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  1. LANG, PEARL (1921– ), U.S. dancer. Lang was born to Jacob Lack from Vilna and Frieda (nee Feder) from Pinsk. She studied modern dance with Francis Allis. In 1941 she went to New York to study with Martha *Graham and Louis Horst and shortly thereafter joined the Martha Graham Dance Company, performing from 1941 to 1955.

  2. Pearl Lang, a soloist with Martha Graham’s company and a major exponent of her choreography, who also founded her own company and was a Juilliard faculty member from 1951 to 1969, died on February 24 in Manhattan at 87. The cause was a heart attack while she was recuperating from hip surgery. Pearl Lang in her solo work Windsung, c. 1960s.

  3. 19 ott 2023 · Pearl Lang teaching at the Folkwang School, courtesy Dance Magazine Archives. Although Lang embarked on an independent choreographic career, she never disassociated herself from the Graham company. From 1952 until the late 1970s, she performed with the Graham company as a guest artist.

  4. Melo melo pearls (or melo pearls) are produced by the same name sea snail that is indigenous to the waters of Southern Asia. The shape of its shell is like a scroll. Melo pearls are often spherical and they can be very large. The size of 20 to 30mm in diameter is not uncommon among these rare gems.

  5. Pearl Liang’s outstanding oriental style restaurant and cocktail bar is one of the leading restaurants serving high quality and authentic Chinese food in London. A classy, modern Chinese restaurant which creates an authentic Oriental atmosphere, decorated with water features, bamboo and a full room-length painting of Chinese blossom branches.

  6. Touch and feel the temperature. The first step you can take is to touch them and feel the temperature. Real pearls are cold to touch for the first couple of seconds before warming up against your skin. Fake plastic pearls have the same temperature as the room temperature and you don’t feel the coolness when you touch them.

  7. For each type, the pearl size varies significantly from one to another. For example, the typical size range of freshwater pearls ranges from 4 to 14mm. For Akoya pearls, it can be anything between 2 and 10mm. South Sea and Tahitian pearls are typically larger, with a size range of 8 to 20mm and 9 to 14mm respectively.