#West Forsyth
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The Desmond Johnson Show - Weds Nov 13th 2024
Hosted by Desmond Johnson WS Journal Prep Beat Writer joins Des for a supersized High School Football Preview! 1st round starts this Friday! On today’s show… Marc’s top 3 Triad Games for this Friday Scheduled to stop by… West Forsyth HC Kevin Wallace Walkertown HC Tripp Honeycutt Northern Guilford HC Erik Westburg Presented by Emergency Responders Credit Union – Winston Salem
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Forchang? Stebecca? Stecca? Lmfao. Someone hear me out on this ship..Bi4Bi🙏
#nicks edits♡#dead rising#dead rising 2#dead rising 3#rebecca chang#stacey forsythe#chuck greene#frank west#nick ramos#rebecca x stacey#stacey x rebecca#rebecca chang x stacey forsythe#stacey forsythe x rebecca chang
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#gif edit#ps4#dailygaming#gaming edit#dailyvideogames#capcom#frank west#stacey forsyth#dead rising 2 off the record#dead rising 2#dead rising
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Hot Vintage TV Men's Bracket - Round 1 - Part 1/2 (Polls 1-99)
Round 1 (All Polls)
Ted Bessell Vs. Dick Van Dyke
Jonathan Frid Vs. William Hartnell
Claude Rains Vs. William Hopper
Eric Idle Vs. Peter Tork
Henry Winkler Vs. Tom Smothers
Martin Kove Vs. Tom Selleck
Jeff Conaway Vs. John de Lancie
Dave Foley Vs. Michael J. Fox
David Hyde Pierce Vs. Tony Shalhoub
Jason Bateman Vs. Rob Lowe
Ted Cassidy Vs. Boris Karloff
Eddie Albert Vs. Russell Johnson
Bobby Sherman Vs. Micky Dolenz
Robin Williams Vs. Fred Grandy
Kevin Smith Vs. Bruce Campbell
Brad Dourif Vs. LeVar Burton
Seth Green Vs. Brandon Quinn
Matthew Perry Vs. Tim Daly
Mike Farrell Vs. Judd Hirsch
Matt Bomer Vs. Timothy Olyphant
Larry Hagman Vs. Kent McCord
Fred Rogers Vs. Bobby Troup
David Cassidy Vs. Luke Halpin
George Takei Vs. Richard Hatch
Ricardo Montalban Vs. John Forsythe
Richard Dean Anderson Vs. Bruce Willis
Anthony Head Vs. Paul McGann
Thorsten Kaye Vs. Michael Horse
Darren E. Burrows Vs. Dana Ashbrook
Adam Brody Vs. Milo Ventimiglia
Adam West Vs. Richard Chamberlain
Randy Boone Vs. Dean Butler
Clint Walker Vs. George Maharis
Erik Estrada Vs. Paul Michael Glaser
Billy Dee Williams Vs. Rock Hudson
Ted Danson Vs. Jameson Parker
Sylvester McCoy Vs. Armin Shimerman
Joe Lando Vs. Spencer Rochfort
Ben Browder Vs. Keith Hamilton Cobb
Richard Ayoade Vs. Kevin McDonald
Patrick McGoohan Vs. Robert Vaughn
Chad Everett Vs. DeForest Kelley
Jon Pertwee Vs. Mark Lenard
Darren McGavin Vs. Peter Falk
Terry Jones Vs. Alan Alda
Michael Tylo Vs. Timothy Dalton
Sean Bean Vs. Valentine Pelka
Ioan Gruffudd Vs. Colin Firth
David Tennant Vs. Robert Carlyle
Jason Priestley Vs. Tom Welling
Martin Milner Vs. James Garner
David Soul Vs. Lee Majors
Derek Jacobi Vs. Andrew Robinson
David Hasselhoff Vs. Stephen Nichols
Jimmy Smits Vs. Hal Linden
Brent Spiner Vs. Ted Raimi
Patrick Troughton Vs. Andreas Katsulas
Miguel Ferrer Vs. Mitch Pileggi
David James Elliot Vs. Andre Braugher
Blair Underwood Vs. Mark-Paul Gosselaar
Don Adams Vs. Cesar Romero
Bob Crane Vs. John Astin
Walter Koenig Vs. Davy Jones
Tom Baker Vs. Jamie Farr
Woody Harrelson Vs. John Schneider
John Goodman Vs. Joseph Marcell
Danny John-Jules Vs. Marc Alaimo
Michael Praed Vs. Kevin Sorbo
Mark McKinney Vs. Colm Meaney
Neil Patrick Harris Vs. David Schwimmer
James Arness Vs. Robert Fuller
Clint Eastwood Vs. Robert Conrad
Jonathan Frakes Vs. Michael Hurst
David Duchovny Vs. Michael T. Weiss
Luke Perry Vs. Jeremy Sisto
Matt LeBlanc Vs. John Stamos
Reece Shearsmith Vs. Alexander Siddig
Eric Close Vs. William Shockley
Daniel Dae Kim Vs. Robert Beltran
Scott Cohen Vs. Scott Patterson
Dick Gautier Vs. Michael Landon
Wayne Rogers Vs. Alejandro Rey
Gerald McRaney Vs. Robert Wagner
Simon Williams Vs. John Cleese
Brian Blessed Vs. James Earl Jones
Noah Wyle Vs. Kyle MacLachlan
James Marsters Vs. Paul Gross
Paolo Montalban Vs. Robert Duncan McNeill
Garrett Wang Vs. Nate Richert
Christian Kane Vs. Michael Vartan
David McCallum Vs. David Selby
Leonard Nimoy Vs. Colin Baker
Randolph Mantooth Vs. Michael Nesmith
Demond Wilson Vs. Tony Danza
Ron Perlman Vs. Mr. T
Ron Glass Vs. Dirk Benedict
John Shea Vs. Michael Ontkean
Jeffrey Combs Vs. Rowan Atkinson
Tim Russ Vs. Bruce Boxleitner
Round 1 Polls 100 - 128
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Note: We’re Arab, not Native American, so listen to their opinions on this before ours.
I wanted to have hope that Outlaws of Thunder Junction would be handled well, or even just not awfully. But the evidence is starting to rack up, folks, and it aint pretty:
At MagicCon, Blake Rasmussen (mtg’s Senior Communications Manager) said that, “everyone’s a newcomer to Thunder Junction.”
Also at that MagicCon panel, Aaron Forsythe (VP of Magic Design) called it an “unspoiled land.”
Mark Rosewater (mtg Head Designer) says that, “prior to omen paths [sic], it was uninhabited.”
Could this just be three white guys saying White Guy Things? Sure. Especially since they’ve all shown themselves in the past to be kinda uninformed on the particulars of their product’s storyline. But it’s not a great look.
The narrative that lands are uninhabited and ripe for plunder is inextricable from the American colonial genocide of indigenous nations (which has never stopped). This is especially the case in a setting based on the American West, rife with the trappings of the imperialist genre of American Westerns, and fraught with the colonialist propaganda of “frontier fantasy.” For this world, they’ve even created an ethnic group explicitly based on the Diné nation, per the official MTG Twitter account. Yet they still chose to center the set’s story around the genocidal selling point of “exploring uninhabited lands to find untold treasure and fortune.”
