They were the triumphal enfant terrible of the UK's post-punk, independent music scene. |
|
And what of working with Stone himself, the enfant terrible who seems to thrive on provocation? |
|
The 39-year-old looks more like an accountant than the enfant terrible of contemporary Hollywood cinema. |
|
His break with the bank has earned him a reputation as an enfant terrible who is inclined to stir up trouble wherever he goes. |
|
At 39, he is no longer young enough to be an enfant terrible, but people still peg him as a kid too cool to grow up. |
|
Notoriously single-minded, the erstwhile enfant terrible of the Belgian art world is a Renaissance man, despite his penchant for drenching everything in body fluids. |
|
Stu Ungar, who repeated as champion that year, was a coke-addled enfant terrible whose wavelength happened to be out of phase with that of the London man of letters. |
|
Jérôme Bel has the reputation of an enfant terrible among those searching for the ultimate provocation. |
|
Marc Ravenhill, English dramatist, enfant terrible of his generation, has written nearly a dozen plays with explosive ingredients. |
|
I had seen his performances, and he represented what I would describe as bad choreography, in the sense that he was quite transgressive, an enfant terrible. |
|
The American concert pianist and composer made his mark in Paris in the 1920's as a genuine enfant terrible, courting controversy and working hard for his notoriety. |
|
She was an enfant terrible who didn't care what people thought. |
|
Though he was just beginning his teaching career, Barth was, at the time, already something of a controversial celebrity, an enfant terrible among European theologians. |
|
He was an enfant terrible of culinary art, impossibly difficult to work for, fastidious about his creations and possessing a volcanic temper and savage tongue. |
|
This has earned him a reputation in the business press and among policy elites as an enfant terrible inclined to stir up trouble wherever he goes. |
|
Instead of treating me as an enfant terrible they nurtured me along. |
|
Years later, Jones would express some regret over his reputation as an enfant terrible, preferring to be known as Daniel Jones. |
|
Known as the enfant terrible of fashion, Jean Paul Gaultier is undoubtedly one of the most important designers of recent decades. |
|
Landau was a mathematical prodigy and enfant terrible. |
|
Later the rich and the famous became obsessed by the stone and the most prominent collector was the legendary enfant terrible of the international jet set, Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton. |
|
|
Mourinho never played professionally, but as Porto coach and Chelsea manager, this enfant terrible collected every European and domestic trophy available to him. |
|
Through his social and political actions, Bethune became the figure we know today: the enfant terrible of his profession, the champion of socialized medicine and the communist. |
|
But what happens when the enfant terrible has enfants of her own? |
|
The legendary pack has been reinvented and reborn through the imagination of Ora Ïto. This is the enfant terrible designer's second creation for Guerlain after the Idylle fragrance. |
|
At 43, Ostermeier still has something of the enfant terrible about him, even if the boyish pudginess of his face is less obvious than it once was. |
|
I am not such an enfant terrible as to torture you here. |
|
He was soon the talk of the town, the enfant terrible of our little world. |
|