#Judith McConnell
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atomic-chronoscaph · 11 months ago
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TGIF
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movie-titlecards · 1 year ago
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The Thirsty Dead (1974)
My rating: 4/10
Whoever came up with all those bogus "The Lord of the Rings movies have way too many walking scenes" jokes clearly never saw this.
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nobuyukikakigi · 1 year ago
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ガザを想う──映画『ガザ 素顔の日常』を見て
福岡アジア美術館を会場に開催されていた水俣・福岡展2023(認定NPO法人水俣フォーラム主催)の協賛企画として10月29日に開催された「水俣を想う歴史家と哲学者の対話」の終わりに、歴史家の藤原辰史さんが、パレスティナのガザ地区の海水が下水などによって汚染されていることに触れてくれた。2006年から続くイスラエルによる封鎖と、その後も度重なった武力攻撃によってガザの水道が機能しなくなり、下水が処理されないまま海に流されているという。そのために健康被害が心配されるほどに海水が汚れていく一方、飲み水を含めた生活用水の供給もできない状態が続いていることは言うまでもない。 それでもなお、人々は海に出る。海岸で遊ぶために、魚を獲るために、あるいはただ息をつくために。海が広がっていくのを眺め、波とともに吹き寄せてくる風を浴びると、生きている感触が得られるのだ。先の対談は、石牟礼道子の言葉に因んで「生…
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nightsidewrestling · 1 year ago
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D.U.D.E Bios: Hortensia Marino
Urbano's Wife Hortensia Marino (2020)
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The wife of Urbano, sister-in-law of Bienvenida and daughter-in-law of Yago and Florencia, Hortensia. She works as a bartender and pole dancer, as well as a part-time wrestler.
"I get more bruises than my husband does at work."
Name
Full Legal Name: Hortensia Zoraida Marino (Née Lozano)
First Name: Hortensia
Meaning: Feminine form of the Roman family name 'Hortensius', possibly derived from Latin 'Hortus' meaning 'Garden'.
Pronunciation: or-TEHN-sya
Origin: Ancient Roman, Spanish
Middle Name: Zoraida
Meaning: Perhaps means 'Enchanting' or 'Dawn' in Arabic.
Pronunciation: so-RIE-dha
Origin: Spanish
Surname: Marino (Née Lozano)
Meaning: Derived from the given name 'Marino' which itself is the Italian and Spanish form of 'Marinus', 'Marinus' comes from the Latin word 'Marinus' meaning 'Of the sea'. (Lozano: Means 'Healthy, Exuberant, Lively' in Spanish.)
Pronunciation: ma-REE-no (lo-SA-no)
Origin: Spanish (Spanish)
Alias: Miracle
Reason: Work name & Ring Name
Nicknames: Sia, Zora, Raida
Titles: Mrs, Ms
Characteristics
Age: 35
Gender: Female. She/Her Pronouns
Race: Human
Nationality: Cuban
Ethnicity: Hispanic/Latino
Birth Date: July 10th 1985
Symbols: None
Sexuality: Bisexual
Religion: Catholic
Native Language: Spanish
Spoken Languages: Spanish, English, Portuguese, Italian
Relationship Status: Married
Astrological Sign: Cancer
Theme Song (Ringtone on Billie's Phone): 'Pony' - Ginuwine
Voice Actor: Anabelle Acosta
Geographical Characteristics
Birthplace: Bayamo, Granma Province, Cuba
Current Location: Bayamo, Granma Province, Cuba
Hometown: Bayamo, Granma Province, Cuba
Appearance
Height: 5'7" / 170
Weight: 150 lbs / 68 kg
Eye Colour: Brown
Hair Colour: Black
Hair Dye: None
Body Hair: N/A
Facial Hair: N/A
Tattoos: (As of Jan 2020) 4
Piercings: Ear Lobes (Both)
Scars: None
Health and Fitness
Allergies: None
Alcoholic, Smoker, Drug User: Social Drinker
Illnesses/Disorders: None
Medications: None
Any Specific Diet: None
Relationships
Allies: N/A
Enemies: N/A
Friends: Wanda Ott, Genesis Winter, Rosaleem O'Sullivan, Oneida Rhydderch, Haf McFarlane, Olwen McDermott, Gertrude Rhydderch, Llinos McConnell
Colleagues: N/A
Rivals: N/A
Closest Confidant: Urbano Marino
Mentor: Hilaria Lozano
Significant Other: Urbano Marino (34, Husband)
Previous Partners: None of Note
Parents: Ramiro Lozano (55, Father), Hilaria Lozano (56, Mother, Née Nieddu)
Parents-In-Law: Yago Marino (57, Father-In-Law), Florencia Marino (58, Mother-In-Law, Née Palomo)
Siblings: Iris Nicci (32, Sister, Née Lozano), Jazmín Lozano (29, Sister), Luna Lozano (26, Sister)
Siblings-In-Law: Sancho Nicci (33, Iris' Husband), Bienvenida Marino (37, Urbano's Sister), Judith Ibarra (31, Urbano's Sister, Née Marino), Xavier Ibarra (32, Judith's Husband), Quirino Marino (28, Urbano's Brother), Natividad Marino (25, Urbano's Sister), Macario Marino (22, Urbano's Brother), Rosaura Marino (19, Urbano's Sister), Isaac Marino (16, Urbano's Brother)
Nieces & Nephews: Emperatriz Romero-Marino (17, Niece), Antonio Huerta-Marino (14, Nephew), Triana Santos-Marino (11, Niece), Casilda Ibarra (11, Niece), Zaira Nicchi (12, Niece)
Children: Lorenzo Marino (14, Son), Paz Marino (11, Daughter)
Children-In-Law: None
Grandkids: None
Great Grandkids: None
Wrestling
Billed From: The Underworld
Trainer: Sabas Marino, Yago Marino, Tercero Marino, Ramiro Marino, Pastor Marino, Olegario Marino, Nicanor Marino, Jair Marino, Heliodoro Marino, Gonzalo Marino, Facundo Marino, C.R.C Wrestling School
Managers: Urbano Marino
Wrestlers Managed: Urbano Marino
Debut: 2005
Debut Match: Miracle VS Oneida Rhydderch. Miracle won via pinfall
Retired: N/A
Retirement Match: N/A
Wrestling Style: Grappler
Stables: Los Marinos (2006-)
Teams: Los Marinos
Regular Moves: Big Boot, Diving Clothesline, Swinging Neckbreaker, Diving Crossbody, Sitout Rear Mat Slam, Electric Chair Drop, Electric Chair Facebuster, Flapjack, Half Nelson Bulldog, Inverted DDT, Missile Dropkick, Spinning Heel Kick, Somersault Senton Plancha, Sharpshooter, Sitout Powerbomb, Crossface, Spinebuster
Finishers: Leg Hook Reverse STO, Spear, Lifting DDT, Standing Arm Triangle
Refers To Fans As: The Watchful Eyes
Extras
Trivia: Nothing of note
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weepingwonderlandunknown · 12 days ago
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Dark Fears
Derrick gave a curt nod of greeting to the other person in the elevator as he entered, punched the button for the eighth floor and automatically took a position in the opposite corner. It was a familiar routine. Even though they’d reach his floor first (the button for the tenth floor was lit), he was used to people panicking a little if he stood in front of the doors. At 6’4” and 275 pounds, Derrick was used to being mistaken for a football player. Sometimes that came in handy but after years of being hassled by everyone from his teachers to complete strangers, Derrick was over it. So he took his grandmother’s advice and invested in nice clothes and worked on keeping a professional appearance. For the most part it worked. Except in certain situations. Like being the biggest, darkest dude on the elevator.
