@dodolgarutmylove: setiap ucapan dan ketikan mereka, berhasil membuat hati tersentuh dan menangis🥹🥹 #taesan #boynextdoor #onedoor #kpop #zxycba

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sarua_shigeta
han taesan bayar zakat :
ini dia ngomong ini dimana kaa😭😭😭
2026-06-01 00:20:03
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say29939
capybara_neo :
belum rilis aja udah nangis duluan liat lirik sm video spoilernya😭💖
2026-06-01 13:40:44
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jia_sho
Jorjiyah🫧 :
kalimatnya penyair itu selalu indah yaa🥹
2026-06-11 17:29:30
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hansjourneys
n :
hes so family man coded 😭😭🥹🩷
2026-06-05 15:37:26
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indomie kari ayam :
duh merinding banget san🥺🥺 proud of youu you're doing well may boyy💗
2026-06-05 06:41:49
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na.woonagie20yo
Gonna Be A Rock :
join grup onedoor sini cinta💐
2026-06-12 13:10:23
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dongminieee_
SevEN :
gue mewek bgt kalo soal mereka
2026-06-07 14:26:17
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niaad15
niaad15 :
ihh dimanaa inii ngomong kaya gini sintaesan
2026-06-01 12:43:41
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letta54_
itsme_ :
syg ku🥺
2026-06-01 17:00:54
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In 1937, long before the world knew him as the “Clown Prince of Denmark,” Victor Borge made his very first appearance on screen in a Danish comedy film—and he did it in spectacular fashion… by performing on eight pianos at once. The now-famous “8 Pianos” routine is a remarkable piece of early film trickery and musical showmanship. In the archival footage, Borge appears to dash between a row of pianos, striking notes on several instruments at once while the magic of cinema multiplies his presence. The result is a seamless melody built from chaos—part virtuoso performance, part visual gag. Even in this early moment, the blueprint of Borge’s legendary style is already visible: classical mastery gently sabotaged by mischievous humor. Rather than treating the piano as a solemn instrument of high culture, Borge turned it into a stage for playful rebellion. The routine also hints at the kind of musical anarchy he would later bring to live audiences. In later decades, Borge famously performed chaotic duets and mock “battles” at the piano with collaborators like Leonid Hambro and Şahan Arzruni—acts that felt as if eight pianists were fighting over a single keyboard. Behind the comedy, however, was formidable technique. A true prodigy, Borge began playing at age two and gave his first public recital at eight. Even when turning pages upside down, wrestling a page-turner, or tumbling off the bench mid-performance, the notes rarely suffered. That 1937 film clip isn’t just a novelty—it’s the birth of piano comedy, captured at the moment when a young Danish virtuoso discovered that classical music could also be gloriously ridiculous. #VictorBorge #PianoComedy #ClassicalMusic #FilmHistory #VintageCinema
In 1937, long before the world knew him as the “Clown Prince of Denmark,” Victor Borge made his very first appearance on screen in a Danish comedy film—and he did it in spectacular fashion… by performing on eight pianos at once. The now-famous “8 Pianos” routine is a remarkable piece of early film trickery and musical showmanship. In the archival footage, Borge appears to dash between a row of pianos, striking notes on several instruments at once while the magic of cinema multiplies his presence. The result is a seamless melody built from chaos—part virtuoso performance, part visual gag. Even in this early moment, the blueprint of Borge’s legendary style is already visible: classical mastery gently sabotaged by mischievous humor. Rather than treating the piano as a solemn instrument of high culture, Borge turned it into a stage for playful rebellion. The routine also hints at the kind of musical anarchy he would later bring to live audiences. In later decades, Borge famously performed chaotic duets and mock “battles” at the piano with collaborators like Leonid Hambro and Şahan Arzruni—acts that felt as if eight pianists were fighting over a single keyboard. Behind the comedy, however, was formidable technique. A true prodigy, Borge began playing at age two and gave his first public recital at eight. Even when turning pages upside down, wrestling a page-turner, or tumbling off the bench mid-performance, the notes rarely suffered. That 1937 film clip isn’t just a novelty—it’s the birth of piano comedy, captured at the moment when a young Danish virtuoso discovered that classical music could also be gloriously ridiculous. #VictorBorge #PianoComedy #ClassicalMusic #FilmHistory #VintageCinema

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