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  • Dancer Ashwini Iyer, 23 practices her routine at a rehearsal of the production of The Merchants of Bollywood in a studio in Mumbai, India<br />
<br />
The Merchants of Bollywood, An Indian theatrical dance musical, charts the history of the world's largest and most prolific film industry, and is loosely based on the showbusiness, Merchant family. Seen by over two million people worldwide, the show is homage to the world of Indian cinema.
    sfe_060817_0339.jpg
  • Dancer Ashwini Iyer, 23 practices her routine at a rehearsal of the production of The Merchants of Bollywood in a studio in Mumbai, India<br />
<br />
The Merchants of Bollywood, An Indian theatrical dance musical, charts the history of the world's largest and most prolific film industry, and is loosely based on the showbusiness, Merchant family. Seen by over two million people worldwide, the show is homage to the world of Indian cinema.
    sfe_060817_0344.jpg
  • Man dancing on Oxford Street in London, England, United Kingdom. Listening to music on his headphones this dancer joined in with another practicing his street dance moves on this busy shopping street.
    20180507_oxford street dancer_003.jpg
  • Man dancing on Oxford Street in London, England, United Kingdom. Listening to music on his headphones this dancer joined in with another practicing his street dance moves on this busy shopping street.
    20180507_oxford street dancer_002.jpg
  • Man dancing on Oxford Street in London, England, United Kingdom. Listening to music on his headphones this dancer joined in with another practicing his street dance moves on this busy shopping street.
    20180507_oxford street dancer_001.jpg
  • Intricate carving reliefs of Apsara dancers at Angkor Wat. Note that the dancer on the left is pushing her tongue out. In addition to this she has 6 levels to the points of her head-dress. Showing her superiority to the other dancer. This jewel in the crown of Angkor's ancient temples is a vision of beauty, might and Khmer architectural excellence. The five towers dominate the view, which you are led to trough outer walls, along causeways over the moat and past the two giant pools which act as a mirror of the vision. Consecrated at around 1150 to the Hindu god, Vishnu it is suggested that construction took 30 years.
    2006-11-06_Angkor Wat Detail_O_1.jpg
  • Ballet dancer from the Ruggieri Dance Academy practices her positions in an unexpected urban environment prior to a performance at a local Summer event in Wapping, London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160709_ballet dancers_B.jpg
  • Portrait of a morris dancer at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018
    DSCF3273cc.jpg
  • Ballet dancer from the Ruggieri Dance Academy practices her positions in an unexpected urban environment prior to a performance at a local Summer event in Wapping, London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160709_ballet dancers_F.jpg
  • Ballet dancer from the Ruggieri Dance Academy practices her positions in an unexpected urban environment prior to a performance at a local Summer event in Wapping, London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160709_ballet dancers_C.jpg
  • Ballet dancer from the Ruggieri Dance Academy practices her positions in an unexpected urban environment prior to a performance at a local Summer event in Wapping, London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160709_ballet dancers_D.jpg
  • Ballet dancer from the Ruggieri Dance Academy has a pint of beer after performance at a local Summer event in Wapping, London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160709_ballet dancers_A.jpg
  • A dancer throwing live electric lightning bolts as part of the  the Arcadia robotic spider performance at Glastonbury Festival 25th July 2016, Somerset, United Kingdom.  The spider is both a dj booth playing rave tunes through the night and a piece of spectacular performance with electric dancers and fire blasts. The Glastonbury Festival runs over 3 days and has 3000 acts, including music, art and performance and approx. 150.000 attend the anual event.
    AB9A9666.jpg
  • A dancer throwing live electric lightning bolts as part of the  the Arcadia robotic spider performance at Glastonbury Festival 25th July 2016, Somerset, United Kingdom.  The spider is both a dj booth playing rave tunes through the night and a piece of spectacular performance with electric dancers and fire blasts. The Glastonbury Festival runs over 3 days and has 3000 acts, including music, art and performance and approx. 150.000 attend the anual event.
