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No, it is enough for him to just have sex with them without sleeping with them.

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No, it is enough for him to just have sex with them without sleeping with them.

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The cast of Samyy luchshiy film - 2008 includes: Valeriy Barinov as Banker Yuliya Beretta as Whore Iosif Buyanovski as Lyalya Lidiya Dorotenko Aleksandr Fursenko as Jewellery Seller Mikhail Galustyan as Half Kilo Artak Gasparyan Sergey Kholmogorov as Killer Pavel Kozmopulos as Killer Mariya Kravtsova as Whore Rimma Markova as Female whoremaster Boris Moiseev as Militiaman Dmitriy Nagiev as Praporshchik Vsevolod Pichugin as Vadik, 8 Years Old Kseniya Sobchak as Whore Vladimir Turchinskiy as Gun Seller Elena Velikanova as Nastya Pavel Volya as Tima Milan

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223 words found.

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Rimma Markova has: Performed in "Zhivye i myortvye" in 1964. Played Shura in "Krylya" in 1966. Played Nadehda Petrovna in "Babye tsarstvo" in 1967. Played Avdotya in "Zhuravushka" in 1968. Played Melaniya in "Yegor Bulychyov i drugiye" in 1972. Played Vasilisa in "Vechnyy zov" in 1973. Played Frau Leben in "Skvorets i Lira" in 1974. Played Zinaida Voronina in "Eshchyo ne vecher" in 1975. Played Klavdiya in "A u nas byla tishina..." in 1977. Performed in "Poka bezumstvuyet mechta" in 1978. Performed in "Syn predsedatelya" in 1978. Performed in "Struny dlya gavayskoy gitary" in 1978. Performed in "Otpusk za svoy schyot" in 1981. Performed in "Shlyapa" in 1982. Performed in "S koshki vsyo i nachalos" in 1982. Performed in "Predel zhelaniy" in 1982. Performed in "Pokrovskiye vorota" in 1982. Performed in "Mirgorod i ego obitateli" in 1983. Performed in "Rodnya" in 1983. Performed in "Chelovecheskiy faktor" in 1984. Performed in "Blagie namereniya" in 1984. Performed in "Idushchiy sledom" in 1984. Performed in "Polosa prepyatstviy" in 1984. Performed in "Obryv" in 1985. Performed in "Tyotya Marusya" in 1985. Performed in "Kazhdyy okhotnik zhelaet znat..." in 1985. Played M-me Nesselrode in "Poslednyaya doroga" in 1986. Performed in "Staraya azbuka" in 1987. Performed in "Nechistaya sila" in 1989. Played Marina Ignatyeva in "Vo boru brusnika" in 1989. Performed in "Russkaya ruletka" in 1990. Performed in "Aferisty" in 1990. Performed in "Duraki umirayut po pyatnitsam" in 1990. Performed in "Arbitr" in 1992. Performed in "Noyev kovcheg" in 1992. Played Vera Fyodorovna in "Padenie" in 1993. Played Aunt Lena in "Na zare tumannoy yunosti" in 1997. Performed in "Starye pesni o glavnom 2" in 1997. Played Pozhilaya medsestra in "Sdvinutyy" in 2001. Performed in "Podozrenie" in 2001. Played Anna Stepanovna Ashmetyeva in "Dikarka" in 2002. Played Koldunya Darya in "Nochnoy dozor" in 2004. Played Koldunya Darya in "Dnevnoy dozor" in 2006. Played Mat Morozova (2007) in "Savva Morozov" in 2007. Performed in "Troe i snezhinka" in 2007. Played Veronika Sorokina in "Veronika ne pridyot" in 2008. Played Ada in "Semeyka Ady" in 2008. Played Female whoremaster in "Samyy luchshiy film" in 2008. Played Medsestra in "Utomlyonnye solntsem 2: Predstoyanie" in 2010. Played Pani Basja in "Zhizn i priklyucheniya Mishki Yaponchika" in 2011. Played Herself - Guest in "Davno ne videlis" in 2011.

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The people in Shakespeare's time, at least in Europe, were Christians. In England, Shakespeare's country, they were protestants (the Church of England or the Anglicans); everywhere else was Catholic. They also believed in, rather paradoxically, astrology and being able to predict the future using the stars.

In 1531 Henry VIII declared himself sole head of the Church in England, and his authority was recognised by the English bishops. This created a strange hybrid-church which accepted all the Roman Catholic teachings except the primacy of the Pope. Anglicanism was not Protestant - because it accepted all the Roman Catholic teachings. It was also not Catholic - because it denied the authority of the Pope.

This confusing system continued until the death of Henry in 1547. Henry was succeeded by his ten-year-old son Edward VI. Edward VI was in constant ill-health, and was persuaded by his guardians to move Anglicanism much closer to real Protestantism by revising the Book of Common Prayer. (Real Protestantism had started in Bohemia with the teachings of Jan Hus in the 1420's, and had become an important European religion after Martin Luther promulgated his 95 theses in 1517). Edward VI tried to move the church of England closer to Luther's protestantism, and even attempted (illegally) to disinherit his two sisters' claims to the royal succession in favour of the protestant Lady Jane Grey.

Edward VI died in 1553 at the age of fifteen, and Lady Jane Grey was offered the throne of England. But Edward's German protestantism had never been very popular, and Queen Mary - Henry VIII's eldest daughter, and Edward's older sister - had no trouble reclaiming the throne for the Tudor line.

Both Henry VIII and Edward VI had instituted religious purges against the Roman Catholics. Queen Mary (Bloody Mary) replied with purges against the more protestant of the Anglican clergy. Religion was suddenly a good way to get yourself killed in England.

Mary herself died relatively young (42) and without children. She was succeeded by her half-sister, Henry VII's daughter by Anne Boleyn - Queen Elizabeth I.

Elizabeth I was broadly protestant in outlook, but had no interest in religious persecution. She announced that she had 'no window to look into men's souls' and began a gradual process of protestantisation of the Anglican church, but without the religious persecutions which were common all over Europe at the time.

Englishmen in Shakespeare's time were technically protestant, but with a great deal of tolerance of Catholic ideas. Many old Catholic families were allowed to continue to practise their religion (there is some evidence that the Ardens - Shakespeare's mother's family - were such recusant Catholics).

People still had superstitions (as they do today). There was considerable belief in Horoscopes, Herbology, Elves, Fairies, and Scrying (similar to Psychic reading today). But England in Shakespeare's time was a protestant country which was broadly tolerant of Catholics.

Compared to almost all other European countries Elizabeth I's England was extraordinarily tolerant - this is one of several reasons why it was a golden age for British Culture.

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