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Surviving two Dionne Quintuplets Annette and Cecile - who were taken from their parents and kept in a 'baby zoo' for tourists to visit - celebrate their 87th birthday Cecile and Annette Dionne ...
Yvonne died in 2001, leaving Cecile and Annette as the two surviving sisters. Related: Family Secrets: The Dionne Quintuplets' Autobiography, by Cecile Dionne, Yvonne Dionne, and, Jean-Yves Soucy.
After her death, the sisters became even more private. Annette, left, and Cecile, right, seen here with sister Yvonne in 1994, are the only two surviving Dionne quintuplets.
Yvonne Dionne, one of the legendary Dionne sisters--the first quintuplets known to have survived infancy--died Saturday in Montreal, the family announced. She was 67 and had been fighting cancer.
In the mid-1990s, the three remaining sisters — Annette, Cecile, and Yvonne — wrote in their book The Dionne Quintuplets: Family Secrets that their father had abused when he took them alone in ...
The surviving Dionne quintuplets, Annette and Cecile, celebrated their 87th birthday on Thursday. Their birth near North Bay, Ont., in 1934 astounded the world, but has become a focal point for ...
1940: The Dionne quintuplets starting first grade at six years old. Back row: Annette, Cecile and Yvonne; front, Emile and Marie. Instruction is conducted in French by Mille.
Yvonne, Annette, Cécile, Émilie and Marie were the first set of quintuplets known to live through infancy. But that one fact that made them so unique saw them imprisoned in a ‘human zoo'. More ...
On May 28, 1934, the Dionne sisters, Emilie, Yvonne, Cecile, Marie and Annette, first documented set of quintuplets to survive, were born near Callander, Ontario, and soon became world-famous.
The Dionne quintuplets – from left, Annette, Marie, Cecile, Yvonne and Emilie, flanked by Monsignor Gustav Schultheiss, left, and their father, Oliva Dionne – take in the sights from the ...