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Julia and McKenzie
Listing of the TV series featuring Geraldine McEwan and Julia McKenzie:
These greetings were written by: Sheila Hancock, Julia McKenzie, Milton Babbitt, Judi Dench, and Glynis Johns.
The story was also adapted into a radio series ( BBC Audiobooks Ltd, 1998 ) featuring Timothy West, Julia McKenzie, and Oliver Peace as Tom.
* Guys and Dolls, the National's first musical, directed by Richard Eyre, starring Bob Hoskins, Julia McKenzie, Ian Charleson, and Julie Covington ( 1982 )
As well as writing the script, Herring also played one of the characters alongside Gordon Kennedy, Claire Skinner, Rebecca Front, Sarah-Jane Potts, Robert Daws, Anton Rodgers and Julia McKenzie.
ITV Studios and WGBH Boston produced another adaptation for the Marple television series starring Julia McKenzie as Miss Marple, with Joanna Lumley reprising her role as Dolly Bantry, Lindsay Duncan as Marina Gregg and Hannah Waddingham as Lola Brewster.
In the BBC Radio 4 plays, Ariadne Oliver has been played by Stephanie Cole ( Cards on the Table and The Pale Horse ), and by Julia McKenzie ( Mrs McGinty's Dead, Dead Man's Folly and Elephants Can Remember ).
The original cast featured Bob Hoskins as Nathan Detroit, Julia McKenzie as Adelaide, Ian Charleson as Sky and Julie Covington as Sarah.
On UK radio and television, notable portrayals of Madame Arcati have been given by Hattie Jacques ( ITV 1964, directed by Joan Kemp-Welch, Joanna Dunham as Elvira, Griffith Jones as Charles and Helen Cherry as Ruth ) and Peggy Mount ( BBC radio 1983, with Anna Massey as Elvira, Paul Eddington as Charles and Julia McKenzie as Ruth ).
She won a BAFTA Award for the role of Edith Hope in the 1986 TV adaptation of Anita Brookner ’ s novel Hotel du Lac in a role which one of her co-stars, Julia McKenzie, has said ' could have been written for her.
The novel has since been dramatised twice more: first with Joan Hickson as Miss Marple for the 1980s series, and then with Julia McKenzie for Agatha Christie's Marple.
officially opened in 1997, directed by Julia McKenzie, at the Stephen Joseph Theatre in Scarborough, England
In February, she landed the role of Mrs. Crump in the episode " A Pocket Full of Rye " of the Marple TV series starring Julia McKenzie.
Beginning in 2009 ( with episodes filmed in 2008 ), Julia McKenzie has taken over the role of Miss Marple.
** Agatha Christie's Marple with Geraldine McEwan, and Julia McKenzie: 2005 ( 4 ), 2006 ( 4 ), 2007 ( 4 ), 2009 ( 4 ), 2010 ( 3 )
* Agatha Christie's Marple ( aka Marple ), a British TV series from 2004 onwards, with Geraldine McEwan and later Julia McKenzie
* Julia McKenzie — Lottie Crump
Eyre was director of the National Theatre ( which became the Royal National Theatre during his time there ) between 1987 and 1997, having previously directed a noted revival of Guys and Dolls for the venue in 1982 with Olivier Award-winner Julia McKenzie and Bob Hoskins.
Hunt appeared alongside Julia McKenzie in That Beryl Marston ...!
He was a glowingly reviewed Sky Masterson in Richard Eyre's enormously successful revival of the musical Guys and Dolls ( 1982 ), opposite Julie Covington as Sister Sarah, with Bob Hoskins as Nathan Detroit and Julia McKenzie as Adelaide.
A London production, produced by Harold Fielding, and starring Keith Michell as Oscar Jaffe, Julia McKenzie as Lily Garland, Mark Wynter as Bruce Granit and Ann Beach as Mrs. Primrose, opened on March 19, 1980, at Her Majesty's Theatre, The Haymarket and ran for 165 performances.
in the mid-1990s as well as playing Jack's mother in the original London cast of Sondheim's Into the Woods alongside Julia McKenzie and Imelda Staunton.
* 1986 – Julia McKenzie for Woman in Mind
She would also appear in Maggie and Her ( 1978 ) opposite Julia McKenzie.

