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Her and break
Her line-by-line translations, complete with brackets where the ancient papyrus sources break off, are meant to capture both the original's lyricism and its present fragmentary nature.
Her first big break was a lead role in the radio comedy Take It From Here, and television followed, including appearances with Tony Hancock throughout his television career.
Her big break came in 1953 when she replaced the emigrating Joy Nichols on the hit Muir and Norden radio comedy Take It From Here, co-starring Jimmy Edwards and Dick Bentley.
Her big break came in 1983 when she was cast by Martin Scorsese to star as stalker and kidnapper Masha in the film The King of Comedy for which she won the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress.
Her big break came in the 1985 film The Goonies, in which she played cheerleader-turned-adventurer Andrea " Andy " Carmichael.
Her drab voice quavers with a brittle strength that can command a student but break before a parent's will.
Her career break came with the early 1960s sitcom Marriage Lines starring opposite Richard Briers.
Her big break came in the 1961 BBC serial A for Andromeda.
Her break into big-time show business came in February 1955, when she turned down $ 30 to appear on a Swainsboro radio station in order to see Red Foley and a touring promotional unit of his ABC-TV program Ozark Jubilee in Augusta.
Her big break came the following year, when she received her first starring role in Public Wedding.
Her big break came in 1970, when she was in her mid-thirties.
Her catchphrases included " This won't break you ", " This is perfectly economical ", and " This won't stretch your purse ".
Her first big break in films was a small speaking role in the 1994 Woody Allen film Bullets Over Broadway.
Her big star break came in 1987, when she was cast as Marcy Rhoades ( later Marcy D ' Arcy ) on the hit Fox TV sitcom Married ... with Children.
Her character leads a coven of necromancer witches who threaten the status quo in Bon Temps, erasing most of Eric Northman's memories and leaving him almost helpless when he tries to kill her and break up their coven.
Her break came with a bit part in 1986's Pretty in Pink which led to more substantial roles in Sweet Revenge with Nancy Allen and Cocktail, with Tom Cruise and Elisabeth Shue.
Her big break came in 1975 at an amateur night at the comedy club Catch a Rising Star in New York.
Her stories often include themes where an alien or supernatural force is either trying to break into the world of the characters, or else trying to drag them into their own unnatural realms.
Her big break came in 1983 when she starred opposite Richard Chamberlain as the lead role portraying Meggie Cleary in the television mini-series The Thorn Birds, for which she was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film.
Her first big break was Seema, for which she won her first Filmfare Best Actress Award.
Her character steals Adam away from Eva, and begins dating him after he and Eva break up.
Her first significant break was being selected as an artist for the Young Concert Artists Trust in 1985.
Her next major break was a record deal with Collins Classics, with whom she made fifteen recordings.
Impressed with the script, Home asked Davies to write the second episode, and when Tony Robinson decided to take a break from producing Maid Marian and Her Merry Men, a slot opened up in the Children's BBC schedules for late 1991 and Home decided to use Dark Season to fill it, commissioning Davies to write the remaining episodes of the serial.

Her and came
Her scream split up the silence of the car, accompanied by the rattling of the freight, and then Cappy came off the floor, his legs driving him hard.
Her mother, now dead, was my good friend and when she came to tell us about her plans and to show off her ring I had a sobering wish to say something meaningful to her, something her mother would wish said.
Her father, James Upton, was the Upton mentioned by Hawthorne in the famous introduction to the Scarlet Letter as one of those who came into the old custom house to do business with him as the surveyor of the port.
Her mother was a Greer and her father's family came from the Orkney Isles.
Her days as an art student at the University of Budapest came to a sudden end during the Hungarian uprisings in 1957 and she and her husband Stephen fled to Vienna.
Her voice came shrill.
Her first real success came in 1975 with the release of her album Never Can Say Goodbye, which established her as a disco artist.
" Her mother, who feared the inconvenience of a brat, came to my aid, and she allowed herself to be overcome " ( Confessions ).
Her tragic early death from measles at the age of 32 came as a terrible blow to Severn and adversely affected his own health.
Her wish, however, never came true and she was just given the chance of being present at the exhumation ceremony in Paris.
Her first appearance with Ronald Reagan came in one of the latter, Ford Theatre, during a 1953 episode titled " First Born ".
Her first film role came in 1985's Heaven Help Us.
Her primary fame came as a member of the British / American rock band Fleetwood Mac, though she has also released three solo albums.
Her husband also had a mistress, Edla, who came from the same area in Europe as herself, and who was possibly taken to Sweden at the same time.
Her breakthrough film role came in 1983, when she played Lana in Risky Business.
Her sisters, the countess of Tripoli and abbess of Bethany, came to nurse her before she died on 11 September 1161.
Her parents came from prominent families.
Her big-screen directorial debut came with the film Then She Found Me, in which she also starred, with Colin Firth and Matthew Broderick.
Her sister, Maria Josepha, came down with it after visiting the improperly sealed tomb of her sister-in-law ( of the same name ), and died quickly afterwards.
Her parents were born in Shanghai, China, and came to the United States in the mid-1940s.
Her birth came as a blow to her father, King Frederick II of Denmark, who was desperately hoping for a son.
Her final stage performance came in 1966 when she played Mrs Malaprop in The Rivals at the Haymarket Theatre, alongside Sir Ralph Richardson.
Her reputation in 19th century Germany was highly negative, but in the 20th century Germans came to admire her pluck and liberalism in defiance of Bavarian conservatism.
Her father, Robert Goulden, came from a modest Manchester merchant family with its own background of political activity.
Her next major award came in 1993 when she was received the Canadian Governor General's Award for Fiction in French for Cantique des Plaines ( 1993 ).

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