    AB9A9634.jpg
  • A dancer throwing live electric lightning bolts as part of the  the Arcadia robotic spider performance at Glastonbury Festival 25th July 2016, Somerset, United Kingdom.  The spider is both a dj booth playing rave tunes through the night and a piece of spectacular performance with electric dancers and fire blasts. The Glastonbury Festival runs over 3 days and has 3000 acts, including music, art and performance and approx. 150.000 attend the anual event.
    AB9A9656.jpg
  • Passing lads slightly mock a young man dancing on Oxford Street in London, England, United Kingdom. Listening to music on his headphones this dancer was practicing his street dance moves on this busy shopping street.
    20180507_romeo dancing_003.jpg
  • A lady looks unhappy, and a dancer leans backwards while a suited man looks on in a night clun near Buda Castle, on 18th June 1990, in Budapest, Hungary.
    hungary_people05-18-06-1990.jpg
  • A young ballerina dancer adopts a position in front of the fountains of Trafalgar Square, on 13th August 2018, in London, England.
    trafalgar_square-03-13-08-2018.jpg
  • Young man dancing on Oxford Street in London, England, United Kingdom. Listening to music on his headphones this dancer was practicing his street dance moves on this busy shopping street.
    20180507_romeo dancing_010.jpg
  • Young man dancing on Oxford Street in London, England, United Kingdom. Listening to music on his headphones this dancer was practicing his street dance moves on this busy shopping street.
    20180507_romeo dancing_009.jpg
  • Young man dancing on Oxford Street in London, England, United Kingdom. Listening to music on his headphones this dancer was practicing his street dance moves on this busy shopping street.
    20180507_romeo dancing_008.jpg
  • Young man dancing on Oxford Street in London, England, United Kingdom. Listening to music on his headphones this dancer was practicing his street dance moves on this busy shopping street.
    20180507_romeo dancing_007.jpg
  • Young man dancing on Oxford Street in London, England, United Kingdom. Listening to music on his headphones this dancer was practicing his street dance moves on this busy shopping street.
    20180507_romeo dancing_006.jpg
  • Passing lads slightly mock a young man dancing on Oxford Street in London, England, United Kingdom. Listening to music on his headphones this dancer was practicing his street dance moves on this busy shopping street.
    20180507_romeo dancing_005.jpg
  • Young man dancing on Oxford Street in London, England, United Kingdom. Listening to music on his headphones this dancer was practicing his street dance moves on this busy shopping street.
    20180507_romeo dancing_001.jpg
  • Gog Magog Molly dancer at the Straw Bear Festival in Whittlesey near Peterborough, United Kingdom on 13th January 2018. The traditional event was revived in 1980 and features a Straw Bear and its children being led through the streets of Whittlesey. The bear dances, while musicians break off into groups around the town square to perform with many different Morris, Molly, Sword, Mummer and Appalachian dancing teams
    A0039699cc_1.jpg
  • A dancer from the Arcadia robotic spider performance at Glastonbury Festival 25th July 2016, Somerset, United Kingdom.  The spider is both a dj booth playing rave tunes through the night and a piece of spectacular performance. The Glastonbury Festival runs over 3 days and has 3000 acts, including music, art and performance and approx. 150.000 attend the anual event.
    AB9A9627.jpg
  • Parade dancer in a purple costume at Notting Hill Carnival on 26th August 2019 in West London, United Kingdom. A celebration of West Indian / Caribbean culture and Europes largest street party, festival and parade. Revellers come in their hundreds of thousands to have fun, dance, drink and let go in the brilliant atmosphere. It is led by members of the West Indian / Caribbean community, particularly the Trinidadian and Tobagonian British population, many of whom have lived in the area since the 1950s. The carnival has attracted up to 2 million people in the past and centres around a parade of floats, dancers and sound systems.
