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Yes, they have 4 puppies 3 that look like Lady and 1 that looks like Tramp, the puppies are in the Second movie...The, puppies names are Anette, Colette, and Danielle and Scamp.
Patricia Williamson's real name is Jade Ramsey.
Lady Daisy is attacked by a female pit bull. Tuck tries to help her, but the pit bull over powers him and tears Lady Daisy's throat out. Of course, thats when the owner of the pit bull comes and takes her away and apologizes to Ellen, owner to Tuck and Lady Daisy. L. Daisy is taken to the vet, but later dies from blood loss.
Are you thinking of Lady Killers?
There are lots of them. Here are some: Lady and the Tramp The Lady Vanishes The Lady Eve The Lady That Lady My Fair Lady Lady Chatterly The Lady in Red 3 Men and a Little Lady
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The Lady of Shalott dies because she looks directly at Sir Lancelot, breaking the curse that had kept her confined to weaving images of the outside world. Seeing him directly causes the curse to take effect, leading to her death.
"The Lady of Shalott" is a narrative poem by Alfred, Lord Tennyson that tells the story of a cursed lady who is confined to a tower and can only view the outside world through a mirror. When she sees Sir Lancelot riding by and decides to look directly at him, she breaks the curse and sets off in a boat towards Camelot, leading to her tragic demise.
Sir Lancelot
Camelot represents freedom, love, and human interaction, which are unavailable to the Lady of Shalott as she is cursed to remain isolated in her tower. It also symbolizes the societal norms and expectations that she can never be a part of.
Because of an unspecified curse which means she must continually weave a magic web without looking directly out at the world. Instead, she looks into a mirror which reflects the busy road and the people of Camelot which pass by her island. There she weaves by night and day A magic web with colours gay. She has heard a whisper say, A curse is on her if she stay To look down to Camelot. She knows not what the curse may be, And so she weaveth steadily, And little other care hath she, The Lady of Shalott.
After she looked directly through the window and the curse had fallen on her, the Lady of Shalott in the island came down to the river and lay down on the boat in her trance at the closing of the day. She floated down to Camelot on her final journey through the noises of the night, leaves lightly falling upon her all the way. When the dead and still Lady of Shalott reached and floated by under the tower and balcony and between the high houses of Camelot, the sound of royal midnight revelry died in the nearby lighted palace, and seeing the drifting body, they all crossed themselves for fear. Therefore it can be logically assumed that it was during the midnight that the gone Lady of Shalott reached Camelot.
It's a book of Tennyson's poetry and at the end it's open to "The Lady of Shallot," which is about a woman who has to live in a tower and never look out the window of it except through a mirror (the tower was in Camelot). If she looks directly at Camelot, she'll die. But when she hears Lancelot singing, she has to see him up close, so she goes down the river in a boat. By the time she gets to him, she's dead, and Lancelot sees her and basically says, "She's pretty,"and walks away.
In Camelot, the musical, there was no such character. Nimue had the song: "Follow Me". I'll need to look up who the singer was on Broadway. In the movie version the song was instrumental.Now in Spamalot, the Lady of the Lake was played by Sara Ramirez in the original Broadway production.
Dude - Looks Like a Lady - was created in 1987-10.
Frederick Loewe collaborated with lyricist Alan Jay Lerner on the Broadway musicals Camelot and My Fair Lady.
In Tennyson's poem "The Lady of Shalott," the lady lives a solitary and restricted life in her tower, cut off from the outside world. This contrasts with the bustling life of the villagers and the glamour of the court in Camelot, where people interact freely and engage in social activities. The lady's isolation is emphasized by her inability to directly experience the outside world, leading to a sense of longing and unfulfilled desire in her secluded existence.