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Mackintosh and met
It was at these classes that he first met his future wife Margaret MacDonald, her sister Frances MacDonald, and Herbert MacNair who was also a fellow apprentice with Mackintosh at Honeyman and Keppie.
When Walt Disney Theatrical president Thomas Schumacher met Mackintosh in 2001, Schumacher found out Mackintosh wanted to make Mary Poppins from screen to stage.
When he met Qwill ’ s mother, Anne Mackintosh, they chose to stay in Chicago, so he could not stay in his theater group.
where she met and befriended the show's Assistant Stage Manager Cameron Mackintosh, who was to become one of the most prominent musical theatre producers in world.
There is no record of Bickerton ever having formally graduated, but around 1910 he went to work in one of the iron foundries in Bedford and, while resident in that town, he met and became friends with the Antarctic explorer Aeneas Mackintosh ( a veteran of Shackleton's Nimrod expedition ).
It can trace its origin to the Literary Society of Bombay which first met in Mumbai on November 26, 1804, and was founded by Sir James Mackintosh.

Mackintosh and artist
Among the most prominent members were the loose collective of The Four: acclaimed architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh, his wife the painter and glass artist Margaret MacDonald, her sister the artist Frances, and her husband, the artist and teacher Herbert MacNair.
Charles Rennie Mackintosh ( 7 June 1868 – 10 December 1928 ) was a Scottish architect, designer, watercolourist and artist.
It is the only church by the Glasgow born artist to be built and is now the Charles Rennie Mackintosh Society headquarters.
The Charles Rennie Mackintosh Society tries to encourage a greater awareness of the work of Mackintosh as an important architect, artist and designer.
Margaret MacDonald Mackintosh ( 5 November 1865 – 10 January 1933 ) was a Scottish artist whose design work became one of the defining features of the " Glasgow Style " during the 1890s.
It was home to the noted artist and architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh from 1914.
Among the most prominent definers of the Glasgow School loose collective were The Four: the painter and glass artist Margaret MacDonald, acclaimed architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh ( MacDonald's husband ), MacDonald's sister Frances, and Herbert MacNair.

Mackintosh and Margaret
There were also three other siblings: Margaret Elizabeth Foot ( 1911 – 1965 ), Jennifer Mackintosh Highet ( born 1916 ) and Christopher Isaac Foot ( born 1917 ).
Charles Rennie Mackintosh was born at 70 Parson Street, Glasgow on 7 June 1868, the fourth of twelve children and second son of William and Margaret McIntosh.
The Room de Luxe at The Willow Tearooms features furniture and interior design by Mackintosh and Margaret Macdonald. Mackintosh lived most of his life in the city of Glasgow.
Later in life, disillusioned with architecture, Mackintosh worked largely as a watercolourist, painting numerous landscapes and flower studies ( often in collaboration with Margaret, with whose style Mackintosh's own gradually converged ) in the Suffolk village of Walberswick ( to which the pair moved in 1914 ), where he was briefly arrested as amid accusations of being a German spy in 1915.
de: Margaret MacDonald Mackintosh
fr: Margaret MacDonald Mackintosh
* The May Queen is the title of a gesso panel designed by Margaret MacDonald Mackintosh for the Scottish Section at the Vienna Secession Exhibition, 1900.
Donald George Mackintosh Mackay and Jean Margaret Mackay, and educated at the independent George Watson's College, Edinburgh.
Artists who were influenced by Japanese art include: Arthur Wesley Dow, Pierre Bonnard, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Mary Cassatt, Edgar Degas, Renoir, James McNeill Whistler ( Rose and silver: La princesse du pays de porcelaine, 1863 – 64 ), Monet, Vincent van Gogh, Camille Pissarro, Paul Gauguin, Bertha Lum, Will Bradley, Aubrey Beardsley, Alphonse Mucha, Gustav Klimt, the sisters Frances and Margaret Macdonald, as well as architects Edward W. Godwin, Frank Lloyd Wright, Charles Rennie Mackintosh and Stanford White, and ceramicists Edmond Lachenal and Taxile Doat.
His younger siblings were Margaret Elizabeth Foot ( 1911 – 1965 ), Michael Foot ( 1913-2010 ), a Labour MP, Cabinet Minister and Leader of the Opposition ( 1980-1983 ), Jennifer Mackintosh Highet ( born 1916 ) and Christopher Isaac Foot ( born 1917 ).

