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He saw a figure that was himself, the villain of his peepshow.
It was as if they were watching a window into the past, a ghostly peepshow.
He started drawing comics in 1987 and is best known for his autobiographical work, Peepshow.
The blue movie in the peepshow machine was made when she was a teenager.
The book collects strips published in various publications from before the Peepshow series started.
They make a peepshow of it, as if the people concerned were freaks in a fairground.
It was released in 1988 as the second single from the band's ninth studio album Peepshow.
It more than ifiled the screen in Albert's little peepshow.
Out of town she was a peepshow.
He feels he's sneaking away after some discreditable peepshow.
The song "Peepshow" was released as a video-only single at an unknown date in 1998.
Granted, I'm no peepshow regular, but the pleasure of commercial pornography isn't totally lost on me.
The Banshees claimed it to be their personal best, until the release of Peepshow in 1988.
I sat up on the couch, jerked out of my peepshow dreams as my mind wandered in through the wrong open door.
Working titles for this story included Peepshow.
In a wry but compassionate way he shows how fragments in the "peepshow of memory" can make up a life.
I personally tossed this place looking for your little friend's peepshow pictures, and there ain't no safe."
The back door to the store opens into the peepshow area but the counter attendent can see who comes in that way.
Peepshow was received very warmly by critics.
In the summer of 2004, the band continued to build upon the setlist variations they began on the Peepshow tour.
Peep Show or peepshow may also refer to:
Everything to Everyone was released October 21, 2003, coincided by the first show of the unique Peepshow tour.
The Peepshow album was considered by critics to be the Banshees' most successful album in years.
Holly Madison stars in Peepshow on property.
"Sweeper, this is Peepshow," came the reply.
Do I look like a raree show?"
This is not a raree show.
The anxious reader must not suppose that we were standing all this while, with finger in mouth, idly gaping like children on a raree show.
Raree shows were precursors of toy theatres, with movable scenes and paper figurines, popular in the 19th century.
Peep shows, also known as peep box or raree show ("rarity show") can be traced back to early modern times (15th century in Europe, by Leon Battista Alberti) and are known in various cultures.
Lord St. Clair stood calmly watching, as if he were observing a raree show that did not please him above half, though he made a point of keeping an eye on Mairelon as well as the row in the middle of the room.
He returned to the United Kingdom determined to perform for a living and, while juggling outside London's Oval House Theatre, was discovered by John and Crissie Trigger, who ran a traveling entertainment company called The Raree Show.
Their local and touring shows, with names like "Bracing Curative," "Eat Circus," "The Beer, Bread & Cheese Cabaret," "A Raree Show," and "Gallimaufry: An Evening of Jiggery-Pokery," played to sold-out audiences.
Houston published her first collection of poetry, A Stained Glass Raree Show, in 1967, followed by Plain Clothes in 1971, At the Mercy in 1980, Necessity in 1988, A Little Treachery in 1990, and All Change in 1993.
Which was probably why most of the patrons here were men and boys... The dancers, of which there were two different troupes, and a set of raree shows promising to display the most amazing oddities, held pride of place in the stone cattle stalls.