Bijou



Bijou Phillips, Actress: Almost Famous. The multi-talented Bijou Phillips has led an unusual life. She spent her childhood in New York, California and South Africa. She excelled in Equestrienne sport. When she was 13, she became a model to escape. (especially of a house or flat) small and elegant. Bijou (which can be pluralized as either bijoux or bijous) has adorned English since the late 17th century. We borrowed it from French, but the word ultimately traces to Breton, a Celtic language (one closely related to Cornish and Welsh) spoken by inhabitants of the Brittany region of northwest France. Bijou Bridal & Special Occasion - Ardmore, PA is now a proud retailer of Allure Bridals! Allure Bridals pursues excellence in design and irreproachable craftsmanship to create a gown worthy of a bride’s most treasured moments. They believe brides should feel nothing less than gorgeous on their wedding day.

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Comments

Comment by evoker

In order to complete this quest you need to 'use' a bijou (any color will do) in front of the altar in the temple at Yojamba Isle. After you destroy the bijou, you get a Zandalar Honor Token (https://classic.wowhead.com/?item=19858) that you can use to get reputation with the Zandalarian Tribe.
When you complete the quest, Vinchaxa will give you another Token.

Comment by galaxygoddess

You get a bijou, talk to her, break it get the 150 honor from her and eat the token for an additional 50 honor.
From that point on, go break your bijous on the altar for 75 rep (well it was 75 rep at revered for me) and eat the token for another 50 rep. All in all each bijou become worth 125rep. You can also turn in the coin set for 25 for the set and 50 for the token equaling 75 rep. Or you can save the tokens for the enchant or to purchase other items from the vendor.
I presonally love the swiftness potions.

Comment by Allakhazam

Yojamba island is Way up north in STV
Edited, Apr 11th 2007 11:17am by lanceleader

Comment by Allakhazam

I have talked with blizzards GM's 3 times about the issue with not being able to destroy the bijou. I was told the first time to change the name of files in my wow folders, the next time I was told uninstall my addons (such as my CT Raid), and finally I decided to uninstall the entire wow program then reinstall it to make sure I wiped any residual programs or addons, after which i renotified the GM in game a 3rd time. I was told on the 3rd time that there was nothing wrong with the bijou quest and when they asked what I did I told them all the steps I had gone through. They (Blizzard) then proceeded to tell me it had to be destroyed while in a party, this seemed to be more of a grabbing at straws technique since I had informed them I was alone trying to accomplish this quest. I am also wondering if it is working for the Horde as compared ti the alloiance.

Comment by Allakhazam

ya, where is the altar

Comment by Allakhazam

use the bijou and it will be destoryed.
Destroy the Bijou, 75points,
Get one token by destroy bijou, 50points,
Turn the quest, 150points,
Get one token as reward, 50points,
325points after complete the quest.
Its not repeatable, so only 125points every bijou then.
Edited, Sun Sep 18 09:05:06 2005

Comment by Allakhazam

I cant destroy a bijou either ive tried everything and it doesnt do anything is there a perticular bijou i need to destroy?

Comment by Allakhazam

Worked for me, right click your Bijou at the altar is all.
75 Points for destroying the Bijou
50 Points for the honor token (Given when destroyed)
125 Points for the quest
50 Points for the honor token - (Quest reward)
50 Points for the honor token - (Comes later in the mail)
---------------
375 Total Points for the first time
75 Points for destroying the Bijou
50 Points for the honor token
---------------
125 Total Points for all subsequent times
Apparently its only worth it doing it one time...Bijous are valuable elsewhere
Edited, Wed Feb 15 17:13:00 2006

Comment by Allakhazam

I destroyed one bojou and after that realized that i need to click on it ...

Comment by Allakhazam

I went to the altar, but I found no way of completing the quest. Is this bugged, or has anyone completed it already?

Comment by Allakhazam

In 1.10 the first time quest completion is 150 reputation instead of 125 reputation stated by Nastiezo

Comment by Allakhazam

Are Bijous needed for anything else but this quest after the 1.11 patch?

Comment by Allakhazam

Check this out :Silver Hakkari Bijou

Comment by Allakhazam

go to the altar and right click on your bijou..
Voila!

Comment by Allakhazam

Will you still get reputation when you kill mobs after hitting revered?

