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Page "Parker Pyne Investigates" ¶ 80
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Rupert and Frazer
Rupert Frazer admitted that he was the first to jump off, landing safely, but bruised.
* Rupert Frazer ..... Lord George Lamson-Scribener

Rupert and played
Michael Gambon played John Harrison, and Jeremy Irons played Rupert Gould, who restored Harrison's timepieces for posterity in the mid-20th century.
One of the most popular versions of the Chief Inspector was that played by British actor Rupert Davies who made his debut on October 31, 1960.
In the centre of the quad is the Harris Building, formerly Oriel court, a real tennis court where Charles I played tennis with his nephew Prince Rupert in December 1642 and King Edward VII had his first tennis lesson in 1859.
As a colonial governor, Rupert shaped the political geography of modern Canada — Rupert's Land was named in his honour — and he played a role in the early African slave trade.
Rupert practised etching, played tennis, practised shooting, read military textbooks and was taken on accompanied hunting trips.
Rupert also played a prominent role in the Third Anglo-Dutch War ( 1672 – 74 ).
Rupert played a key part in the conferences held by the Duke of York in 1665 to review tactics and operational methods from the first Dutch war, and put these into practice before the St James Day battle.
He played Anthony Blunt in Cambridge Spies a BBC production about the four British spies, starring alongside Toby Stephens ( Philby ), Tom Hollander ( Burgess ) and Rupert Penry-Jones ( Maclean ).
In 2011 she played Mrs Higgins in Pygmalion at the Garrick Theatre, opposite Rupert Everett and Kara Tointon, having played Eliza Dolittle in the same play in 1974.
The role of Rupert is played by James Earl Jones.
* " Sherlock Holmes and the Case of the Silk Stocking ", a 2004 BBC TV film directed by Simon Cellan Jones from an original story by Alan Cubitt, features the sleuth, played by Rupert Everett, tracking down a killer of aristocratic young women.
When war was declared in 1914, he joined the Royal Navy and, serving with Rupert Brooke, played a prominent role in the famed young poet's funeral in Greece.
He also portrayed Rupert Purvis in the 1982 production of Tom Stoppard's play The Dog It Was That Died and played the urbane Ambassador McKenzie in four series of Flying the Flag.
* Detective Inspector Greg Lestrade, a character played by Rupert Graves in the BBC's Sherlock ( TV series )
Wright appears in the first film, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, only in a small scene set at London King's Cross railway station, where her character meets Harry Potter ( played by Daniel Radcliffe ) with her mother Molly ( played by Julie Walters ) while watching four of her older brothers Percy ( played by Chris Rankin ), Fred and George ( played by James and Oliver Phelps ) and Ron ( played by Rupert Grint ) enter the magical platform barrier Platform 9¾ to board the Hogwarts express.
* Much of the cast has some connection to the Buffyverse: Benson and Marsters obviously played prominent characters on Buffy ; David Fury was a writer / producer and Rupert Cole was a production assistant on Buffy ; Jeff Ricketts guest starred on both Buffy and Angel as a Watchers ' Council member ; Andy Hallett starred on Angel as Lorne / The Host ; Grant Langston guest starred on an episode of Angel ; and Tressa di Figlia was married to Buffy cast member Nicholas Brendon.
Fox, the leader of the Animals of Farthing Wood, was voiced by Rupert Farley in the United Kingdom version but in the U. S. version he was played by Ralph Macchio.
Rossiter played Rupert Rigsby ( originally Rooksby in the stage play ): the miserly, seedy, and ludicrously self-regarding landlord of a run-down Victorian town house who rents out his shabby bedsits to a variety of tenants.
* Rupert Davies, of Maigret fame, played Smiley as a minor although important character in the film version of The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, made in 1965, and which starred Richard Burton.

Frazer and played
Butler and Frazer, had played together with Panama's national team ; away from home, however, they were also able to establish a friendship.
Ablett's son, Frazer ( born 1991 ), signed for Chester City and has since played for Colwyn Bay since the demise of Chester City.
James Robert " Jamie " McCrimmon is a fictional character played by Frazer Hines in the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who.
Frazer Hines played Jamie in 117 episodes.
She played Anne Frazer on Bracken's World and the original Constance MacKenzie on the daytime program Return to Peyton Place.

