Uti Vår Hage (folk Song) , Norwegian comedy sketch show
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Uti vår hage may refer to: * Uti vår hage (comic strip), Swedish comic strip and associated magazine * Uti vår hage (song), Swedish folk song * Uti vår hage (TV series) ''Uti vår hage'' ( en, Out in Our Garden, named after a folk song) was a Norwegian sketch comedy television program which had two different runs on TV in 2003 and 2008 on the Norwegian state channel NRK. The show starred the three well-known com ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Uti Vår Hage (comic Strip)
Uti vår hage ( en, Out in our pasture, named after a Swedish folk song) is a Swedish comic strip, created by Krister Petersson. It originally appeared in '' Svenska Serier'' in 1981. It then began a long run in '' 91:an'' (1983 - December 2001). On 5 December 2002 ''Uti vår hage'' became a bi-monthly comic, published by Egmont. It also ran briefly as a daily strip in ''Dagens Nyheter''. The comic strip The main character is Faló, an immature and self-righteous man in his mid-30s who lives in the small, fictional Swedish town of Mjölhagen, loosely based on a town in Småland. His last name is never revealed. Lacking any obvious source of income, he nevertheless lives in his own detached villa on Friggagatan with large garden and drives an old Volvo Amazon. He has an extremely high opinion of himself and his own abilities (especially his intelligence), which fails to reflect the realities of his personality. For example, he considers himself to be a talented poet. He generally wea ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Uti Vår Hage (song)
"Uti vår hage" ("Out in our meadow" or "In our meadow") is a traditional Swedish folk song first published in Gotland sometime during the 1880s by Hugo Lutteman, though it is also considered to have earlier origins as far back as the 1600s. The piece became widely published in the 1890s and is associated with a boom in interest in folk traditions in Sweden during this decade. The piece continues to be well known by the Swedish populace, performed frequently by choral groups, and has been described as a "national song treasure" typically taught to schoolchildren. Also owing to this popularity is an arrangement of the piece by composer Hugo Alfvén in 1923. The piece is often performed, among other Swedish traditional songs, during Walpurgis Night. Recordings An early recording was made in the acoustic version of in 1916, and appeared on the album of the same year. The song has also been recorded in English by Engel Lund, with Ferdinand Rauter on the piano under a differe ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |