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Tate and word
Just as Hart Crane had little influence on anyone except very reactionary writers -- like Allen Tate, for instance, to whom Valery was the last word in modern poetry and the felicities of an Apollinaire, let alone a Paul Eluard were nonsense -- so Dylan Thomas's influence has been slight indeed.
As a child, Tate suffered from an obsessive-compulsive disorder which centred on word association.
* Paul and Sam are a Thames Estuary / Essex couple played by Tate and former EastEnders actor Lee Ross, Sam comes home from work with ' amazing ' tales of her mundane life at work and Paul hangs on every word getting as excited as she does over the trivial things that they blow out of all proportion. Their catchphrases included ' What am I like, What are you like ' and ' I dunno '.

Tate and for
He looked at her out of himself, she thought, as he did only for an instant at a time, the look which always surprised her even now when his uncombable hair was yellowing a little and his breath came hard through his nicotine-choked lungs, the look of the gaunt youth she had suddenly found herself staring at in the Tate Gallery on a Thursday once.
* 1971 – Charles Manson is sentenced to death for conspiracy to commit the Tate / LaBianca murders.
* J. Tate London, The " 1991 Amendments " to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act: Protection for Native Lands ?, 8 Stan.
It was written to a libretto furnished by Nahum Tate, and performed in 1689 in cooperation with Josias Priest, a dancing master and the choreographer for the Dorset Garden Theatre.
In 2009, he compiled a podcast for Tate Britain to accompany their Altermodern exhibition, and opened a new AV night called MMMTV in Camden.
* Chris Tate ( friend of Joe Wilson and stand-in for Liam Howe on synthesiser during Bloodsport )
The history of the site as well as information about the conversion was the basis for a 2008 documentary Architects Herzog and de Meuron: Alchemy of Building & Tate Modern.
* July 10 – Doris Tate, American campaigner for the rights of crime victims ( b. 1924 )
As an adult Sharon Tate commented that people often misinterpreted her shyness for aloofness until they knew her better.
After a few months, Doris Tate, who feared for her daughter's safety, suffered a nervous breakdown and Sharon was persuaded to return to Italy.
In 1964, Tate made a screen test for Sam Peckinpah opposite Steve McQueen for the film The Cincinnati Kid.
She continued to gain experience with minor television appearances, and after she auditioned unsuccessfully for the role of Liesl in the film version of The Sound of Music, Ransohoff gave Tate walk-on roles in two motion pictures in which he was producer: The Americanization of Emily and The Sandpiper.
Tate and Sebring traveled to London to prepare for filming, where she met the Alexandrian Wiccan High Priest and High Priestess Alex and Maxine Sanders.
Tate played the part of Malibu, and was allegedly the inspiration for the popular " Malibu Barbie " doll.
Tate reportedly provided ideas for some of the key scenes, including the scene in which the protagonist, Rosemary, is impregnated.
A frequent visitor to the set, she was photographed there by Esquire magazine and the resulting photographs generated considerable publicity for both Tate and the film.
Tate was optimistic: Eye of the Devil and The Fearless Vampire Killers were each due for release, and she had been signed to play a major role in the film version of Valley of the Dolls.
In interviews during production, Tate expressed an affinity for her character, Jennifer North, an aspiring actress admired only for her body.
In the summer of 1968, Tate began her next film, The Wrecking Crew ( 1969 ), a comedy in which she played Freya Carlson, an accident-prone spy, who was also a romantic interest for star Dean Martin, playing Matt Helm.
These results indicated that her career was beginning to accelerate and for her next film, Tate negotiated a fee of $ 150, 000.
Encouraged by positive reviews of her comedic performances, Tate chose the comedy The Thirteen Chairs as her next project, as she later explained, largely for the opportunity to co-star with Orson Welles.
Polanski was due to return on August 12 in time for the birth, and he asked Frykowski and Folger to stay in the house with Tate until then.

Tate and States
Sharon Tate was born in Dallas, Texas, the eldest of three daughters, to Colonel Paul James Tate ( 1922 – 2005 ), a United States Army officer, and his wife, Doris Gwendolyn ( née Willett ; January 16, 1924 – July 10, 1992 ).
Tate returned to the United States alone, saying she wanted to further her studies, but tried to find film work.
Tate returned to the United States to film Don't Make Waves with Tony Curtis, leaving Polanski in London.
Before the film's release, a major publicity campaign resulted in photographs and life-sized cardboard figures of Sharon Tate being displayed in cinema foyers throughout the United States ; a concurrent advertising campaign by Coppertone featured Tate.
She contributed to the 1993 foundation of the Doris Tate Crime Victims Bureau, a non-profit organization which aims to influence crime legislation throughout the United States and to give greater rights and protection to victims of violent crime.
The Memphis Metropolitan Statistical Area ( MSA ), the 42nd largest in the United States, has a 2010 population of 1, 316, 100 and includes the Tennessee counties of Shelby, Tipton, and Fayette, as well as the Mississippi counties of DeSoto, Marshall, Tate, and Tunica, and Crittenden County, Arkansas.
* Tate, Georgia, a town in the United States
* Tate County, Mississippi, a county in the United States
* Louisiana Chief Justice Albert Tate, Jr., who later served on the United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, based in New Orleans.
* Merze Tate, professor, scholar and expert on United States diplomacy, was born in rural Blanchard.
Tate ( 2011 ) undertakes a literary criticism of Taylor's book New Views of the Constitution of the United States, arguing it is structured as a forensic historiography modeled on the techniques of 18th-century whig lawyers.
He has exhibited widely in Europe and the United States, and is represented in the permanent collections of a number of museums and public galleries, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Guggenheim Museum in New York City, the National Gallery of Art and the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D. C., The Art Institute of Chicago, the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, the National Gallery of Australia, the Tate Gallery, London, the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin, and many other private and public collections worldwide.
Tate ( 2011 ) undertakes a literary criticism of a major book by John Taylor of Caroline, New Views of the Constitution of the United States.
After Treen's defeat for governor, President Reagan nominated him on July 22, 1987 for a seat on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in New Orleans created by the death of veteran Judge Albert Tate, Jr.
After a period spent working in galleries in the United States, he returned to England and with the help of his father ( a wealthy financier who had also been a trustee of the Tate Gallery ) in 1962 he established the Robert Fraser Gallery in Duke St, Grosvenor Square, London.
One of the sketches is currently displayed at the Tate Gallery, London, while the painting now hangs in the Yale Center for British Art at New Haven, United States.
The States of Jersey failed in an attempt to purchase it ( it is now in the Tate Britain ), but the image is reproduced on the reverse of a Jersey £ 10 note.
*# Semifinals — Lost to Frank Tate ( United States ), walk-over
MGM mounted an extensive publicity campaign upon its release that was based largely on Tate and her character, Malibu, and life-sized cardboard cutouts of Tate wearing a bikini were placed in cinema foyers throughout the United States.
Herrmann remarried, to Ruth Tate, and served in the United States Coast Guard at New Orleans in World War II.

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