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Page "Stanley Holloway" ¶ 13
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Holloway and along
Tufnell Park Road runs along the line of an old Roman road which stretches from the Roman camp beneath Barclays Bank and Batten's Carpets on the Holloway Road, up Dartmouth Hill and over Hampstead Heath.
In 1986 local birdwatcher Lester Holloway set up a campaign to save Scrubs Wood, the area of railway land along the north side of Wormwood Scrubs, from destruction as part of plans by the then British Rail to build cleaning depots to service Channel Tunnel trains.
They then find a mentally challenged man named Kazan, whom Holloway insists they bring along.
Holloway Road is the site of the main campus of the much-renamed London Metropolitan University ( formerly Northern Polytechnic Institute, the Polytechnic — then University — of North London ), and includes the Orion Building, designed by Daniel Libeskind, which can be seen along the central stretch of Holloway Road, and of the headquarters of the National Union of Students and the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.
Holloway had been elected along with Baker in 1986.
Royal Holloway College, a part of the University of London is south of Egham along the A30 road at Englefield Green.
By 1851 the first Crown allotments were being subdivided and sold, along with a private subdivision developed by T. M. Holloway, known as Little Eltham.
St George's intends to keep working with Royal Holloway in the field of health and social care along with its well-established Joint Faculty with Kingston University.
The coming of Rolls-Royce in the 1910s brought further expansion, with even bigger houses up Hazlewood Road, and council-provided housing along Holloway Road.
The station is a short walk along Holloway Road from on the Northern Line.
Stanley Holloway played the lead role, along with Audrey Totter and Frank Maxwell.

Holloway and with
In 1993, The Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader-Murdering Mom was a TV movie which told the true story of Wanda Holloway, the Texas mother whose obsession with her daughter's cheerleading career made headline news.
Holloway approached Flare and proposed a merger of their respective technologies to create an innovative new kind of gaming console with the computer hardware built into the main controller and in July 1988 a partnership was formed.
His first major comedy role was in The Lavender Hill Mob ( 1951 ): with Alfie Bass he made up the bullion robbery gang headed by Alec Guinness and Stanley Holloway.
Clare Market and part of Aldwych where the London School of Economics and Political Science is based, as well as the West Wing of Somerset House, the location for the Courtauld Institute of Art and King's College London, St Bart's Hospital, the University of London Boat Club in Chiswick and the Egham campus of Royal Holloway with its historic Founder's Building are also examples of properties which form part of the University's estate.
He eventually saves Will and Holloway's men from Holloway by engaging in a firefight with him, holding him back long enough for the house to " consume " Holloway.
Over time, many movie stars began voice acting in movies, with one of the earliest examples being The Jungle Book, which counted among its cast contemporary stars such as Phil Harris, Sebastian Cabot, Louis Prima, George Sanders and Sterling Holloway.
Two women, his wife Elizabeth Holloway Marston and Olive Byrne ( who lived with the couple in a polyamorous relationship ), served as exemplars for the character and greatly influenced her creation.
In 1981, Planet Records ( with distribution through Elektra ) signed the group and released their self-titled debut album which Holloway also produced.
There are several studio cast recordings of the show including one with Stanley Holloway and Alma Cogan and another with Josephine Barstow and Julian Forsyth.
Holloway's stage career began in 1910, when he travelled to Walton-on-the-Naze to audition for The White Coons Show, a concert party variety show arranged and produced by Will S. Pepper, father of Harry S. Pepper, with whom Holloway later starred in The Co-Optimists.
In the early months of 1914, Holloway made his first visit to the US and then went to Buenos Aires and Valparaíso with the concert party The Grotesques.
Upon his return from France, Holloway joined a Yorkshire regiment in Hartlepool and immediately after the war ended he starred in The Disorderly Room with Leslie Henson, which Eric Blore had written while serving in the South Wales Borderers.
From June 1921, Holloway had considerable success in The Co-Optimists, a concert party formed with performers whom he had met during the war in France, which The Times called " an all-star ' pierrot ' entertainment in the West-end.
In 1929, a feature film version was made, with Holloway rejoining his former co-stars.
After The Co-Optimists disbanded in 1927, Holloway played at the London Hippodrome in Vincent Youmans's musical comedy Hit the Deck as Bill Smith, a performance judged by The Times to be " invested with many shrewd touches of humanity ".
Holloway as Sam Small in Fine and Dandy with Leslie Henson
Holloway began regularly performing monologues, both on stage and on record, in 1928, with his own creation, Sam Small, in Sam, Sam, Pick oop thy Musket.
In 1929 Holloway played another leading role in musical comedy, Lieutenant Richard Manners in Song of the Sea, and later that year he performed in the revue Coo-ee, with Billy Bennett, Dorothy Dickson and Claude Hulbert.
On stage during the war years, Holloway appeared in revues, first Up and Doing, with Henson, Binnie Hale and Cyril Ritchard in 1940 and 1941, and then Fine and Dandy, with Henson, Dorothy Dickson, Douglas Byng and Graham Payn.
In both shows, Holloway presented new monologues, and The Times thought a highlight of Fine and Dandy was a parody of the BBC radio programme The Brains Trust, with Holloway " ponderously anecdotal " and Henson " gigglingly omniscient ".

Holloway and Henson
In 1913 Holloway was recruited by the comedian Leslie Henson to feature as a support in Henson's more prestigious concert party called Nicely, Thanks.
In later life, Holloway often spoke of his admiration for Henson, citing him as a great influence on his career.
In his 1967 autobiography, Holloway dedicated a whole chapter to Henson, whom he described as " the greatest friend, inspiration and mentor a performer could have had ".
Following its provincial success, The Disorderly Room was given a West End production at the Victoria Palace Theatre in late 1919, in which Holloway starred alongside Henson and Tom Walls.
Holloway developed the character, naming him after a Cockney friend of Henson called Annie Small ; the name Sam was chosen at random.
Holloway had many friends in show business and forged close friendships with people such as Leslie Henson, Gracie Fields, Maurice Chevalier, Laurence Olivier and Arthur Askey, who said of him, " He was the nicest man I ever knew.
The Disorderly Room was first performed on stage at the Victoria Palace Theatre, in 1919 and starred Blore, Stanley Holloway, Tom Walls, Leslie Henson and Jack Buchanan.

Holloway and established
* Battersea Dogs and Cats Home, formerly Battersea Dogs Home and prior to that the Temporary Home for Lost and Starving Dogs, established in Holloway in 1860 and moved to Battersea in 1871.
* Camp Holloway is in Millersville, TN and established in 1951 as a camp for " Negro girl scouts "; it now serves all girls.
In 1923 Holloway established himself as a BBC Radio performer.
In the 1930s and 1940s, Ealing produced many comedies with stars such as Gracie Fields, George Formby, Stanley Holloway and Will Hay, who had established their reputations in other spheres of entertainment.
English Heritage plaque for actor Stanley Holloway at 25 Albany Road, Manor Park, Essex established in July 2009
Formerly the ' Temporary Home for Lost and Starving Dogs ', it was established in Holloway in 1860 by Mary Tealby.
This was obvious to both sides ; the U. S. established an armed presence very early in the conflict at Camp Holloway, and the Việt Cộng attack on this base in early 1965 was one of the key escalating events that brought U. S. troops into the conflict.

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