Mackintosh and MacDonald
Great Caley names included Willie Whitton ( signed by Spurs and Chelsea ), Kevin MacDonald ( who won multiple trophies with Liverpool and later became player, coach and caretaker manager of Aston Villa ), Donald Park ( of Hearts and Partick Thistle ), ' Ginger ' MacKenzie, Alan Presslie, Billy Urquhart ( of Rangers and Wigan ), Peter Corbett, exciting winger Wilson Robertson, Martin Lisle and Ray Mackintosh.
Clan Baird, Clan Cameron, Clan Chisholm, Clan Drummond, Clan Farquharson, Clan Grant of Glenmoriston, Clan Hay, Clan MacLea, Clan MacBain, Clan MacColl, Clan Macdonald of Clanranald, Clan MacDonald of Glencoe, Clan MacDonnell of Glengarry, Clan MacDonald of Keppoch, Clan Macfie, Clan Macgillivray, Clan Gregor, Clan MacInnes, Clan Mackintosh, Clan MacIver, Clan Mackinnon, Clan Maclachlan, Clan MacLaren, Clan MacLeod of Raasay, Clan MacNeil of Barra, Clan Macpherson, Clan Menzies, Clan Morrison, Clan Ogilvy, Clan Oliphant, Clan Robertson, Clan Stewart of Appin, Clan Urquhart.

Mackintosh and at
In June 2008, he was appointed as Cameron Mackintosh Visiting Professor of Contemporary Theatre at St Catherine's College, Oxford, succeeding Patrick Stewart in the post.
* Special Award, Olivier Award, 2011, " in recognition of his contribution to London theatre "; the award was presented at the ceremony by Cameron Mackintosh and Angela Lansbury.
In 1990, Sondheim took the Cameron Mackintosh chair in musical theatre at Oxford, and in this capacity ran workshops with promising writers of musicals, such as George Stiles, Anthony Drewe, Andrew Peggie, Paul James, Stephen Keeling and others.
He did two additional performances in 1998 at a London gala show celebrating the career of impresario Cameron Mackintosh.
Mackintosh was admitted to a nursing home where he died on 10 December 1928 at the age of 60.
Charles Rennie Mackintosh attended evening classes in art at the Glasgow School of Art.
In 2012, one of the largest collections of art by Charles Rennie Mackintosh and the Glasgow Four Glasgow School was sold at auction in Edinburgh for £ 1. 3m.
* paintings by Charles Rennie Mackintosh at the WikiGallery. org
He had left his hat, spectacles, compass, pipe and Mackintosh atop Govett's Leap at Blackheath, before falling 1000 feet to his death.
She exhibited with Mackintosh at the 1900 Vienna Secession, where she was arguably an influence on the Secessionists Gustav Klimt and Josef Hoffmann.
* Biography at the Charles Rennie Mackintosh Society
Ken Mackintosh, one of the leading dance band leaders of the 1950s and ' 60s, lived for many years at 26 South Side, Streatham Common.
Mackintosh was asked to revive the show yet again in 1983 for a limited five-week Christmas season at the Aldwych Theatre, directed by Peter Coe.
Cameron Mackintosh produced another revival of the show which opened at the London Palladium in the West End on December 8, 1994.
Two years later he was appointed Cameron Mackintosh Visiting Professor of Contemporary Theatre at Oxford University.
Cameron Mackintosh, who owned half the rights to Oliver !, revived the musical at the London Palladium in 1994 in a version rewritten by Lionel Bart.
Because of an affair with a girl he had to leave and Constant moved to the University of Edinburgh, where he lived at Andrew Duncan, the elder and became friends with James Mackintosh, and Malcolm Laing.
Mackintosh was born at Aldourie, 7 miles from Inverness.
The premature death of Sir James Mackintosh at the age of sixty-six was attributed to a chicken bone becoming stuck in his throat, causing a traumatic choking episode.

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