played and Claude
Due to the wartime travel restrictions, the first three games of the 1945 World Series were played in Detroit, where the Cubs won two games, including a one-hitter by Claude Passeau, and the final four were played at Wrigley.
* In the 1942 film Casablanca, Captain Renault, a corrupt official played by Claude Rains recites the last two lines of the poem when talking to Rick Blaine, played by Humphrey Bogart, referring to his power in Casablanca.
Claude Rains played John in the 1938 colour version alongside Errol Flynn, starting a trend for films to depict John as an " effeminate ... arrogant and cowardly stay-at-home ".
In 1946, he starred in a rare comic performance, Angel on My Shoulder, playing a gangster whose early death prompts the Devil ( played by Claude Rains ) to make mischief by putting his soul into the body of a judge, only to have his new identity turn the former criminal into a model citizen.
In Where Danger Lives ( 1950 ) he played a doctor who comes between a mentally unbalanced Faith Domergue and cuckolded Claude Rains.
Huppert played a manic and homicidal post-office worker in Claude Chabrol's La Cérémonie ( 1995 ), with Sandrine Bonnaire, and continued her cinematic relationship with Chabrol in Rien ne va plus ( 1997 ), and Merci pour le chocolat ( 2000 ).
Other successes from this period included Le Train ( 1973 ), where she played a German-Jewish refugee in World War 2, Claude Chabrol's thriller Innocents with Dirty Hands ( Les innocents aux mains sales, 1975 ) with Rod Steiger, and Le vieux fusil ( 1975 ).
In 1929 Holloway played another leading role in musical comedy, Lieutenant Richard Manners in Song of the Sea, and later that year he performed in the revue Coo-ee, with Billy Bennett, Dorothy Dickson and Claude Hulbert.
The Passionate Friends though, in which Howard played a similar character to Alec in Brief Encounter also featured Ann Todd and Claude Rains, but was not successful.
In 1890 he played a major role in assisting Claude Monet in organizing a public subscription and in persuading the French state to purchase Edouard Manet's 1863 Olympia.
In the 1970s, Farrow appeared in a number of notable films, including the thriller See No Evil ( 1971 ), French director Claude Chabrol's Docteur Popaul ( 1972 ) and The Great Gatsby ( 1974 ), in which Farrow played Daisy Buchanan.
During the 1950s and 60s, when the Western desert campaigns began to be played out all over again in memoirs, biographies and history books, he maintained loyalty to those people in whom he had placed his trust-especially Sir Claude Auchinleck, whose reputation he was always eager to defend.
Considered as a possible substitute for Jean-Louis Barrault in Les Enfants du Paradis, he played the ghost in Sylvie and the Ghost ( Sylvie et le fantôme ) ( Claude Autant-Lara appeared as Sylvie ) and also appeared as The Devil in the same film.
He also collaborated, in the past and present, with various dance acts and DJs, such as Tin Tin Out, Eddie Lock, Marc et Claude, Regi Penxten ( Milk Inc .) and the Disco Bros, and played alongside people such as Alice Cooper, Paul Young, Jon Anderson, and Brian May.
He played Claude Pichon in The Dinner Party ( 2000 ) at the Music Box Theatre on Broadway, which was written by Neil Simon.
He played piano with the big bands of Tex Beneke and Ray McKinley, but switched his focus to valve trombone when he was with the Claude Thornhill orchestra in the early 1950s.
Since the movie was shot in Montréal, some of the cast included many French Canadian actors, such as Martin Drainville, Serge Houde and Claude Despins who played a security guard at the customs house, the jazz club host / greeter and the club's bartender, respectively.
In 1964, a fourth series was broadcast as Foreign Affairs, and shows Bootsie ( played by Bass ) getting a job as a Security Officer at the British Embassy in Bosnik where he is joined by Claude Snudge ( played by Fraser ).
He first collaborated with director Ken Russell in a TV biopic of Claude Debussy in 1965, and later played Dante Gabriel Rossetti in Russell's subsequent TV biopic Dante's Inferno ( 1967 ).
Claude Chauchetière and Pierre Cholenec were Jesuit priests who played important roles in Tekakwitha ’ s life.
The American critic Bob Wade wrote about Ceccaldi in ' Stolen Kisses ': " Claude Jade's parents are memorably played by Daniel Ceccaldi and Claire Duhamel.
Besides Lansbury as Mame, the cast included Bea Arthur as Vera Charles, Frankie Michaels as Patrick, Jane Connell as Agnes Gooch, and Willard Waterman ( who had played Claude Upson in the 1958 film ) as Dwight Babcock.

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