Comment by lianzhu

before you buy bijou's from the ah because you are lvl 58 or 59 so you can level up:
this bijou quest for 6600 xp is a one time quest. The others are repeatable (coins).
not repeatable:
  • A Bijou for Zanza

repeatable:
  • Gurubashi, Vilebranch, and Witherbark Coins
  • Sandfury, Skullsplitter, and Bloodscalp Coins
  • Zulian, Razzashi, and Hakkari Coins

Comment by ataegina

This quest is the cancer of wow. I don't believe I ever hated Blizzard more for anything else.
I've done this quest today on an alt.
Some hours later, I decided to transfer the alt to another realm, as I had the opportunity to buy a bunch of things really cheap on my realm and I HAD a buyer for them on the destination realm. This was supposed to help me work around the gold limit when you transfer. On top of that, there were 2 raids I was supposed to join on the destination realms where loot would basically be mine (raiding with overgeared people who didn't need anything from mc other than bindings and nothing from BWL other than Neltharion's Tear and Lokamir, which would have been of no interest to me, as a rogue).
I told the buyer I'd be there in half an hour tops. I went and put ~12,000 gold into the things I was going to transfer with. Bags full, bank full...I tried to transfer. Nope. You've got mail.
I logged back in, I checked the mailbox. Nothing there.
I went and checked every single mailbox on every single alt - perhaps I mailed them something and that's the problem. Nothing.
I logged back in and I checked the auction house. Nothing there.
I went and I bought some random vendor crap and destroyed it - as I had 2000g0s0c - I figured perhaps I have to be UNDER 2000g. Still no.
I tried to contact support. Of course it doesn't work, they just tell me to clear the mailbox.
I googled the error. Apparently, you can have mail from a character you ignored, so it won't show up in the mailbox, but it would STILL be in the mailbox. Since I had an argument a few days before with someone I ended up ignoring, I figured that must be it. I deleted my ignore list. Nothing in the mailbox. Log out, log back in. Still nothing.
As it turns out, the mail I 'have' is mail I haven't received yet. Some stupid troll sends you something in the mail the next day after you complete the quest. Not immediately, noooo. You have to wait. Because it's so important. And that's what's preventing me from transferring.
My buyer left, as he got bored of waiting for me to transfer. I can't blame him. I'm now staring at the screen, waiting for the mail icon to pop up, so I can go and delete whatever the hell was 'sent' to me. I'm also wondering whether instead of making ~1000g profit I'll end up making a ~2000g loss.
If I wrote what I feel about the idiot who put this quest in and the follow-up mail, I'd get permanently banned from this website - and I'd likely get the police at the door tomorrow. Cancer is too good for them.
Edit: 24 hours later, the mail was still not there and I still couldn't transfer. So I raised a ticket. The waiting times were really encouraging.. But if you think that's bad, I actually got a response which proved that it can always get worse.
So in short, if you do this quest and you need to transfer, you're screwed and don't expect any help from 'Blizzard' either, because they don't even try to make it look like they've got GMs or a support department anymore. Instead, they'll apologise for the 'inconvinience'. Maybe. Or maybe not.
At this point, I honestly regret moving away from private servers and I can't help but wonder why we're paying for 'classic' anymore. When vanilla was launched, the explanation for a subscription fee was 'constantly adding new content and offering support for players'. Well, there's no new content, as you all know. As for the 'support'...this is it.
Destroy any one of the Hakkari Bijous found in Zul'Gurub at the Altar of Zanza on Yojamba Isle. When done, speak with Vinchaxa nearby.

Description

The destruction of the various Hakkari Bijous is of grave importance to us, so much so that we welcome outsiders of the tribe to do so for themselves!
BijouTake any one of the bijous that you find in Zul'Gurub to the Altar of Zanza and destroy it. For this one time alone, I will give you an additional Honor Token from our tribe; this is above and beyond what you would normally receive.
Witness for yourself the blessings of Zanza!

Progress

Have you destroyed the bijou at the Altar of Zanza? Do so, and then you will be doubly blessed by Zanza!

Completion

Excellent... each bijou we wrest away from the Blood God's minions is one step closer we all are to finally defeating them once and for all. You bring honor to the Zandalar - and yourself - through your noble actions.
Remember <name>, you may always destroy the bijous you find in Zul'Gurub at the altar. For each one, you will gain recognition and an Honor Token! Just remember to have an open space in your inventory if you don't have one of the tokens already.

