The Rocklopedia Fakebandica now has a podcast.
Listen now!

Difference between revisions of "Madame Pourette"

From Rocklopedia Fakebandica
Jump to navigationJump to search
m
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[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 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.
+
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 07:52, 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 opera Carmen with Jon DuVal in 1847, which is amazing since Bizet didn't start writing it until 1872.

External Links