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Difference between revisions of "Madame Pourette"

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[[Image:Pourette_Madame_The_Beyond.png|right]]Famous French opera singer from 100 years ago who turns out to be still alive 'cause she's a vampire, from "The Vampire of the Opera" story of horror comic book ''The Beyond'' #9 (March 1952). Her bricked-up dressing room is rediscovered and opened by workers, and she reawakens. She poses as her great-grand-niece, '''Mademoiselle Pourette''' to rejoin the Paris Opera House, sing opera, claim all her stuff, steal boyfriends ([[Marcel]]), drink blood, kill girlfriends ([[Colette]]), etc.
 
[[Image:Pourette_Madame_The_Beyond.png|right]]Famous French opera singer from 100 years ago who turns out to be still alive 'cause she's a vampire, from "The Vampire of the Opera" story of horror comic book ''The Beyond'' #9 (March 1952). Her bricked-up dressing room is rediscovered and opened by workers, and she reawakens. She poses as her great-grand-niece, '''Mademoiselle Pourette''' to rejoin the Paris Opera House, sing opera, claim all her stuff, steal boyfriends ([[Marcel]]), drink blood, kill girlfriends ([[Colette]]), etc.
  
A poster on her dressing room wall advertises she sang ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carmen Carmen]'' with [[Jon DuVal]] in 1847, which is amazing since Bizet didn't start writing it until 1872.
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A poster on her dressing room wall advertises she sang in the opera''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carmen Carmen]'' with [[Jon DuVal]] in 1847, which is amazing since Bizet didn't start writing it until 1872.
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==

Revision as of 06:52, 9 February 2018

Pourette Madame The Beyond.png

Famous French opera singer from 100 years ago who turns out to be still alive 'cause she's a vampire, from "The Vampire of the Opera" story of horror comic book The Beyond #9 (March 1952). Her bricked-up dressing room is rediscovered and opened by workers, and she reawakens. She poses as her great-grand-niece, Mademoiselle Pourette to rejoin the Paris Opera House, sing opera, claim all her stuff, steal boyfriends (Marcel), drink blood, kill girlfriends (Colette), etc.

A poster on her dressing room wall advertises she sang in the operaCarmen with Jon DuVal in 1847, which is amazing since Bizet didn't start writing it until 1872.

External Links