
dinner sets kensington image

lovin'.the
I wrote a story... it's set in Endland, London Kensington to be exact and is set in the victorian times...
basically there's a 7 year old girl called alice and after dinner with a family friend and her family (mother father and older sister 18 year old) at night someone comes in and kills her family with a kinfe except for her and sets the house on fire and Alice escapes it, then she's acused of the murder and is sent to prison.... then a couple of years later when she's released she finds out who did it and murders them.... does anyone know any good title names??
Answer
Alice in Murderland
Alice in Murderland
Most expensive MARRIAGE CEREMONY IN THE WORLD ?

Fs4b
Answer
Welcome to the $78 million wedding
A British tycoon is hiring a French chateau and Bollywood's stars for his daughter's nuptials. Amit Roy reports
For the billionaire steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal, recently ranked the fifth richest man in Britain, money is no object when it comes to the marriage of his daughter. Which is why the Indian-born businessman has hired the 17th-century Vaux le Vicomte in France for the nuptials of 23-year-old Vanisha and her banker fiance.
The cost of the wedding is expected to exceed £30 million ($78 million), including extravagant gifts for family and friends. This would eclipse the £10 million spent by the Indian diamond dealer Vijay Shah transforming Antwerp, Belgium, into a Bollywood fantasy for the double wedding of his daughter and son in 2002.
Mittal came to public attention in the so-called "cash-for-favours scandal" three years ago, when the British Prime Minister, Tony Blair, wrote a letter of support to the Romanian Government after Mittal made a £125,000 donation to the Labour Party. Blair denied his support was connected to the donation.
In May, Mittal reportedly paid £70 million for a 12-bedroom mansion in Kensington, London, but he appears to have chosen France for the Hindu wedding of Vanisha and Amit Bhatia.
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The venue has not been officially disclosed. But this week the management of the Vaux le Vicomte estate, 55 kilometres east of Paris, in Maincy, said: "Exceptionally, on June 22, 2004, the chateau and gardens will be closed to the public after 1pm." And a spokesman at Vaux le Vicomte confirmed: "There will be an Indian marriage party here on June 22. We are smaller than Versailles but from the point of view of beauty we are No.1, we think."
There will be an engagement ceremony on June 20 at the Palace of Versailles, once the home of Louis XIV, followed by a banquet.
Mittal and his wife, Usha, had promised their daughter her wedding would be "truly spectacular" and they are keeping their promise. An estimated 1200 guests, including family members, close friends and business figures from across the world, have been told to clear certain dates.
For India's mega rich, 10,000 guests is the norm for a wedding but Mittal is determined that Vanisha's marriage will be tasteful, exclusive and different. A bill of more than £30 million seems inevitable once the diamond and gold jewellery, designer clothes for the families of the bride and groom, transport and hotels, hire of venues in France, deployment of the best chefs (the Mittals are vegetarian) and "goody bags" are taken into account.
And the Indian glitterati across the world are dividing into those who have been invited and the distraught thousands who haven't.
The family sangeet (song and dance) will begin on June 19, with a one-hour play written by Javed Akhtar, Bollywood's best-known scriptwriter. Dinner will be held at the Jardin de Tuileries on the right bank in Paris.
The Mehndi ceremony (when the hands of women guests are painted with henna according to traditional Indian designs) is set for June 21, at a still undisclosed venue, to be followed by a Bollywood night.
The marriage of Mittal's son, Aditya, in Kolkata four years ago was a similarly ostentatious affair. The Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan was paid £300,000 to dance at the reception. Khan is expected to attend Vanisha's wedding but there is as yet no confirmation from Aishwarya Rai, the "Queen of Bollywood", that she will be present.
The chateau of Vaux le Vicomte, transformed by Louis XIV's finance minister, Nicolas Fouquet, after he bought the estate in 1641, is said by historians to be as "resplendent today as it was in former times".
The chateau was also a haven for leading French artists. Writers, poets, painters and sculptors are said to have given the best of their talents to the glory of Vaux.
Welcome to the $78 million wedding
A British tycoon is hiring a French chateau and Bollywood's stars for his daughter's nuptials. Amit Roy reports
For the billionaire steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal, recently ranked the fifth richest man in Britain, money is no object when it comes to the marriage of his daughter. Which is why the Indian-born businessman has hired the 17th-century Vaux le Vicomte in France for the nuptials of 23-year-old Vanisha and her banker fiance.
The cost of the wedding is expected to exceed £30 million ($78 million), including extravagant gifts for family and friends. This would eclipse the £10 million spent by the Indian diamond dealer Vijay Shah transforming Antwerp, Belgium, into a Bollywood fantasy for the double wedding of his daughter and son in 2002.
Mittal came to public attention in the so-called "cash-for-favours scandal" three years ago, when the British Prime Minister, Tony Blair, wrote a letter of support to the Romanian Government after Mittal made a £125,000 donation to the Labour Party. Blair denied his support was connected to the donation.
In May, Mittal reportedly paid £70 million for a 12-bedroom mansion in Kensington, London, but he appears to have chosen France for the Hindu wedding of Vanisha and Amit Bhatia.
Advertisement
Advertisement
The venue has not been officially disclosed. But this week the management of the Vaux le Vicomte estate, 55 kilometres east of Paris, in Maincy, said: "Exceptionally, on June 22, 2004, the chateau and gardens will be closed to the public after 1pm." And a spokesman at Vaux le Vicomte confirmed: "There will be an Indian marriage party here on June 22. We are smaller than Versailles but from the point of view of beauty we are No.1, we think."
There will be an engagement ceremony on June 20 at the Palace of Versailles, once the home of Louis XIV, followed by a banquet.
Mittal and his wife, Usha, had promised their daughter her wedding would be "truly spectacular" and they are keeping their promise. An estimated 1200 guests, including family members, close friends and business figures from across the world, have been told to clear certain dates.
For India's mega rich, 10,000 guests is the norm for a wedding but Mittal is determined that Vanisha's marriage will be tasteful, exclusive and different. A bill of more than £30 million seems inevitable once the diamond and gold jewellery, designer clothes for the families of the bride and groom, transport and hotels, hire of venues in France, deployment of the best chefs (the Mittals are vegetarian) and "goody bags" are taken into account.
And the Indian glitterati across the world are dividing into those who have been invited and the distraught thousands who haven't.
The family sangeet (song and dance) will begin on June 19, with a one-hour play written by Javed Akhtar, Bollywood's best-known scriptwriter. Dinner will be held at the Jardin de Tuileries on the right bank in Paris.
The Mehndi ceremony (when the hands of women guests are painted with henna according to traditional Indian designs) is set for June 21, at a still undisclosed venue, to be followed by a Bollywood night.
The marriage of Mittal's son, Aditya, in Kolkata four years ago was a similarly ostentatious affair. The Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan was paid £300,000 to dance at the reception. Khan is expected to attend Vanisha's wedding but there is as yet no confirmation from Aishwarya Rai, the "Queen of Bollywood", that she will be present.
The chateau of Vaux le Vicomte, transformed by Louis XIV's finance minister, Nicolas Fouquet, after he bought the estate in 1641, is said by historians to be as "resplendent today as it was in former times".
The chateau was also a haven for leading French artists. Writers, poets, painters and sculptors are said to have given the best of their talents to the glory of Vaux.
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