    20190826_notting hill carnival_003.jpg
  • A female dancer shows of her moves , enjoying the music, passing Hackney Town Hall  in East London, United Kingdom,Sept 11 2016. The annual Hackney Carnival took place on a hot summers day and the procession of dancers dressed in various outfits moved through the streets to much joy of the many bystanders.
    AB9A9204.jpg
  • A young dancer shows of her yellow feathers with a smile  in East London, United Kingdom,Sept 11 2016. The annual Hackney Carnival took place on a hot summers day and the procession of dancers dressed in various outfits moved through the streets to much joy of the many bystanders.
    AB9A8898.jpg
  • A dancer makes her moves with a small child taking part in the procession past the Town Hall in East London, United Kingdom,Sept 11 2016. The annual Hackney Carnival took place on a hot summers day and the procession of dancers dressed in various outfits moved through the streets to much joy of the many bystanders.
    AB9A9067.jpg
  • Oruro carnival February 2010. Masked dancer in the parade .
    b5-012.jpg
  • Oruro carnival February 2010. Masked dancer in the parade .
    b3-121.jpg
  • Oruro carnival February 2010. Masked dancer in the parade .
    b2-112.jpg
  • Hackney Carnival on 8th September 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Smiling dancer with gold horns and feathered headdress.
    car_1962.jpg
  • Hackney Carnival on 8th September 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Paraiso school of samba performer and dancer.
    car_1914.jpg
  • Notting Hill Carnival August 28th 2017. West London, England. A dancer wearing a leopard skin leotard and with sore feet carries her golden heeled sandals.
    carn_6261_1.jpg
  • Notting Hill Carnival August 28th 2017. West London, England. A very happy carnival dancer wearing a pink and purple feather head dress shouts with delight.
    carn_6065_1.jpg
  • Detail of a girl dancer and stains from a damp window outside a closed Indian restaurant and take-away. Seen in close-up, the dancing girl appears to be holding a diva lamp, wearing a sari and other traditional Indian clothing and adornment. She is surrounded by the stained curtains that cover the inside of this shut restaurant. It may have closed due to recession or perhaps relocating to another address although it appears the poorly maintained nature of this property means it wasn't a healthy business.
    indian_restaurant02-07-01-2016.jpg
  • Hackney carnival 2014. The procession started in Ridley Road and passed by the The Hackney Town Hall with thousands of spectators lining the road. A young dancer poses in her colourful costume outside the local Sainsbury's.
    IMG_9246_1.jpg
  • Hackney carnival 2014. The procession started in Ridley Road and passed by the The Hackney Town Hall with thousands of spectators lining the road. A dancer leads the procession with a bike balancing on his head.
    IMG_9134_1.jpg
  • Hackney carnival 2014. The procession started in Ridley Road and passed by the The Hackney Town Hall with thousands of spectators lining the road. A dancer leads the procession with a bike balancing on his head.
    IMG_9133_1.jpg
  • In front of an appreciative mainly lady audience, a flamenco dancer puts passion into her performance in a caseta (marquee) during the Spring Feria in Seville, Spain. She dramatically stamps her foot and raises her arms in a Juerga an informal, spontaneous gathering where dancing, singing, palmas (hand clapping), or simply pounding in rhythm are enjoyed. Grown out of the fusion of Arabic, Andalusian, Sephardic, and Gypsy cultures traditional flamenco artists simply learned by listening and watching relatives, friends and neighbours. It adapts to the local talent, instrumentation and mood of the audience. Seville holds its annual fair in rows of temporary marquee casetas, hosting families and friends which begin during the April Fair two weeks after the Semana Santa, or Easter Holy Week in the Andalusian capital.
    seville_feria03-10-06-1999_1_1.jpg
  • Woman giving out leaflets to passers by outside Platinum Lace, a high end Lap dancing club in the West End of London. The woman (possibly a lap dancer) wearing short shorts revealing her legs. Amusingly the sign outside the club reads 'No VAT increase on lap dances'. Surely an incentive in these economically difficult times.
