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García Lorca

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Gar·cí·a Lor·ca  (gär-s lôrkä, gär-thä), Federico 1898-1936.
Spanish poet and playwright. Considered Spain's leading modern poet for works such as Lament for the Death of a Bullfighter (1935) and Poet in New York (1940), he was also known for his folk dramas, including Blood Wedding (1933) and The House of Bernarda Alba (1936). He was executed by Fascist soldiers at the start of the Spanish Civil War.

García Lorca (Spanish) [garˈθia ˈlɔrka]
n
(Biographies) See (Federico García) Lorca


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The most memorable contribution was the least “Cuban” of the selections: four “Canciones” by Odaline de la Martinez, a composer who grew up in the United States and lives in Britain and who chose for her texts poems by the Spanish master García Lorca.
The most memorable contribution was the least “Cuban” of the selections: four “Canciones” by Odaline de la Martinez, a composer who grew up in the United States and lives in Britain and who chose for her texts poems by the Spanish master García Lorca.
 
 
 
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