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Anderson and married
In 1871, she married James George Skelton Anderson ( d. 1907 ) of the Orient Steamship Company co-owned by his uncle Arthur Anderson, but she did not give up her medical practice.
Dubbing Editor was John Kelly, Continuity by Sylvia Thamm ( later married and became Sylvia Anderson ).
They later got married in a surprise wedding in July 2006 after it was reported Anderson was pregnant.
Stig Anderson was married to Gudrun Anderson, and had two sons, Anders and Lasse, and a daughter Marie.
" Following Robin's death in 1982, Nicks married Robin's widower Kim Anderson, believing that her friend would want her to care for the baby.
They lived together for fourteen years, despite the fact that Locke remained married ( in name only ) to her gay husband, Gordon Anderson.
Ethel married James DePreist and their son, James Anderson DePreist is a noted conductor.
Anderson married Mary Christine McKee of Bemidji, Minnesota in 1963.
Anderson married singer – songwriter and guitarist Lou Reed in 2008.
Two years later, he married Ellen Anderson, daughter of a Wellington architect.
The year 1997 saw Anderson recording and releasing a Celtic-influenced solo album called The Promise Ring, around the time he married Jane Luttenberger.
Anderson married Jennifer Baker in 1970, and they divorced in 1995.
His mother subsequently married Captain James Anderson, a tea planter, but Redgrave greatly disliked his stepfather.
The next year he married Lucille's cousin, Lucy ( Kathy Lucille ) Anderson.
She married playwright Robert Anderson in 1959.
In 1966 Manley married Barbara Lewars ( died in 1968 ); in 1972 he married Beverley Anderson but the marriage was dissolved in 1990.
Most of his estate went to his adopted daughter, Sarah Ann Anderson, who had married William Blowers Bliss.
By the show's fourth season, Anderson left the show over a contract dispute ( at the same time she was getting married ) and was replaced by another young policewoman, Fran Belding ( Elizabeth Baur ), who filled much the same role for four more years.
Settling at Foulshiels, in August 1799 Park married Allison, daughter of his old master, Thomas Anderson.
He then married Sylvie Anderson in 1992.
While in law school, he met wife, Mary Anderson, whom he married in 1987.

Anderson and Karen
Pocahontas was the setting and filming location of the 1992 film, The Turning, starring Gillian Anderson, Academy Award nominee Tess Harper, Karen Allen, Michael Dolan and Raymond J. Barry.
Michael Landon starred as Charles Ingalls, Karen Grassle played Caroline Ingalls, Melissa Gilbert played Laura Ingalls, Melissa Sue Anderson played Mary Ingalls, and the twins Lindsay and Sidney Greenbush ( credited as Lindsay Sidney Greenbush ) played Carrie Ingalls.
After the departures of early leads such as Franky Doyle, Karen Travers and Lynn Warner, the trio of Bea Smith, Doreen Burns ( née Anderson ) and Lizzie Birdsworth emerged as the front-line prisoners.
Poul Anderson and his wife Karen Anderson dealt with the legend in their The King of Ys tetralogy.
In addition to Gilbert, two other unknown actresses also starred on the show: Melissa Sue Anderson, who appeared as Mary Ingalls, the oldest daughter in the Ingalls family, and Karen Grassle as Charles ' wife, Caroline.
* Karen Anderson and Toby Bluth ( 2003 )
The show's central characters are Charles Ingalls ( Michael Landon ), farmer and patriarch, with his wife, Caroline ( Karen Grassle ), and four daughters, Mary ( Melissa Sue Anderson ), Laura ( Melissa Gilbert ), Carrie ( Lindsay and Sidney Greenbush ) and Grace ( Wendi and Brenda Turnbaugh ), later adding adopted children Albert ( Matthew Laborteaux ), Cassandra ( Missy Francis ) and James ( Jason Bateman ).
During its six season run, many familiar actors guest-starred on the show, along with other lesser-known performers who later achieved stardom, among them: John Charles Daly, Elaine Joyce, Gary Dubin, Herbert Anderson, June Foray, Robert Cummings, Sam Edwards, Jerry Van Dyke, J. Pat O ' Malley, Johnny Whitaker, Jesse White, Al Lewis, Gordon Jump, Bernie Kopell, Len Lesser, Bob Hastings, Don Keefer, Don Porter, Alan Hale Jr., Melody Patterson, Rusty Hamer, Regis Toomey, Heather North, Allan Melvin, Parley Baer, Jack Bannon, Rick Lenz, Karen Valentine among many others.
* Karen Anderson – general assignment reporter
Baise-moi tells the story of Nadine ( played by Karen Lancaume ) and Manu ( Raffaëla Anderson ) who go on a violent spree against a society in which they feel marginalised.
The cast included Eden Espinosa as Brooklyn, Karen Olivo as Faith, Kevin Anderson as Taylor, Ramona Keller as Paradice, and Cleavant Derricks as a street singer who acts as the narrator.
The writing staff has included Karen Kilgariff ( Head Writer ), Karen Anderson, Margaret Smith and DeGeneres.
It is taught by Bill Jeter and Karen Monson, and part time by Aaron Anderson.
Karen Kruse Anderson (; born 1932 ) is the widow and sometime co-author of Poul Anderson, and mother-in-law of writer Greg Bear.
Karen Anderson ( born January 22, 1971 in Kingston ) is a professional female squash player who represented Jamaica during her career.

