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Hamish and Henderson
* Hamish Henderson, Scots poet
The Allied soldiers in Italy were so incensed that Major Hamish Henderson of the 51st Highland Division composed a bitingly sarcastic song to the tune of the haunting German song " Lili Marleen " ( popularised in English by Marlene Dietrich ) called " The Ballad Of The D-Day Dodgers ".
Scottish music: The Scottish folk revival begin in 1951 when Hamish Henderson created the People's Festival.
For the Scottish, English, and Irish volumes, he worked with the BBC and folklorists Peter Douglas Kennedy, Scots poet Hamish Henderson, and with the Irish folklorist Séamus Ennis, recording among others, Margaret Barry and the songs in Irish of Elizabeth Cronin ; Scots ballad singer Jeannie Robertson ; and Harry Cox of Norfolk, England, and interviewing some of these performers at length about their lives.
* " The 51st ( Highland ) Division's Farewell to Sicily ", a folk song written by Hamish Henderson, a former officer who served in the 51st Division during the Sicilian campaign.
Performers at the event included the poets Christopher Logue, Hamish Henderson, Tony Harrison, Eric Mottram, Jeff Nuttall, Barry MacSweeney, Andrew Wylie, Victor Bockris, Jon Silkin and singers Paul Jones, Alan Hull and Alex Glasgow.
Hamish Scott Henderson, ( 11 November 1919 – 8 March 2002 ; Scottish Gaelic: Seamas MacEanraig ( Seamas Mòr )) was a Scottish poet, songwriter, soldier and intellectual.
nl: Hamish Henderson
* Tape recordings collected in the Scottish Highlands by Hamish Henderson, John Lorne Campbell and others, of sung performances as well as prose tales.
* Hamish Henderson
Although Hamish Henderson did not write the song, he did collect different versions of it and it is attributed to him in the sleeve notes of the Ian Campbell Folk Group's " Contemporary Campbells ".
Others sometimes mentioned in this connection include Ruthven Todd, Tom Scott, Hamish Henderson, Edwin Morgan, Burns Singer, and William Montgomerie.
Hamish Henderson was born in Blairgowrie and tried to track down the best singers there.
In 1958 Hamish Henderson recorded her in Edinburgh.
Hamish Henderson was working in the School of Scottish Studies and Redpath took a keen interest in the archive of tapes and discs of music and songs.
Another influence was family friend Hamish Henderson of the University of Edinburgh ’ s School of Scottish Studies.
The expression " We're a ' the bairns o ' Adam ", conveys exactly the same meaning, see Freedom Come-All-Ye a song written by Hamish Henderson.

Hamish and was
In 2004 there was a limited-run revival at the Royal National Theatre starring Desmond Barrit as Pseudolus, Philip Quast as Miles Gloriosus, Hamish McColl as Hysterium and Isla Blair as Domina ( who had previously played Philia in the 1963 production ).
The first continuous round of the Munros was completed by Hamish Brown in 1974, whilst the current holder of the record for the fastest continuous round is Stephen Pyke who completed his 2010 round in just under 40 days.
The chairman of the British Medical Association, Hamish Meldrum, said he was dismayed by the ‘ jaw-droppingly untruthful attacks ’ made by American critics.
Her novel A Vicious Circle was originally contracted to be published by Hamish Hamilton, but was cancelled when its proof copy received a libel threat from David Sexton, a literary critic and former boyfriend of Craig's at Cambridge, fifteen years previously.
It has received much publicity over the past couple years when it was featured in Playboy's 50th Year Anniversary Special Edition issue, Discovery Channel, the movie " Always ", Hamish and Andy ( Australia ), ESPN, KHQ's " The Derby ", and also in Stranger Than Fiction: True Stories by Chuck Palahniuk.
At the time MacColl, who was twenty years older than Peggy, was still married to his second wife, the dancer Jean Newlove ( b. 1923 ), the mother of two of his children, Hamish ( b. 1950 ) and Kirsty ( 1959 – 2000 ).
The band's manager asked for the song to be taken down from the blog it was found on, and drummer Hamish Rosser issued a statement on the band's fan club forum asking fans not to post or distribute the song on the internet.
It was published in 1952 by HarperCollins with Hamish Hamilton Ltd. and has been reprinted several times.
On that same trip was also the young Hamish Bowles, now International Editor at Large for Vogue magazine.
The film was not shown in the United Kingdom after director Larry Clark assaulted Hamish McAlpine, the head of the UK distributor for the film, Metro Tartan.
Between songs, conductor Hamish McKeich was careful not to trip over his players, squeezed on to two-thirds of the stage ; Salmonella Dub looked oddly well-behaved and vulnerable standing next to them.
The village is a popular tourist resort, especially because the TV series Hamish Macbeth, starring Robert Carlyle, was filmed there, substituting for the fictional Lochdubh.
* Hamish Watt, a Scottish Member of Parliament from 1974 to 1979, has been quoted as saying that MacRae was assassinated for his too-extensive study of NATO activities in Scotland.
At the end of the hiatus Calvin Robertshaw left the band to become their tour manager and was replaced by Hamish Glencross.
The spin-off show was named " You'll have had your tea " in reference to the formulaic manner in which every Hamish and Dougal sketch began on I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue.
The official title, read out at the beginning of each show, was You'll Have Had Your Tea: The Doings of Hamish and Dougal.
A book of the complete scripts from all three series plus the Hogmanay and Burns Night specials was published in hardback by Preface Publishing on 28 August 2008 entitled The Doings of Hamish and Dougal: You'll Have Had Your Tea ?.
The Hatfield Drink is a Hatfield Tickler ( which was formerly known as the Hamish Tickler, named after Hamish Leese, who created it ).
He continued appearing in television series well into the 1990s, guest starring in an episode of Hamish Macbeth in a part that was written especially for him ; the series was produced by his daughter Deidre.
This was particularly true in later years when Graeme Garden and Barry Cryer invented the characters of Hamish and Dougal, two rural Scotsmen who featured regularly in the sketches, and later were given their own series, You'll Have Had Your Tea.

