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Langham and did
The first series did not rate as well as hoped, however, and it was felt that Langham was " too independent a spirit.

Langham and until
Although the bone was eventually removed, his suffering continued until he died a month later on 30 May 1832 and he was buried in Hampstead churchyard, having lived for much of his later life in London at 15 Langham Place.
Indeed, most critics now agree that the first major 20th century production didn't take place until 1957, at The Old Vic, directed by Michael Langham and starring Richard Gale as Valentine, Keith Michell as Proteus, Barbara Jefford as Julia and Ingrid Hafner as Silvia.
The manor remained in the possession of the Crown until 1135, when King Henry I exchanged it for the manors of Hockham and Langham in Rutland, with Roger de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Warwick.
In 1974 he founded the Langham Partnership International ( known as John Stott Ministries in the US ), and in 1982 the London Institute for Contemporary Christianity, of which he remained honorary president until his death.
Egton House in Langham Street in Central London was home to BBC Radio 1 for many years from 1985 until 1996.
Established in 1858, Langham was the home of the Ruddles Brewery, until it was closed in 1997.
The brewery was established in 1858 in Langham, Rutland but it was not bought by George Ruddle until 1912.
Langham remained the home of the brewery until its closure in 1999.
The Summer Activities Program occurs in the Langham Arena from early July until late August.

Langham and day
On his second day of work at EMI, Richard Langham was assigned to be the assistant engineer of Norman Smith who would be doing the first recording session of the Beatles in the evening.

Langham and when
Islip had designed the foundation for secular clergy ; but when he died in 1366, Islip's successor, Simon Langham, a man of monastic training, turned the leadership of the college over to a monk.
The married couple moved to Edward's home in Manhattan, but when her cousins tried to have her indicted for forgery based on the Robinson v. Mandell decision, they moved to London and they lived in the Langham Hotel.
Langham Pond was created when the meandering River Thames formed an oxbow lake.
After Langham left in 1977, the Guthrie crossed a milestone of sorts when for the first time it selected an artistic director that was not a respected collaborator or friend of Tyrone Guthrie.
The Langham Hotel was the largest in the city when it opened in 1865.
She enrolled at Langham Secretarial College in London when she was 17.

Langham and second
Langham claimed he downloaded this material as research for a character in the second series of Help, but Whitehouse's testimony only partially corroborated this explanation.
Langham left the residue of his large estate and his library to Westminster Abbey, and has been called its second founder.
Langham had two children by his second wife, director Christine Cartwright.
More villains appeared, such as Tony Zucco ( voiced by Mark Hamill, who voiced the Joker in the DC animated universe ), Killer Moth ( voiced by Jeff Bennett ), Black Mask ( voiced by James Remar ), Rumor ( voiced by Ron Perlman ), Everywhere Man ( voiced by Brandon Routh ), Harley Quinn ( voiced by Hynden Walch ), Francis Grey ( voiced by Dave Foley ), and the Basil Karlo version of Clayface ( voiced by Wallace Langham in the first appearance, Lex Lang in the second appearance ).
The second engineer was Richard Langham.
Their second series, The Rapid Eye Movement, about the troupe of actors performing a man's nightly dreams, starred Martin Freeman, Chris Langham and Kevin Eldon.

Langham and series
Promenade concerts had existed in London's pleasure gardens since the mid 18th century, but on 10 August 1895 impresario Robert Newman arranged the first series of indoor promenade concerts, in the Queen's Hall in Langham Place.
The series featured Rowan Atkinson, Pamela Stephenson, Mel Smith, and Griff Rhys Jones, as well as Chris Langham in the first series.
Langham narrated the 1984 radio series The History of Rock with Chris Langham, in which Langham gave a comedic, and somewhat fictitious, account of the history of rock music.
Only a few days after his release from prison, Langham was interviewed by celebrity psychologist Dr Pamela Connolly ( née Stephenson ), with whom he had worked on Not the Nine O ' Clock News, for her UK television series Shrink Rap where he discussed being abused as an eight-year-old child, the events that led up to his conviction and the subsequent trial.
The series shared several script writers with Not the Nine O ' Clock News including Clive Anderson, Colin Bostock-Smith and used Chris Langham as a cast regular.
It ran for three series on BBC Radio 4 from 1995 and won Sony Radio Award and a Writer's Guild Award for Best Radio Comedy before being adapted for BBC Two ( with Langham in the same role ) in 1999.

Langham and .
On 4 August Orwell gave a talk at the Adelphi Summer School held at Langham, entitled An Outsider Sees the Distressed Areas ; others who spoke at the School included John Strachey, Max Plowman, Karl Polanyi and Reinhold Niebuhr.
Langham, MD: Lexington Books.
Between 2005 – 09 English Heritage attempted to restore Kenilworth's garden more closely to its Elizabethan form, using as a basis the description in the Langham letter and details from recent archaeological investigations.
Discovered in 1961 by K. S. Gardener and A. Langham.
Whitehouse wrote, produced and appeared with Chris Langham in the 2005 comedy drama Help, also for the BBC.
The pair's collaboration resulted in Whitehouse taking the witness stand on 24 July 2007 in the trial of Langham, in regard to the charge of holding explicit images and videos of minors.
On 30 August 1889, Stoddart dined with Wilde and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at the Langham Hotel, and commissioned short novels from both men.
The 23-strong cast featured several actors, such as Jim Broadbent, David Rappaport and Chris Langham, who went on to successful film, stage and television careers.
* July 22 – Simon Langham, Archbishop of Canterbury ( b. 1310 )
Langham has used it for several subsequent productions, most recently in an adaptation by Stanley Silverman which expands the score with some of Ellington's best-known works.
Gable was married at the time to oil heiress Ria Langham, and the affair was kept quiet.
The situation proved a major obstacle in Gable accepting the role of Rhett Butler in Gone with the Wind, as MGM head Louis B. Mayer sweetened the deal for a reluctant Gable by giving him money to settle a divorce agreement with Langham and marry Lombard.
Gable divorced Langham on March 7, 1939 and proposed to Lombard at the Brown Derby.
The East Anglian flag as it is known today was invented by George Henry Langham and adopted by the London Society of East Anglians.
* 1950: John Gielgud played Cassius at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre under the direction of Michael Langham and Anthony Quayle.
It was in the belief that he could fulfil these requirements, that Head himself volunteered to act, as Langham puts it, " as Rivers's experimental guinea-pig.
As Langham points out, with special references to " Rivers's reputed sexual proclivities ", it is at this point that the experiment takes on an almost farcical aspect to the casual reader.
As Langham puts it: " The image of a man reading a poem to evoke aesthetic pleasure while a close friend meticulously studies the erection of his hairs may seem ludicrous.
The street is known for its business and retailing skyscraper complex Langham Place, numerous restaurants and its famous red-light district.

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