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Erased identity: Post-war adoptee seeks German roots
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Struggling Sevilla sack Garcia Pimienta
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Japan qualify for BJK Cup finals with win over Canada
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Iran says talks with US to focus solely on nuclear issue, lifting sanctions
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Members of Hong Kong's Democratic Party approve plan to disband
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Russian strike on city centre in Ukraine's Sumy kills 21
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Green Day, Charli XCX and... Bernie Sanders helm Coachella day two
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Hirpa and Biwott triumph at Paris Marathon
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China's Xi courts Southeast Asia as Trump tariffs bite
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Gaza hospital hit as Israel intensifies assault
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Myanmar quake victims mark new year camped in ruins
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Australian schoolboy Gout Gout scorches to 19.84sec over 200m
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Bernie Sanders fights apathy on American left
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Scottish rowing brothers aim for record-breaking Pacific crossing
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Ennis downs Stanionis to unify IBF, WBA welterweight belts
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Bernie Sanders thrills Coachella crowd with surprise appearance
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Bulgarian border city hails Schengen tourism boom
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Algeria protests after consular official indicted in France
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Indonesia palm oil firms eye new markets as US trade war casts shadow
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Indonesia's horror movie industry rises from the grave
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Myanmar marks new year festival mourning quake losses
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Death toll in Dominican nightclub roof collapse hits 226
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Blues go back to forwards to turn around Super Rugby form
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Harvey Weinstein sex crimes retrial to begin Tuesday in NY
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Hip hop trio Kneecap has Coachella rapping in Irish
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Day: McIlroy worthy of Tiger and Jack if he wins Masters
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Ecuador votes in razor-close presidential runoff
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DeChambeau surges late to line up Masters showdown with McIlroy
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McIlroy eyes Masters win and Slam - 'I'll be able to handle it'
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McIlroy leads by two heading into Masters final round
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No.1 Scheffler grinds out level par on tough day at Masters
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Magisterial McIlroy leads midway through Masters third round
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Svitolina seals Ukraine berth in BJK Cup Finals with Britain, Spain advancing
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McLaren's Piastri claims Bahrain pole as Norris, Verstappen struggle
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UK government to take control of British Steel under emergency law
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Serbian president holds nationalist rally to counter student demos
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Bayern fail to make most of Leverkusen slip with Dortmund draw
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Arnautovic pushes Inter six points clear ahead of Bayern showdown
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Zach Johnson, 49, turns back time with 66 in Masters charge
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Sizzling start lifts McIlroy to Masters lead
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Abhishek plunders 141 as Hyderabad pull off second-highest IPL chase
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Serbian president holds nationalist counter-rally
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Arsenal held by Brentford as faint title hopes fade

Funny-side up: Comedy booming in French-speaking Canada
Home to a prestigious comedy school, the world's largest annual laughs festival and nightclubs that pack in audiences for dozens of weekly stand-up shows, comedy is serious business in Montreal.
Hundreds of comedians regularly ply their trade in the French-speaking Canadian city after the number of local stages offering to showcase their talents exploded in recent years.
Improv, topical, observational or deadpan comedy in both French and English, from pioneers such as Tom Green -- host of a popular MTV show in the 1990s -- to newbies trying to find what works on stage, every stand-up style imaginable can found.
Appreciative audiences fill the brisk Quebec night air with laughter, in a province in which comedy shows are a top entertainment draw.
"Comedy in Quebec, we take it seriously," said comedian Simon Delisle.
At the popular Bordel Comedy Club in Montreal, Charles Deschamps -- with a microphone in hand and a staid brick wall as a backdrop -- lets loose on a packed room with joke after joke, eliciting giggles and guffaws from the audience.
Opened in 2015, the comedy cabaret presents several shows a night -- and usually sells out even before the line-up is finalized, said Deschamps, who is also part-owner of the club.
Building on its runaway success, the cabaret doubled its capacity by opening a second stage last year and expanded its bookings.
"It's a way to relax," says a grinning Manuel St-Aubin, 27, a regular at the club.
At the Bordel, "the laughter is loud, people applaud a lot," observes Certe Mathurin, contrasting Canadians' outbursts with more muted Paris audiences.
The French comedian plans to start his fourth comedy tour in Quebec, calling the Canadian province -- which has hosted Just For Laughs, the largest international comedy festival in the world, for decades -- "the Mecca of humour."
"It's a pilgrimage for comedians: whether you're French, Swiss, Belgian... you have to go to Quebec because they are at the forefront of French-speaking humor," adds the 37-year-old.
- What's so funny -
Before performing on stage, many seek training at the National School of Humour in Montreal.
Founded in 1988, the school graduates about 30 comedians each year, including Roman Frayssinet who went on to great success in France -- which current student Felix Wagner, 27, hopes to emulate.
Inside a classroom with curtains drawn, one of Wagner's schoolmates rehearses a comedy routine. His teacher, Stephan Allard, tells him he needs to "work on the material so that it flows better."
There are also lessons in creativity, improvisation, and career management, and each week students are required to present in class a new five-minute stand-up routine.
Allard says they help students locate their funny bone -- whether they mine their own lives for inspiration, or find their material in news or pop culture -- and zero in on which bits "are funniest on stage."
The program also helps them firm up their writing and to develop a "signature" style to differentiate themselves from others, he added.
"Going to the school allowed me to perform in comedy clubs in Paris, even though they didn't know me, in places where it's normally difficult to get a gig," such as the Paname or Fridge comedy clubs, said Virginie Courtiol, a first-year student who uses the alias "Beurguy" onstage.
The 34-year-old French comedian riffs on topics such as menstruation and having had an abortion.
Once that kind of humour about women's bodies would have been taboo -- but as Deschamps says, "there is always an evolution."
M.Furrer--BTB