The doors finally closed as he was mentally ticking off his plan for the night. The girl in the corner was frowning at her phone and swayed slightly as the elevator started to move but didn’t say anything. At least she wasn’t one of those people who felt the need to fill spaces with words, Derrick thought gratefully. He couldn’t see her face under the hood of her jacket but she still seemed familiar. Not that he was gonna ask for her name or anything. They probably had a class together. 
As the number three flashed on the screen above the buttons, the lights dimmed and the elevator jerked. Derrick sucked in a breath as the girl’s head snapped up from her phone. Both sets of eyes locked on the screen as the elevator slowly crept upward. While Derrick knew that this was a fairly modern building and that the elevators were supposedly checked regularly, he didn’t like the idea of being stuck in one. Apparently the girl didn’t either because she moved forward and raised a hand to the control panel.
Several things happened very quickly. The number on the screen changed to a 4 just as the lights flickered again and the girl hit the emergency button. Derrick felt a thump in his feet and he was pretty sure there was one above but it was drowned out by the buzzing noise of the alarm. And then the lights went out completely.
“Fuck a duck!”
Derrick gave a nervous chuckle. He appreciated the sentiment but it certainly wasn’t what he expected.
“There’s supposed to be an emergency light in these things,” the girl continued. The screen of her phone brightened and swung back to the control panel. The buzzer had shut off and she pressed the call button. “Come on,” she muttered. “Someone answer me.”
There was a dial tone and then a click. “Emergency services,” a woman’s voice said. “Please state your name and location.”
“Hello, my name is Katie McConnell and I’m calling from one of the elevators in the Braun building,” the girl stated. “There’s a guy stuck in here, too.” 
Derrick listened as the operator gathered information, providing his name when asked. Katie’s business-like demeanor impressed and steadied his own nerves. The operator explained that half the city was down without any explanation and they were being told it would be at least an hour before anything changed. She was a little concerned that the emergency light hadn’t kicked on and added their phone numbers to her notes as well as giving them the number for her station. “Just in case,” she told them. “My name’s Judith and you can try asking for me but we’re pretty busy right now. Now, promise me that you won’t do anything stupid like try to pry the doors open and if anything changes, you’ll call 911 immediately.” Both promised to stay put before she hung up.
Katie dropped to the floor with her phone in her hands, fingers tapping the screen wildly. Derrick took the opportunity to text his parents and his cousin, not that he expected any answers. If the power was out all over town they probably had other things to deal with. He lowered himself to the floor and stretched out his legs, careful not to encroach on Katie’s space. 
“You’re taking Sociology this semester, right?”
Derrick nodded at the sudden question. “Yeah. Anthropology with Kipp.”
The girl nodded. “Is he any good? I checked out Uloop but everyone seems pretty split on whether he’s good or not.”
“Depends on what you’re looking for,” Derrick said with a shrug. “He doesn’t just read from the assigned books. I actually think his lectures supplement the basics well but I’ve heard some of the students complain about him going off-topic. Which he does, especially if it involves the Anasazi. Dude has some wild theories about them. But he usually doesn’t do that unless we’ve already covered the day’s work.” He scratched his chin, thoughtfully. “I think the complainers are the ones who haven’t figured out that Kipp’s fine with people walking out once they understand a concept. Hell, you can take the quizzes while you’re in class and ask questions if you’re not sure.”
Katie tilted her head, a quizzical expression on her face. “Seriously? That sounds pretty easy.”
“Well, he doesn’t just tell you the answers,” Derrick clarified. “There’s a whole system. Let me show you.” He reached for his backpack and paused, realizing that the explanation might be more than Katie actually wanted. “I mean, I can if you want me to.”
Her nose crinkled as she smiled. “I wouldn’t have asked if I didn’t want to know. I need to pick a class for next semester so why not ask someone who knows. Besides, the distraction will do me good.”
“You don’t like cramped, dark spaces?”
“Oh, I’m fine with this,” Katie waved a hand to indicate the elevator. “It’s just that I was on my way to drop off part of a project and it was supposed to be there before 7 pm tonight. I’ll be lucky if I get there in the next hour.” She scowled suddenly. “God, I hate group projects. I always end up with the jackasses.”
“Isn’t that always the way?” Derrick commiserated as he wrestled his laptop out and opened it. “You would not believe the crap I’ve had to come up with whenever I’m in a class with anyone on the football team. I had to add a whole section to my tutoring contracts.”
