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William and Goldman
* 1931 – William Goldman, American novelist, playwright, and screenwriter
He was cast as a stable boy turned swashbuckler Westley in Rob Reiner's fantasy-comedy The Princess Bride, based on the novel of the same name by William Goldman.
* Author William Goldman claims in his book The Princess Bride that the story he tells is an abridged version of the Florinese literary masterpiece by the great ( and fictional ) S. Morgenstern.
Screenwriter William Goldman identified Schaffner in 1981 as being one of the three best directors ( then living ) at handling ' scope ' ( a gift for screen epics ) in films.
# REDIRECT William Goldman
Sondheim worked with William Goldman on Singing Out Loud, a movie musical, in 1992.
The Silent Gondoliers ( ISBN 0-345-44263-6 ) is a 1983 novel written by William Goldman, under the pseudonym of " S. Morgenstern ", about why the gondoliers of Venice no longer sing through the tale of the protagonist Luigi.
William Goldman also uses this pseudonym in his better-known novel, The Princess Bride which leads us to believe it is William Goldman's favorite pseudonym.
Category: Novels by William Goldman
* August 12 – William Goldman, American author
His Ph. D. students include Richard Canary, Suyoung Choi, Renaud Dreyer, David Gabai, William Goldman, Benson Farb, Sergio Fenley, Detlef Hardorp, Craig Hodgson, Richard Kenyon, Steven Kerckhoff, Robert Meyerhoff, Yair Minsky, Lee Mosher, Igor Rivin, Nicolau Saldanha, Oded Schramm, Richard Schwartz, Martin Bridgeman, William Floyd and Jeffrey Weeks.
James Goldman and William Goldman are the first pair of siblings to win for separate films.
# REDIRECT William Goldman # Autobiographical fiction
In his 2000 book Which Lie Did I Tell ?, screenwriter William Goldman, commenting on the film, insists that it was Lehman who created North by Northwest and that many of Hitchcock's ideas were not used.
The film received two Academy Award nominations, for Best Original Screenplay ( Walon Green, Roy N. Sickner, Sam Peckinpah ) and Best Original Music Score ( Jerry Fielding ) At the 42nd Academy Awards ceremony, both awards went to crew members of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid ( screen writer William Goldman and composer Burt Bacharach ).
The film's screenwriter, William Goldman, repeated much of this rendition from his earlier account of the same story in his novel Magic.
After being paid $ 400, 000 US plus ten percent of profits for his Ryan's Daughter screenplay, Bolt became for a time the highest-paid screenwriter in Hollywood ( with only William Goldman in serious competition ).
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid is a 1969 American Western film directed by George Roy Hill and written by William Goldman ( who won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for the film ).
The premiere was attended by Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Robert Redford, George Roy Hill, William Goldman, and John Forman, among others.
William Goldman won the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Original Screenplay.
Category: Screenplays by William Goldman
United States President William McKinley was assassinated by Leon Czolgosz, a registered Republican who, after his arrest, claimed he had been influenced by the writings of Emma Goldman and others.