Yes, they’ve said they used cultural consultants. And, sure, that’s gone well-ish (though not without great flaws) for NEO and LCI. But whatever influence those consultants were allowed to have on OTJ, it was clearly not enough. Because holy shit, even the (otherwise amazing) side story, No Tells, says, “Thunder Junction’s a new plane, one that’s still beginning.” (Do NOT go hating on the author; I doubt he had control over that level of worldbuilding.)
All of this has shattered my hope in the set being respectful, or even not actively harmful. You can say, “wait and see,” and we will, but we’ve seen a lot already—and gang, it has not looked good.
#Glittancy#Yasmin#Fifi#mtg#magic the gathering#outlaws of thunder junction#mtg community#mtg lore#vorthos#mtg spoilers#mtgcommunity#mtgotj#colonialism#indigenous#genocide#america is committing genocide#racism#imperialism#magic the card game
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Scottish actress Brigit Forsyth born on July 28th 1940 in Edinburgh.
Brigit was a theatre fan from the age of eight when she saw her first pantomimes at the King’s Theatre in the city where she remembers Stanley Baxter as"The best panto dame ever" and Russell hunter during his Callan days.
She attended all girls schools Cranley and St George’s in Edinburgh then trained as a secretary before enrolling at RADA where she studied for three years. She then joined various repertory companies including Lincoln, Edinburgh, Salisbury, Cheltenham, Hornchurch and Watford.
She toured in My Fat Friend and performed in the West End productions of The Norman Conquests, Dusa, Fish and Stas and Vi. Her film work includes The Wrong Side of The Blankets, The Road Builder and The Crystal Stone.
Brigit has worked extensively on television for many years in shows including Playing The Field, The Practice and Tom, Dick and Harriet. She has also appeared in countless long-running hits such as Doctors, The Bill, Casualty, Coronation Street and Emmerdale. She is best known for her long running role as Thelma Ferris in the BBC comedy The Likely Lads and Whatever Happened To The Likely Lads, she has been in the reboot of Open all Hours, Still Open All Hours, but said a number of years ago that The Likely Lads should never return.
Brigit’s heart has always remained in theatre and she has appeared in classics such as Hamlet, The Comedy of Errors, The Glass Menagerie and The Importance of Being Earnest as well as the recent West End hit Calendar Girls
In March 1998 she made a one episode guest appearance in Coronation Street as Ken Barlow’s dating agency client Babs Fanshawe. Brigit is married to Coronation Street director Brian Mills and they have two children Zoe and Ben. Brigit has also appeared in Eastenders, Hollyoaks, Holby City and Doctors, to name but a few of her many extensive YV roles.
Brigit Forsyth passed away on December 1st last year aged 83, she is survived by her two children.
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𝐒𝐈𝐓𝐄-φ'𝐒 𝑊𝐴𝐿𝐾𝐼𝑁𝐺 𝐶𝐿𝑈𝐵.
In order to maximize the safety, comfort, and well-being of site personnel, Site-φ has been outfitted with various amenities to promote an active lifestyle for all staff members. One of the most popular features provided to the employees housed at Site-φ's facility is the Walking Club: a pack of eight exceptionally intelligent dogs who patrol the designated walking trail set up by the Foundation around the ██████ Mountains. Both Site Director Buckley Osterholz and Wellness Counselor J. Oyuun highly recommend that the newly formed MTF Chi-00 become acquainted with the Walking Club. Any operative in Chi-00 who has concerns about potential allergic reactions to the Walking Club can rest assured that all of the members are hypoallergenic. Yes, all of them.
BACKGROUND.
The Site-φ Walking Club was first founded on January 21st, 1999 after two researchers, Dr. Forsyth and Dr. Gustav, became lost in the ██████ Mountains when an unexpected blizzard hit the area while they were on a recreational hike. Although the Foundation employed extreme measures to locate the researchers, efforts to find them were hindered by the weather. Many feared the harsh conditions would claim the lives of Forsyth and Gustav, if they hadn't already succumbed to the elements.
As the rescue search became desperate, Director Osterholz coordinated with search-and-rescue teams from the nearby town of Hōuston who were more familiar with the terrain of the ██████ Mountains. This decision ended up saving the lives of both researchers as in the 26th hour, a patrol officer's intrepid German Shepherd, Tutu, broke away from her handler and rushed out into the wilderness. A few hours later, Tutu, along with Forsyth and Gustav, were discovered at a Foundation security post 30 miles to the west of the area they had gone missing in. For her bravery, Tutu was given the honorary title of Lead Rescuer and a thick striploin steak by Director Osterholz.
However, the question on just how Tutu was about to locate the two missing researchers and then bring them back to Site-φ baffled Foundation personnel. They requested permission to study the canine. Director Osterholz organized a mock photoshoot with Tutu and her handler for the biweekly site newsletter where researchers were able to perform a handful of tests. The investigation and subsequent attempts to recreate the findings brought to attention that some dogs transported to Site-φ could become hyper-intelligent (HI).
The exact why and how of these anomalous dogs continues to elude the Foundation. However, the following results have been replicated with enough frequency that the Lead Researcher on HI-dogs, Dr. Forsyth, was able to make these proven observations for all canines that fall under the HI category:
While unable to communicate outside of regular canine vocalizations and body language, they are able to understand basic human conversations to at least the level of a 10-year-old human child; and while their ability to understand written language is still quite limited, further experimentation has shown that they can be trained to associate certain keywords and phrases with their meanings.
It is unclear if they truly understand these concepts at a human level, as HI-dogs have also demonstrated intensified versions of otherwise standard canine behaviors. For example, HI-dogs form "packs" with no more than 8 members, and these groups can become extremely competitive, territorial, and jealous if allowed to cohabit the same 10 mile radius. Additionally, these negative reactions are not only limited to other HI-dogs, but any and every "pet" onsite. As all HI-dogs have shown an innate understanding of the area around Site-φ and the ██████ Mountains without being shown or taught from a map, Director Osterholz determined that for the continued safety of site personnel all other non-essential animals would be banned from the facility. Though this decision was controversial at the time, the Walking Club quickly won the heart of staff personnel.
MEMBERSHIP.
Any member of Chi-00 interested in joining The Walking Club should be aware that group walks take place at 12:00 PM with all members of the club setting off in batches based on how many people show up on a particular day. However, early morning, late afternoon, and night tours are available via sign-up. Please be advised that signing up for a tour does not guarantee a spot as the dogs pick and choose those they would like to walk with.
Furthermore, not all dogs run together. It is recommended to request one dog at a time during sign-ups, unless you are aware of the interdoggy relationships within the Walking Club. There are unconfirmed rumors that if someone were to walk in the Walking Club's "shoes," they may be able to become popular with all the members and request any member(s) for private walks, regardless of doggy drama.
However, if you do not wish to join the Walking Club and go off on the trails yourself, don't be alarmed when a group of dogs appear out of nowhere from the bushes! The Walking Club also somehow innately knows when anyone is walking alone in the Mountains. They endeavor to join any human if they are able, as it is part of their Membership Rules.