It only took a few moments to pull up the information. Derrick handed the laptop to Katie and patiently answered her questions about the class. This evolved into a discussion of his experiences in other classes and as a tutor. He highly doubted Katie would ever need his services but he didn’t mind. It was better than wondering how much longer it would take for the elevator to get going again.
Katie sighed and shoved the laptop back over. “I don’t want to run your battery down.” She gave him a friendly grin. “I knew you were the right person to ask. You may not talk much in class but when you do, Professor Tierre always looks impressed.”
“Thanks, but I’m not sure that’s a compliment. She’s always surprised when I’m in class on game days because she thinks I’m on the team. I’ve given up telling her I’m not.” Derrick chewed the inside of his cheek and then decided to ask a question of his own. “Look, clearly you know who I am and your face seems familiar but I’m having trouble placing you. And I kinda get the feeling you don’t normally wear hoodies.”
“Huh?” Katie blinked at him in surprise. Then she started laughing and lowered the hood and caught him off guard by taking off a blond wig. “I totally forgot I was wearing this getup,” she said as she waved the wig in the air. “No wonder I’m sweating like a pig.”
Derrick snapped his fingers as he recognized her. “Second row center. Okay, now I know who you are. I loved the argument you made about government control of resources.”
“Thanks. I totally cribbed it from a sci-fi series I listen to.” She leaned back against the wall and closed her eyes. “I wonder how long we’re going to be stuck here.”
There seemed to be no real answer to that so Derrick focused on shutting his laptop down and putting it away. He checked his phone one more time and then he also leaned back. Now that the light from all of their screens was gone, the elevator was pitch black. The soft sound of Katie’s breathing  and the tiny movements each of them made was comforting in the darkness.
It was the sense of being watched that brought Derrick out of his light doze. He yawned and rolled his eyes to where Katie had been sitting and froze. Dozens of glowing eyes stared back at him. As he watched, the orbs in shades running from white to yellow to green shifted around. A cold sweat broke out across his body. He couldn’t even tell how many creatures there were. 
“Oh shit.”
“Thank God!”
Confusion welled up as Katie’s exclamation drowned out his own.
“You can see them too?” Their voices tangled in the same phrase. Derrick was pretty sure the fear in his voice cancelled out the excitement in Katie’s.
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monkeyssalad-blog · 5 months ago
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Dorothy Gish
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Dorothy Gish by Truus, Bob & Jan too! Via Flickr: British postcard in the 'Cinema Favourites' series by Photochrom Co. Ltd., London, in conjunction with Triangle Plays. Photo: Triangle. American actress Dorothy Gish was the sister of silent film star Lilian Gish. D.W. Griffith discovered the two girls in 1912 and they starred in his epics Hearts of the World (1918) and Orphans of the Storm (1921). Dorothy Elizabeth Gish was born in 1898 in Massillon, Ohio, USA. Her restless father, traveling salesman James Lee Gish was frequently absent and later abandoned his family. Her mother, Mary Robinson McConnell a.k.a. Mary Gish, entered into acting to make money to support the family. As soon as Dorothy and her sister Lillian Gish were old enough, they became part of the act. In 1902, at the age of four, Dorothy made her stage debut portraying the character Little Willie in 'East Lynne', an adaptation of the 1861 English novel by Ellen Wood. In 1912 they met fellow child actress Mary Pickford, and she got both of them extra work with Biograph Pictures in New York at salaries of 50 dollars a week. Director D.W. Griffith was impressed by both the girls and cast them in An Unseen Enemy (D.W. Griffith, 1912), their first picture. Dorothy would go on to star in over 100 two-reel films and features over the years. She would appear in the very successful Judith of Bethulia (D.W. Griffith, 1914) with Blanche Sweet and Henry B. Walthall. Griffith did not use Dorothy in any of his earliest epics, but while he spent months working on The Birth of a Nation and Intolerance, Dorothy was featured in many feature-length films made under the banner of Triangle and Mutual releases. They were directed by young Griffith protégés such as Donald Crisp, James Kirkwood, and Christy Cabanne. Elmer Clifton directed a series of seven Paramount-Artcraft comedies with Dorothy that were so successful and popular that the tremendous revenue they raked in helped to pay the cost of Griffith’s expensive epics. These films were wildly popular with the public and the critics. She specialised in pantomime and light comedy, while her sister appeared in tragic roles. Then the two sisters made a number of films together, including the extremely successful Hearts of the World (D.W. Griffith, 1918) and Orphans of the Storm (D.W. Griffith, 1921). In both films, Dorothy would play French girls, but in different periods of time. Wikipedia about Hearts of the World: "In the 1918 release Hearts of the World, a film about World War I and the devastation of France, Dorothy found her first cinematic foothold in comedy, striking a personal hit in a role that captured the essence of her sense of humor. As the 'little disturber', a street singer, her performance was the highlight of the film, and her characterization on screen catapulted her into a career as a star of comedy films." Dorothy became famous in a series of Griffith-supervised comedies for the Triangle-Fine Arts and Paramount companies from 1918 through 1920. Almost all of these films are now considered to be lost. While Dorothy Gish would excel in pantomime and light comedy, her popularity would always be overshadowed by that of her sister Lillian, who was considered to be one of the silent screen's greatest stars. Lillian would try her hand at directing, with a film called Remodeling Her Husband (Lillian Gish, 1920), which starred Dorothy and James Rennie. Dorothy and James married later that year. Dorothy would