Anderson and Kruse
These include A. O. Anderson and the connection is described by Woolf ( 2007 ) as " extremely tenuous " although Jennings and Kruse ( 2009 ) have supported the identification.

Anderson and 1953
Anderson and colleagues from St Thomas ' Hospital, London, were the first to mention a case with possible clinical findings of LEMS in 1953, but Lambert, Eaton and Rooke at the Mayo Clinic were the first physicians to substantially describe the clinical and electrophysiological findings of the disease in 1956.
* 1953 – Louie Anderson, American comedian
* 1953 – Michael J. Anderson, American actor
In Hilton's final novel, " Time and Time Again " ( 1953 ), protagonist Charles Anderson bears clear biographical similarities to Hilton himself.
Anderson used the award money to establish a singing competition to help support young singers ; recipients of which include Camilla Williams ( 1943, 1944 ), Nathaniel Dickerson ( 1944 ), Louise Parker ( 1944 ), Rawn Spearman ( 1949 ), Georgia Laster ( 1951 ), Betty Allen ( 1952 ), Shirlee Emmons ( 1953 ), Judith Raskin ( 1952, 1953 ), Miriam Holman ( 1954 ), Shirley Verrett ( 1957 ), and Joyce Mathis ( 1967 ).
Many of his films inspired filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson ( There Will Be Blood ), who gave an introduction on the newly restored DVD of The Earrings of Madame de ( 1953 ).
On stage in the 1953 dramatic reading of Stephen Vincent Benét's John Brown's Body, Massey, in addition to narrating along with Tyrone Power and Judith Anderson, took on both the roles of John Brown and Abe Lincoln in the same work.
In 1953 he also played inspectors in the crime films The Drayton Case and Black 13, the latter directed by Ken Hughes and co-starring Peter Reynolds, Rona Anderson and Patrick Barr ; he again worked with John Harlow in the 1954 film Dangerous Cargo.
* Michael J. Anderson ( born 1953 ), American actor, notable for being a ' little person '
* Boyd Anderson Tackett-U. S. representative from Arkansas's 4th congressional district, 1949 to 1953
Anderson Hospital for Cancer Research of the University of Texas began construction in 1953.
His play John Brown's Body was staged on Broadway in 1953, in a three-person dramatic reading featuring Tyrone Power, Judith Anderson, and Raymond Massey, and directed by Charles Laughton.
Michael J. Anderson ( born October 31, 1953 ) is an American actor known for his roles as the Man from Another Place in David Lynch's television series Twin Peaks, the epilogue and prologue film of the series, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me, and Samson Leonhart on the HBO series Carnivàle.
He turned it down ( the job ultimately went to Richard Burton ) and, on 1 November 1952, left on a ten week national tour with John Brown's Body, a three-person dramatic reading of Stephen Vincent Benét's narrative poem, adapted and directed by Charles Laughton, and featuring Power, Judith Anderson and Raymond Massey ; which culminated in a run of 65 shows between February and April 1953 at the New Century Theater on Broadway.
Louis Perry " Louie " Anderson ( born March 24, 1953 ) is an American stand-up comedian.
Tea and Sympathy is a 1953 stage play in three acts by Robert Anderson.
Before becoming National Security Advisor, Anderson was an official at the National Security Council from 1953 to 1955.
Anderson was also an Associate Justice on the Montana Supreme Court from 1953 – 1956 and Montana Attorney General from 1956 to 1968.
In the 1900s, Jack London ( 1876 – 1916 ), Theodore Dreiser ( 1871 – 1945 ), Sherwood Anderson ( 1876 – 1941 ), Eugene O ' Neill ( 1888 – 1953 ), Clifford Odets ( 1906 – 1963 ), T. S. Eliot ( 1888 – 1965 ), John Dos Passos ( 1896 – 1970 ), Francis Scott Fitzgerald ( 1896 – 1940 ), and Henry Louis Mencken ( 1880 – 1956 ).
* William L. Anderson ( born 1953 ), American economist and writer
George Kirke Spoor ( December 18, 1872 – 24 November 1953 ) was an early film pioneer who, with Broncho Billy Anderson, founded Essanay Studios in Chicago in 1907.
Ian Hugh Myddleton Anderson ( 1953 – 2 February 2011 ) was a leading figure on the British far-right in the 1980s and 1990s.
* Pilgrimage to freedom ( 1953 ; written jointly with Sybil Norton, illustrated by Rus Anderson )

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