#1999 addy walker
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y2kbeautyandother2000sstuff · 5 months ago
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American Girl Doll Catalogue
Spring 1999
Found on toysandcollectiblesmuseum.org
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agmagazinescans · 3 months ago
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The Little Brother, by Connie Porter
American Girl Magazine, January/February 1999
[Ko-Fi Donations]
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celestialmazer · 4 years ago
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Julie Mehretu, Untitled 2, 1999. Private collection. Courtesy of White Cube. © Julie Mehretu
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Julie Mehretu, Hineni (E. 3:4), 2018. Centre Pompidou, Paris, Musée national d’art moderne/Centre de création industrielle; gift of George Economou, 2019. © Julie Mehretu. Photography:Tom Powel Imaging
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Julie Mehretu, Mind-Wind Field Drawings (quarantine studio, d.h.) #1, 2019-2020. Private collection, courtesy Marian Goodman Gallery New York/Paris. © Julie Mehretu. Photography courtesy Marian Goodman Gallery
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Julie Mehretu, Mogamma (A Painting in Four Parts) Part 1, 2012. Guggenheim Abu Dhabi. © Julie Mehretu. Photography: White Cube, Ben Westoby
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Julie Mehretu, Conjured Parts (eye), Ferguson, 2016. The Broad Art Foundation, Los Angeles. © Julie Mehretu. Photography: Cathy Carver
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Julie Mehretu, Migration Direction Map (large), 1996. Private collection. © Julie Mehretu. Photography: Tom Powel Imaging
At home with artist Julie Mehretu
CAMILLE OKHIO - 25 MAR 2021
Julie Mehretu speaks with the joy and conviction of someone who has had the freedom to investigate all their interests. Curiosity has led her to the myriad topics, objects and moments that inform her work, among them cartography, archaeology, the birth of civilisation and mycology. Since the 1990s, her practice has expanded outwardly in all directions like a spider web. A lack of understanding and preconceived notions among reviewers have often led to her work being flattened – simplified so that it is easily digestible – but in reality, her work is far from a simplistic investigation of any one topic. It encompasses multitudes.
The artist’s recent paintings are mostly large scale, but her early works on paper (often created with multiple layers – one sheet of Mylar on top of another) are as small as a six-inch square. The works often comprise innumerable minuscule markings – tremendous force and knowledge communicated through delicate inkings and streaks. Their layers reveal, rather than obfuscate. And though Mehretu’s creative process springs from a desire to understand herself better, the work itself is in no way autobiographical. 
Born in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on the tails of a continental rejection of colonialism, and raised there, then in Michigan, Mehretu has a flexible and full-hearted understanding of home. It is not one physical place, but many, all holding equal importance. On 25 March, Mehretu will present her first major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art, with works spanning 1996 to 2019. The institution is an important one for Mehretu, as it played host to several pivotal shows in her youth.
Her exhibition has served as an impetus for Mehretu to look back at her already prolific career, observing and organising the thoughts, questions and answers she has put forth for over two decades. The six years it took to bring this exhibition together proved an incredibly valuable time of reflection, fatefully dovetailing with a year of quarantine. 
Wallpaper*: Where are you as we speak?
Julie Mehretu: I’m in my studio on 26th Street, right on the West Side Highway. I’ve worked here for 11 years.
W*: Are there any artists, writers or thinkers that have had a meaningful impact on you?
JM: I don’t know how to answer that because there are literally so many! It’s constantly changing. Right now, Kara Walker, David Hammons, William Pope.L, and younger artists like Jason Moran (who has made amazing work around abstraction). There are so many artists that have been informative and important to me: Frank Bowling, Jack Whitten, Caravaggio.
I also look at a lot of prehistoric work, from as far back as 60,000 years ago, as well as cave paintings from 6th century China and early prehistoric drawings in the caves of Australia. 
W*: What’s the most interesting thing you have read, watched or listened to recently?
JM: For the last few weeks I’ve been immersed in Steve McQueen films. I’ve been bingeing on lovers rock music. And a TV show that really moved me was [Michaela Cole’s] I May Destroy You. It’s difficult, but it was really well done and powerful. 
Ocean Vuong’s novel On Earth We Are Briefly Gorgeous is amazing. The Mushroom at the End of the World by Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing is a really incredible book too – she studies this mushroom that became a delicacy in Japan in the 7th century. It started growing in deforested areas – it’s in these places destroyed by human beings that these mushrooms survive. [I find it interesting] that this mushroom grows on the edge of precarity and destruction. Like with Black folks, there is a constant aspect of insisting on yourself and reinventing yourself in the midst of constant effort of destruction. 
W*: What was the first piece of art you remember seeing? How did you feel about it?
JM: One of the first times I remember being moved by a work of art was looking through my mother’s Rembrandt book. We brought so few things back from Ethiopia and that was one of them. [Particularly] Rembrandt’s The Sacrifice of Isaac. That story is so intense. I was so moved by the light and the skin and the way the paint made light and skin. 
