Aulakh is married to her husband, Ravi, and has two children. When not practicing dentistry, she enjoys gardening, traveling, and spending time with her family. Parin Patel, DDS Dr. Parin Patel was born and raised in the Bay area. Jay March 7th, 2019. It is very sad especially because the escuelita was the nightlife for us Latinos and Latinas to hear some good Spanish music when it closed down I was thrilled to have boom booms it will definitely take a toll us or the loved Latin music I hope they will be opened or someone else the place was getting too small for such a large crowd yes it was a very large crowd so it. “As I am a good husband.” She cocked her head to the side. “Quite,” she said. “And as I mentioned, I’m going to the cemetery today as soon as the Myaz clears.” Kalev shook his head. “Let’s not play games Gaylie. You know exactly why I don’t want you to go.”.
| Be My Husband | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Alla Surikova | 
| Written by | Eduard Akopov | 
| Starring | Andrei Mironov Elena Proklova  | 
| Music by | Victor Lebedev | 
| Cinematography | Grigory Belenky | 
  | |
| 87 min. | |
| Country | USSR | 
| Language | Russian | 
Be My Husband or (Russian: Будьте моим мужем, romanized: Budte moim muzhem) is a 1981 Soviet romantic comedy directed by Alla Surikova.[1][2]
Plot[edit]
Victor the pediatrician arrives on the Black Sea coast. He is finally on the vacation which he has been looking forward to for a long time. There are of course no free rooms in hotels, but the good-natured physician does not lose heart and decides to go camping. At the station, Victor by chance gets acquainted with a pretty woman, Natasha Kostikova, who, along with her young son, Ilya, also came to vacation. Natasha rented a room for only one person, and to place her son there she decides to stage a performance. A 'jealous husband' with the child should come to the resort and thus Natasha would be able to be lodged together with Ilya. The role of the 'husband' Natasha offers to Victor, and he after a little persuading he agrees. Albina Petrovna, the mistress of the house, dumbfounded by the appearance of unexpected guests, initially categorically refuses to provide them with housing, but Victor, giving the hostess a small medical consultation and thereby winning her favor, manages to settle everything.
The mistress of the house where the 'spouses' are residing, is an authoritative and practical woman, who dreams only of one thing - buying a car. The money received from lodgers allows Albina Petrovna to buy a treasured car. But alas, the landlady suffers color blindness, and driving is forbidden to her. In a terrible frustration with the collapse of their grandiose plans, Albina Petrovna is ready to drive out all the guests, but resourceful Victor finds a way out of the predicament again. He offers the owner to collect money for a yacht, because in the sea Albina Petrovna will be able to drive her vehicle even without discerning color.
Meanwhile the holidays continue. Natasha is very fond of Victor, he secretly is in love with her, but Natasha categorically rejects all of his timid advances. Unexpectedly an unpleasant surprise happens: on the beach Victor loses his clothes and passport and is detained by the police. To help Victor out of this difficult predicament, Natasha makes an 'official' statement that he is her husband. And then it becomes clear that the ridiculous game of 'spouses' has developed into true love..
Cast[edit]
- Andrei Mironov – Victor, pediatrician
 - Elena Proklova – Natasha Kostikova
 - Philipp Adamovich – Ilya Kostikov, Natasha's son
 - Nina Ruslanova – Albina Petrovna, the mistress of the house
 - Oleg Anofriyev – Spa visitor-veterinarian
 - Nikolai Grinko – Spa visitor
 - Mikhail Svetin – Spa visitor with Lapdog
 - Valentina Voilkova – Spa visitor-newlywed
 - Anton Tabakov – Spa visitor-newlywed
 - Anna Varpahovskaya – Spa visitor-neighbor
 - Natalya Krachkovskaya – Spa visitor-theater lover
 - Georgiy Shtil – Spa visitor
 - Vladimir Basov – beach-gardener who lost his documents
 - Baadur Tsuladze – policeman
 
References[edit]
- ^'Будьте моим мужем. Х/ф'. Russia-K.
 - ^'Будьте моим мужем'. VokrugTV.
 
External links[edit]

- Budte moim muzhem on IMDb
 
March 1, 2019 By Meghan Sackman Macbook firmware password hack.
Bum Bum Bar, the gay-owned and operated bar located in Woodside for more than two decades, has closed its doors.
The bar, which opened at 63-14 Roosevelt Ave. in the early 1990s, saw three generations of LGBT owners, and appears to have closed late last year.
Its closure was announced in a release today by NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project, a group that works to highlight and preserve sites connected to the city’s LGBT community.
The non-profit says Bum Bum Bar (pronounced “boom boom”), was among the four remaining lesbian bars in New York City, and attracted a “mixed, but mostly working-class, Latina lesbian crowd.”
“It’s a really sad commentary on the state of nightlife for LGBTQ women,” said Ken Lustbader, Co-Director of NYC LGBT Historic Sites Projects. “This was one of the only places that provided the opportunity for LGBTQ women to meet each other in a safe environment.”
The group even pointed to the bar’s history in providing support for the inaugural Queens Pride Parade in 1993.
It is unclear why the bar closed, and the owner was unable to be reached for comment by press time. Awesome wedding invitation templates for mac.
Danny Hart, the site’s most recent owner, was interviewed by Go Magazine about the bar and its origins after she took ownership of it in 2016.
“The word ‘Bum Bum’ is actually Brazilian,” she said. “It means ‘the booty of the women.’ In Brazil they have a contest called the Bum Bum Contest, and it takes into account the whole physique of the woman.”
The magazine said the two gay men that opened the bar named it after the contest as an “homage to their beautiful women customers.”
The nightlife establishment, which had a 175-person capacity and a large dance floor, held a huge annual Pride event and also participated in the annual Jackson Heights Pride Parade.
The bar’s unexpected closure was met with surprise and concern.
“I was shocked to hear they were closed,” said Gwen Shockey, a Brooklyn artist who studies queer nightlife and incorporates it into her “Addresses” project–a digital map of lesbian/queer historical sites that have existed in the city. Her work is unaffiliated with the NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project.
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Shockey speculated that the reason for Bum Bum bar’s closing, besides the changing neighborhood and rising rents, could be the difficulties queer women face as business owners, as her research has demonstrated.
“People have frequently mentioned that it’s harder for women to open and maintain spaces because of pay discrepancies,” Shockey said. “Women aren’t making as much money as men on the dollar and it makes it harder to succeed or have as consistent of a nightlife following as gay men.”
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The NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project said its work in documenting this bar’s trajectory and that of other sites helps “document an invisible history to show the public that LGBTQ history is American history.”
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12 Comments
It is very sad to see that the only lesbian Latino club closed it door. However, I hope that a new club opens that has more respect for it customers. Something more classy and that represents 2019 not the cheap clubs of the 90 ‘s. Perhaps a grill lounge that turns into a club later at night.
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