Julia and took
Dean turned from Susan and took Julia Fortune in his arms.
When Domitian found out, he allegedly murdered Paris in the street and promptly divorced his wife, with Suetonius further adding that once Domitia was exiled, Domitian took Julia as his mistress, who later died during a failed abortion.
His first post war assignments took him and Julia to Detroit and Sackets Harbor, New York, which was perhaps their happiest location.
When Julia took the offer seriously and pleaded for the opportunity, and Grant earnestly objected, she turned silent, indignant and quite disappointed.
When Livia Drusilla died in June 29 AD, Antonia took care of Caligula, Agrippina the Younger, Julia Drusilla, Julia Livilla and later Claudia Antonia, Claudius's daughter through his second wife Aelia Paetina, her younger grandchildren.
She took the lead role of America's Sweethearts, a 2001 romantic comedy film which also starred Julia Roberts, Billy Crystal and John Cusack.
Until her film career took off, young Julia Turner was known to family and friends as " Judy ".
Another RSC production took place at the Swan in 1998, under the direction of Edward Hall, and starring Tom Goodman-Hill as Valentine, Dominic Rowan as Proteus, Lesley Vickerage as Julia and Poppy Miller as Silvia.
The following year, she took the part of Julia Cook in Gregor Jordan's Australian film Ned Kelly opposite Heath Ledger, Orlando Bloom, and Geoffrey Rush, as well as the Merchant-Ivory film Le Divorce portraying Roxeanne de Persand, a poet who is abandoned by her husband Charles-Henri de Persand at the time she is pregnant.
Suetonius further adds that, once Domitia was exiled, Domitian took Julia as his mistress, who later died during a failed abortion.
Forrester was pit reporter for six of the show's nine series ; Julia Reed took the role for Series 4 and Extreme 1 since Forrester was unable to participate in the programme due to pregnancy, but Forrester returned for Series 6 and Extreme 2.
Despite the great efforts Jacobs and her partner, Julia A. Wilbur, made in contacting countless friends and acquaintances, much of the building of the schools in Washington and Alexandria at the camps of refugees from the South, generals and captions took over the homes of Jacobs and others as they were without funds to shelter themselves and the government permitted them to sanction such homes.
Hearst first approached American architect Julia Morgan with ideas for a new project in April 1915, shortly after he took ownership.
Edna once took an on-air phone call from President Ronald Reagan to assure him that he was, indeed, still the president and at recent stageshows the character has claimed to be giving Australian Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, elocution lessons.
Constantin's maternal grandmother took on the task of bringing up Constantin and Julia in his father's home in Belgium.
Due to an unforeseen event, however, his divorce from Julia never took place.
He had at least two children: a son, Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, also known as Pompey the Great or Pompey the triumvir, who took as his fourth wife Julia ( the daughter of dictator Gaius Julius Caesar ), and a daughter called Pompeia.
Smith was appointed Minister for Foreign Affairs in Kevin Rudd's cabinet on 3 December following Labor's win in the 2007 election, and when Julia Gillard took over from Kevin Rudd as prime minister in June 2010, she added Minister for Trade to Smith's portfolio.
In July 2011, the British Advertising Standards Authority took action against L ' Oréal, banning two airbrushed Lancôme advertisements in the UK featuring actress Julia Roberts and supermodel Christy Turlington.
Julia Pastrana ( 1834 – 25 March 1860 ) was a woman born with hypertrichosis who took part in 19th-century exhibition tours in Europe.
Charles Darwin described her as: " Julia Pastrana, a Spanish dancer, was a remarkably fine woman, but she had a thick masculine beard and a hairy forehead ; she was photographed, and her stuffed skin was exhibited as a show ; but what concerns us is, that she had in both the upper and lower jaw an irregular double set of teeth, one row being placed within the other, of which Dr. Purland took a cast.
Deciding to make a fresh start Julia took Vanessa to live in the U. S. where she eventually became the Dean for the Department of History and Geology at Harvard University.
Hosted by Stephen Fry — accompanied each week by a selection of guests including Jim Broadbent, Emma Thompson, Phyllida Law, Robert Bathurst, Julia Hills, Alison Steadman and long-time collaborator Hugh Laurie — the show took the form of a round table discussion and sketches which veered tangentially from the sublime to the ridiculous.

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