W*: Do you travel? If so, what does travel afford you, and what have you missed about it during Covid-19?
JM: I travel a lot, but I haven’t travelled this year. There has been this amazing sense of suspension and a pause in that. I miss travelling, but going to look at art, watching films, reading novels and listening to music is the way I travel now. For instance, I’ve been listening to Afro-Peruvian music and now I want to go to Peru.
Before I know it we will be back in this fast-paced, zooming-around environment – there is something I want to savour by staying here, now, in this time and absorbing as much as I can.
W*: You are said to have a vast collection of objects and images. Walk me through your collection – what areas, materials, makers and things have the largest presence and why?
JM: When you enter our home there is this long hallway. Framed along the wall we have around 20 fluorescent Daniel Joseph Martinez block-printed posters he made with words – almost poems. Our kids grew up reading those. One says ‘Sometimes I can’t breathe’ and another one says ‘Don’t work’, while some are really long.
We also have a great Paul Pfeiffer photograph of one from the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse series. We have a group of Richard Tuttle etchings right over our dining table. We have an amazing David Hammons body print as well, and my kids’ work is all over the house.
W*: As the daughter of immigrants and an immigrant yourself – how do you conceptualise home and how do you create it?
JM: There were a lot of times I felt very transient – as a student and a young adult, going in and out of school and residency programmes. It always came back to music and food. There are certain flavours, foods, music, smells that you take wherever you go. Also as a mother, I’m building a home for my children. Home becomes something else because of them. They are the core of home now. 
W* How has motherhood affected your practice?
JM: I became much more productive when I had kids for several reasons – one is that I felt a lot of pressure to make [work] in the time I wasn’t with them, which of course is unsustainable. A large part of making is not making – thinking and searching. 
When I got to work I could get into it much more quickly. Kids grow and change so fast, you feel time is passing so you need to use it. I wasn’t going to stop working, that’s for sure. All women who are pushing in their lives make that choice. 
W*: What is your favourite myth and why does it hold importance for you?
JM: Right now I’m reading Greek myths to my ten-year-old. We’ve read them before, but he wanted to read them again. I still read to him at night even though he’s a voracious reader himself.
The myths I remember the most are myths I’ve come across in visual works. Titian’s Diana and Actaeon – I know that myth so well because of his painting. Bernini’s mesmerising sculpture of Apollo and Daphne I saw in Rome, where her body becomes a tree. The leaves are so delicately carved into the marble, it’s a work of incredible beauty. I’ve been considering this deconstructionist approach to mythology. Storytelling becomes this place to interrogate propositions, which is what I think mythology does.
W*: Have you experienced a flattening of your work?
JM: I’m always concerned with flattening and pigeonholing. That is something that happens to artists like us all the time. When I first was working and showing there was a bit of that happening with my work. It was put into the space of cartography or an architectural analysis of it. It was said to be autobiographical work.
The art world tries to consume. There is this desire to flatten and the desire for Black artists to be a reflection of their experience. I don’t think any artist is like that at all. In reality, none of us are flat. We all contain multitudes and are complicated – that has always been the core of the Black radical tradition.
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archiveacademics · 5 years ago
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Histories and the first Spotlight
Earlier this week I looked at what the definition of fanfic is. It’s a topic of endless debate and one I will doubtless return to again and again over the course of this study. But for today I’d like to do a little look back at the history of fanfic and, more broadly, of fandom itself.
“First there was “Star Trek,” the original series, whose viewers—many of them women in stem fields—organized conventions and created self-published journals (a.k.a. fanzines) with fiction about its characters, a small but notorious slice of which included sexy doings between Kirk and Spock. Or: first there were fans of science-fiction novels and magazines who held conventions and traded self-published journals as early as the nineteen-thirties. Or: first there was Sherlock Holmes, whose devotees, hooked by serial publication, pushed for more stories, formed clubs, and wrote their own. Or: first came Virgil’s Aeneid. Or: first, the Janeites. Or: first there was you, and your friends, age ten, making up adventures in which Chewbacca met Addy Walker, and writing them down.”
So opens “The Promise and Potential of Fan Fiction” by Stephanie Burt, which, if you didn’t read it when I linked to it in the last post you really should. The history of fanfic, if we wanted to be really broad, could go all the way to the ancient Greeks writing plays based on The Iliad and The Odyssey which are based on oral stories of a real war that (probably) happened around 1180 BCE. 
But we’re not going to do that, because, as Jill Bearup explains in the first of her “History of Fanfic” vlogs, The Aeneid and Iphigenia at Aulis and Trojan Women were not technically fanfic, but derivative works. As I discussed before, fanfic is about intent*.
To find the true beginnings of fanfic, you need to only go as far back as the eighteenth century.
