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Hughes and autobiography
The movie follows the exploits of a famous art forger, his biographer Clifford Irving, and the subsequent fake autobiography of Howard Hughes that Irving tries to publish.
** Clifford Irving admits to a New York court that he had fabricated Howard Hughes ' " autobiography ".
Gardner stated in her autobiography Ava: My Story, that she was never in love with Howard Hughes, but he was in and out of her life for about twenty years.
Hughes ' autobiography was published in May 2011 by British art-book publishers Foruli.
For the movie Welles intercut footage of Elmyr de Hory, an art forger, and Clifford Irving, who wrote an " authorized " autobiography of Howard Hughes that had been revealed to be a hoax.
Life lost credibility with many readers when it supported Clifford Irving, whose fraudulent autobiography of Howard Hughes was revealed as a hoax in January 1972.
* Clifford Irving ( born 1930 ), U. S. author who created a hoax autobiography of Howard Hughes
In Edge's 2004 autobiography " Adam Copeland on Edge ," Matt and Jeff Hardy's 2003 biography " Hardy Boyz Exist 2 Inspire ," and the WWF / E Fanatic Series Tables, Ladders & Chairs, it was revealed that Hughes is " deathly afraid of heights ", which he originally stated in character at WrestleMania 2000.
Clifford Michael Irving ( born ) is an American investigative reporter and author of best-selling novels and works of nonfiction, but best known for his hoax " autobiography " of reclusive and eccentric businessman Howard Hughes in the early 1970s.
Irving contacted his publisher, McGraw-Hill, and claimed that he had corresponded with Hughes because of his book about de Hory and that Hughes had expressed interest in letting him write his autobiography.
The autobiography would be based on interviews Hughes was willing to do with Irving.
Then, James Phelan read an excerpt of the " autobiography " and realized that some of its factual information had come not from Hughes, but from his own book.
The fraudulent autobiography was published in Santa Fe in a private edition in 1999, and went out of print, but, in March 2008, John Blake Publishing, a British company, issued Howard Hughes: The Autobiography.
In her autobiography, published in 1987, she listed 22 intimate friends, including Prince Aly Khan, Billy Wilder, Burt Lancaster, Howard Hughes, Robert Stack and Robert Taylor.
In 2008, Tommy Smith claimed in his autobiography, that on 8 May 1972, Hughes told him that he had been speaking to a number of Arsenal players, and they had said that they were " willing to throw a match for £ 50 a man " in a vital match at Highbury which decided the title.
A number of people in recovery testified, including Academy Award-winning actress Mercedes McCambridge, National Council on Alcoholism founder Marty Mann, and AA co-founder Bill W. In his autobiography, The Man from Ida Grove: A Senator's Personal Story, Hughes writes that he asked a dozen other well-known people in recovery to present public testimony, but all declined.
Richard Suskind ( 19251999 ) was a children's author who participated with author Clifford Irving in creating a fraudulent autobiography of the reclusive entrepreneur Howard Hughes.
Irving admitted that he had made up the autobiography of Howard Hughes, for which he had received an advance from McGraw-Hill.
According to Chris Jericho's autobiography Chris Jericho Undisputed Hughes also suffers from Narcolepsy.

Hughes and London
* Lindsey Hughes, Russia in the Age of Peter the Great ( New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1998 ).
* Millionaire Howard Hughes lived in hotels during the last ten years of his life ( 1966-76 ), primarily in Las Vegas, as well as Acapulco, Beverly Hills, Boston, Freeport, London, Managua, Nassau, Vancouver, and others.
After university, living in London and Cambridge, Hughes went on to have many varied jobs including working as a rose gardener, a night watchman and a reader for the British film company J. Arthur Rank.
* February 8 – Hugh Price Hughes, Methodist social reformer, first Superintendent of the West London Mission ( d. 1902 )
Moore was born in Charing Cross Hospital, London, the son of Ada Francis ( née Hughes ), a secretary, and John Moore, a railway electrician.
In July 2010 Hughes appeared as a guest vocalist ( together with Masterplan singer Jørn Lande ) fronting Heaven & Hell at the High Voltage Rock Festival in London as a tribute to the late Ronnie James Dio.
In 1913 the London Missionary Society responded to the appeal of the To Tsai Church to provide a Headmaster for the project, sending Arnold Hughes to Hong Kong, and the college was re-opened as a middle school in 1914 in rented premises, first at 9 Caine Road, later at 45 Caine Road, and finally at 80 Bonham Road ( a former German Rhenish Mission property ).
Mark Dooley & Michael Hughes ( London & New York: Routledge, 2001 ).
Retrieved 8 March 2007 .</ ref > and was where Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath married on Bloomsday in 1956 .< ref >< cite > Walking Literary London, Roger Tagholm, New Holland Publishers, 2001 .</ ref >
* Molly Hughes, educator and author, chronicled her childhood in Canonbury in A London Child of the 1870s.
* The book A London Family 1870-1900 by Molly Hughes, ISBN 0-19-282896-7.
William Morris Hughes was born in Pimlico, London on 25 September 1862 of Welsh parents.
In 1881, when he was 19, William lived with his father and his father's elder sister Mary Hughes at 78 Vauxhall Bridge Road, London.
A collection of Low's cartoons of Hughes entitled The Billy Book, which he published in 1918, brought Low to the notice of Henry Cadbury, part-owner of the London Star.
* Zwicker U., Greiner H., Hofmann K. & Reithinger M., 1985, Smelting, Refining and Alloying of copper and copper Alloys in Crucible Furnaces During Prehistoric up to Roman Times, P. Craddock & M. Hughes, Furnaces and smelting Technology in Antiquity, British Museum, London
* June 16-Ted Hughes marries Sylvia Plath at St George the Martyr Holborn in the London Borough of Camden.
After she separated from Hughes, Plath moved to a smaller apartment in London, “ giving her time and place to work uninterruptedly.
See Life by his son ( 2 vols., London, 1884 ), and a monograph by C. F. G. Masterman ( 1907 ) in “ Leader of the Church ” series ; W. E. Collins in Typical English Churchmen, pp. 327 – 360 ( 1902 ), and T. Hughes in The Friendship of Books ( 1873 ).
* Tom Hughes, Tom Brown's School Days, London: Penguin, 1994 ( original 1857 ).
The doctrine of promissory estoppel was first developed in Hughes v. Metropolitan Railway Co but was lost for some time until it was resurrected by Lord Denning in the controversial case of Central London Property Trust Ltd v. High Trees House Ltd K. B.
Murdoch remained in London, expanding the cable service, writing influential journalism — and helping his friend Billy Hughes on visits to England — until he was offered the post of chief editor at the Melbourne Herald, which he took in January 1921.
The second was the assassination by Irish republicans in London of a retired British general Henry Hughes Wilson.
* Hughes, Kathryn: The Victorian Governess, London: Hambledon, 1993.
Hughes ( St. Thomas ' Hospital, London, UK ) who worked at the Louise Coote Lupus Unit at St Thomas ' Hospital in London and played a central role in the description of the condition.

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