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mainstay and stage
Failing to make a commercial success on the stage, however, and finding that the stresses of theatrical work were difficult to sustain, he returned to the writing of long, serialised novels, which again became the mainstay of his income.
The drug is also the mainstay of treatment for stage I infection with Trypanosoma brucei gambiense ( West African Trypanosomiasis ).
As a stage actor he was a mainstay of Brian Rix's Whitehall farces company.
For the following 13 years, Camacho was a defensive mainstay for the national side, being selected – and always as first-choice – for the 1982 and 1986 FIFA World Cups, as well as Euro 1984 and 1988 ; after the 0 – 2 group stage loss against West Germany in the latter competition, he retired from the international scene, aged 33.
She has been a mainstay on the stage at the Shaw and Stratford Shakespeare Festival.

mainstay and 1950s
From the late 1950s until the early 1970s, Charlton remained a mainstay of the Second Division before relegation to the Third Division in 1972 caused the team's support to drop, and even a promotion in 1975 back to the second division did little to re-invigorate the team's support and finances.
On French-language television in Quebec the téléroman has been a popular mainstay of network programming since the 1950s.
A mainstay of RCA's catalog through the 1950s, many of the NBC Symphony's recordings were later reissued on the lower priced RCA Victrola label, where they remained until the demise of the LP.
Grape production was begun again and was a booming industry between 1910 and 1920, fishing and vegetable production were the town ’ s economic mainstay until the vegetable sheds were closed in the 1950s.
Avro Shackleton, the mainstay of Coastal Command in the 1950s.
Ackerman was still the mainstay of the club in the first part of the 1950s, but mariage and work needs led to his attending less frequently.
Live theatre and variety shows remained the mainstay of Matthews ' work through the 1950s and 1960s, with successful tours of Australia and South Africa interspersed with periods of less glamorous but welcome work in British provincial theatre and pantomimes.
Sometimes, Mercury was presented as a performance division of more mainstay Ford products, while at other times, it was meant to match sales with Detroit crosstown rivals Buick, Oldsmobile and Chrysler during the 1950s through 1980s.
During the 1950s a mainstay of business for the airport was the Cross channel car ferry service operated by Silver City Airways using Bristol Freighters and Superfreighters.
Smith and Prima's act was a mainstay of the Las Vegas lounge scene for much of the 1950s.
During the 1940s Ásmundur's work moved even farther away from the human and animal form that had been his mainstay until then and by the 1950s he was producing work that was almost entirely abstract.
Trabert, along with Vic Seixas, was an American Davis Cup team mainstay during the early 1950s, during which time the Americans reached the finals 5 times, winning the cup in 1954.
He became a mainstay behind the plate for the Go-Go White Sox teams of the 1950s and early 1960s, which included future Hall of Fame members Nellie Fox, Luis Aparicio, George Kell, Hoyt Wilhelm and Early Wynn.
The Boeing B-47 Stratojet was the first swept-winged jet bomber built in quantity for any air force, and was the mainstay of the medium-bombing strength of the Strategic Air Command all throughout the 1950s.
Fishing vessels and small cargo boats were the mainstay of the shipyard until the 1950s, when the yard all but ceased to exist as a result of foreign competition.
Macrae became a mainstay of television Hogmanay celebrations in the 1950s and 1960s with a rendition of his song ( in Scots ), " The Wee Cock Sparra ".
The mainstay continued to be the 1950s song and dance routines.
Welk's program, a mainstay of television since the early 1950s, immediately moved to first-run syndication, where it enjoyed an additional 11 years before Welk's retirement in 1982.
His left arm bowling was a mainstay of the Australian pace attack of the 1950s and early 1960s, and from the late 1950s widely regarded as one of the finest pace bowlers in the world, with a classical bowling action which imparted late swing.

mainstay and she
Sayre's antics were shocking to those around her, and she became — along with her childhood friend and future Hollywood starlet Tallulah Bankhead — a mainstay of Montgomery gossip.
Scarlett, heartbroken and aggravated that Rhett has left her completely, sets out for Tara and is saddened when she learns that Mammy, her mainstay since birth, is dying.
Since " Could It Be Magic " hit the # 1 slot on the British NRG chart, she has been a mainstay on the Hi-NRG Chart as well as the US Hot Dance Music / Club Play chart.
The book remained in print and subsequent cheaper printings assisted it in selling well in the decades following Davis's death, thus providing some income for his widow in her final years, though her employment as an editorial writer and a modest income from rental of remaining family properties provided the mainstay of any financial comfort she enjoyed.
A course she developed on the " Interrelation of the Arts " became a mainstay of the program and a much beloved and influential course among her students.