“...popular authors such as Daniel Defoe started protesting that his work was being "kidnapped" and bowdlerised by amateur writers who reduced the value of his creations with inferior impersonations,” writes Ewan Morrison in an article entitled “In the Beginning, there was fan fiction: from the four gospels to Fifty Shades.”
1913 saw the publication of Old Friends and New Fancies – an Imaginary Sequel to the Novels of Jane Austen by Sybil Brinton, the first piece of published Janeite fanfic. (Janeite, of course, being the name of Jane Austen fans at the time. Much like Swifties or Beliebers today.)
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I myself own a book called Mr. Darcy, Vampyre, and though I’ve yet to read it (my shelf is over full, you might say) I’m sure it’s delightful.
From the Janeites of the eighteenth century we move forward to the Sherlock fans of the nineteenth. This genteel group of readers was so dedicated to Sherlock Holmes that they managed to raise him from the dead. Well, they annoyed Sir Arthur Conan Doyle so much he raised Sherlock from the dead. 
From there, the literary club of the Baker Street Irregulars was established in the 1930s and they are still alive and active to this day. Apparently, there’s a lot to discuss, as “Conan Doyle generally wrote the Holmes stories quickly and with a minimal amount of editing, and as a result the canon contains a huge number of mistakes and inconsistencies. It was from these that the practice of "Holmesian speculation" arose, which consists of pointing out discrepancies in the canon and devising (sometimes reasonable, sometimes extremely outlandish) explanations for them.” (Fanlore.org)
From Sherlock and the Irregulars we move to the modern era, and what you could potentially call the birth of modern fandom. That’s right folks, it’s time for some Star Trek.
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“The shape of those [early 2000s] fandoms, in turn, was due to those that migrated out of meatspace onto the brand new baby internet, which of course owed their structure to the zine-based fandoms of the ‘70s and ‘80s. All of which can be traced back to – you guessed it – Star Trek.
Star Trek: The Original Series is often looked to as the origin of modern fandom, and many of the networks and communities those fans established continue to influence fan interactions to this day, as does the example they set in using fandom as a means of social awareness and political action.”
In “None of This is New: An Oral History of Fanfiction” Jordan West discusses why you shouldn’t be surprised when you draw the card “Harry Potter erotica” in Cards Against Humanity and gives a quick overview of the history of fanfic. However, West argues that writing such as Shakespeare and The Aeneid count as fanfic which, by this blog’s definition, they don’t.
So I guess what I’m trying to say is that everyone has their own ideas of what fanfic is and where it really began. I’m sticking with the Janeites as my point of ignition. 
Now that’s settled (insofar as anything on the internet is every “settled”) let’s move on to this week’s Spotlight. Every week, I plan on putting a platform, a person, or a particular story in the spotlight to show off the practical side of these academic headaches I’m giving myself. (I’ve gone back and forth on the definition of fanfic at least fifteen times since I posted the first blog post, much less when I was writing the damn thing.)
This week’s Spotlight is on two of the earlier homes of fanfic: LiveJournal and Fanfiction.net. 
LiveJournal was created in 1999 by American programmer Brad Fitzpatrick as a mixed blog/social media site.  It was purchased in 2006 by Six Apart and then sold in 2007 to SUP Media, a Russian media company. (Wikipedia.com)
“LiveJournal encourages communal interaction and personal expression by offering a user-friendly interface and a deeply customizable journal. The service's individuality stems from the way highly dedicated users utilize our simple tools, along with the instinct for individual expression, to create new venues for online socializing.
Because of LiveJournal's unique combination of platform and social media, LiveJournal has a unique personality in different parts of the world. In fact every national community in every country is unique in its own way. Where a user in the United States might focus their attention on communities dedicated to topics from the popular to the esoteric, users in the U.K. may tend to rally around entertainment-related issues. In Russia LiveJournal makes up the vast majority of the blogosphere, hosting over 80 of the top 100 Russian blogs. In Singapore LiveJournal revolves around collaboratively purchasing overseas goods. And that's just for starters.” (LiveJournal.com)
Fanfiction.net was created in 1998 by Los Angeles programmer Xing Li. The largest archive of fanfic on the internet, fanfiction.net comes in second in popularity to Archive of our Own**. It has over 12 million users and hosts stories in over 40 languages. Unlike LiveJournal, fanfiction.net is not a social networking site, but a site specifically dedicated to fanfic. Users can choose from a number of categories for their work and they can rate their work as well. The site also hosts forums for fans and writers alike, and registered users can apply to be beta readers. (Wikipedia.com)
I have never had a LiveJournal (I’m honestly not even sure if I’m capitalizing that right), and if I did have a ff.net account I had to have been, like, 12 when it was created and 13 when it was last opened. Still, these are two of the earliest archives of massive amounts of fanfic from hundreds of different fandoms (just check out this list of book fandoms that have stories written about them of ff.net. And that’s just the book category!) 