As the Walking Club has a social structure of their own, members have joined and left throughout the years. Currently, the Walking Club is in its third generation, led by Tutu's granddaughter, RADAR.
MEMBERSHIP RULES.
The Walking Club Membership Rules are on a poster located in the Main Base's Third Floor, on a bulletin board next to Corner Coffee. The poster is a 8.5"x11" sheet of white printer paper, and the rules are typed in 16pt Times New Roman font.
𝐌𝐔𝐒𝐓 𝐁𝐑𝐈𝐍𝐆 𝐓𝐑𝐄𝐀𝐓𝐒 𝐅𝐎𝐑 𝐄𝐕𝐄𝐑𝐘𝐎𝐍𝐄!!!
𝐍𝐎𝐁𝐎𝐃𝐘 𝐖𝐀𝐋𝐊𝐒 𝐀𝐋𝐎𝐍𝐄!!!
𝐓𝐇𝐄 𝐖𝐎𝐑𝐃𝐒 "𝐁𝐀𝐃 𝐃𝐎𝐆" 𝐈𝐒 𝐍𝐎𝐓 𝐀𝐋𝐋𝐎𝐖𝐄𝐃!!!
𝐍𝐎 𝐖𝐇𝐈𝐒𝐓𝐋𝐄𝐒!!!
𝐃𝐎𝐍'𝐓 𝐖𝐀𝐍𝐃𝐄𝐑 𝐎𝐅𝐅!!!
𝐖𝐄𝐀𝐑 𝐀𝐏𝐏𝐑𝐎𝐏𝐑𝐈𝐀𝐓𝐄 𝐒𝐇𝐎𝐄𝐒!!!
𝐃𝐎 𝐍𝐎𝐓 𝐏𝐑𝐄𝐓𝐄𝐍𝐃 𝐓𝐎 𝐓𝐇𝐑𝐎𝐖 𝐁𝐀𝐋𝐋/𝐒𝐓𝐈𝐂𝐊/𝐒𝐇𝐎𝐄/𝐄𝐓𝐂. 𝐈𝐓 𝐌𝐀𝐊𝐄𝐒 𝐔𝐒 𝐒𝐀𝐃!!!
𝐏𝐋𝐄𝐀𝐒𝐄 𝐒𝐓𝐀𝐘 𝐎𝐍 𝐏𝐀𝐓𝐇!!!
ᴛʜᴇ ᴡᴀʟᴋɪɴɢ ᴄʟᴜʙ ᴀɴᴅ ᴛʜᴇ ꜰᴏᴜɴᴅᴀᴛɪᴏɴ ᴀʀᴇ ɴᴏᴛ ʀᴇsᴘᴏɴsɪʙʟᴇ ꜰᴏʀ ᴀɴʏ ɪɴᴊᴜʀɪᴇs, ᴀᴄᴄɪᴅᴇɴᴛs, ᴀɴᴅ/ᴏʀ ᴅᴇᴀᴛʜs ᴛʜᴀᴛ ᴍᴀʏ ᴏᴄᴄᴜʀᴇ ᴅᴜᴇ ᴛᴏ ꜰᴀɪʟᴜʀᴇ ᴛᴏ ᴀᴅʜᴇʀᴇ ᴛᴏ ᴛʜᴇsᴇ ʀᴜʟᴇs ʙʏ ʜᴜᴍᴀɴ ᴍᴇᴍʙᴇʀs ᴏꜰ ᴛʜᴇ ᴄʟᴜʙ. ʀᴇᴘᴇᴀᴛᴇᴅ ʀᴜʟᴇ ʙʀᴇᴀᴋɪɴɢ ᴍᴀʏ ʟᴇᴀᴅ ᴛᴏ ʜᴜᴍᴀɴ ᴍᴇᴍʙᴇʀs ʙᴇɪɴɢ ᴋɪᴄᴋᴇᴅ ᴏᴜᴛ ᴏꜰ ᴛʜᴇ ᴄʟᴜʙ.
𝐇𝐀𝐕𝐄 𝐅𝐔𝐍!!!
𝐒𝐈𝐆𝐍-𝐔𝐏 𝐇𝐄𝐑𝐄:
____________________________________________
____________________________________________
____________________________________________
THE CURRENT 8 MEMBERS.
A profile of each member of the Walking Club has been uploaded to SCiPNET. The dogs, although incapable of human speech, picked out the font themselves with the engineers. They hope you enjoy their profiles and give them a like! 🐶
All images credited to Michael G. on Unsplash.
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"Day of The Jackal FIRST LOOK: Eddie Redmayne is every inch the suave assassin while filming Sky's 'modern reimagining' of the thriller in Croatia", Daily Mail, November 6, 2023.
Eddie Redmayne was seen for the first time on the set of Sky's new TV adaption of The Day of The Jackal in Croatia on Monday.
The British actor, 41, cut a suave figure as he shot scenes as assassin known as the Jackal, originally played by Edward Fox in the classic 1973 film.
Eddie was dressed all in black and teamed a sweater with smart trousers for the shoot which took place in a busy market.
The Oscar winner could be seen chatting to the crew before jumping behind the wheel of a swanky sports car for a complex action scene.
Originally a novel by Frederick Forsyth the story follows the story of the trained killer who is hired to is hired to assassinate French president Charles de Gaulle.
According to the Hollywood Reporter the producers, of which Eddie is one, have described the adaption as a 'bold, modern reimagining of the beloved and respected novel and film.'
And while the series, written by Top Boy creator Ronan Bennett, will pay homage to the original it will be set in the world modern world of geo-politics.
Producer Gareth Neame said: “We are excited to bring to life Ronan Bennett’s re-imagining of Forsyth’s revered thriller in the complex world in which we live today and are incredibly fortunate to have an actor of Eddie’s calibre as our Jackal'.
It comes after Eddie credited his parents for his successful career in a rare candid interview.
The actor said it was his father, Richard, a banker, and mother Patricia, who ran a relocation company, and their willingness to allow him to pursue his interest in acting at an early age that allowed him to flourish in his career.
'I loved music and singing and acting at school,' the Fantastic Beast franchise star told Today's Willie Geist in an interview. 'To my parents' credit, which now as a parent myself I really do hold high, anything I had an interest in or my brothers had an interest in, they supported.'
The future star attended the Jackie Palmer Studios Stage School in London where his classmates including James Corden, Jamie Dornan and Aaron Taylor-Johnson.
The father of two shares Iris, seven and Luke, five, with his wife of nine years, Hannah Bagshawe.
Eddie, who won the Academy Award for his portrayal of the late physicist Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything.
In addition to the Oscar, Eddie won a Tony in 2010 for his work in Red and will soon return in a production of Cabaret after starring as Emcee in the musical in London's West End.
Still most fans know him for his role as Newt Scamander in the Fantastic Beasts films. He's starred in three of the magical adventures, but said he isn't sure when or if a fourth is in the works.