    08042011no vat on lap dancesC.jpg
  • Woman giving out leaflets to passers by outside Platinum Lace, a high end Lap dancing club in the West End of London. The woman (possibly a lap dancer) wearing short shorts revealing her legs. Amusingly the sign outside the club reads 'No VAT increase on lap dances'. Surely an incentive in these economically difficult times.
    08042011no vat on lap dancesB.jpg
  • Woman giving out leaflets to passers by outside Platinum Lace, a high end Lap dancing club in the West End of London. The woman (possibly a lap dancer) wearing short shorts revealing her legs. Amusingly the sign outside the club reads 'No VAT increase on lap dances'. Surely an incentive in these economically difficult times.
    08042011no vat on lap dancesA.jpg
  • Brazilian dancer in costume dances at the Pride London gay and lesbian parade through central London. Pride London (founded in 2004) aims to promote equality and diversity through all of its campaigns. The Pride London festival uses theatre, music, debate, art and entertainment to raise awareness of discrimination and the issues and difficulties affecting the lives of lesbian gay bisexual and transgender people around the world. The annual parade is an explosion of Pride in the heart of the capital, attracting over 1,000,000 people in a celebration of diversity.
    02072011gay pride paradeJ.jpg
  • Brazilian dancer in costume dances at the Pride London gay and lesbian parade through central London. Pride London (founded in 2004) aims to promote equality and diversity through all of its campaigns. The Pride London festival uses theatre, music, debate, art and entertainment to raise awareness of discrimination and the issues and difficulties affecting the lives of lesbian gay bisexual and transgender people around the world. The annual parade is an explosion of Pride in the heart of the capital, attracting over 1,000,000 people in a celebration of diversity.
    02072011gay pride paradeI.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3219cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3215cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3211cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3207cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3189cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3194cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3204cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3191cc.jpg
  • Beautiful Apsara dancers perform at Jasmine restaurant in Siem Reap. The ancient artform of Apsara dance is loaded with the symbolism of each move or position the dancers perform. Basic dance training takes 6 years with a further 5 or 6 years to mature artistically, learning some 1500 positions in total. The dancers are sewn into their silk tunics before each performance to ensure a tight fit. During the rein of Jayavarman VII, 3000 dancers performed exclusively for the king.
    2006-11-07_Apsara Dance_P_1.jpg
  • Beautiful Apsara dancers perform at Jasmine restaurant in Siem Reap. The ancient artform of Apsara dance is loaded with the symbolism of each move or position the dancers perform. Basic dance training takes 6 years with a further 5 or 6 years to mature artistically, learning some 1500 positions in total. The dancers are sewn into their silk tunics before each performance to ensure a tight fit. During the rein of Jayavarman VII, 3000 dancers performed exclusively for the king.
    2006-11-07_Apsara Dance_AA_1.jpg
  • Beautiful Apsara dancers perform at Jasmine restaurant in Siem Reap. The ancient artform of Apsara dance is loaded with the symbolism of each move or position the dancers perform. Basic dance training takes 6 years with a further 5 or 6 years to mature artistically, learning some 1500 positions in total. The dancers are sewn into their silk tunics before each performance to ensure a tight fit. During the rein of Jayavarman VII, 3000 dancers performed exclusively for the king.
    2006-11-07_Apsara Dance_X_1.jpg
  • Beautiful Apsara dancers perform at Jasmine restaurant in Siem Reap. The ancient artform of Apsara dance is loaded with the symbolism of each move or position the dancers perform. Basic dance training takes 6 years with a further 5 or 6 years to mature artistically, learning some 1500 positions in total. The dancers are sewn into their silk tunics before each performance to ensure a tight fit. During the rein of Jayavarman VII, 3000 dancers performed exclusively for the king.