A history of fanfic is always going to be a little bit messy around the edges, in part because the definition of fanfic is so personal and changeable. All I can hope is that you’ve learned something new today while reading this. If so, I’ll count that as a win.
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*And as I haven’t discussed yet, it’s also about copyright and ideas of authorship. Again, this is a topic you’ll have to look forward to.
**AO3 will be the subject of a future spotlight, don’t you worry.
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telenoveladamore · 6 years ago
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//I PERSONAGGI PRINCIPALI DI TELENOVELA D’AMORE.
Errico Foresta (1987-in corso)
Carmen Ligin Foresta (1987-in corso)
Gianni Foresta (1987-2012, 2013-in corso)
Laura Humilton (1990–2002, 2004, 2005–2013, 2014, 2018-in corso)
Serena Foresta Chiummi (1998-2002, 2004-2005, 2006-2014, 2015-2017, 2018-in corso)
Stefania Foresta (1999-2006,2008-2013,2015-in corso)
Mirko Foresta Jr. (2019-in corso)
Lina Ligin (1987–1991, 1994–1996, 2001, 2006-2015, 2016, 2017, 2018-in corso)
Angelica Ligin (1987-1989, 1991, 1994-1998, 2000-2001, 2003-2004, 2007-in corso)
Rose Ligin Foresta (2002-2014, 2015, 2016, 2018–in corso)
Florencia Ligin (2019-in corso)
Sarah Ligin (2019-in corso)
Max Chiummi Jr. (2009-in corso)
Louis Chiummi (2010-2018, 2018-in corso)
Stuard Chiummi (2010-in corso)
Wak Chiummi (2013-in corso)
Quata Fisher Foresta (2013-in corso)
Shelley Chiummi (2019-in corso)
Lucas Chiummi (2015-2018, 2018-in corso)
Luke Chiummi (2015-2018, 2018-in corso)
Noah Chiummi (2017-in corso)
Lucky Chiummi (2018-in corso)
Luca Chiummi (2018-in corso)
Nathaniel Chiummi (2018-in corso)
Xander Chiummi (2019-in corso)
Lukas Chiummi (2019-in corso)
Phoebe Chiummi (2018-in corso)
L.J. Shiley (2016-2018, 2019-in corso)
Brad Light (2018-in corso)
Owen Light (2017-in corso)
Marcus Light (2018-in corso)
Felix Light (2017-in corso)
Keith Light (2019-in corso)
Clara Light (2018-in corso)
Ciara Light (2018-in corso)
Justin Stevens (2019-in corso)
Jesse Stevens (2019-in corso)
Alisa Stevens (2016, 2019-in corso)
Karla Stevens Light (2017-in corso)
Vanessa Stevens (2018-in corso)
Alisha Stevens (2018-in corso)
Viktoria Stevens (2018-in corso)
Lindsay Stevens (2018-in corso)
Dylan Shaw (1994-1996, 2019-in corso)
Drew Foresta (2015-2017, 2018, 2019-in corso)
Theo Foresta (2016-2017, 2019-in corso)
Travis Foresta (2019-in corso)
Theresa Foresta Horton (2015-2018, 2018-in corso)
Thessa Foresta (2019-in corso)
Haley Foresta (2015-2018, 2018-in corso)
Ginevra Foresta Milkon (2018-in corso)
John Foresta (2018, 2019-in corso)
Cooper Foresta (2017-2018, 2018-in corso)
Connor Foresta (2019-in corso)
Jason Foresta (2019-in corso)
Julia Foresta (2019-in corso)
Hayley Foresta (2018-in corso)
Janet Foresta (2017-in corso)
Shauna Walker (2019-in corso)
Brittany Foresta (2018-in corso)
Mark Foresta (2018-in corso)
Aurora Foresta (2018-in corso)
Caitlin Foresta (2019-in corso)
Bella Foresta (2019-in corso)
Sonia Evans (2013-in corso)
Alejander Evans (2018-in corso)
Andy Young (2017-in corso)
Liam Young (2015, 2016, 2018-in corso)
Philip Young (2017-2018, 2018-in corso)
Aaron Young (2018-in corso)
Adam Young (2015-in corso)
A.J. Young (2015-2018, 2019-in corso)
Brody Young (2017-in corso)
Stephanie Young (2015-2017, 2018-in corso)
Aiden Young (2019-in corso)
Samuel Young (2016, 2017, 2018-in corso)
Allison Young (2014-2016, 2017, 2018-in corso)
Camilla Young Jr. (2019-in corso)
Patrick Young (2018-in corso)
Todd Young (2017-in corso)
Dina Angels Milkon (2018-in corso)
Dario Milkon (2017-in corso)
Dante Milkon (2019-in corso)
Dorian Milkon (2019-in corso)
Cane Milkon (2018-in corso)