only make a handful of films in the 1920s. In the costume film Romola (Henry King, 1924) about Italy in the Middle Ages, she would again co-star with Lillian. By 1926 Dorothy had moved to England, where she would star as the title figure in Nell Gwyn (Herbert Wilcox, 1926). The success led to three more British films. Her last silent film would be Madame Pompadour (Herbert Wilcox, 1927) with Antonio Moreno. When the film industry converted to talking pictures, Dorothy made one in 1930, the British crime drama Wolves (Albert de Courville, 1930) with Charles Laughton. Earlier, in 1928 and 1929, her performances in the Broadway play 'Young Love' and her work with director George Cukor renewed her interest in stagecraft and in the immediacy of performing live again. After that, she enjoyed a long career on the stage. Only incidentally, she accepted film offers. Director Otto Preminger cast Dorothy in his 1946 film, Centennial Summer. Her final film appearance was in The Cardinal (Otto Preminger, 1963). Gish had divorced James Rennie in 1935. Dorothy never married again. In 1968, Dorothy Gish passed away by bronchial pneumonia in Rapallo, Italy. She was 70. Her remains were interred at Saint Bartholomew's Episcopal Church in New York City. In 1976, the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Film Theater was dedicated on the Bowling Green State University campus in Bowling Green, Ohio. Sources: Tony Fontana (IMDb), Wikipedia, and IMDb. And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
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scribeme · 7 months ago
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RTC Chairs - Massachusetts GOP
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Chair First Chair Last City/Town Email
Niccole Emery Abington [email protected]
Dave Lunger Acton [email protected]
John Cowie,JR Adams [email protected]
Kebbi Nowland Amesbury [email protected]
Judith Tan Amherst [email protected]
Keith Saxon Andover [email protected]
Donnarose Russian Arlington [email protected]
Jeremey Smeltekop Ashburnham [email protected]
Steven Semple Attleboro [email protected]
Geoffrey McElroy Auburn [email protected]
Nick Mobilia Bellingham [email protected]
Anthony Ventresca Billerica [email protected]
Graham Slieker Bolton [email protected]
Barbara Bsuh Boston (charlestown) [email protected]
Joseph Steffano Jr Boston Ward 1 [email protected]
Richard Pien Boston Ward 5 [email protected]
Peter Fisher Bourne [email protected]
Christine Casebolt Boxborough [email protected]
Jeffrey Linehan Boxford [email protected]
Steven Phillips Boylston N/A
Sean Powers Braintree [email protected]
Steven Frissora Brewster [email protected]
Peter Linhares Bridgewater [email protected]
Lawrence Novak Brockton (Ward 1) [email protected]
Tony O’Brien Brockton (Ward 2) Anthony Thomas [email protected]
Alan Greene Brockton (Ward 3) [email protected]
Alan Greene Brockton (Ward 3) N/A
Beverly Doherty Brockton (Ward 4) N/A
Micheal DeYoung Brockton (Ward 5) N/A
Michael Deyoung Brockton (Ward 5) N/A
Roberta Spinosa Brockton (Ward 6) N/A
Rev. Richard Reid Brockton (Ward 7) [email protected]
William Hogan Brockton (Ward 7) N/A
Elizabeth Childs Brookline [email protected]
Adam Senseu Burlington [email protected]
Lawrence Overlan Canton [email protected]
Alan Germain Carver [email protected]
Robert Coleman Charlton [email protected]
Doreen Deshler Chelmsford [email protected]
Joseph Notaro Clinton [email protected]
Kevin O’Donnell Cohasset [email protected]
Michael Benn Concord [email protected]
Andrew Soborski Dalton N/A
Micheal Bean Danvers [email protected]
Margaret Sweet Dartmouth [email protected]
Colleen Hynes Dedham [email protected]
Robert Chamberlain Dennis N/A
John Stellberger Dover [email protected]
Marybeth Shanahan Dunstable [email protected]
John Dargin III Duxbury [email protected]
Myles Heger East Bridgewater [email protected]
Ronald Gaudreau East Longmedow [email protected]
Cathy Wavczinski Easthampton [email protected]
Patricia Locke Easton [email protected]
Julie DePaolis Essex [email protected]
Robert McConnell Fairhaven [email protected]
Pam Vidal Falmouth [email protected]
John Strang Fitchburg [email protected]
Shelley O’Neil Fitchburg Ward 1 [email protected]
Elmer Eubanks Fitchburg Ward 2 [email protected]
Andrew Couture Fitchburg Ward 3 [email protected]
Aaron Packard Fitchburg Ward 4 [email protected]
John Strang Fitchburg Ward 5 [email protected]
Dwight Foss Fitchburg Ward 6 [email protected]
Raffaella Feinstein Foxborough [email protected]
Dashe Videira Franklin [email protected]
Scott Cyganiewicz Gardner [email protected]
Leonard Mirra Georgetown [email protected]
Clayton Sova Gloucester [email protected]
Stephen Melanson Gloucester (Ward 1) [email protected]
Irene Frontiero Gloucester (Ward 2) [email protected]
Alden Hiltz Tarr Gloucester (Ward 3) N/A
Mary Pat DeRosa Gloucester (Ward 4) [email protected]
Cynthia Bjorlie Gloucester (Ward 5) [email protected]
Stacie Bennett Grafton
Walter Atwood III Great Barrington [email protected]
David Lewis Greenfield [email protected]
Paul Fitzgerald Groton [email protected]
Jeffrey Austin Hamilton [email protected]
Michael Cianciola Hanover [email protected]
John Knowles Harvard [email protected]
Jeri Ann Levassuer Haverhill [email protected]
Mark Tashian Haverhill Ward 1 [email protected]
Jack Roy Haverhill Ward 4 [email protected]
Daniel Lanen Haverhill Ward 5 [email protected]
Brian Petrie Haverhill Ward 6 [email protected]
Richard Plasse Haverhill Ward 7 [email protected]
Edward Matthews IV Hingham [email protected]
Arthur George Holbrook [email protected]
Steve Cooley Holden [email protected]
Martin Lumb Holliston [email protected]
Richard Berrena Holyoke [email protected]
Linda Vacon Holyoke Ward 5 [email protected]
James Mirabile Hopkinton [email protected]
Maria Tourigry Hubbardston [email protected]
Chuck Kuniewich Jr Hudson [email protected]
Catherine Caloia Hull [email protected]
Daniel Kelly Ipswich [email protected]
Patricia Livie Kingston [email protected]
Thomas Swift Lee [email protected]
John McNaboe Jr Leicester jmcnaboe
Julia Keiselbach Leominster [email protected]
Gwen Meunier Leominster (City Committee) [email protected]
Lisa Contreras Leominster Ward 1 N/A
Ivandro Carboni Leominster Ward 2 [email protected]