Speaking to Indiewire the actor explained, 'It’s more a question for J. K. Rowling and David Yates and Warners, but I don’t know, I’m afraid. I can’t add to that, adding, 'I love playing Newt, he’s a sweet man".
....
#eddie redmayne#eddieredmayne#redmayne#the day of the jackal#november 2023#dailymail#on set photos#new series#the theory of everything#fantastic beasts#cabaret
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The actor Brigit Forsyth, who has died aged 83, made her name as Thelma in the BBC television series Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads? One critic described Thelma as so prim that she could turn the lifting of a lace curtain into an art form.
Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais’s creation, which ran from 1973 to 1974, was the sequel to the popular 1960s sitcom The Likely Lads, which starred Rodney Bewes and James Bolam as Bob Ferris and Terry Collier, two single north-east England factory workers who share a flat and the same interests – women, drink and football.
Thelma Chambers was brought in as a girlfriend for the upwardly mobile Bob, now in the white-collar class with a house, car and annual holiday on the Costa Brava, scoffed at by Terry, who clings on to his working-class roots. Thelma and Bob were married halfway through the two series of the show.
“Up until then, I had done a lot of drama on telly,” said Forsyth. “If I wasn’t being murdered, I was murdering somebody or I was a disturbed art teacher. I was playing quite a lot of deranged people, so comedy was a nice change.”
She created laughs again with the sitcom Sharon and Elsie (1984-85), in which she co-starred as the middle-class Elsie Beecroft alongside Janette Beverley as the more down-to-earth Sharon Wilkes, two employees in a greetings card manufacturing company.
But Forsyth’s own favourite television part was Francine Pratt in Playing the Field (1998-2002), the on- and off-pitch women’s football drama created by Kay Mellor. Her character, who hates the game, is married to the Castlefield Blues’ sponsor, played by Ricky Tomlinson, and keeps him happy in return for designer clothes and other luxuries.
“I have never played awful glamour before,” she said. “I had a blond wig, six-inch heels, makeup and my bosom hitched up high.”
Forsyth was born in Malton, North Yorkshire, to Scottish parents, Anne (nee Forsyth), an artist, and Frank Connell, an architect and town planner, and brought up in Edinburgh. She was mesmerised by Stanley Baxter’s performances as a pantomime dame at the city’s King’s theatre and, aged 18, landed her own first lead role, as Sarat Carn, on her way to the gallows, in Charlotte Hastings’s play Bonaventure with the Makars amateur drama group.
But when she left St George’s school, Edinburgh, her parents insisted she learn a skill, so she trained as a secretary. After a couple of jobs, she headed for London and Rada (1958-60), where she won the Emile Littler prize.
She began her professional career back in Edinburgh with the Gateway theatre company (1960-61) before moving on to the Theatre Royal, Lincoln (1961-62) and the Arthur Brough Players in Folkestone (1962). With other actors already named Brigit McConnell and Bridget O’Connell, she changed her professional name to Forsyth on her return to Lincoln in 1962.
At the Edinburgh festival three years later, she played one of the witches in a headline-making production of Macbeth. “That show caused an absolute uproar because they wanted the witches to have the bodies of young girls and the faces of old women, and they wanted us to have our top half naked,” Forsyth recalled. “But the Earl of Harewood, who was running the EIF at the time, said ‘No’. So they put nipple caps on us, which looked absolutely disgusting – and they used to drop off each night. It was absolutely hysterical.”
Later, in the West End, Forsyth played Annie in The Norman Conquests (Globe, now Gielgud, and Apollo theatres, 1974-76) and Dusa in the feminist play Dusa, Fish, Stas and Vi (Mayfair theatre, 1976-77). She put her TV breakthrough down to cutting her hair short. “It proved a tremendously lucky omen,” she said.
That break came with Adam Smith (1972), in which she played the younger daughter of the title character, a Scottish minister (Andrew Keir). The director, Brian Mills, then worked with Forsyth on the psychological thriller Holly (1972), when she took the part of a young art teacher kidnapped by a mentally unstable student. Forsyth and Mills married in 1976.
Television roles kept on coming. She was Veronica, one of the product-promotion team, in The Glamour Girls (1980-82), Harriet in the inter-generational sitcom Tom, Dick and Harriet (1982-83), and Helen Yeldham, a hotelier, in the 1989 series of Boon.
There were also appearances in soap opera: as GP Judith Vincent in The Practice (1985-86); Babs Fanshawe, Ken Barlow’s escort agency date who dies of a heart attack, in a 1998 Coronation Street episode; Delphine LaClair, a sales rep for a French company interested in buying Rodney Blackstock’s vineyards, for two short runs in Emmerdale (2005 and 2006); Cressida, mother of the millionaire Nate Tenbury-Newent, in Hollyoaks in 2013; and three roles in Doctors between 2000 and 2012.
Forsyth also played the miserable Madge, who frustrates her sister Mavis’s attempts at a relationship with Granville, in the sitcom sequel Still Open All Hours (2013-19).
A cellist from the age of nine, Forsyth starred as the real-life virtuoso Beatrice Harrison in a 2004 tour of The Cello and the Nightingale. Also on tour, she was a remarkably believable Queen Elizabeth II in A Question of Attribution (2000) and played Marie in Calendar Girls (2008). “I’m Mrs Frosty-Knickers, the one who doesn’t approve of it all.”
In 2017, she played a terminally ill musician in the stage comedy Killing Time, written by her daughter, Zoe Mills, who acted alongside her. At the time, Forsyth revealed that her maternal grandfather, a GP in Yorkshire, had helped dying patients to end their lives. Declaring herself a supporter of euthanasia, she said: “He bumped off probably loads of people with doses of morphine.”
In 1999, Forsyth separated from her husband, but they remained friends until his death in 2006. She is survived by their children, Ben and Zoe.
🔔 Brigit Forsyth (Brigit Dorothea Connell), actor, born 28 July 1940; died 1 December 2023
Daily inspiration. Discover more photos at Just for Books…?
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Rathbone Holmes, attempt #2
So I asked @blistering-typhoons about Rathbone Holmes awhile back. I tried getting into it in high school, and couldn’t get past how dirty they did Watson, cause Watson is my absolute favorite. BUT, I had seen their unironic delight at the adaptation and wondered if there was something I had missed. Even Granada Holmes, which is undeniably fabulous in terms of adaptation, had some hit and miss episodes. (The Last Vampyre. Why.) Maybe I had just had a bad, or at least particularly egregious, example.
Typhoons gave me three episodes to try out. I will go over them, and my impressions. I try not to give egregious spoilers in my discussions, but be aware they likely exist in some way.
The Pearl of Death
Okay, this is a fun and solid adaptation of The Six Napoleons. The fact that the thief/killer/monomaniac busted up a bunch of china to obfuscate the fact that they were after the plaster busts is actually a nice double blind that provides an additional hurdle before the picture becomes clear. The inclusion of the Creeper is kind of… weird? Is this a Creeping Man reference?? (looks it up) nooo, but apparently the Creeper had… his own spin-off?? What?? EXPLAIN your reasoning, 1940s Universal Studios.