Jake Milkon (2015-2016, 2017, 2018-in corso)
Mya Milkon (2016, 2018-2019, 2019-in corso)
Ethan Milkon (2015-2016, 2018-in corso)
Austin Milkon (2016-2018, 2018-in corso)
Edward Milkon (2018-in corso)
Jacob Milkon (2017-in corso)
Jean Milkon (2019-in corso)
Josh Milkon (2019-in corso)
Jack Shiley (2017-in corso)
Zack Shiley (2017-in corso)
Leo Shiley (2019-in corso)
Lisa Shiley (2015-in corso)
Quinn Shiley Young (2015-2017, 2018-in corso)
Taylor Wood (2017-in corso)
Amelia Wood (2018-in corso)
Kevin Wood (2018-in corso)
Raphaela Wood (2018-in corso)
Nancy Wood (2017-2018, 2018-in corso)
Nora Wood (2018-in corso)
Natasha Wood (2019-in corso)
Susan Specchio Shiley (2017-in corso)
Sabrina Specchio (2017-in corso)
Sabina Specchio (2018-in corso)
Sean Specchio (2019-in corso)
Mary Specchio (2017-in corso)
Sacca Specchio Jr. (2017–in corso)
Sabina Specchio Jr. (2019-in corso)
Pierina Donglas (2006-in corso)
Alexis Morgan (2018-in corso)
Alan Spencer (2016, 2019-in corso)
Chris Underwood (2016, 2019-in corso)
Ian Spencer (2016, 2018-in corso)
Henrique Spencer (2018-in corso)
Jame Barton (2009-in corso)
Joseph Store (2018-in corso)
Matt Walter (2017-2018, 2019-in corso)
Billy Walter (2017-in corso)
Shawn Walter (2017-2018, 2019-in corso)
Daniel Walter (2017-in corso)
Vincent Walter (2018-in corso)
Francesca Walter (2019-in corso)
Rafael Gonzalez (2017-in corso)
Adrianna Gonzalez (2017-in corso)
Cassie Gonzalez (2017-in corso)
Robert Gonzalez (2018-in corso)
Rex Gonzalez (2019-in corso)
Nicole Gonzalez (2018-in corso)
Rafe Gonzalez (2017-2018, 2018-in corso)
Xavier Gonzalez (2017-2018, 2018-in corso)
Jan Gonzalez (2018-in corso)
Fabian Gonzalez (2018-in corso)
Tracy Horton (2019-in corso)
Julian Horton (2018-in corso)
Jackie Malloy (2018-in corso)
Julie Malloy (2019-in corso)
Jessica Horton (2017-in corso)
Jeff Horton (2018-in corso)
Jen Horton (2017-in corso)
Jasmine Horton Chiummi (2018-in corso)
Becky Horton (2019-in corso)
Brady Horton (2019-in corso)
Ben Horton (2019-in corso)
Elizabeth Horton (2018-in corso)
Krystal Horton (2019-in corso)
Brenda Mitchell (2018-in corso)
Tyler Mitchell (2019-in corso)
Abby Logan (2018-in corso)
Addy Logan (2018-in corso)
Rocco Buckingbill (2018-in corso)
Zoey Buckingbill (2018-in corso)
Sydney Rogers (2018-in corso)
Sasha Falton (2019-in corso)
Alec Hernandez (2019-in corso)
Arthur Hernandez (2019-in corso)
August Hernandez (2019-in corso)
Arthuro Hernandez (2019-in corso)
Camila Hernandez (2019-in corso)
Annalisa Johnson (2019-in corso)
Dean Nero (2019-in corso)
Kyle Avery (2019-in corso)
Clarissa Taylor (2019-in corso)
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ultralifehackerguru-blog · 7 years ago
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New Post has been published on http://www.lifehacker.guru/game-thrones-actors-looked-different-youth-barely-recognizable/
Game Of Thrones Actors Who Looked So Different In Their Youth, Some Of Them Are Barely Recognizable
Now that season 7 of Game of Thrones has come to a dramatic end, we thought it was time to revisit the cast in their days before they became a part of HBO’s most popular series.
It’s hard to believe when you watch the show that the actors weren’t always the conniving, cynical, dour and battle-hardened residents of Westeos and Essos, but as you can see from these eye-opening pictures, some of your favorite GoT characters were virtually unrecognisable in their younger days. From Ser Davos Seaworth and Tyrion Lannister to Thoros of Myr and The Hound, Sandor Clegane, the list should help to satisfy your Game of Thrones cravings while you – and the rest of the world – wait for season 8 to arrive. How many actors do you recognise? Let us know in the comments below.