Rewards

You will receive:
Zandalar Honor Token

Gains

Upon completion of this quest you will gain:
  • 150 reputation with Zandalar Tribe

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The Wowhead Client is a little application we use to keep our database up to date, and to provide you with some nifty extra functionality on the website!

It serves 2 main purposes:

  1. It maintains a WoW addon called the Wowhead Looter, which collects data as you play the game!
  2. It uploads the collected data to Wowhead in order to keep the database up-to-date!

You can also use it to keep track of your completed quests, recipes, mounts, companion pets, and titles!

Bijoux jewelry

So, what are you waiting for? Download the client and get started.

Two Broadway theatres have been named the Bijou Theatre.

1239 Broadway[edit]

1239 Broadway

The Theatre Brighton,[1] at 1239 Broadway between 30th and 31st Streets, had been converted from a drinking and gambling establishment into a theatre for variety, and opened August 26, 1878 with Jerry Thomas as proprietor.[2] The house had many changes and names until John A. McCaull, a Baltimore lawyer, and Charles E. Ford took charge of it. Considerable money was spent and when they reöpened the house on March 31, 1880, as the Bijou Opera-house, it looked like a modern and well-regulated theatre.[3][4] In 1881 and 1882, Lillian Russell appeared in three different operettas.[5][6]

But the house proved too small to be profitable,[note 1] so after the performance of July 7, 1883 preparations for tearing it down were at once commenced:[7] R. E. J. Miles and Gen. W. B. Barton leased the premises for five years from its owner, Edward F. James. They agreed to advance sufficient funds to erect a new house, which was designed by J. B. McElfatrick & Son and opened December 1, 1883 as the Bijou Theatre.[8] The first production was Orpheus and Eurydice, an adaption by Max Freeman of Jacques Offenbach's Orfée aux enfers.'[9][10][11]

Adonis, starring Henry E. Dixey, played its record-breaking run of 603 performances at the Bijou beginning September 4, 1884. Another long run was The Music Master, starring David Warfield, transferred from the Belasco Theatre on January 9, 1905,[12] and playing 511 performances, for a total at the two theaters of 635, before closing September 29, 1906. The next big hit was A Gentleman from Mississippi, starring Thomas A. Wise and Douglas Fairbanks, which opened September 29, 1908.[13] From June 29 to August 7, 1909, it played at the Aerial Gardens atop the New Amsterdam Theatre, with new scenery and costumes,[14] moving back to the Bijou August 9. After giving its 400th performance (counting the Aerial Gardens) on August 25, the play closed on September 18.[15][16]

The Bijou was later used as a silent movie house. It was demolished in 1915 and replaced by the present high-rise office building, which opened in 1917.[17][18][19]

Selected shows[edit]

  • Adonis (1884–86; 603 perf.)
  • A Midnight Bell (1889; 136 perf.)
  • The Widow Jones (1895), basis for 1896 Edison short film The Kiss
  • Courted Into Court (1896–97; 140 perf.)
  • Sister Mary by Glen MacDonough (1889-1900; 120 perf.)
  • The Climbers by Clyde Fitch (1901; 163 perf.)
  • The Auctioneer by Charles Klein (1901; 105 perf.)
  • Nancy Brown (1903; 112 perf.)
  • A Gentleman from Mississippi (1908–09)
  • The Music Master (1905–06; 627 counting 124 shows at Belasco)
  • The Lottery Man (1909–10; 200 perf.)

209 West 45th Street[edit]

209 W. 45th St.

The second Bijou Theatre was built by the Shubert family in 1917 at 209 W. 45th Street in New York City.[20][21][22] It was one of three theaters that hosted the premiere season of the musical Fancy Free—but primarily it presented plays by many writers, including Sacha Guitry, John Galsworthy, A. A. Milne, James M. Barrie, Herman J. Mankiewicz, Leslie Howard, Anton Chekhov, Henrik Ibsen, Luigi Pirandello, Graham Greene, Eugene O'Neill, William Saroyan, and Seán O'Casey.

The Oscar-winning British film The Red Shoes played the Bijou for 107 weeks, from 21 October 1948 to 13 November 1950.

Starting on 16 November 1950, as the Bijou, it hosted the film Cyrano de Bergerac, starring José Ferrer.[23]

In 1951, it became a CBS radio studio, then—as the D. W. Griffith Theatre—it presented art films. It was reinstated as the Bijou Theatre in 1965, but was demolished in 1982 to make room for the Marriott Marquis Hotel.