Hamish and creating
Blake says that the experience of creating Real Stories was much more enjoyable than The Hamish and Andy Show because they had greater control over the series.

Hamish and first
Bratley first became interested in self-reproducing programs after seeing the first known such program written in Atlas Autocode at Edinburgh in the 1960s by the University of Edinburgh lecturer and researcher Hamish Dewar.
Hamish Brown did the first continuous self-propelled round of the Munros ( except for the Skye and Mull ferries ) between 4 April and 24 July 1974 walking, of which were on a bicycle, with of ascent.
* Christmas Special ( 1995 )-25 December ( Hamish and Dougal make their first appearance.
The Snowman is a children's book without words by English author Raymond Briggs, first published in 1978 by Hamish Hamilton in the U. K., and published by Random House in the U. S. that November.
Hamish Scott has described Rochford as ‘ the ablest man to control foreign policy in the first decade of peace 1763, a statesman of intelligence, perception and considerable application ’.
In 2001, Clark gave birth to her first child, Hamish Marissen-Clark, with then husband Mark Marissen.
A prototype Hamish & Dougal first appeared in a 1979 Christmas Special of ' Clue ', doing ' Wee Freak Ings Of Orient Are ', with John Junkin standing in for Barry Cryer.
He climbed extensively in Scotland, ( making the first winter traverse of the Cuillin ridge with Hamish MacInnes, David Crabbe and Brian Robertson in 1965 ), as well as achieving notable ascents in the Alps and the Karakoram including the first ascent of the Muztagh Tower ( 7273m ) with John Hartog, Joe Brown and Ian McNaught-Davis in 1956 and Rakaposhi ( 7788m ) in 1958 with Mike Banks.
It was first published in 2004 by Hamish Hamilton ; subsequent publications have been by Penguin Books.
In addition to Honor Harrington, the story includes the first appearances of Alistair McKeon, Hamish Alexander, Lord Pavel Young, Andreas Venizelos, Rafael Cardones, Paul Tankersley, Mercedes Brigham and Allen Summervale.
Hamish and James became the second pair of twins ( after Mark and Steve Waugh ) to play Test cricket, and are the first identical pair.
Australian comedy duo Hamish and Andy co-hosted a world first simulcast with O ' Connell on Friday 18th May 2012.
In season two, Dawn Steele, Alexander Morton and Hamish Clark were bumped up to star status having been supporting regulars in the first season.
* Mediterranean Front ( Hamish Hamilton, 1941 ; McGraw, 1942 ) A journal of his experiences during the first year of WW II while General Wavell was in command, mostly in the Western Desert of North Africa.
Hamish is very attached to his pets, first his dog Towser, then in later books his dog Lugs ( Scots for " ears ") and a " domesticated " wildcat named Sonsie ( Scots for " cheeky ").
In the New Zealand innings, he claimed his first senior international wicket, bowling Hamish Marshall.

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