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Ives's and was
In Ives's view this would also be around the minimum age that a girl could be a Maid of Honour, as Anne was to the regent, Margaret of Austria, Duchess of Savoy.
In the Anglo-Saxon era, St Ives's position on the river Great Ouse was strategic, as it controlled the last natural crossing point or ford on the river, from the sea.
In honor of Ives's influence on American vocal music, on October 25, 1975, he was awarded the University of Pennsylvania Glee Club Award of Merit.
Burl Ives's version was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song.
He was responsible for introducing more new works to US audience than any other conductor — he was a particular champion of Charles Ives's music, which was virtually unknown at that time.
Both Currier's and Ives's sons followed their fathers in the business, which was eventually liquidated in 1907.
After Ives's death, his sons and Currier's sons continued to manage the firm until it was liquidated in 1907.
She suggested that Ives's theory on Anne's fall ( that it was caused by foreign policy and palace politics ) was based on an over-reliance on Spanish sources and that his theory on her youth was ridiculous.
In the United States, the song was included as " Jesous Ahatonia " on Burl Ives's 1952 album Christmas Day in the Morning and was later released as a Burl Ives single under the title " Indian Christmas Carol.
The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song for Burl Ives's version of the 17th-century English folk song " Lavender Blue ," but lost to " Baby, It's Cold Outside " from Neptune's Daughter.

Ives's and .
Eric Ives's latest version of his biography hypothesizes that Anne may have had evangelist conviction and a strong spiritual inner life.
Further, the most recent edition of Ives's biography admits that Anne may very well have had a personal spiritual awakening in her youth which spurred her on, not just as catalyst but expediter for Henry's Reformation, though the process took a number of years.
A fragment of the lyric ( changed to " Riding down from Bangor on the midnight train ...") appears in the quodlibet of the arrangement for orchestra and chorus of Charles Ives's song " The Circus Band ," though apparently with a different melody.
As an actor, Ives's work included comedies, dramas, and voice work in theater, television, and motion pictures.
Music critic John Rockwell said, " Ives's voice ... had the sheen and finesse of opera without its latter-day Puccinian vulgarities and without the pretensions of operatic ritual.
Ives's statement to the HUAC ended his blacklisting, allowing him to continue acting in movies.
Ives's Broadway career included appearances in The Boys From Syracuse ( 1938 – 39 ), Heavenly Express ( 1940 ), This Is the Army ( 1942 ), Sing Out, Sweet Land ( 1944 ), Paint Your Wagon ( 1951 – 52 ), and Dr. Cook's Garden ( 1967 ).
* October 14 – Leopold Stokowski conducts the Symphony of the Air in three world premièees at Carnegie Hall: Charles Ives's Browning Overture, Alan Hovhaness's Symphony No. 3, and Kurt Leimer's Piano Concerto No. 4.
* February – The first complete performance of Charles Ives's Second Symphony is given in Carnegie Hall by the New York Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Leonard Bernstein.
* February 16-Nicolas Slonimsky conducts the first performance of Charles Ives's Three Places in New England.
Herrmann's many US broadcast premieres during the 1940s included Myaskovsky's 22nd Symphony, Malipiero's 3rd Symphony, Richard Arnell's 1st Symphony, Edmund Rubbra's 3rd Symphony and Ives's 3rd Symphony.
* Charles Ives's Symphony No. 4
Starting in 1984 with his political piece The Black Hills Belong to the Sioux, Gann adopted a method of switching between different tempos ( usually between quarter-notes, dotted eighths, triplet quarters, and other values ) as a more performable alternative to the simultaneous layers at contrasting tempos that he had sought earlier under Charles Ives's influence. Ironically, other composers had arrived at a similar technique via other routes, coalescing into a New York style of the 1980s and ' 90s called Totalism.
* Shaw, the 54th regiment, and Augustus Saint-Gaudens ' memorial are one of the subjects of Charles Ives's composition for orchestra, Three Places in New England.
" Since the opening notes of Haydn's second movement are very simple, they were a suitable choice for Ives's purpose.
Nathaniel Currier soon noticed Ives's dedication to his business and his artistic knowledge and insight into what the public wanted.