References[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bijou Theatre (Manhattan).

Bijou Candles

Short citations

  1. ^The Sun (New York). August 25, 1878.
  2. ^Brown:273
  3. ^Brown:274
  4. ^The New York Times. April 1, 1880
  5. ^The Sun (New York). October 30, 1881
  6. ^The New York Times. 1881-10-30, 1881-12-20, and June 6, 1882
  7. ^The New York Times. July 29, 1883
  8. ^Real Estate Record. July 21, 1883
  9. ^Brown:281
  10. ^The New York Times. August 19, 1883
  11. ^The Sun (New York). December 2, 1883
  12. ^The New York Times. January 10, 1905
  13. ^The New York Times. September 30, 1908
  14. ^The Sun (New York). June 30, 1909
  15. ^The Sun (New York). August 22, 1909.
  16. ^The Sun (New York). September 10, 1909.
  17. ^Kenrick
  18. ^Internet Broadway Database website. 'Bijou Theatre'
  19. ^Emporis website
  20. ^Internet Broadway Database website. 'Toho Cinema'
  21. ^Cinema Treasures website. 'Bijou Theatre'
  22. ^The New York Times. April 13, 1917
  23. ^The New York Times. November 17, 1950

Note

  1. ^The plot is only 40 feet wide. See The New York Times. January 10, 1915.

Bijou Cafe

Full citations

  • Brown, T. Allston (1903). A History of the New York Stage. Vol. 3. New York: Dodd, Mead and Company. Online at Google Books.
  • Cinema Treasures website. 'Bijou Theatre'
  • Emporis website. '1239 Broadway'
  • Internet Broadway Database website. 'Bijou Theatre'
  • Internet Broadway Database website. 'Toho Cinema'
  • Kenrick, John. Musicals101.com website. 'Bijou Opera House'
  • Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide Vol. 32 No. 801 (July 21, 1883), 'Buildings Projected. New York City' (p. 537, col. 3), 'Broadway, Nos. 1237 and 1239', p. 538, col. 1. Online at Internet Archive.
  • The New York Times. April 1, 1880. 'Record of Amusements. Bijou Opera-House'
  • The New York Times. October 30, 1881. 'Amusements. Bijou Theatre.' (scroll down)
  • The New York Times. December 20, 1881. 'Bijou Opera-house'
  • The New York Times. June 6, 1882. 'Amusements. General Mention.' 2nd paragraph
  • The New York Times. July 29, 1883. 'Amusements. General Mention', paragraph 20: 'What was the Bijou Opera-house is now an open space, where foundations will be laid immediately for a new theatre.'
  • The New York Times. August 19, 1883. 'Bijou Opera-house'
  • The New York Times. January 10, 1905. 'Fire Scare at the Bijou'
  • The New York Times. September 30, 1908. 'New Comedy at Bijou; A Night of Laughter'
  • The New York Times. January 10, 1915. 'Times Square and Old Theatre Section Give Active Tone to New Realty Year', col. 4
  • The New York Times. April 13, 1917. 'Tense Melodrama by Eugene Walter'
  • The New York Times. November 17, 1950. Crowther, Bosley. 'Cyrano de Bergerac (1950)'
  • The Sun (New York). August 25, 1878. Advertisement for Theatre Brighton, p. 8, col. 3. Online at Library of Congress.
  • The Sun (New York). October 30, 1881. 'Audran's New Opera, The Snake Charmer', p. 5, col. 4. Online at Library of Congress.
  • The Sun (New York). December 2, 1883. 'Amusements. Orpheus and Eurydice at the Bijou', p. 5, col. 6. Online at Library of Congress.
  • The Sun (New York). June 30, 1909. 'New Home for A Gentleman from Mississippi', p. 7, col. 3 (bottom). Online at Library of Congress.
  • The Sun (New York). August 8, 1909. 'Plays of the New Season', and advertisement for Bijou Theatre, Third Section, p. 6. Online at Library of Congress.
  • The Sun (New York). August 22, 1909. 'Two New Detective Plays', Third Section, p. 6, col. 2, second item. Online at Library of Congress.
  • The Sun (New York). September 10, 1909. 'News of Plays and Players', p. 9, col. 4. Online at Library of Congress.

Coordinates: 40°44′50″N73°59′19″W / 40.74721°N 73.988584°W

Bijou Brigitte

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