#1 Diana Rigg As Emma Peel (In 1961’s The Avengers) And As Olenna Tyrrel (In GoT)
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#2 Jason Momoa As Jason (In 2003’s Baywatch) And As Khal Drogo (In GoT)
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#3 Young Kristofer Hivju And As Tormund Giantsbane (In GoT)
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#4 Lena Headey As Young Mary (In 1992’s Waterland), Guinevere (In 1998’s Merlin) And As Cersei Lannister (In Got)
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#5 Gwendoline Christie As Lexi (In 2012’s Wizards Vs. Aliens) And As Brienne Of Tarth (In GoT)
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#6 Aidan Gillen As Frank (In 2000’s The Low Down) And As Petyr Baelish (In GoT)
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#7 Charles Dance As David Carlton (in 2002’s Ali G Indahouse) And As Tywin Lannister (in Game Of Thrones)
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#8 Paul Kaye As Dennis Pennis (in 1995’s Anyone For Pennis) And As Thoros Of Myr (in Got)
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 #9 Iain Glenn As Brendan (in 1988’s Gorillas In The Mist) And As Ser Jorah Mormont (in Got)
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#10 Sean Bean As Horace Clark (In A 1984 Episode Of The Bill) And As Ned Stark (In GoT)
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#11 Peter Dinklage As Finbar Mcbride (In 2003’s The Station Agent) And As Tyrion Lannister (In GoT)
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 #12 Young Jerome Flynn And As Bronn (In Got)
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#13 Young Kit Harington And As Jon Snow (In Got)
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#14 Conleth Hill As Roache (In 1992’s Blue Heaven) And As Lord Varys (In GoT)
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#15 Young Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson And As The Mountain (in Got)
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#16 Maisie Williams When She Was A Child And As Arya Stark (In GoT)
maisie_williams Report
#17 Carice Van Houten As Suzy (In 1999’s Suzy Q) And As Melisandre (In GoT)
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#18 Rory Mccann As Kenny Mcleod (In 2002’s The Book Group) And As Sandor Clegane Aka The Hound (In GoT)
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#19 Liam Cunningham As Sir Agravaine (In 1995’s First Knight) And As Ser Davos (In Got)
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#20 Emilia Clarke As Savannah (In 2010’s Triassic Attack) And As Daenerys Targaryen (In GoT)
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#21 Ross Mullan As Puppeteer (In 2007’s Bear Behaving Badly) And As White Walker (In GoT)
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#22 Sophie Turner When She Was A Child And As Sansa Stark (In GoT)
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 #23 Natalie Dormer As Victoria (In 2005’s Casanova) And As Margaery Tyrell (In GoT)
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#24 Richard Madden As Kirk Brandon (in 2010’s Worried About The Boy) And As Robb Stark (in Got)
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#25 Thomas Brodie-Sangster As Sam (In 2003’s Love Actually) And As Jojen Reed (In GoT)
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#26 Nikolaj Coster-Waldau As Martin (In 1994’s Nightwatch) And As Jaime Lannister (In Got)
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#27 Alfie Allen As Arundel’s Son (In 1998’s Elizabeth) And As Theon Greyjoy (In GoT)
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#28 Michelle Fairley As Teresa Doyle (In 1990’s Hidden Agenda) And As Catelyn Stark (In GoT)
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 #29 Jonathan Pryce As Sam Lowry (In 1985’s Brazil) And As High Sparrow (In GoT)
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 #30 Max Von Sydow As Antonius Block (In 1957’s The Seventh Seal) And As Three-Eyed Raven (In GoT)
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#31 Rose Leslie As Gwen Dawson (In 2010’s Downton Abbey) And As Ygritte (In GoT)
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 #32 Jacob Anderson As Angelo (in 2010’s 4.3.2.1.) And As Grey Worm (in Got)
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 #33 Young Iwan Rheon And As Ramsay Bolton (In GoT)
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#34 Young Kristian Nairn And As Hodor (In GoT)
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#35 Jack Gleeson As Little Boy (in 2005’s Batman Begins) And As Joffrey Baratheon (in Got)
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 #36 Gemma Whelan As Gwen’s Maid (in 2010’s The Wolfman) And As Yara Greyjoy (in Got)
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#37 Tom Wlaschiha (In 2008’s Spoons) And As Jaqen H’gar (In GoT)
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#38 Mark Addy As David ‘Dave’ (In 1997’s The Full Monty) And As Robert Baratheon (In GoT)
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38points
  #39 Hannah Murray As Cassie Ainsworth (in 2007’s Skins) And As Gilly (in Got)
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#40 Indira Varma As Ruttie Jinnah (in 1998’s Jinnah) And As Ellaria Sand (in Got)
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#41 Michael Mcelhatton As Raymond ‘Rats’ Doyle (In 2001’s Paths To Freedom) And As Roose Bolton (In GoT)
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#42 Jim Broadbent As Jean Pierre Dubois (in 1987’s Superman Iv: The Quest For Peace) And As Archmaester Ebrose (in Got)
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#43 David Bradley As Colin Woodcock (In 1971’s A Family At War) And As Walder Frey (In GoT)
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#44 Richard Brake As Pierce Tencil (In 1996’s Subterfuge) And As Night’s King (In GoT)
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#45 Stephen Dillane As Michael Henderson (In 1997’s Welcome To Sarajevo) And As Stanis Baratheon (In GoT)
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#46 Anton Lesser As Feste (in 1988’s Twelfth Night, Or What You Will) And As Qyburn (in Got)
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#47 Owen Teale As Maldak (in 1985’s Doctor Who : “vengeance On Varos”) And As Alliser Thorne (in Got)
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#48 Pilou Asbæk As Teis (in 2008’s Worlds Apart) And As Euron Greyjoy (in Got)
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 (C)
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American Girl Holiday Catalogue featuring Addy Walker and Molly McIntire
Holiday 1999
Found on worthpoint.com
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wankerwatch · 2 months ago
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Commons Vote
On: House of Lords (Hereditary Peers) Bill Committee: New Clause 1
Ayes: 41 (36.6% Con, 22.0% SNP, 9.8% Ind, 9.8% PC, 9.8% Green, 4.9% SDLP, 4.9% LD, 2.4% TUV) Noes: 378 (91.4% Lab, 4.8% Con, 2.1% Ind, 1.1% DUP, 0.3% RUK, 0.3% UUP) Absent: ~231
Day's business papers: 2024-11-12
Likely Referenced Bill: House of Lords (Exclusion of Hereditary Peers) Bill
Description: A Bill to amend the House of Lords Act 1999 to remove the by-election system for the election of hereditary peers; to provide for the exclusion of hereditary peers from the House of Lords over time; and for connected purposes.