autobiography and Stranger
In his autobiography, Kiss Me Like A Stranger, actor Gene Wilder describes being initially terrified of Mostel.
He wrote a series of short stories and his autobiography, Truth is Stranger than Publicity, published posthumously in the 1970s.
In 1994, White wrote his autobiography, Stranger at the Gate: To Be Gay And Christian In America, which detailed his former career in the Religious Right and his struggle coming to terms with his sexuality.
White's autobiography, Stranger at the Gate: To be Gay and Christian in America ( 1994 ), is still being read widely, especially by LGBTQ people, their families and friends struggling to reconcile faith with sexual orientation.
He has written three novels Sweet and Tender Hooligan, Looking at the Stars and A Stranger Here Myself, the latter being Rab C Nesbitt's ' autobiography.

autobiography and was
His reception remained warmer in America than Britain, and he continued to publish novels and short stories, but by the late 1930s the audience for Milne's grown-up writing had largely vanished: he observed bitterly in his autobiography that a critic had said that the hero of his latest play (" God help it ") was simply " Christopher Robin grown up ... what an obsession with me children are become!
Even his old literary home, Punch, where the When We Were Very Young verses had first appeared, was ultimately to reject him, as Christopher Milne details in his autobiography The Enchanted Places, although Methuen continued to publish whatever Milne wrote, including the long poem ' The Norman Church ' and an assembly of articles entitled Year In, Year Out ( which Milne likened to a benefit night for the author ).
Christopher Hitchens, in his autobiography, describes a dinner with Christie and her husband, Max Mallowan, that became increasingly uncomfortable as the night wore on, where " The anti-Jewish flavour of the talk was not to be ignored or overlooked, or put down to heavy humour or generational prejudice.
He says in the page 114 of his autobiography that he was responsible for the null set symbol ( Ø ) and it came from the Norwegian alphabet, with which he alone among the Bourbaki group was familiar.
The word autobiography was first used deprecatingly by William Taylor in 1797 in the English periodical the Monthly Review, when he suggested the word as a hybrid but condemned it as ' pedantic '; but its next recorded use was in its present sense by Robert Southey in 1809.
Lerner's autobiography The Street Where I Live ( 1978 ), was an account of three of his and Loewe's successful collaborations, My Fair Lady, Gigi, and Camelot along with personal information.
The autobiography was a successful New York Times Best Seller.
" The Lita Grey affair was soon forgotten, but Chaplin was deeply affected by it: the stress of the ordeal turned his hair white, and both his second wife and The Circus received only a passing mention in his autobiography.
Linnaeus did not like him, writing in his autobiography that Telander " was better calculated to extinguish a child's talents than develop them.
Twain also expressed grave doubts about the authorship of Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, showing through content analysis that the quality of the writing was much better than any of Eddy's previous or subsequent work ( for example her autobiography and her later writings in the Christian Science Journal ):
Chen's autobiography refuted the idea that she was a concubine.
In his autobiography, Chuck Amuck, Jones credits his artistic bent to circumstances surrounding his father, who was an unsuccessful businessman in California in the 1920s.
He stated in his 1974 autobiography, " We were so poor and everybody around us was so poor that it was the forties before anyone even knew there had been a depression.
Following a turbulent childhood which was marked by drug and alcohol abuse and two stints in rehab, Barrymore wrote the 1990 autobiography, Little Girl Lost.
She was the wife of Sir Michael Redgrave and mother of Vanessa, Lynn and Corin, and published her autobiography, Life Among the Redgraves, in 1988.
As documented in her 1994 autobiography, initially, much of Wagoner's audience was unhappy, that Norma Jean, the performer whom Parton had replaced, had left the show, and was reluctant to accept Parton ( sometimes chanting loudly for Norma Jean from the audience ).
The most infamous dacoit was probably India's Phoolan Devi who authored an autobiography.
Dolores Fuller's autobiography, A Fuller Life: Hollywood, Ed Wood and Me, co-authored by Winnipeg writer Stone Wallace and her husband Philip Chamberlin, was published in 2008.
In 1988, her autobiography, On the Other Hand, was published.
In her autobiography On The Other Hand: A Life Story she stated that she was a Republican.

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