I simply MUST, very briefly, go off about the knife book trap. It’s… look, it’s objectively silly. It’s an Adam West Batman level of silly trap. But, since we don’t actually see what the asshole is doing with the gift in the hallway before giving it to Watson, it’s set up as an homage to the Dying Detective, which means we get like 30 AGONIZING minutes of Watson just-barely-not springing the trap. (Note - I’ve looked back at the episode and it’s barely 5 minutes. Why am I so obsessed with this scene lmao). If I had realized it was a sproingy dagger rather than poison, I think I actually would’ve been less stressed. Because LISTEN, if there is ANYTHING I LOVE, it is a DYIN AU where Watson accidentally springs the box trap. There are surprisingly few of them out there, at least that I have found. Katie Forsythe did an excellent one. (if you know of any more PLEASE SEND THEM TO MEEE).
So much digression, sorry. All of this to say, Literally up until Holmes walked in the room, I wasn’t completely convinced they weren’t going to turn the tables on us with the music box trap. Like, the tension was absolutely obvious, but I felt it!
And now we get a little bit into my impressions of this Watson.
This Watson is… I can’t read him as dangerous. I have a hard time believing “former army doctor” from this chap. He’s affable, a bit absent-minded, and fiercely devoted to and protective of his Holmes, but when push comes to shove, would he brain a blackmailer with a chair? I dunno. (If there is in fact a later episode where he actually brains Milverton with a chair, PLEASE. PROVE ME WRONG THAT WOULD BE SO FUNNY). But I think what I like to take away from this Watson, which I’ve seen in a LOT of fanfic and which seems like a touchstone of Sherlock Holmes mythos, is this: it’s nearly impossible not to like Watson. Where Holmes can range from purposefully insufferable to intensely unlikeable, Watson is just. A good man. He’s just a good guy that I’d like to sit down and have tea with. Part of that is the “I’m just the humble narrator” everyman of the original stories, but. I dunno. There IS something about this Watson that’s incredibly likeable.
I think the reason the knife book trap hit ME so well is that the idea of THIS Watson falling victim to a trap set for Holmes is especially galling. This guy?! Who misplaced a paper clipping he was in the middle of gluing into his commonplace book? You’re gonna ACCIDENTALLY murder THIS MAN? The stupid knife book got me where the “You MURDERED my best friend!” bluff at the end of the episode absolutely did not. XD
Anyway, Holmes walks into the room and immediately knows the book is a knife. On to Lestrade.
I didn’t think it was possible, but somehow they’ve done Lestrade even dirtier than Watson in this adaptation. Like… yikes. I know the early stories had a lot of contempt for the Yard, but come on!! It’s the SIX NAPOLEONS! Lestrade’s opportunity to say “look, there are no actual hard feelings, we actually LOVE you at the Yard.” You don’t gotta make him… just, the worst. Although, I have to say the sass-off between Lestrade and Watson is very fun. It’s about the only bit of fun Lestrade gets to have.
The House of Fear
I promise this will be shorter than the previous entry. And honestly, I’m kind of bummed about that. I WISH I had more to say. But I have to be honest.
A 1940s-era locked room mystery, in a big isolated house that they can’t leave, where the guests are picked off one-by-one, and two guests have to join forces and wits to stay alive and get to the bottom of it? I’m sorry, but the whole time my brain was going “Ah man, I want to be watching And Then There Were None.”
I am entirely biased in this point, I have to say. When I was a kid, I was sent for several summers in a row on a week-long visit to my grandmother. She had some frankly incredible stories - if she’s to be believed, she potentially met Nikta fucking Kruschev on a vacation abroad. I regret that it was hard for Young Snaitf to really connect with her, except in one topic: mysteries. We had wildly different tastes in a lot of things, but on those week-long visits we both found out that no one in the house would object if an episode of Murder, She Wrote was on the TV, and we both genuinely loved the Rene Clair adaptation of And Then There Were None. If you haven’t watched it, I cannot recommend it highly enough. The whole opening sequence establishes every single visitor to the island - their quirks, foibles, and flaw - without a single line of dialogue. It’s masterful.
Against the double barrel shotgun of nostalgia and a genuinely masterful adaptation, I’m afraid House of Fear holds no contest for me. Watching this episode just made me think of Grandmother Marie, and made me want to watch the movie. Sorry, ya’ll.
Pursuit to Algiers
Typhoons called this the “Big Daddy herself” and I can’t say I disagree. I really, REALLY liked this one.
The initial set-up of random street- and pub- people feeding Holmes clues and cryptic warnings was so incredibly effective. It was off-putting, how very blatant it was to both Holmes and the audience. I believe they were trying to use Watson to juxtapose with the innocent reaction, but honestly the fact that he didn’t pick up on the sinister vibes just came off as weird. Unless his “I don’t like fish and chips, sorry” is his way of brushing them off. “No creepy murder pubs for US today, sorry.” Unfortunately for him, they’ve managed to intrigue Holmes.
I like that Watson’s loyalty really gets to shine here. The plot is explained, and it’s one they genuinely can’t turn away from. And then a perfectly reasonable explanation is given as to why they have to separate, and Watson is just Not Having It. When the fish factor is so high that even this Watson calls bullshit, you KNOW it’s bad.
Typhoons referenced a very specific and emotional scene, and I’m so sorry typhoon. I fucked up. I was paying attention to the notice board, where the name of the boat was inscribed, and I ABSOLUTELY LOST MY SHIT about the fact that we’re on the Friesland! WE’RE ON THE DUTCH STEAMSHIP FRIESLAND. (I don’t know how I didn’t put this together until this very moment, forgive my shit listening skills) and I missed at least half of the emotional impact of this scene. I have to agree, though. There is this… weight of “what am I to do now?” that I really wish we’d gotten a little more time to sit in. Maybe a Watson left to his own devices would still befriend the singer lady and find out about the stolen jewels. Alas, Watson is given about five seconds to absorb this development before he’s pulled in another direction.
Anyway, none of these reviews is very comprehensive, and I didn’t take very many notes, so all I have is this last impression that I wrote down: Here we see a Watson that’s a step behind Holmes, because that is where Holmes prefers him to be. They didn’t have to make him stupid to put him there. And he was genuinely part of the plan the whole way through, in a classic (if assholey) Holmesian way: Holmes does not tell him the whole plan, so that Watson’s reactions will be genuine. I feel that this worked particularly well in Pursuit to Algiers, in a way that managed not to irritate me. Well bloody done.
in summation: I think I see the appeal.
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Titans Talk with West Forsyth HC Kevin Wallace - Season 5 Ep 10 - Mon Nov 4th 2024
The Titans fall to East Forsyth 48-42 in the Regular Season finale to end the season at 7-3. Next up, the 4A State Playoffs as West Forsyth waits for their 1st round matchup Loaded show with special guests Northern Guilford HC Erik Westburg, Walkertown HC Tripp Honeycutt, and Prestige Worldwide (Coach Willard and Coach Perez)!
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Stacey and Rebecca 🤍 (the girlfriends)
this is for whoever asked for that Stacey edit...I decided to add Rebecca into it if that's ok.