    2006-11-07_Apsara Dance_V_1.jpg
  • Beautiful Apsara dancers perform at Jasmine restaurant in Siem Reap. The ancient artform of Apsara dance is loaded with the symbolism of each move or position the dancers perform. Basic dance training takes 6 years with a further 5 or 6 years to mature artistically, learning some 1500 positions in total. The dancers are sewn into their silk tunics before each performance to ensure a tight fit. During the rein of Jayavarman VII, 3000 dancers performed exclusively for the king.
    2006-11-07_Apsara Dance_S_1.jpg
  • Beautiful Apsara dancers perform at Jasmine restaurant in Siem Reap. The ancient artform of Apsara dance is loaded with the symbolism of each move or position the dancers perform. Basic dance training takes 6 years with a further 5 or 6 years to mature artistically, learning some 1500 positions in total. The dancers are sewn into their silk tunics before each performance to ensure a tight fit. During the rein of Jayavarman VII, 3000 dancers performed exclusively for the king.
    2006-11-07_Apsara Dance_F_1.jpg
  • Beautiful Apsara dancers perform at Jasmine restaurant in Siem Reap. The ancient artform of Apsara dance is loaded with the symbolism of each move or position the dancers perform. Basic dance training takes 6 years with a further 5 or 6 years to mature artistically, learning some 1500 positions in total. The dancers are sewn into their silk tunics before each performance to ensure a tight fit. During the rein of Jayavarman VII, 3000 dancers performed exclusively for the king.
    2006-11-07_Apsara Dance_E_1.jpg
  • Beautiful Apsara dancers perform at Jasmine restaurant in Siem Reap. The ancient artform of Apsara dance is loaded with the symbolism of each move or position the dancers perform. Basic dance training takes 6 years with a further 5 or 6 years to mature artistically, learning some 1500 positions in total. The dancers are sewn into their silk tunics before each performance to ensure a tight fit. During the rein of Jayavarman VII, 3000 dancers performed exclusively for the king.
    2006-11-07_Apsara Dance_AG_1.jpg
  • Beautiful Apsara dancers perform at Jasmine restaurant in Siem Reap. The ancient artform of Apsara dance is loaded with the symbolism of each move or position the dancers perform. Basic dance training takes 6 years with a further 5 or 6 years to mature artistically, learning some 1500 positions in total. The dancers are sewn into their silk tunics before each performance to ensure a tight fit. During the rein of Jayavarman VII, 3000 dancers performed exclusively for the king.
    2006-11-07_Apsara Dance_AD_1.jpg
  • Ballet dancers from the Ruggieri Dance Academy practice their positions in an unexpected urban environment prior to a performance at a local Summer event in Wapping, London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160709_ballet dancers_K.jpg
  • Ballet dancers from the Ruggieri Dance Academy practice their positions in an unexpected urban environment prior to a performance at a local Summer event in Wapping, London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160709_ballet dancers_M.jpg
  • Ballet dancers from the Ruggieri Dance Academy practice their positions in an unexpected urban environment prior to a performance at a local Summer event in Wapping, London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160709_ballet dancers_J.jpg
  • Ballet dancers from the Ruggieri Dance Academy practice their positions in an unexpected urban environment prior to a performance at a local Summer event in Wapping, London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160709_ballet dancers_I.jpg
  • Pointe shoes belonging to a prima ballerina in her dsressing room at the Palais Garnier, Paris. A pointe shoe is a type of shoe worn by ballet dancers when performing pointe work. Pointe shoes were conceived in response to the desire for dancers to appear weightless and sylph-like and have evolved to enable dancers to dance en pointe (on the tips of their toes) for extended periods of time. They are normally worn by female dancers, though male dancers may wear them for unorthodox roles such as the ugly stepsisters in Cinderella, or in dance companies that feature men dancing as women, such as Les Ballets Trockadero. They are manufactured in a variety of colors, most commonly in shades of light pink.