Jeffrey Buono Leominster Ward 3 N/A
Josh Bowdridge Leominster Ward 4 [email protected]
Sydney Walsh Leominster Ward 5 N/A
Alan Seferian Lexington [email protected]
Stephen Binder Lincoln N/A
Peter Benton Long Meadow [email protected]
Bonnie Manchester Ludlow [email protected]
Michael Clark Lunenburg [email protected]
Maria Perez Lynn [email protected]
Richard Stachard Lynn (Ward 2) [email protected]
Maria Perez Lynn (Ward 3) [email protected]
Michael Stanley Lynn (Ward 7) [email protected]
Reid Lavoie Lynnfield [email protected]
Denise Cowie Malden [email protected]
Matthew Amorello Manchester by the Sea [email protected]
Olivier Kozlowski Mansfield [email protected]
W. Rolfe Lofmark Marblehead [email protected]
Peter Winters Marion [email protected]
Mark Gordon Marlborough Ward 1 N/A
Paul Ferro Marlborough Ward 2 [email protected]
Robert Alessio Marlborough Ward 6 N/A
Todd Beauchemin Marlborough Ward 7 [email protected]
Owen Mahoney Mashpee [email protected]
Paul Criscuolo Mattapoisett [email protected]
Victoria Clidmore Maynard [email protected]
Matthew Avella III Medford [email protected]
Tavon Bowden Medford Ward 6 [email protected]
Tim Harris Medway [email protected]
Theodore Hunt Melrose (Ward 1) [email protected]
Earle Solano Melrose (Ward 2) [email protected]
Alison Boone Melrose (Ward 3) [email protected]
Daniel Fusco Melrose (Ward 4) [email protected]
Robert Aufiero Melrose (Ward 6) [email protected]
Kristen Nemeth Melrose (Ward 7) [email protected]
Eric Machado Middleboro N/A
Joan Garber Middleton [email protected]
Ann Ragosta Milford [email protected]
Frank Irr Millbury [email protected]
Daniel Bailey Millis [email protected]
Kerry White Milton [email protected]
Peter Warren Monson [email protected]
Amanda Peterson N/A [email protected]
Mary Livingston Nahant [email protected]
Toby Brown Nantucket [email protected]
Michael Linehan Natick [email protected]
Gary Ajamian Needham [email protected]
Christopher Sheldon New Bedford [email protected]
Claire Dix Newbury [email protected]
Rob Nardella Newburyport [email protected]
Donna Sprague Newburyport (Ward 1) N/A
Katie Haried Newburyport (Ward 2) N/A
Rosemarie Serino Newburyport (Ward 3) N/A
Christos Givas Newburyport (Ward 6) N/A
Christos Givas Newburyport (Ward 6) N/A
Jessica Flynn Newton City Committee [email protected]
Dorothy Codington Newton Ward 1 [email protected]
Alan Dechter Newton Ward 2 [email protected]
Jessica Flynn Newton Ward 3 [email protected]
Theodore Stoia Newton Ward 4 [email protected]
Fidel Ramos Newton Ward 5 [email protected]
Debra Shapiro Newton Ward 6 [email protected]
Vladislav Yanovsky Newton Ward 7 [email protected]
Margot Einstein Newton Ward 8 N/A
Patricia Saint Aubin Norfolk [email protected]
Kevin Dube North Andover [email protected]
Jeff Yull North Reading [email protected]
Stephen Novic Norwell [email protected]
Lynne Roberts Norwood [email protected]
Leslie Proctor Orange [email protected]
Peter Meara Orleans [email protected]
Adam Gedutis Pembroke [email protected]
Mary Regan Pepperell [email protected]
Tom Wallace Plymouth [email protected]
Suzanne Jafferian Plympton [email protected]
Norman Tuttle Quincy [email protected]
Julie Berberan Quincy Ward 1 [email protected]
Russell Theriault Quincy Ward 2 [email protected]
John Vaulding Quincy Ward 3 [email protected]
Sharon Cintolo Quincy Ward 4 [email protected]
William Burke Quincy Ward 5 [email protected]
Kathleen Sullivan-Moran Quincy Ward 6 [email protected]
Jean Riguel Ulysse Randolph [email protected]
Eric Bergstrom Reading [email protected]
William Chamberlain Rochester [email protected]
Bea Reardon Rockport [email protected]
Roberta Newman Royalston [email protected]
Marshall Magurie Salisbury [email protected]
Christopher Luongo Saugus [email protected]
Laurie Withrow Scituate [email protected]
Mira Belenkiy Sharon [email protected]
Kenneth Wood JR Shirley [email protected]
Mindy McKenzie Shrewsbury [email protected]
Jessica Machado Somerset [email protected]
James Balanz Stockbridge [email protected]
Steve Ternullo Stoneham [email protected]
Robert Kirby Stoughton [email protected]
Michael Young Sturbridge [email protected]
Dorothy Ann Bisson Sudbury [email protected]
Daniel Farnham Sutton [email protected]
David Chou Tewksbury [email protected]
Ron Mastrogiovanni Topsfield [email protected]
Richard Shuford Townsend [email protected]
John Murphy Tyngsborough [email protected]
Tomas Etzold Uxbridge [email protected]
Scot McCauley Wakefield [email protected]
Grace Lincoln Walpole [email protected]
Tom Arena Waltham [email protected]
Michael Fountain Ware [email protected]
Mark Swan Wareham [email protected]
John Dimascio Watertown [email protected]
Virginia Gardner Wayland [email protected]
Stephen Rogerson Webster [email protected]
Jaqui Van Looy Wellesley [email protected]
Chris Smith West Bridgewater [email protected]
Michael Devine West Newbury [email protected]
Stephen Morris West Roxbury Ward 2 [email protected]
Steven Buttiglieri Westborough [email protected]
Dan Allie Westfield [email protected]
Anthony Dileo Westford [email protected]
Karen Conte-Moore Westminster [email protected]
Gloria Cabral Westport [email protected]
Brain Camenker Westwood [email protected]
Lynne Santangelo Weymouth [email protected]
Gregory Eaton Whitman [email protected]
Tracey Farnsworth Wilbraham [email protected]
Jeffrey Cohen Wilmington [email protected]
Darlene Rossi Winchendon [email protected]
Deborah Melkonian Winchester [email protected]
Paul Carrucio Winthrop [email protected]
Nancy Herlihy Woburn [email protected]
Daniel Macgilvray Woburn Ward 1 [email protected]
Evan Rice Woburn Ward 2 N/A
Marie Dellagrotte Woburn Ward 3 [email protected]
Jeff Semon Woburn Ward 7 N/A
Mary Cassol Worcester (City commitee) N/A
Don Crowley Wrentham [email protected]
"
https://massgop.com/our-party/rtc-chairs#:~:text=Chair%20First,dgcrowley%40live.com
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t3r3sa-p · 7 months ago
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RINO Sellout Mitch McConnell Moves to Torpedo Election Integrity Efforts by Blocking SAVE Act In Upcoming Spending Bill - And Open Door to Illegals Voting in US Elections | The Gateway Pundit | by Julian Conradson
GOING ALONG TO GET ALONG WITH THE COMMUNISTS TO GET PAID AND KEEP HIS FAMILY ALIVE. REMEMBER HOW HIS SISTER-IN-LAW DIED.
