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Page "The Alan Parsons Project" ¶ 2
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Englishman and Alan
* A Question of Attribution ( dramatization of Blunt's term as Keeper of the Queen's Pictures ), An Englishman Abroad ( dramatization of Burgess in Russia ), and The Old Country ( about a fictional Philby-esque spy in exile ), all by Alan Bennett.
* An Englishman Abroad, a 1983 television play by Alan Bennett starring Alan Bates as Guy Burgess, subsequently adapted for the stage by Bennett as the first act of Single Spies.
This event is portrayed in Alan Bennett's play An Englishman Abroad.
An Englishman Abroad is a 1983 BBC television drama film, based on the true story of a chance meeting of an actress, Coral Browne, with Guy Burgess ( Alan Bates ), a member of the Cambridge spy ring who worked for the Soviet Union whilst with MI6.
Alan Bennett gives the date of Coral Browne's meeting with Burgess as 1958 in the Introduction to his Single Spies, which contains the text of An Englishman Abroad in the stage play version and the text of A Question of Attribution about Anthony Blunt.
This meeting became the basis of Alan Bennett's script for the television movie An Englishman Abroad ( 1983 ) in which Browne played herself, apparently including some of her conversations with Burgess.
Bennett's An Englishman Abroad told the remarkable true story of the chance meeting between actress Coral Browne ( playing herself ) and spy Guy Burgess ( Alan Bates ) in Moscow in 1958, while A Question of Attribution ( finished shortly before Lloyd's death ) was a logical sequel, showing the radically different fate of Keeper of the Queen's Pictures and fellow traitor Anthony Blunt.

Englishman and met
When he played the Allegro of an unpublished piano concerto of his own in June 1852, Henry Chorley remarked, " We have met with no Englishman for whom we have so long been waiting than Mr. Bache.
The British player met Frenchman André Gobert in the final, but Gobert was victorious over the Englishman in straight sets.
" The organiser of the strike, Harry Pearman, headed a delegation to meet Powell and said after: " I have just met Enoch Powell and it made me feel proud to be an Englishman.
She met an Englishman, Roy Sansom, in Boulogne, and married him in 1931, moving with him to England.
Still, during the marriage he met and established a romantic relationship with an Englishman, Edward Saint-Barbe, who remained his life companion.
Born in Macclesfield, Cheshire, England, Far was the daughter of Englishman Edward Eaton, a merchant who met her Chinese mother while on a business trip to Shanghai, China.
By the spring of 1881, prematurely aged and nearly blind, Mariette arranged for the appointment of the Frenchman Gaston Maspero ( a linguist rather than an archaeologist, who he had met at the Exposition in 1867 ), to ensure that France retained its supremacy in Egyptology, rather than an Englishman.
During her time there she also met William Ella Rose, a Christian jeweler and silversmith, an Englishman and an " Owenite ".
In London she met her first husband, Englishman Horace Eliashcheff ; their brief marriage however ended in a divorce.
As Middleton, an Englishman present when Leborgne met the nabab, explained to him afterward, this invitation was in fact an order ; if he refused he would have been thrown in prison.
Gene Pierson first met Englishman Roy Nicolson in 1982, shortly after he had released novelty song I Eat Cannibals which was a novelty hit across Australia.
There, he met up with publisher Joe Weider, who began to feature the Englishman prominently in his muscle magazines.

Englishman and Scotsman
The Russell Gaelic Union was formed by an Englishman a Scotsman and an Irishman: Willie King, Alex McDowell and Willie Byrne respectively, I
* An Englishman, an Irishman and a Scotsman
Twelve British drivers have won the British Grand Prix, with Englishman Stirling Moss being the first and Scotsman Jim Clark winning 5 times, the most of any driver other than French driver Alain Prost, who also won the British Grand Prix 5 times ( all of them at Silverstone ).
The An Englishman, an Irishman and a Scotsman joke format is one common to many cultures, and is often used in English, including having the nationalities switched around to take advantage of other stereotypes.
* An Englishman, an Irishman and a Scotsman
Although commonly attributed to Englishman David Coleman, this was actually said by Scotsman Sam Leitch.
Headmasters after him included Brian Head ( 1989 – 90 ), a Yorkshireman named David Edward Hanson ( 1990 ), a Scotsman named Mr. Caithness ( 1990 – 2000 ) and then an Englishman by the name of Neil Wainwright Gardner.
* An Englishman, an Irishman and a Scotsman walk into a bar.
In terms of personality, for example, Hannay seems to be a stereotypical " strong, silent " Briton, combining the stereotype of the dour Scotsman with the " stiff upper lip " of an Englishman, along with a tough physique and a shrewd, although not brilliant, brain.
Not until 1983, when a United side captained by Bryan Robson lifted the FA Cup for the fifth time, did another Englishman captain the club to FA Cup glory, as United's captains of their second and third triumphs were both Irish and their fourth FA Cup winning side was captained by a Scotsman.
Many compare mathematicians to other professions, typically physicists, engineers, or the " soft " sciences in a form similar to an Englishman, an Irishman and a Scotsman.

Englishman and Eric
On the communist role in Spain, Hobsbawm writes simply that " its pros and cons continue to be discussed in the political and historical literature ", and refers to Orwell, not by his literary name, but as " an upper-class Englishman called Eric Blair ".
Eric Curtis, an Englishman and a former faculty member at Earlham College, was brought in to be the headmaster after McFeely, serving from 1967 ( there was an interim head for 1966 – 67 ) until 1979.
The Americans, Paul Theroux, Bill Bryson and William Least Heat-Moon, Welsh author Jan Morris and Englishman Eric Newby are or were widely acclaimed as travel writers although Morris is also a historian and Theroux a novelist.

Englishman and Abbey
It was held partly by Chertsey Abbey ; partly by an Englishman from the abbey ; and partly by Herfrid from the Bishop of Bayeux.
Francis Richard Wegg-Prosser ( 19 June 1824 – 16 August 1911 ), born Francis Richard Haggitt, was a wealthy Englishman who established the Benedictine community which became Belmont Abbey and so played a significant role in the English catholic revival.
In 1585, in league with the Englishman Richard Topcliffe, he attacked and ransacked he Abbey of Our Lady of Aiguebelle, Provence, and attempted to destroy it.

Englishman and Road
There was a young Englishman who had a farm on Hamilton Avenue just above Philadelphia Road which was covered with beautiful roses.
Bar billiards in its current form started in the UK in the 1930s when an Englishman David Gill saw Billard Russe being played in Belgium and persuaded the Jelkes company of Holloway Road in London to make a similar table.
According to the Stilton Cheesemaker's Association, the first Englishman to market blue Stilton cheese was Cooper Thornhill, owner of the Bell Inn on the Great North Road, in the village of Stilton, Huntingdonshire.
In Victoria just a few weeks later, the Victorian College for the Deaf was founded by a deaf Englishman, Frederick J Rose, who had been educated at the Old Kent Road School in London.

Englishman and Studios
Orleans was produced by Englishman Robin Lumley, mixed at Trident Studios in London and featured Lumley's friend, Phil Collins, contributing backing vocals to a track.

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