Originating house: Commons Current house: Commons Bill Stage: 2nd reading
Individual Votes:
Ayes
Conservative (15 votes)
Andrew Murrison Andrew Snowden Ashley Fox Ben Obese-Jecty Blake Stephenson Bob Blackman David Davis Gavin Williamson Harriet Cross John Cooper John Lamont Lewis Cocking Peter Bedford Rebecca Paul Steve Barclay
Scottish National Party (9 votes)
Brendan O'Hara Chris Law Dave Doogan Graham Leadbitter Kirsty Blackman Pete Wishart Seamus Logan Stephen Flynn Stephen Gethins
Independent (4 votes)
Ayoub Khan Iqbal Mohamed Jeremy Corbyn Shockat Adam
Plaid Cymru (4 votes)
Ann Davies Ben Lake Liz Saville Roberts Llinos Medi
Green Party (4 votes)
Adrian Ramsay Carla Denyer Ellie Chowns Siân Berry
Social Democratic & Labour Party (2 votes)
Claire Hanna Colum Eastwood
Liberal Democrat (2 votes)
Freddie van Mierlo Tom Gordon
Traditional Unionist Voice (1 vote)
Jim Allister
Noes
Labour (342 votes)
Abtisam Mohamed Adam Jogee Adam Thompson Al Carns Alan Campbell Alan Gemmell Alan Strickland Alex Baker Alex Ballinger Alex Barros-Curtis Alex Davies-Jones Alex Mayer Alex McIntyre Alex Norris Alex Sobel Alice Macdonald Alison Hume Alison McGovern Alison Taylor Alistair Strathern Allison Gardner Amanda Hack Amanda Martin Andrew Cooper Andrew Lewin Andrew Pakes Andrew Ranger Andrew Western Andy MacNae Andy McDonald Andy Slaughter Angela Eagle Angela Rayner Anna Dixon Anna Gelderd Anneliese Dodds Anneliese Midgley Antonia Bance Bambos Charalambous Bayo Alaba Beccy Cooper Becky Gittins Bell Ribeiro-Addy Ben Coleman Ben Goldsborough Bill Esterson Blair McDougall Brian Leishman Bridget Phillipson Callum Anderson Calvin Bailey Carolyn Harris Cat Eccles Cat Smith Catherine Fookes Catherine McKinnell Charlotte Nichols Chi Onwurah Chris Bloore Chris Curtis Chris Elmore Chris Evans Chris Hinchliff Chris Kane Chris McDonald Chris Murray Chris Vince Chris Ward Chris Webb Christian Wakeford Claire Hazelgrove Claire Hughes Clive Betts Clive Efford Clive Lewis Connor Naismith Connor Rand Damien Egan Dan Aldridge Dan Jarvis Dan Tomlinson Daniel Francis Daniel Zeichner Danny Beales Darren Jones Darren Paffey Dave Robertson David Baines David Burton-Sampson David Pinto-Duschinsky David Smith David Taylor David Williams Dawn Butler Deirdre Costigan Derek Twigg Diana Johnson Douglas Alexander Douglas McAllister Ellie Reeves Elsie Blundell Emily Darlington Emma Foody Emma Hardy Emma Lewell-Buck Emma Reynolds Euan Stainbank Fabian Hamilton Feryal Clark Fleur Anderson Florence Eshalomi Frank McNally Fred Thomas Gareth Snell Gen Kitchen Georgia Gould Gerald Jones Gill Furniss Gill German Gordon McKee Graeme Downie Grahame Morris Gregor Poynton Gurinder Singh Josan Harpreet Uppal Heidi Alexander Helen Hayes Helena Dollimore Henry Tufnell Imogen Walker Irene Campbell Jack Abbott Jacob Collier Jade Botterill Jake Richards James Asser James Frith James Murray James Naish Janet Daby Jas Athwal Jayne Kirkham Jeevun Sandher Jeff Smith Jen Craft Jenny Riddell-Carpenter Jess Phillips Jessica Morden Jessica Toale Jim Dickson Jim McMahon Jo Platt Jo Stevens Jo White Joani Reid Jodie Gosling Joe Morris Joe Powell Johanna Baxter John Grady John Slinger John Whitby