    dorothee_gilbert227-05-06-2014_1.jpg
  • Pointe shoes belonging to a prima ballerina in her dsressing room at the Palais Garnier, Paris. A pointe shoe is a type of shoe worn by ballet dancers when performing pointe work. Pointe shoes were conceived in response to the desire for dancers to appear weightless and sylph-like and have evolved to enable dancers to dance en pointe (on the tips of their toes) for extended periods of time. They are normally worn by female dancers, though male dancers may wear them for unorthodox roles such as the ugly stepsisters in Cinderella, or in dance companies that feature men dancing as women, such as Les Ballets Trockadero. They are manufactured in a variety of colors, most commonly in shades of light pink.
    dorothee_gilbert225-05-06-2014_1.jpg
  • Dancer Ashwini Iyer, 23, backstage at a rehearsal of the production of The Merchants of Bollywood in a studio in Mumbai, India<br />
<br />
The Merchants of Bollywood, An Indian theatrical dance musical, charts the history of the world's largest and most prolific film industry, and is loosely based on the showbusiness, Merchant family. Seen by over two million people worldwide, the show is homage to the world of Indian cinema.
    sfe_060817_0122.jpg
  • A dancer waits for her cue behind a prop in  rehearsals for the Merchants of Bollywood in the Yash Raj Studios in Mumbai (Bombay), India<br />
<br />
The Merchants of Bollywood, An Indian theatrical dance musical, charts the history of the world's largest and most prolific film industry, and is loosely based on the showbusiness, Merchant family. Seen by over two million people worldwide, the show is homage to the world of Indian cinema.
    sfe_060816_0127.jpg
  • Portrait of members of Oxblood Molly Dancers at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked
    A0039865cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Georgia and Ellin from the Ouse Washes Molly Dancers at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039824cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Georgia and Ellin from the Ouse Washes Molly Dancers at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039826cc_1.jpg
  • Hackney carnival 2010. Dancers take part in the procession.
    carn_2934.jpg
  • Intricate carving reliefs of Apsara dancers at Angkor Wat. This jewel in the crown of Angkor's ancient temples is a vision of beauty, might and Khmer architectural excellence. The five towers dominate the view, which you are led to trough outer walls, along causeways over the moat and past the two giant pools which act as a mirror of the vision. Consecrated at around 1150 to the Hindu god, Vishnu it is suggested that construction took 30 years.
    2006-11-06_Angkor Wat Detail_J_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Seven Champions Molly at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039909cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Seven Champions Molly at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039904cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Old Glory Molly at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039897cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Old Glory Molly at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039895cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Old Glory Molly at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039903cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Old Glory Molly at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039886cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Old Glory Molly at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039880cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Old Glory Molly at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039875cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Mepal Molly at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039859cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Mepal Molly at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked
    A0039851cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of the Norwich Kitwitches at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked
    A0039847cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of the Norwich Kitwitches at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked
    A0039846cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of the Norwich Kitwitches at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked
    A0039841cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of the Norwich Kitwitches at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked
    A0039832cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of the Norwich Kitwitches at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked
    A0039830cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of the Norwich Kitwitches at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked
    A0039828cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Michael Czarnobaj from Mepal Molly at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039819cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Sue Beecroft from Misfit Molly at A Day of Dance, the largest annual gathering of Molly dancers in the UK in Ely on 27th January 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance and is one of the traditional dances from the fens of East Anglia. It traditionally only appeared during the depths of winter as a means of earning some money when the land was frozen or waterlogged and could not be worked. The original ploughboys blackened their faces as a disguise to escape recognition and the consequences of their mischievous actions
    A0039822cc_1.jpg
  • Protest against the proposed cull of badgers June 1st 2013 led by a flashmob of dancers dressed with badger heads and black and white costumes, and with Brian May, Queen guitarist .
    bad_0236_1.jpg
  • Protest against the proposed cull of badgers June 1st 2013, led by a flashmob of dancers dressed with badger heads and black and white costumes.
    bad_0216_1.jpg
  • Oruro carnival February 2010. Dancers taking part in the parade.
    b4-071.jpg
  • Oruro carnival February 2010. Dancers taking part in the parade.
    b3a-150.jpg
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