William and flat
* William Tallon, Steward and Page of the Backstairs in the household of Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, typically referred to by newspapers as " Backstairs Billy ", moved from Clarence House in 2002 to a Duchy of Cornwall flat in Kennington.
The flat, lower part of the community was laid out in city-sized lots of 25 ' by 100 ' while the hillsides were plated as sites for larger Victorian " villas " for such individuals as Vice President Garret A. Hobart ( now the location of William Paterson University ) and the Barbour family of linen flax manufacturers.
Housing was in short supply and Helms shared a flat with his OSS superior William J. Casey ( who would later head the CIA under Reagan ).
Based on previous work done by William S. Webb, William R. Perkins claims that atlatl weights, commonly called " bannerstones ," and characterized by a centered hole in a symmetrically shaped carved or ground stone, shaped wide and flat with a drilled hole and thus a little like a large wingnut, are a rather ingenious improvement to the design that created a silencing effect when swung.
' Sir William made it clear that it was in his view not only possible but desirable that graded family allowance schemes, applicable to families in the higher income brackets, be administered concurrently with his flat rate scheme ,' reported the Eugenics Review.
* The tune for the birdie song may have been influenced by the first theme in the third movement of William Alwyn's Concerto Grosso No. 1 in B flat major of 1943.
William Jessop was chief engineer of the latter venture only and the flat alignment of his route proved more long-lasting than the railway.
The Canadian Pacific Railway decided to establish a maintenance stop and a sliding by-pass on the railway on the land purchased from William Lea, which was attractive because it was uniformly flat.
Many works were written for his musical acquaintances, including Hexapoda and a concerto for violinist Louis Kaufman, Tema Sporca con Variazoni for duo-pianists Appleton and Field, Suite for Flute and B flat Clarinet for Frances Blaisdell and Alex Williams, and the Rondo Capriccioso for Georges Barrére ( Bennett's friendship with flutists William Kincaid and John Wummer prompted other chamber works ).
Cargill was founded in 1865 by William W. Cargill when he bought a grain flat house in Conover, Iowa.
His London flat and his gallery were the foci of a " jet-set " salon of top pop stars, artists, writers and other celebrities, including members of The Beatles and The Rolling Stones, photographer Michael Cooper, designer Christopher Gibbs, Marianne Faithfull, Dennis Hopper ( who introduced Fraser to satirist Terry Southern ), William Burroughs and Kenneth Anger.
Working under commercial cover from an unassuming flat in London under the alias persona William Morgan, Melville ran both counterintelligence and foreign intelligence operations, capitalizing on the knowledge and foreign contacts he had accumulated during his years running Special Branch.
Ace suffered traumatic events in her childhood, including a bad relationship with her mother Audrey ( the daughter of merchant seaman Frank William Dudman and his wife Kathleen, who served in the Women's Royal Naval Service during World War II ) and the racist firebombing of her friend Manisha's flat when she was 13.
Back at the flat, William finds his small nephew Rupert, an enchantingly self-possessed boy of six, who has run away from home.
With his Symphony No. 3 in E flat major subtitled " Visions of Albion " Strutt moved into the world of William Blake, and expanded his own symphonic ambitions even further.
Barnum had two of his partners, William Cameron Coup and Dan Costello, come up with a system to load the circus wagons on to railroad flat cars.
Once the family can no longer keep up with him, Peter decides to go off with William Shatner, who has appeared on the Griffin family doorstep after experiencing a flat tire, to a nearby festival.
Important soloistic parts in standard band repertoire for the E clarinet include the second movement of Gustav Holst's First Suite in E-flat for Military Band ( for two E clarinets ), also his piece ' Hammersmith ' ( similarly for two E flat clarinets ), Paul Hindemith's Symphony in B-flat for Band, and Gordon Jacob's William Byrd Suite.

William and manifolds
According to Husserl, this view of logic and mathematics accounted for the objectivity of a series of mathematical developments of his time, such as n-dimensional manifolds ( both Euclidean and non-Euclidean ), Hermann Grassmann's theory of extensions, William Rowan Hamilton's Hamiltonians, Sophus Lie's theory of transformation groups, and Cantor's set theory.
The hierarchy played a crucial role in William Thurston's hyperbolization theorem for Haken manifolds, part of his revolutionary geometrization program for 3-manifolds.
The Ricci flow ( named after Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro ) was introduced by Richard Hamilton in 1981 in order to gain insight into the geometrization conjecture of William Thurston, which concerns the topological classification of three-dimensional smooth manifolds.
Well into the 1970s, symplectic experts were unsure whether any compact non-Kähler symplectic manifolds existed, but since then many examples have been constructed ( the first was due to William Thurston ); in particular, Robert Gompf has shown that every finitely presented group occurs as the fundamental group of some symplectic 4-manifold, in marked contrast with the Kähler case.
Goldman has investigated geometric structures, in various incarnations, on manifolds since his undergraduate thesis, " Affine manifolds and projective geometry on manifolds " ( supervised by William Thurston and Dennis Sullivan ).
* William Goldman, " On the polynomial cohomology of affine manifolds ", Invent.
* William Goldman, " Geometric structures on manifolds and varieties of representations ", Geometry of group representations ( Boulder CO, 1987 ), 169 – 198, Contemp.
* William Goldman and John Millson, " The deformation theory of representations of fundamental groups of Kaehler manifolds ," Publications Mathematiques d ' Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques, 67 ( 1988 ), 43 -- 96.
* William Goldman, Michael Kapovich, and Bernhard Leeb ; " Complex hyperbolic manifolds homotopy equivalent to a Riemann surface ", Comm.
* William Goldman, " Locally homogeneous geometric manifolds ", Proceedings of the 2010 International Congress of Mathematicians, Hyderabad, In-dia ( 2010 ), 717 – 744, Hindustan Book Agency, New Delhi, India

2.035 seconds.