Jon Pearce Jon Trickett Jonathan Brash Jonathan Hinder Jonathan Reynolds Josh Dean Josh Fenton-Glynn Josh MacAlister Josh Newbury Josh Simons Julia Buckley Julie Minns Juliet Campbell Justin Madders Kanishka Narayan Karin Smyth Karl Turner Kate Dearden Kate Osamor Kate Osborne Katie White Katrina Murray Keir Mather Kenneth Stevenson Kerry McCarthy Kevin Bonavia Kevin McKenna Kim Johnson Kim Leadbeater Kirith Entwistle Kirsty McNeill Laura Kyrke-Smith Lauren Edwards Lauren Sullivan Laurence Turner Lee Pitcher Leigh Ingham Lewis Atkinson Liam Byrne Liam Conlon Lilian Greenwood Linsey Farnsworth Liz Kendall Liz Twist Lloyd Hatton Lola McEvoy Lorraine Beavers Louise Haigh Louise Jones Lucy Rigby Luke Akehurst Luke Charters Luke Murphy Luke Myer Margaret Mullane Maria Eagle Marie Tidball Mark Ferguson Mark Sewards Mark Tami Markus Campbell-Savours Marsha De Cordova Martin McCluskey Martin Rhodes Mary Glindon Matt Rodda Matt Turmaine Matt Western Matthew Patrick Matthew Pennycook Maureen Burke Maya Ellis Meg Hillier Melanie Onn Melanie Ward Miatta Fahnbulleh Michael Payne Michael Wheeler Michelle Scrogham Michelle Welsh Mike Reader Mike Tapp Mohammad Yasin Natalie Fleet Natasha Irons Naushabah Khan Navendu Mishra Neil Coyle Neil Duncan-Jordan Nesil Caliskan Nia Griffith Nicholas Dakin Nick Smith Nick Thomas-Symonds Noah Law Oliver Ryan Olivia Bailey Olivia Blake Pam Cox Pamela Nash Pat McFadden Patricia Ferguson Patrick Hurley Paul Davies Paul Foster Paul Waugh Paula Barker Paulette Hamilton Perran Moon Peter Kyle Peter Lamb Peter Prinsley Peter Swallow Phil Brickell Polly Billington Preet Kaur Gill Rachael Maskell Rachel Blake Rachel Hopkins Rachel Taylor Richard Baker Richard Quigley Rosie Wrighting Rupa Huq Rushanara Ali Ruth Cadbury Ruth Jones Sadik Al-Hassan Sally Jameson Sam Carling Sam Rushworth
Samantha Niblett Sarah Champion Sarah Coombes Sarah Edwards Sarah Hall Sarah Owen Sarah Russell Sarah Sackman Satvir Kaur Scott Arthur Sean Woodcock Seema Malhotra Shabana Mahmood Sharon Hodgson Shaun Davies Simon Lightwood Siobhain McDonagh Sojan Joseph Sonia Kumar Stephanie Peacock Stephen Doughty Stephen Kinnock Stephen Morgan Stephen Timms Steve Race Steve Reed Steve Witherden Steve Yemm Sureena Brackenridge Tahir Ali Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi Terry Jermy Tim Roca Toby Perkins Tom Collins Tom Hayes Tom Rutland Tonia Antoniazzi Tony Vaughan Torcuil Crichton Torsten Bell Tracy Gilbert Tristan Osborne Uma Kumaran Vicky Foxcroft Warinder Juss Will Stone Yuan Yang Zubir Ahmed
Conservative (18 votes)
Alison Griffiths Andrew Rosindell Bernard Jenkin Christopher Chope David Reed Desmond Swayne Edward Leigh George Freeman Gregory Stafford Jack Rankin James Cleverly Jeremy Hunt John Hayes Mark Pritchard Martin Vickers Rebecca Smith Roger Gale Tom Tugendhat
Independent (8 votes)
Alex Easton Apsana Begum Ian Byrne Imran Hussain John McDonnell Rebecca Long Bailey Richard Burgon Rosie Duffield
Democratic Unionist Party (4 votes)
Carla Lockhart Gavin Robinson Gregory Campbell Jim Shannon
Reform UK (1 vote)
Nigel Farage
Ulster Unionist Party (1 vote)
Robin Swann
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