THE DEMON-CRATS DON'T PLAY NICE.
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garythingsworld · 7 months ago
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RINO Sellout Mitch McConnell Moves to Torpedo Election Integrity Efforts by Blocking SAVE Act In Upcoming Spending Bill - And Open Door to Illegals Voting in US Elections | The Gateway Pundit | by Julian Conradson
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antonjesus · 9 months ago
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☆☆☆ Judith McConnell ☆☆☆ Get Smart english
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politicalscienceguru · 1 year ago
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https://politicalscienceguru.com/judith-mcconnell-judge-political-party/
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atomic-chronoscaph · 2 years ago
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TGIF
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chronivore · 2 years ago
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The Thirsty Dead (1974) - IMDb
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emptymanuscript · 1 year ago
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I was very fortunate when I was... a sophomore I think, I got to take what I think was one of the last classes taught by Professor Frank McConnell. He was able to get us early access to Stardust before all the issues came out. For the grand finale, he arranged for @neil-gaiman to come give us a special guest lecture to talk about it. And someone in the class asked about how he came up with the title.
I don't remember the exact wording of the answer but the gist of it was he liked to use song titles. So the comic title was named for the song (the 1927 song IF I remember correctly after all these years).
Having pretty much nothing to do with whatever the point actually was about using song titles as story titles, I was like: AHA! YOU STEAL THEM!! Brilliant. And so yeah,since then, I just flat out steal titles from somewhere else that references something for me that I want to evoke in others.
Like, The Hidden and the Maiden, is Death and the Maiden. Hidden is even the name for the people who are the gods of death in the fiction.
Spinward of the Sun, Handed of the Moon is East of the Sun, West of the Moon both in title and topic.
Only a Mother (which is ALMOST done >_< any time now >_< I swear) is named for one of my favorite short stories, "That Only a Mother" by Judith Merrill. I actually read it for the first time in that college class. I still have the reader from it. Because its actually one of the better sci-fi anthologies I'm aware of. And without spoiling either, part of how the "mothers" in both, react to their "children" in both, plays on the same emotions.
The Count of Earth is The Count of Monte Cristo... sort of, vaguely, in part.
And it doesn't have to actually be the title of the story I'm referencing or even accurate. A Five Card Draw is referencing for me the story that inspired it: The Queen of Spades by Alexander Pushkin. Where a guy wins his bets, not by gambling on a full game but just the draw of a card. A new one each night.
The Devil's First Rule has extremely little to do with the reference title, The Wizard's First Rule by Terry Goodkind. Pretty much just that the magical communities in both have these very unkind social rules. And there's way more than one.
Bindlesticks Lostagain has zero to do with Eugene Onegin by Alexander Pushkin (again). I just liked the rhythm of the name.
At this point I just kinda keep lists of titles I like. So I'll have a reference to what I could potentially steal from when the chance arises. I aspire to have stories worthy of a star trek title. XD.
As someone bad at titles. Please tell me how you got the title of your WIPs! I wanna hear the stories
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nightsidewrestling · 1 year ago
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D.U.D.E Bios: Tydfil Rhydderch
The Clurichaun Princess of C.R.C Tydfil McFarland (2020)
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Kirby's cousin, Hywel's niece, and Uinseann's daughter, Tydfil. An Irish-Catholic woman living in Wales and an intelligent, book-smart and quick-witted mother. She spends her time out of the ring with her head in a book.
"Strategy is a form of intelligence, and you can always be smarter."
