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Lucy and Kirkwood
Smith appeared as Vanessa in Tinderbox: a Revenge Comedy by Lucy Kirkwood at the Bush Theatre, Shepherd's Bush, in April 2008.

Lucy and b
* 1995 – Lucy Rie, American potter ( b. 1902 )
* 1935 – Lucy, Lady Duff-Gordon, English fashion designer ( b. 1863 )
* 1942 – Lucy Maud Montgomery, Canadian author ( b. 1874 )
* Lucy Irvine ( b. 1956 ), writer, lived very briefley in the Summer Isles Hotel with her father, who owned it and the Hydroponicum.
* Lady Lucy Hamilton ( b. bef.
* 1660 – Lucy Hay, Countess of Carlisle, English socialite ( b. 1599 )
* July 31 – Lucy Page Mercer Rutherfurd, Franklin Roosevelt's lover ( b. 1891 )
** Lucy Maud Montgomery, Canadian writer ( b. 1874 )
* February 6 – Vince Guaraldi, American musician ( Linus and Lucy ) ( b. 1928 )
* April 24 – Lucy Beaumont, English actress ( b. 1873 )
** William Frawley, American actor ( I Love Lucy ) ( b. 1887 )
* June 25 – Lucy Webb Hayes, First Lady of the United States ( b. 1831 )
* October 17 – Lucy Bacon, American painter ( b. 1857 )
** Lucy Hay, Countess of Carlisle, English socialite ( b. 1599 )
* Lucy Tayiah-Eads, b. 1888, adopted daughter of Washunga.
Francis and Emma had other children: Captain John Brooke Johnson ( 1823 – 1868 ) ( later Brooke Brooke ), Mary Anna Johnson ( b. 1824 ), Harriet Helena Johnson ( b. 1826 ), Charlotte Frances Johnson ( b. 1828 ), Captain ( William ) Frederic Johnson ( b. 1830 ), Emma Lucy Johnson ( b. 1832 ), Margaret Henrietta Johnson ( 1834 – 1845 ), Georgianna Brooke Johnson ( 1836 – 1854 ), James Stuart Johnson ( 1839 – 1840 ), and Henry Stuart Johnson ( b. 1841 ).
* August 22 – Lucy Broadwood, folk song collector and researcher ( b. 1858 )
Simon was raised in the Riverdale neighborhood of the Bronx, New York City and has two older sisters, Joanna ( b. 1940 ) and Lucy ( b. 1943 ), and a younger brother, Peter ( b. 1947 ).

Lucy and .
There is clear evidence that Lucy from childhood had an unusual mind.
He recalled Lucy, as `` a bright-looking black-eyed young lady who came regularly through the boys' study hall to join the class in Greek in the little recitation room beyond ''.
The study of Greek was the distinctive mark of boys destined to go to college, and Lucy Upton too expected to go to college and take the full classical course offered to men.
With four younger children at home, Lucy stepped into her mother's role, and even after the brothers and sisters were grown, she was her father's comfort and stay until he died in 1879.
But even so Lucy could not give up her intellectual pursuits.
Many years later ( on August 3, 1915 ), Lucy Upton wrote Winslow's daughter soon to be graduated from Smith College: `` While I love botany which, after dabbling in for years, I studied according to the methods of that day exactly forty years ago in a summer school, it must be fascinating to take up zoology in the way you are doing.
Also Lucy and Winslow had a private contest to see which one could make the most words from the letters in `` importunately ''.
And it was Lucy Upton who first started the idea of a regular course in Music at Spelman College.
After her father's death, Lucy and her youngest sister lived for a few years with Winslow in Washington, D.C..
Lucy was a lively part of the household.
There is reason to suppose that Lucy would have made a record as publicly distinguished as her brother had it not been that her mother's death occurred just as she was about to enter college.
While in Washington, D.C., Lucy Upton held positions in the U.S. Census Office, and in the Pension Bureau.
three sisters, Mrs. Eugene Horstman, Los Angeles, Mrs. Lucy Brett Andrew, New York City, and Mrs. Beatrice Kiefferm, New York City, and five grandchildren.
She's a year older than I am, Lucy told herself.
`` Come, come '', Jim said, jollying Lucy a little.
Lucy listened.
Lucy suspected that Myra would never have come home if Gregg, Myra's husband, hadn't gone out to fetch her.
Lucy had an idea that Myra loved it.
It seemed to Lucy that all their married life, she and Jim had been doing nothing but rescue his sister from the constant crises that were her way of life.
whenever Lucy saw her, she tried, without noise or fuss, to give her the warmth she had never had from Myra.
Lucy knew her too well to find it impossible.
`` Don't yell at Susan '', Lucy said.
Lucy was sick of it.
His voice had sharp edges, as though he knew very well Lucy and he were not friends at the moment.
`` Now, now '', Lucy said, approaching Susan with a handkerchief, mopping skillfully.

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