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She and married
She finds married life stifling and every prolonged sex relationship unbearably monotonous.
`` She married our baby boy, Bobby Joe, this summer ''.
She was married to him for better or for worse.
She had grown up with young Jenkins, and he had heard that they had been at the point of getting married at least twice.
She and her second husband, Sir Max Mallowan, were one of the rare married couples to be titled, each in their own right.
She and Alexander II married on 21 June 1221, at York Minster.
She later married to Turner Doughtry.
She was married in 515 to Eutharic ( c. 480 – 522 ), an Ostrogoth noble of the old Amal line, who had previously been living in Visigothic Hispania, son of Widerich ( born c. 450 ), grandson of Berismund ( born c. 410 ), and great-grandson of Thorismund ( died after 400 ), King of the Ostrogoths c. 400.
She had married in 1444 Leonello d ' Este, deceased 1450.
She married Basil of Trebizond and took over the throne of the Empire of Trebizond from 1340 to 1341.
She divorced Vadim in 1957 and in 1959 married actor Jacques Charrier, with whom she starred in Babette Goes to War.
She married Theodore Olson in 1996.
She became the sister-in-law of her friend and colleague, Édouard Manet, when she married his brother, Eugène.
( She was engaged to Mu Bai's brother, so they feel it would not be honorable to get married.
She would later convert to Henry's faith when they married.
She married Henry VIII, who had only just acceded to the throne, in a private ceremony at Greenwich Church.
She later married Áed's successor Flann Sinna.
She married Bogusław V, Duke of Pomerania.
She married in 1380, at the age of 15 and was widowed 10 years later.
She married Etienne du Castel, a royal secretary to the court, at the age of 15.
She did write for a few television shows under her married name, but upon marrying Thomas Reggie ( who was not a writer ) in 1963, she ceased writing entirely.
She married British bartender turned Los Angeles bar owner Jeremy Thomas on March 20, 1994, and filed for divorce less than two months later.
She married David on September 23, 1885, in Lecompton, Kansas, on the campus of their alma mater, Lane University.
She became a member of the Communist Party in 1938, and married Deng a year later in front of Mao's cave dwelling in Yan ' an.
She elected to work under the advice and management of her third husband, Marty Melcher, whom she married in Burbank on April 3, 1951.

She and 1939
) She also performed some acrobatics while trying to steal a wallet from Groucho Marx in the Marx Brothers film At the Circus ( 1939 ).
She married Owen Moore ( 1886 – 1939 ), an Irish-born silent film actor, on January 7, 1911.
She attended the Girls ' Latin School of Chicago ( describing herself as an average student ), graduated in 1939, and later attended Smith College in Massachusetts, where she majored in English and drama and graduated in 1943.
She had a busy official role from 1932 to 1939 and, following her husband's death, stood for Parliament herself, becoming Australia's first female Member of the House of Representatives, and later first woman in Cabinet, joining the Menzies Cabinet in 1951.
She chose to work only occasionally after her marriage to film costume designer Adrian in 1939.
She was married to MGM costume designer Adrian from August 14, 1939 to his death on September 13, 1959.
She then made a comeback in her first comedy playing opposite Melvyn Douglas in Ernst Lubitsch's Ninotchka ( 1939 ).
She won the National Board of Review Best Acting Award for Camille, 1936, Ninotchka, 1939, and Two-Faced Woman, 1941.
She was emotional during the making of her next film, Dark Victory ( 1939 ), and considered abandoning it until the producer Hal B. Wallis convinced her to channel her despair into her acting.
She appeared in three other box office hits in 1939, The Old Maid with Miriam Hopkins, Juarez with Paul Muni and The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex with Errol Flynn.
She was awarded the Tagea Brandt Rejselegat ( a Danish prize for women in the arts or academic life ) in 1939.
She ponders about medical experiments conducted by Nazi physicians ; about the gas chambers in the death camps, implicitly comparing a crowded New York subway with a cattle wagon to Auschwitz ; the Nazis making soap with human fat ; Pope Pius XII and Roman Catholicism ; displaced Jews after World War II ; anti-Semitism in general ; Neo-Nazis in Germany and Austria ; the world population of Jews in 1939 and today and the fact that there were " no Jews left " in Poland after World War II ; business in the DP camps ( i. e. bartering with cigarettes ), coffee but also Nazi memorabilia ; and she considers with disgust a video game on CD-ROM entitled " How to Survive the Holocaust ".
With the aid of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and her husband Franklin D. Roosevelt, Anderson performed a critically acclaimed open-air concert on Easter Sunday, April 9, 1939, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D. C. She sang before a crowd of more than 75, 000 people and a radio audience in the millions.
She was married to Prince Bernhard of Lippe-Biesterfeld, with whom she had four children: Princess Beatrix ( born 1938 ), Princess Irene ( born 1939 ), Princess Margriet ( born 1943 ), Princess Christina ( born 1947 ).
She won the award for Best Supporting Actress for her role of Mammy in Gone with the Wind ( 1939 ).
She also edited The Rabbit Skin Cap, a tale of a Norfolk countryman's youth, first published in 1939 and reprinted by the Norfolk Library, 1974, 1975, 1976, which is the life story of George Baldry, a local inventor and poacher in the early C20.
She returned to the stage in Stars in Your Eyes, which struggled to survive while the public flocked to the 1939 New York World's Fair instead and finally closed short of four months.
She voiced the Wicked Witch of the West in Tom and Jerry and the Wizard of Oz, an animated direct-to-DVD midquel / parallel of the classic 1939 film.
She held the Promethea mantle from 1920 – 1939.
She moved with her first husband, a Swedish osteopath, Eric V. Drimmer in 1939, shortly after they married in London.
She made her stage debut in 1939 in the Little Revue.
She was under surveillance by MI5 from 1939 until the 1950s.
She married the journalist Peter Fleming in 1935, and in 1939 gave birth to their first child, a son.
* She Stoops to Conquer, a 1939 adaptation for television starring Morris Harvey, Renee De Vaux and James Hayter
She attended South Hampstead High School for Girls, the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art from 1939 – 40, and the Feagin School of Dramatic Art in New York from 1940-42.

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