#nicks edits♡#dead rising#dead rising 2#dead rising 2 otr#dead rising 3#dead rising fandom#stacey forsythe#rebecca chang#chuck greene#frank west#nick ramos#annie greene#katey greene
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State march masterpost (updated as information comes in!)
All times are local time unless otherwise specified. Reblogs are off because this is a living, regularly updated post; please see our website or send an ask for more information! Post you can reblog is here. Alabama: Florence—114 W Mobile St -> 200 S Court St, 3/31, 3:30pm (link) Montgomery—Alabama State House, 3/31, 1pm (link)
Alaska: Anchorage—Dimond Center -> Costco Wholesale, 3/31, 12pm
Arizona: Prescott—Prescott Courthouse, 3/31, 2pm Sierra Vista—Fry and Coronado -> City Hall, 3/31, 3pm (link) Tuscon—Tuscon City Hall, 3/31, 4pm (link)
Arkansas: Eureka Springs—Basin Spring Park, 3/31, 6pm (link) Little Rock—Lucie’s Place, 3/31, 6pm Marion—Brunetti Park -> Marion City Hall, 3/31, 5pm
California: Castro Valley—Castro Valley High School (non-students please join in once the protest has left school grounds) -> Corner of Redwood Rd and Castro Valley Blvd, 3/30, 3:35pm (link) Fresno—N Blackstone Ave & E Nees Ave, 3/31, 4pm (link) Hollywood—Corner of Sunset & Vine, 3/30, 4:15pm Merced—3055 Loughborough Dr -> Laura's Fountain -Applegate Park 1045 W 25th St, 3/31, 4:30pm (link) Pomona—Pomona Pride Center 836 S -> City Hall, 3/31, 4pm (link) Riverside—Back To The Grind Coffee Shop –> Riverside City Hall, 3/31, 4pm (link) Sacramento—Capitol Complex, 3/31, 12pm (link) San Diego—Balboa Park at the Bea Evenson Foundation -> El Prado, 3/31, 5pm San Francisco—Corner of Turk & Taylor -> City Hall, 3/25, 11am (link) | Patricia's Green -> City Hall, 3/31, 2:15pm (link) San Jose—San Jose City Hall, 3/31, 5:30pm (link) Santa Ana—Brad Brafford LGBT Center on 4th, 3/31, 6pm (link)
Colorado: Denver—Civic Center Park, 3/17, 8:30pm | West Steps of the Capitol, 3/24, 11am (link)
Connecticut: Bristol—131 N Main Street, 3/31, 1pm Fairfield—Upper Quad of Sacred Heart University, 3/31, 4pm New Haven—corner of Chaple and Church St, 3/31, 4pm
Delaware: Wilmington—Delaware Historical Society –> Rodney Square, 3/31, 6pm (link)
District of Colombia: Union Station -> US Capitol, 3/31, 3pm (link)
Florida: Altamonte Springs—3/31, 9am (link) Naples—Cambier Park, 3/31, 6pm (link) Ocala—Pine Plaza -> City Hall, 3/31, 3:30pm Orlando—Dr Philips Performing Arts Center, 3/31, 11am Port Orange—Corner of Yorktowne Blvd. and Dunlawton Ave -> Port Orange Regional Library, 3/31, 4:30pm Tallahassee—state Capitol building, 3/31, 2pm (link) Venice—Town Center -> Venice Beach, 3/31, 10:30am
Georgia: Atlanta—state Capitol building, 3/31, 12pm (link) Dalton—3/31, 11am (link) Gainesville—Gainesville Square –> Jesse Jewell Parkway (in front of CVS), 3/31, 5pm Savannah—Forsyth Park -> City Hall & back, 3/31, 6pm
Hawaii: Honolulu—state Capitol building, 3/31, 3:30pm
Idaho: Boise—TBD Shelley—Shelley City Park, 3/31, 2pm
Illinois: Champaign—McKinley Foundation Church Chapel, University of Illinois, 3/31, 5:30pm Chicago—Grant Park, 3/31, 5pm Rockford—1005 5th Ave, 3/31, 5pm (link) Streamwood—7 Augusta Dr –> 7 S Sutton Rd, 3/31, 8am (link)
Indiana: Fort Wayne—Boone Street Playlot -> Allen County Courthouse, 3/23, 3pm (link) | Allen County Courthouse, 3/31, 5pm (link) Hanover—Hanover College Quad, 3/31, 1pm Indianapolis—433 N Capital Ave -> 1 Monument Circle, 3/31, 3pm Terre Haute—Terre Haute Courthouse, 3/31, 5pm
Iowa: Des Moines—state Capitol building (West Capitol Terrace Stage), 3/31, 6pm (link) Dubuque—Dubuque Courthouse -> Washington Park, 3/31, 4pm (link) Iowa City—Pentacrest -> Wesley Center, 3/31, 6pm (link)
Kansas: Lenexa—Lenexa Rec Center -> City Hall, 3/31, 5pm Topeka—state Capitol building entrance, 3/31, 5pm (link) Wichita—121 E Douglas Ave, 3/31, 4pm (link)
Kentucky: Frankfort—front of Annex Building, 3/29, 9:30am (link) | Kentucky State Capitol, 4/8, 1pm (link) Lawrenceburg—Anderson County Courthouse -> 44 Anna Mac Clarke Ave, 4/3, 3pm (link) Lexington—Robert F. Stephens Courthouse Plaza, 3/31, 4:30pm | Outside of the Old Fayette County Courthouse, 3/31, 6pm
Louisiana: Lake Charles—Prein Lake Park, 3/31, 12pm New Orleans—Washington Square Park 700 Elysian Fields Ave, 3/31, 5pm (link)
Maine: Bangor—West Market Square, 3/31, 6pm Portland—456 Congress St, 3/31, 6pm (link) Rockland—Intersection of Main Street and Park Street (near Walgreens and Maine Sport) –> Chapman Park, 3/31, 5:30pm
Maryland: Baltimore—400 E Biddle St, 3/31, 5pm Oakland—32 Oak St –> 305 E Oak St, 3/31, 3pm (link)
Massachusetts: Boston—state house, 3/18, 11am (link) | state house, 3/28, 10am (link) Sunderland—North Star, 45 Amherst Road, 3/31, 12pm
Michigan: Detroit—Woodward-Warren Park, 3/31, 5pm (link) Fenton—Rackham Park, 3/31, 6pm (link) Grand Rapids—Downtown, 3/31, 5pm Lansing—state Capitol building, 3/31, 11am
