Sitting at a nearby table, under a revolving mirror ball, Steve seems immune to such louche diversions. |
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Don't we take great pride in our city for being open-minded, socially liberal and happily louche? |
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Witty examinations of the more louche aspects of sexuality are masked by music so exquisite that the provocative subject matter barely registers. |
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The spies on both sides are pretty louche characters, and espionage is portrayed as intimately bound up with military and business interests. |
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In a photomural at the end of a back alleyway, a louche fellow in a raincoat could be seen, intensifying a sense of verisimilitude. |
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Brighton, on the south coast and one hour by train from London, is the most raffish, louche and exciting of British seaside towns. |
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Although it enjoys a louche reputation among the druggie and stag-party sets, it's actually one of the most refined, stylish cities I know. |
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Fresh of face and louche of manner, they are equal parts Dickensian urchins and Wildean dandies. |
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Lounge lizards will welcome this louche downtown bar boasting one of North America's largest vodka selections not to mention world-class wines. |
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The tousled hair's intact, but, at 57, the formerly cherubic face is somewhat worn, making him look more louche than ever. |
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Or perhaps that's just static from the man-made fibres sported by the louche characters draping themselves across the furniture. |
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Sure enough, its reputation for unorthodoxy has gradually brought together a louche bunch of demented geniuses. |
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Akkari and Laban had long been disaffected with life in Denmark, a country they saw as louche and irreligious. |
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He's a better poet when just mulling things over, in a louche beachcomber-ish way — when he talks politics, the taste seems bitter in his mouth. |
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I was certain that New Orleans, louche and corrupted in my view, would condone my recreancy. |
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At its most louche and glamorous, this meant Sam Shepard premieres, but it also meant Heathcote Williams and The Rocky Horror Show. |
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With Lou Reed's Walk on the Wild Side – a louche, lyrical ramble in downtown bohemia? |
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One of the rare red absinthes to offer a louche action when water is added to it. |
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I was telling him about last night and he described me as sounding languid and louche, and consequently correctly guessed that I was still in bed. |
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Somewhere between circus and living sculpture, it has the thrills and spills of the big top, the aesthetic sensibility of ballet and a hint of louche cabaret. |
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The historically louche behaviour definitely has more charm. |
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Service was reasonably snappy, if occasionally louche, the prices were very reasonable given the size of the portions and the ambience was mixed and lively. |
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Eventually, this short, louche novel that began with warmth and zest and cheekiness, wanders around aimlessly in magenta caftans. |
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He made no apologies for his rackety lifestyle, his liking for louche and even sleazy companions, his lavish consumption of cigars, brandy and champagne. |
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The Russian family of whom Natasha Richardson's character is a member has fallen on such hard times the others must depend on her income as a taxi dancer in louche clubs. |
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From this louche improbable source pours music of sublime beauty without one false note. |
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Both vaporiums I visited included areas to hang out it, like the louche opium dens of old. |
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His louche take on style calls to mind the aftermath of a night spent clubbing or a pre-dawn, hung-over, walk of shame. |
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It has the taint of the louche, as did its forebear, the nautch show. |
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The torridness is probably down to a mix of Hispanic bonhomie, his steamy ad work for the likes of Gucci and Versace, and his penchant for louche poolside settings. |
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Even to mention it seems louche, but to glide past it is bizarre. |
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He then turned lounge lizard to accentuate the full louche nature of the tango. |
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The opalescent, minty-green louche billows under the ice water droplets. |
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The motif recalls images of fetchingly louche youths in the light-in-darkness style of Caravaggio, which was then influential, but with a blithe speediness that is utterly remote from the Italian's frozen radiance. |
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That is why the addition of water provokes no louche action. |
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They tie into the more louche, relaxed attitude we've seen coming through. |
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I was introduced to the joys of Green Chartreuse by a louche uncle. |
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By the 1960s, however, this now-boutique hotel had become something of a draw for the louche upper-crust, and since then Al Pacino, Lenny Kravitz, Frank Sinatra and Quentin Tarantino have all passed through the lavish lobby. |
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If you're after louche lightness from your indie then the new single from Ducktails, aka Real Estate's Matt Mondanile, should be aptly ambient after the disconcerting Daughn Gibson. |
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Rudolph, a former marine who sported a military-style brush cut, clearly had a taste for the louche. |
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Redgrave's depiction of a man slowly being robbed of the ability to write by his illness is captivating and intense, despite his louche delivery and demeanour. |
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Louche and loungey, the interior is done up in chrome and white leather, all beautifully offset by deep milky blue walls. |
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