The song, which is really hauntingly beautiful was written for the Movie, the melody appears to be loosely adapted from the Internationale, the famous Commnist anthem, though with totally different llnes of thought. I often wondered about the Dancing Bears, were they NKVD men angling towards the (Basement of Blood!)?By the way Dancing bears were once a popular and usually harmless carnival act though soe trianers and handlers may have abused them. The act was most popular in Eastern Europe and Hungary. Gypsy Carnivals went for the idea as the Bruin was a quite effective super watch dog and Gypsy caravans were often under siege form the Police authorities. A Gypsy Clairvoyant girl would make a darn effective KGB operative, NYet. I"m surprised the idea of mixed bag anti-heroine has not used the carnival background. Coime into my Baack Room, look into my Eyes...GAVAR, literally assault or weapon was the psychic craft of the Rom. (many are or were Italian )
Yes, he bled to death.
Great-great-grandmother.
Really can't answer this without knowing who he is or who his grandmother is.
She was the fourth and youngest daughter of Czar Nicholas II of Russia. She was murdered when she was only 14, just because she was a Romanov. There is a myth though that she didn't really get killed, and that somehow she escaped.
Georges Grandmother didn't really inspire him she only paid little attention to him.
My grandmother is really obese. ( fat ).
There really is no book on Anastasia but the differences between the movie and the true story of Anastasia Romanov is that her family wasn't killed when she was 8 years old, she was 17 when she and her family were exicuted in the "House of Special Purpose's" basement. But her Grandmother did escape the tragidy and live in Paris until she moved to Canada a few years later.
This is called a paradox. There is no answer.
Your great grandmother would be your mother's grandmother.
The big bad wolf.
It is more grammatically correct to say, "My grandmother's name was Alice" if she is deceased. This reflects the past tense and acknowledges that she is no longer alive.
Tsar Nicholas II was born in Russia, but he was not really Russian. His mother was of Danish and German extraction and his father was the same (they were first cousins.) Nicholas II was not even really a Romanov.