Minnesota: Saint Paul—state Capitol building, 3/31, 9am (link)
Mississippi:
Missouri: Columbia—701 East Broadway Blvd, 3/31, 5:30pm (link) | Uptown Columbia –> Downtown Columbia, 4/15, 9am Jefferson City—Missouri State Capitol, 3/29, 2pm (link) St Louis—11911 Dorsett Rd –> 715 NW Plz Dr, 4/27, 1pm
Montana: Missoula—Missoula Courthouse, 3/31, 5pm (link)
Nebraska: Lincoln—state Capitol building, 3/31, 5:30pm
Nevada: Las Vegas—Las Vegas TransPride Center -> The LGBTQ Center of Southern Nevada, 3/31, 11am (link)
New Hampshire: Keene—Keene State College Campus Main Entrance -> Center Square, 3/31, 5pm (link)
New Jersey: Flemington—Flemington Historic Courthouse -> Flemington DIY, 3/31, 3:45pm (link) Trenton—State House, 3/31, 3pm (link)
New Mexico: Albuquerque—Civic Plaza, 3/31, 5pm Santa Fe—State Capitol -> the Attorney General's office, 3/31, 11am
New York: Albany—Washington Square Park -> Capitol Park, 3/31, 1pm Canandaigua—7 Mill St, 3/31, 3pm Forest Hills—Forest Hills Station, 3/31, 2:30pm New Paltz—SUNY New Paltz Campus, 3/31, 3:30pm New York City—Union Square -> Washington Square Park, 3/31, 5pm (link) | Times Square, 3/31, 5pm Penn Yan—Yates County Courthouse, 3/31, 3pm (link) Plattsburgh—Hawkins Pond -> Samuel Champlain Monument Park, 3/23, 3pm Utica—Genesee-Parkway Intersection, 3/31, 5pm Westchester—SUNY Purchase College, 3/31, 5pm
North Carolina: Asheville—TBD Mooresville—Freedom Park -> Town Hall, 3/31, 2:30pm (link) Raleigh—John Chavis Memorial Park, 3/31, 1pm Wilmington—Historic Thalian Hall Steps, 3/31, 5pm (link)
North Dakota:
Ohio: Cleveland—Free Stamp @ Willard Park -> City Hall, 3/31, 4pm Cleveland Heights—City Hall, 3/31, 11am (link) Columbus—Goodale Park, 3/31, 5pm Dayton—Lily’s Dayton (329 E 5th St) –> Courthouse Square (23 N Main St), 3/31, 4pm Lakewood Park—Lakewood Park, 3/31, 4pm (link) Madison—Madison Village Square Park, 3/31, 4pm (link)
Oklahoma: Oklahoma City—Supreme Court of Oklahoma -> state Capitol building, 3/31, 5pm Tulsa—Central Library, 3/31, 4pm (link)
Oregon: Bend—Drake Park, 3/31, 5pm Hillsboro—Civic Center -> 145 NE 2nd Ave, 3/31, 5pm Medford—Vogel Plaza 200 E. Main Street, 3/31, 4pm Portland—Tom McCall Waterfront Park -> Pioneer Courthouse, 3/31, 2pm
Pennsylvania: Harrisburg—state Capitol building, 3/31, 1pm (link) Oil City—Oil City -> Franklin, 3/31, 8am Philadelphia—Temple University Bell Tower, 3/29, 1pm (link) | City Hall, 3/31, 6pm (link) Pittsburgh—City County Building, 3/31, 5pm (link)
Rhode Island: Providence—the Wheeler School -> state Capitol building, 3/31, 11:30am
South Carolina: Columbia—State House Grounds, 3/31, 2pm Greenville—300 S Main St, 3/31, 3pm (link)
South Dakota: Brookings—City Council Building, 3/31, 5pm (link) Rapid City—Main Street Square, 3/31, 5pm
Tennessee: Knoxville—Downtown Hilton, 3/31, 10:30am (link) | Gay Street & Market Square (where the water fountain markers are), 3/31, 2pm Memphis—Civic Center Plaza, 3/16, 4pm
Texas: Amarillo—Amarillo Chamber of Commerce -> Potter County Courthouse, 3/31, 5pm Austin—state Capitol building, 3/20, 9am (link) Dallas—Main St Garden Park 1902 Main St, 3/18, 12pm (link) | Pacific Plaza, 3/31, 3pm Houston—Discovery Green Park -> City Hall, 3/31, 11:30am Killeen—101 N College St -> 1114 N Fort Hood St, 3/31, 5:30pm Lubbock—Mahon Library parking lot -> county Courthouse, 3/31, 5pm San Antonio—San Antonio Courthouse, 3/31, 6:30pm (link)
Utah: Salt Lake City—state Capitol building, 3/31, 5pm (link)
Vermont: Montpelier—Montpelier State House, 3/31, 12pm (link)
Virginia: Richmond—Open High School -> state Capitol building, 3/31, 3pm
Washington: La Center—by the bridge into town, 3/31, 5pm Olympia—Heritage Park -> state Capitol building, 3/31, 3:30pm Seattle—SeaTac Airport Station, 3/31, 1pm | Volunteer Park -> Seattle Courthouse, 3/31, 4pm (link) Spokane—Cracker Building, 3/18, 12pm (link) Walla Walla—Pioneer Park -> Land Title Plaza, 3/31, 3:45pm (link) Wenatchee—Memorial Park, 3/31, 4pm
West Virginia: Charleston—3/31, 4:30pm
Wisconsin: Appleton—Houdini Plaza, 3/31, 10am (link) Janesville—Corner of East Court Street/Jackman Street -> Corner of West Court Street/South Locust Street, 3/31, 2pm Kenosha—Civic Center Park, 3/31, 12pm Madison—Library Mall, 3/18, 2:30pm (link) | 534 State St –> Wisconsin State Capitol, 3/31, 12pm Milwaukee—TBD
Wyoming:
CANADA: Toronto, Ontario 3/17, 3pm, US Consulate (link)
#queer youth assemble#march for queer and trans youth autonomy#queer youth#queer pride#queer#trans healthcare#trans rights#trans#trans day of visibility#transgender#activists#activism#youth rights#protest
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Hot Vintage TV Men's Bracket - Full List
Sorry for the delay, it took us longer than expected to finalize the list. We are currently working on finishing and finalizing the bracket for round 1. For now enjoy the list of everyone in the tournament and we'll be back on Thursday evening to kick off round 1!
