Ramona and User talk:Neverending Drumbeat: Difference between pages

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I stilI still can't edit. What's up?
''(This article refers to the novel and plays/movies derived from it. There is also a song named [[Ramona (song)|Ramona]] and a place named [[Ramona, California]].)''
 
==Yes, you can==
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== Novel ==
 
This account is not blocked. Please stop spamming your talk page. <span style="background-color:#000000"><font color="white">(|--</font></span> <span style="background-color:#CCCCCC">[[User talk:Ultimus|<font color="red">'''UlT</font><font color="green">i</font><font color="blue">MuS'''</font>]]</span> 00:17, 26 August 2006 (UTC)
'''''Ramona''''' is the title of a novel by writer [[Helen Hunt Jackson]] and published in [[1884 in literature|1884]].
 
No I can't, I just tried to make another account, and that one wasn't ok for some reason,so they told me to make another and now I still can't edit. What's going on here?
Jackson's novel is set in the [[Southern California]] of [[Spain|Spanish]] [[Californio]] society. It is about a part-Indian and part-Scottish orphan who is raised by the Se&ntilde;ora Moreno, who is the sister of Ramona's deceased foster mother. Se&ntilde;ora Moreno has raised Ramona as if she is part of the family, giving her every luxury, because her sister asked her to before her death. Se&ntilde;ora Moreno, who still considers herself a [[Mexico|Mexican]], even though [[California]] is no longer a [[province]] of that [[country]], and hates the [[United States|American]]s who have cut up her huge [[rancho]] and taken away lands, adores her only child, Felipe Moreno, but she does not love Ramona because she harbors ill feelings about her being part Indian.
 
==Stop the spam==
Se&ntilde;ora Moreno holds up the sheep shearing that year so the band of Indians from [[Temecula]] that she always hires can arrive, as well as the Priest from [[Santa Barbara]], because she wants to make sure the lowly heathens have mass in her chapel and an opportunity to give confession. Ramona falls in love with a young Indian sheepherder, Alessandro. The Se&ntilde;ora Moreno is outraged. Ramona realizes that Se&ntilde;ora Moreno has never loved her, and to the old woman's chagrin they leave to be married. Alessandro and Ramona have a daughter. They also have misery and hardship. They are run off of several of their places, due to the land greed of certain [[United States|American]]s, and cannot find a permanent home. They finally move up into the [[San Bernardino Mountains]]. Alessandro looses his mind. He is down in town one day and rides off on the horse of an [[United States|American]]. The man follows him home and shoots him. In the meantime, the Se&ntilde;ora Moreno has died. Felipe finds Ramona and they are married. They leave to live in [[Mexico]].
 
Once again, please stop spamming your talk page, or you may lose the privelege of editing it. <span style="background-color:#000000"><font color="white">(|--</font></span> <span style="background-color:#CCCCCC">[[User talk:Ultimus|<font color="red">'''UlT</font><font color="green">i</font><font color="blue">MuS'''</font>]]</span> 00:21, 26 August 2006 (UTC)
Jackson's fiction, which used real locations in [[Southern California]] and dramatized various real events, was intended to arouse public concern for the treatment of [[Native Americans]]. But readers accepted the sentimentalized [[Spain|Spanish]] [[Californio]] aristocracy that was portrayed and the Ramona myth was born.
 
''Ramona'' was an instant success. The novel has never been out of print.
 
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== Movies ==
 
The novel ''Ramona'' has inspired [[motion pictures]] of the same title.
 
The first was a [[silent movie]] filmed in [[1910 in film|1910]], which starred [[Mary Pickford]] and was directed by [[D. W. Griffith]].
 
Another version of the story was filmed in [[1916 in film|1916]] and starred Adda Gleason.
 
A version filmed in [[1928 in film|1928]] starred [[Dolores Del Rio]].
 
And another version filmed in [[1936 in film|1936]] starred [[Loretta Young]] in the title role.
 
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== Play ==
 
There is also ''The Ramona Pageant'', a long-running outdoor [[play]] at [[Hemet, California]].
 
This staged adaptation of Jackson's novel opened in [[1923]] and is held annually over three consecutive weekends in April and May in the Ramona Bowl, a natural [[amphitheater]] in the foothills above Hemet in [[Riverside County, California|Riverside County]]. The pageant features a four hundred member cast, made up largely of area residents, and is described as the largest and longest-running outdoor play in the nation.