mainstay and organized
* Cafesjian's Carousel was a mainstay at the Minnesota State Fair from 1914 to 1988 when it was saved from the auction block by a non-profit group organized to save the landmark.
SSD organized their own shows, not playing at typical venues, such as punk rock mainstay The Rat, because those clubs served alcohol.

mainstay and her
Misty Rowe, a mainstay member of the " Gossip Girls ", would enhance the comedy of the sketch by singing her part of the verse out of tune ( as a young child would do ).
Depictions of family life alternated, and intertwined, with the shadowy crime drama that was always the strip's mainstay, such as the kidnapping of Bonnie Braids by fugitive Crewy Lou, or Junior's girlfriend, Model, being accidentally shot and killed by her brother, a wanted murderer of a police officer.
After successfully defending her Australian Open crown in 2002, Capriati became a top ten mainstay until injuries derailed her career in 2004.
Susan Young, who had become a mainstay of the series from series 4 and onwards, had her last appearance in the first episode of series 8.
Then 70 years old, Prinz, a soap opera mainstay, made her feature film debut.
Rusby lives with her husband Damien O ' Kane and her dog Doris, herself a mainstay feature of Rusby's banter during gigs and appearing on her merchandise.
She began her acting career in radio drama in 1935, while still in her 20s, and became a mainstay of soap operas during this period, appearing on Arnold Grimm's Daughter ( as the titular daughter Constance in 1938 ), Road of Life ( as Nurse Helen Gowan ), and the radio version of The Guiding Light, as Charlotte Wilson in the mid-1940s.
Valerie French started in wrestling as the valet for her real life cousin Jimmy Garvin in Championship Wrestling from Florida and as a mainstay World Class Championship Wrestling in 1983.
She left when it was clear that the Met director Rudolf Bing did not appreciate her, and went on to become a mainstay of the world's other great opera houses, especially in Germany, in Wagner and Strauss but also several Verdi and other roles.

mainstay and own
After leaving Davis, Carter was for several years a mainstay of CTI Records, making albums under his own name and also appearing on many of the label's records with a diverse range of other musicians.
At Chess Records in the spring of 1955, Bo Diddley's debut record " Bo Diddley "/" I'm A Man " climbed to # 2 on the R & B charts and popularized Bo Diddley's own original rhythm and blues clave-based vamp that would become a mainstay in rock and roll.
Rambler became a marque in its own right and the mainstay of the company.
The Peronists ' own political mainstay ( the labor movement ) was also subject to the " subversive " labels and consequent reprisals.
This left Yun on his own to become a lower card wrestler and Velocity mainstay, competing primarily in the cruiserweight division until he was released on July 5, 2005.
Since the Breton folk music revival, Scottish bagpipes and Irish harps have been added to the Breton repertoire, though Brittany retains its own unbroken piping traditions as well as mainstay instruments such as the bombard.
Railroad contracts were subsequently a mainstay of Pinkerton's until railroad companies gradually developed their own police departments in the years following the Civil War.
They were a mainstay on the show until they left to start a career of their own in 1968.
One series of promos had Dick Van Dyke ( whose own ' 60s sitcom was a mainstay of the channel in the ' 90s ) depicted as " Chairman of Nick at Nite " ( ironically, this idea was later reused as one of Nick at Nite's sister networks, TeenNick, would use actor and television personality Nick Cannon depicted as the " Chairman of TeenNick " in a series of promos that began airing in 2009 ).
ATF was released from court supervision in 1936 and in 1938 a sales study was made making the following observations: the Kelly press was obsolete, body type was now the exclusive province of line-casters and display type would have to be the mainstay of type production, almost half of what ATF was selling was other manufacturers products that could easily be made in their own facilities, the acquisition of or merger with another firm in the letterpress industry would be desirable, as offset was a rising technology ATF needed to invest in that business.
The serio-comic style became a rhetorical mainstay of the Cynics, and the Romans gave it its own genre in the form of satire, contributed to most notably by the poets Horace and Juvenal.
This horrified Oxbridge, where college tutors had little research capacity of their own and saw the undergraduate as an embryonic future gentleman, liberal connoisseur, widely-read, and mainstay of country and empire in politics, commerce, army, land or church, not an apprentice to dusty, centuries-old archives, wherein no more than 1 in 100 could find even an innocuous career.

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