Boris Karloff
Clint Walker
Desi Arnaz
Claude Rains
James Arness
James Garner
William Hopper
Adam West
Alejandro Rey
Bob Crane
Cesar Romero
David McCallum
David Selby
Davy Jones
DeForest Kelley
Dick Gautier
Dick Van Dyke
Dwayne Hickman
Eddie Albert
George Maharis
George Takei
John Astin
Jonathan Frid
Larry Hagman
Leonard Nimoy
Mark Lenard
Martin Milner
Michael Nesmith
Micky Dolenz
Patrick McGoohan
Patrick Troughton
Peter Tork
Randy Boone
Raymond Burr
Richard Chamberlain
Robert Conrad
Robert Fuller
Robert Vaughn
Rod Serling
Russell Johnson
Ted Bessell
Ted Cassidy
Tom Smothers
Walter Koenig
William Hartnell
William Shatner
Alan Alda
Brian Blessed
Darren McGavin
David Cassidy
David Soul
Dean Butler
Demond Wilson
Derek Jacobi
Eric Idle
Erik Estrada
Fred Grandy
Fred Rogers
Hal Linden
Henry Winkler
Jamie Farr
John Cleese
John Hurt
Jon Pertwee
Judd Hirsch
Kabir Bedi
Kent McCord
Lee Majors
Michael Landon
Michael Palin
Mike Farrell
Peter Falk
Randolph Mantooth
Richard Hatch
Ricardo Montalban
Robert Wagner
Rock Hudson
Simon Williams
Telly Savalas
Terry Jones
Tom Baker
Wayne Rogers
Anthony Andrews
Bruce Boxleitner
Bruce McCulloch
Colin Baker
Dave Foley
David Hasselhoff
Dirk Benedict
Gene Anthony Ray
Gerald McRaney
Hugh Laurie
Jameson Parker
Jeremy Brett
Jimmy Smits
John Forsythe
John Stamos
Johnny Depp
Kevin McDonald
Mark McKinney
Martin Kove
Michael J. Fox
Michael Praed
Mr. T
Patrick Duffy
Peter Davison
Richard Dean Anderson
Rik Mayall
Rowan Atkinson
Sam Neill
Scott Thompson
Simon MacCorkindale
Stephen Fry
Sylvester McCoy
Ted Lange
Tom Selleck
Tony Danza
Alexander Siddig
Andre Braugher
Andreas Katsulas
Andrew Robinson
Anthony Head
Anthony Starke
Armin Shimerman
Avery Brooks
Brad Dourif
Brent Spiner
Bruce Campbell
Charles Shaughnessy
Colm Meaney
Craig Charles
Dana Ashbrook
Danny John-Jules
Darren E. Burrows
David Duchovny
David Hyde Pierce
David Schwimmer
David Suchet
David Wenham
Dean Stockwell
Garrett Wang
Gary Cole
Grant Show
James Earl Jones
James Marsters
Jeff Conaway
Jeffrey Combs
John Corbett
John de Lancie
John Goodman
John Shea
Jonathan Frakes
Joseph Marcell
Kevin Smith
Kevin Sorbo
Kyle MacLachlan
LeVar Burton
Luke Perry
Marc Alaimo
Mark-Paul Gosselaar
Matt LeBlanc
Matthew Perry
Michael Dorn
Michael Horse
Michael Hurst
Michael O’Hare
Michael Ontkean
Michael Tylo
Miguel Ferrer
Mitch Pileggi
Nate Richert
Nicholas Lea
Noah Wyle
Paolo Montalban
Patrick Stewart
Paul Gross
Paul Johansson
Paul McGann
Peter Wingfield
René Auberjonois
Robert Beltran
Robert Carlyle
Robert Duncan McNeill
Ron Perlman
Scott Bakula
Seth Green
Spencer Rochfort
Stephen Nichols
Ted Danson
Ted Raimi
Thorsten Kaye
Tim Daly
Timothy Dalton
Tim Russ
Valentine Pelka
William Shockley
Ben Browder
Brandon Quinn
Brian Krause
Chad Michael Murray
Christian Kane
Conner Trinneer
Daniel Dae Kim
David Boreanaz
David Tennant
Donnie Wahlberg
Eric Close
Ioan Gruffudd
Jensen Ackles
Jeremy Sisto
Joe Lando
Joshua Jackson
Keith Hamilton Cobb
Michael Shanks
Nathan Fillion
Neil Patrick Harris
Reece Shearsmith
Richard Ayoade
Rob Lowe
Ron Glass
Scott Cohen
Skeet Ulrich
Tom Welling
Tony Shalhoub
Billy Dee Williams
Bruce Willis
Clint Eastwood
Colin Firth
George Clooney
Jeremy Irons
Paul Michael Glaser
Pierce Brosnan
Sean Bean
Blair Underwood
David James Elliot
Michael Vartan
Michael T. Weiss
Scott Patterson
Sebastian Cabot
Luke Halpin
Adam Brody
Jason Bateman
Matt Bomer
Timothy Olyphant
Woody Harrelson
Richard Biggs
Robin Williams
Will Smith
John Schneider
Milo Ventimiglia
Bobby Troup
Bobby Sherman
Chad Everett
Casey Biggs
Jason Priestley
Don Adams
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"Tell Admiral Maine blown up and destroyed . . . “
Telegram to the Secretary of the Navy, February 15, 1898.
Record Group 45: Naval Records Collection of the Office of Naval Records and Library
Series: Area Files
File Unit: 11-15 February 1898
Transcription:
The Western Union Telegraph Company
RECEIVED at Corcoran Bldg, S.E. Cor. 15th & F Sts., Washington, D.C.
8C0 0 PR GVT 51 Collect Gvt Via Jax. 213 AM.
Key West Fla Feb 15-98
Sec-Nav. Washn D.C.
Sigsbee wires " Tell Admiral Maine blown up and destroyed Send lightHouse Tenders Many killed and wounded Dont send War vessel if others available"
I have sent Erecssen to Sicard with sigsbee's dispatch about disaster Mangrove getting up steam to go over shall I also send Fern?
Forsythe.
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Happy Birthday Scottish actress Sandra Voe born on Shetland on 6th 1936.
Other than the fact she was born on Shetland, where her father owned a fishing factory, there is little I can tell you about Sandra’s early life. However she has been a very busy lady, appearing in many TV shows over the past 50 odd years Voe began her on screen career in 1966, appearing in an episode of Dr. Finlay’s Casebook.
Her shows in the 70’s include Coronation Street, Emmerdale Farm, Within These Walls and Sounding Brass, during the 80’s on TV and film, Bread or Blood, The Practice, Open all Hours and Local Hero, the 90’s saw her in the brilliant Takin’ Over the Asylum, which seems to crop up in a few of our anniversaries and another regular show on my posts Taggart, over into the 21st century and oor Sandra was still working hard, the pick of 15 different shows and films were Playing the Field, Midsomer Murders, Foyles War, and of course Monarch of the Glen .In 1993 she was also in the gritty film Naked, which also starred Ewan Bremner, Spud in the Trainspotting films.In the past 8 years Sandra Voe, now in her 70’s shows no sign of slowing down, Holby City, Howards end, in 2013, inevitably she turned up in her home Islands on the superb Shetland. Just this year Sandra has chalked up a couple of appearances on the hit series, Vikings as a witch
As well as the many, many TV and film roles she has also been a regular treading the boards at some of the top Theatres, including Sheffield Crucible, Leicester Phoenix, Leicester Haymarket, Oxford Playhouse, Birmingham Rep, Manchester Royal Exchange, West Yorkshire Playhouse, Nottingham Playhouse, Bristol Old Vic, Bloomsbury, Hampstead, Lyric Hammersmith, Almeida, Bush, Shared Experience, RNT, Royal Court and Ambassadors.
Her daughter, Candida Doyle, was keyboard player with the '90s British pop band Pulp, her son, Magnus Doyle, was Pulp's drummer. Sandra was last on our screens in the very good mini-series Trigonometry.
Recently Sandra has been reliving her Local Hero experience when she makes a return trip to the north-east for the 40th anniversary of the film. She has teamed up with fellow actors Jimmy Yuill, Jonathan Watson and Tam Dean Burn and met school children from Banff Academy and Fraserburgh Academy.
Sandra said: “It’s wonderful to be coming back. The place and the community is conjured up so well by Bill Forsyth that you really believe it.”
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