Name
Full Legal Name: Tydfil Fiadh Bébinn Méabh McFarland (Née Rhydderch)
First Name: Tydfil
Meaning: Anglicized form of Welsh 'Tudful', of unknown meaning
Pronunciation: TYD-fil
Origin: Welsh
Middle Name(s): Fiadh, Bébinn, Méabh
Meaning(s): Fiadh: Means 'Wild, Wild Animal, Deer' (Modern Irish 'Fia') or 'Respect' in Irish. Bébinn: Means 'White Woman', from Old Irish 'Bé' and 'Finn' 'White, Blessed'. Méabh: Modern Irish form of 'Medb' meaning 'Intoxicating'
Pronunciation(s): FYEE. BYEH-vyin / BYEH-vyeen. MYEW / MYEHV
Origin(s): Irish. Old Irish, Irish Mythology. Irish, Irish Mythology
Surname: McFarland (Née Rhydderch)
Meaning: Variant of 'McFarlane', the Anglicized form of Scottish Gaelic 'MacPhàrlain' or Irish Gaelic 'MacPharlain' meaning 'Son of Parthalán'. (Rhydderch: From the given name 'Rhydderch' from the Old Welsh name 'Riderch', derived from 'Ri' 'King' and 'Derch' 'Exalted')
Pronunciation: Mac-FAHR-luhnd (HRUDH-ehrkh)
Origin: Irish, Scottish (Welsh)
Alias: Clurichaun Princess, Tydfil McFarland
Reason: This is Tydfil's ring name
Nicknames: N/A
Titles: Mrs, Ma'am
Characteristics
Age: 32
Gender: Female. She/Her Pronouns
Race: Human
Nationality: Welsh. Irish-Welsh Mix. Dual Citizenship ROI-UK
Ethnicity: White
Birth Date: June 29th 1988
Symbols: Clurichauns, Alcohol, Crowns
Sexuality: Heterosexual
Religion: Irish-Catholic
Native Language: Welsh
Spoken Languages: Welsh, Irish, Scottish (Scots Gaelic), English
Relationship Status: Married
Astrological Sign: Cancer
Theme Song: 'Creep' - Radiohead (2006-)
Voice Actor: Amy-Joyce Hastings
Geographical Characteristics
Birthplace: Tullahought, Kilkenny, Ireland
Current Location: Llanfaethlu, Anglesey, Wales
Hometown: Llanfaethlu, Anglesey, Wales
Appearance
Height: 5'9" / 175 cm
Weight: 163 lbs / 73 kg
Eye Colour: Brown
Hair Colour: Blonde
Hair Dye: None
Body Hair: N/A
Facial Hair: N/A
Tattoos: (As of Jan 2020) 10
Piercings: Navel, Ear Lobe (Double, Both)
Scars: None
Health and Fitness
Allergies: None
Alcoholic, Smoker, Drug User: Smoker, Social Drinker
Illnesses/Disorders: None Diagnosed
Medications: None
Any Specific Diet: None
Relationships
Allies: (As of Jan 2020) The Rhydderch Clan
Enemies: (As of Jan 2020) None
Friends: Maeve Pritchard, Deirdre Llewellyn, Bridget Griffiths, Rosaleen O'Sullivan, Aisling O'Hannigan, Caoimhe O'Hannegan, Eithne O'Hannagan, Kathleen Mulrennan, Haf McFarlane, Olwen McDermott, Gwen McCracken, Branwen McCormick, Llinos McConnell, Gardenia Lum, Judith Ibarra, Sabina Volkov, Pelageya Volkov
Colleagues: The C.R.C Locker Rooms / Too Many To List
Rivals: None
Closest Confidant: Keith McFarland
Mentor: Uinseann Rhydderch
Significant Other: Keith McFarland (33, Husband)
Previous Partners: None of Note
Parents: Uinseann Rhydderch (74, Father), Odharnait Rhydderch (75, Mother, Née MacCarthy)
Parents-In-Law: Fraser McFarland (63, Father-In-Law), Ansa McFarland (64, Mother-In-Law, Née Ralston)
Siblings: Kathleen Mulrennan (44, Sister, Née Rhydderch), Sean Rhydderch (41, Brother), Wyn Rhydderch (38, Brother), Haf McFarlane (35, Sister, Née Rhydderch)
Siblings-In-Law: Fachtna Mulrennan (45, Kathleen's Husband), Yvette Rhydderch (42, Sean's Wife, Née Plamondon), Ragnhild Rhydderch (39, Wyn's Wife, Née Perreault), Keaton McFarlane (36, Haf's Husband), Ayesha Vang (30, Keith's Sister, Née McFarland), Gintaras Vang (31, Ayesha's Husband), Eugenijus McFarland (27, Keith's Brother), Bahiyya McFarland (28, Eugenijus' Wife, Née Wang), Bahiga Akkermans (24, Keith's Sister, Née McFarland), Mantvydas Akkermans (25, Bahiga's Husband), Konstantinas McFarland (21, Keith's Brother), Danya McFarland (22, Konstantinas' Wife, Née Aldenberg), Dalal McFarland (18, Keith's Sister), Rimantas McFarland (15, Keith's Brother), Dema McFarland (12, Keith's Sister), Urbanas McFarland (9, Keith's Brother), Dima McFarland (6, Keith's Sister)
Nieces & Nephews: Eachann Mulrennan (24, Nephew), Aurora Mulrennan (25, Eachann's Wife, Née MacDonald), Daffodil MacDaniel (21, Niece, Née Mulrennan), Grant MacDaniel (22, Daffodil's Husband), Calanthe Mulrennan (18, Niece), Baggi Mulrennan (15, Nephew), Abel Mulrennan (12, Nephew), Zinnia Mulrennan (9, Niece), Yolanda Mulrennan (6, Niece), Xerxes Mulrennan (3, Nephew), Walker Rhydderch (21, Nephew), Henriika Rhydderch (22, Walker's Wife, Née MacColuim), Velvet Rhydderch (18, Niece), Unni Rhydderch (15, Niece), Talfryn Rhydderch (12, Nephew), Ragna Rhydderch (9, Niece), Queenie Rhydderch (6, Niece), Samson Rhydderch (3, Nephew), Pacey Rhydderch (18, Nephew), Ogden Rhydderch (15, Nephew), Naomi Rhydderch (12, Niece), Madonna Rhydderch (9, Niece), Lachtna Rhydderch (6, Nephew), Kal-El Rhydderch (3, Nephew), Jane McFarlane (15, Niece), Idalia McFarlane (12, Niece), Hall McFarlane (9, Nephew), Gael McFarlane (6, Nephew), Fallon McFarlane (3, Nephew), Ayishah Vang (10, Niece), Gintautas Vang (7, Nephew), Bahija Vang (4, Niece), Tautvydas Vang (1, Nephew), Basma McFarland (7, Niece), Laurynas McFarland (4, Nephew), Dania McFarland (1, Niece), Markas Akkermans (4, Nephew), Bushra Akkermans (1, Niece), Mindaugas McFarland (1, Nephew)
Children: Easter McFarland (12, Daughter), Dalton McFarland (9, Son), Cadell McFarland (6, Son), Barbara McFarland (3, Daughter)
Children-In-Law: None
Grandkids: None
Great Grandkids: None
Wrestling
Billed From: Kilkenny, Ireland
Trainer: The C.R.C Wrestling School, Uinseann Rhydderch
Managers: Keith McFarland
Wrestlers Managed: Keith McFarland
Debut: 2006
Debut Match: Tydfil Rhydderch VS Odharnait Rhydderch. Tydfil won via pinfall
Retired: N/A
Retirement Match: N/A
Wrestling Style: Technician / Powerhouse
Stables: The Rhydderch Clan (2006-)
Teams: No Team Names
Regular Moves: Back Body Drop, Bearhug, Bearhug Into A Thrust Spinebuster To The Ring Post, Big Boot, Chokehold, Corner Clothesline, Flying Clothesline, Rebound Clothesline, Arm Twist Ropewalk Chop, Over The Top Rope Suicide Dive, Reverse STO, Running DDT, Running Elbow Drop, Running Leg Drop, Running Leg Drop To An Apron-Hung Opponent, Sidewalk Slam, Snake Eyes, Standing Dragon Sleeper, Arm Drag, Dropkick, Headscissors Takedown, Knee Lift, Running Crossbody
