots (Charles Jarrott, 1971). Instead, she played the role of Cassandra, a Greek prophet, in Michael Cacoyannis's film version of The Trojan Women (1971), opposite Katharine Hepburn, Vanessa Redgrave, and Irene Papas. She settled the lawsuit with Universal, agreeing to a three-picture film contract starting with the disaster film Earthquake (Mark Robson, 1974), starring with Charlton Heston and Ava Gardner. The film is notable for the use of an innovative sound effect called Sensurround, which created the sense of actually experiencing an earthquake in theatres. A year later, Philippe de Broca cast her alongside Jean-Paul Belmondo and Capucine in the comedy L'incorrigible/The Incorrigible (Philippe de Broca, 1975). In 1976 she appeared in Brian De Palma's thriller Obsession opposite Cliff Robertson and alongside Jack Lemmon in Love and Other Crimes. In 1977 she starred in the French Western Un autre homme, une autre chance/Another Man - Another Woman (Claude Lelouch, 1977) with James Caan. She played classic female title roles of stage literature in theatre productions recorded for television, such as Saint Joan in George Bernard Shaw's play of the same name for NBC in 1967, Antigone in Jean Anouilh's adaptation of the Greek tragedy on Broadway in 1974 and Cleopatra in Shaw's Caesar and Cleopatra in 1976.
Geneviève Bujold attracted attention when she became one of the first women to play a leading role in an action film in the medical thriller Coma (Michael Crichton, 1978), which was a box office hit. Murder by Decree (1979) was a Canadian Sherlock Holmes adaptation starring Christopher Plummer as Holmes and James Mason as Dr. Watson. Bujold appeared alongside Clint Eastwood in the Neo-noir slasher Tightrope (1984) produced by Clint Eastwood and written and directed by Richard Tuggle. She also starred in ambitious independent films including three films by Alan Rudolph, Choose Me (1984), Trouble in Mind (1985) and The Moderns (1988). That year, Bujold also starred in David Cronenberg's Dead Ringers (1988) opposite Jeremy Irons. In the mid-1990s, she left the US TV production Star Trek: Voyager after only a few days of shooting, leaving the leading role to Kate Mulgrew. In the new century, she played a supporting role alongside Ewan McGregor and Ashley Judd in Eye of the Beholder (Stephan Elliott, 2000), the US remake of the French thriller Mortelle Randonnée/Deadly Circuit (Claude Miller, 1983) with Michel Serrault and Isabelle Adjani. Another supporting role followed in the Canadian romantic drama La Turbulence des fluides/Chaos and Desire (Manon Briand, 2002) with Pascale Bussières. In 2006 she starred in the Canadian drama Délivrez-moi/Deliver Me (Denis Chouinard, 2006) alongside Céline Bonnier. More recently, Bujold played a woman battling dementia in the sleeper romantic drama Still Mine (Michael McGowan, 2012) with James Cromwell. The Washington Post called her performance "superb" and "remarkably detailed".
Sources: Wikipedia (German, Dutch and English), and IMDb.
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.