Finishers: Ropewalk Diving Elbow Chop, Heart Punch, One-Handed Clawhold, Elevated Powerbomb, Triangle Choke, Chokeslam, Tombstone Piledriver, Figure-Four Leglock, Flying Forearm Smash
Refers To Fans As: The Fans, The Family
Extras
Backstory: Tydfil McFarland (Née Rhydderch) of the C.R.C (Welsh Wrestling League / Cynghrair Reslo Cymru) owning Rhydderch Family. When Uinseann dies Tydfil will have a 1/40th ownership of the promotion. Tydfil is a 'Clurichaun Style' (Technician mixed with Powerhouse) trainer. She's a quarter-Welsh and three quarters-Irish
Trivia: Nothing of Note
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monkeyssalad-blog · 5 months ago
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Dorothy Gish by Truus, Bob & Jan too! Via Flickr: British postcard in the Famous Cinema Stars Series by J. Beagles & Co., London, no. 103.A. American actress Dorothy Gish was the sister of silent film star Lilian Gish. D.W. Griffith discovered the two girls in 1912 and they starred in his epics Hearts of the World (1918) and Orphans of the Storm (1921). Dorothy Elizabeth Gish was born in 1898 in Massillon, Ohio, USA. Her restless father, traveling salesman James Lee Gish was frequently absent and later abandoned his family. Her mother, Mary Robinson McConnell a.k.a. Mary Gish, entered into acting to make money to support the family. As soon as Dorothy and her sister Lillian Gish were old enough, they became part of the act. In 1902, at the age of four, Dorothy made her stage debut portraying the character Little Willie in 'East Lynne', an adaptation of the 1861 English novel by Ellen Wood. In 1912 they met fellow child actress Mary Pickford, and she got both of them extra work with Biograph Pictures in New York at salaries of 50 dollars a week. Director D.W. Griffith was impressed by both the girls and cast them in An Unseen Enemy (D.W. Griffith, 1912), their first picture. Dorothy would go on to star in over 100 two-reel films and features over the years. She would appear in the very successful Judith of Bethulia (D.W. Griffith, 1914) with Blanche Sweet and Henry B. Walthall. Griffith did not use Dorothy in any of his earliest epics, but while he spent months working on The Birth of a Nation and Intolerance, Dorothy was featured in many feature-length films made under the banner of Triangle and Mutual releases. They were directed by young Griffith protégés such as Donald Crisp, James Kirkwood, and Christy Cabanne. Elmer Clifton directed a series of seven Paramount-Artcraft comedies with Dorothy that were so successful and popular that the tremendous revenue they raked in helped to pay the cost of Griffith’s expensive epics. These films were wildly popular with the public and the critics. She specialised in pantomime and light comedy, while her sister appeared in tragic roles. Then the two sisters made a number of films together, including the extremely successful Hearts of the World (D.W. Griffith, 1918) and Orphans of the Storm (D.W. Griffith, 1921). In both films, Dorothy would play French girls, but in different periods of time. Wikipedia about Hearts of the World: "In the 1918 release Hearts of the World, a film about World War I and the devastation of France, Dorothy found her first cinematic foothold in comedy, striking a personal hit in a role that captured the essence of her sense of humor. As the 'little disturber', a street singer, her performance was the highlight of the film, and her characterization on screen catapulted her into a career as a star of comedy films." Dorothy became famous in a series of Griffith-supervised comedies for the Triangle-Fine Arts and Paramount companies from 1918 through 1920. Almost all of these films are now considered to be lost. While Dorothy Gish would excel in pantomime and light comedy, her popularity would always be overshadowed by that of her sister Lillian, who was considered to be one of the silent screen's greatest stars. Lillian would try her hand at directing, with a film called Remodeling Her Husband (Lillian Gish, 1920), which starred Dorothy and James Rennie. Dorothy and James married later that year. Dorothy would only make a handful of films in the 1920s. In the costume film Romola (Henry King, 1924) about Italy in the Middle Ages, she would again co-star with Lillian. By 1926 Dorothy had moved to England, where she would star as the title figure in Nell Gwyn (Herbert Wilcox, 1926). The success led to three more British films. Her last silent film would be Madame Pompadour (Herbert Wilcox, 1927) with Antonio Moreno. When the film industry converted to talking pictures, Dorothy made one in 1930, the British crime drama Wolves (Albert de Courville, 1930) with Charles Laughton. Earlier, in 1928 and 1929, her performances in the Broadway play 'Young Love' and her work with director George Cukor renewed her interest in stagecraft and in the immediacy of performing live again. After that, she enjoyed a long career on the stage. Only incidentally, she accepted film offers. Director Otto Preminger cast Dorothy in his 1946 film, Centennial Summer. Her final film appearance was in The Cardinal (Otto Preminger, 1963). Gish had divorced James Rennie in 1935. Dorothy never married again. In 1968, Dorothy Gish passed away by bronchial pneumonia in Rapallo, Italy. She was 70. Her remains were interred at Saint Bartholomew's Episcopal Church in New York City. In 1976, the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Film Theater was dedicated on the Bowling Green State University campus in Bowling Green, Ohio. Sources: Tony Fontana (IMDb), Wikipedia, and IMDb. And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
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