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She and remarried
She eventually remarried.
She has since remarried and has a daughter.
She remarried once and died in 1985.
She cared for her brother John for several years until their father remarried in 1912 to Elizabeth " Lizzie " Fields ( 1878 – 1933 ).
She never remarried after the death of her husband, but her enemies said she conducted a love affair with Ernst Johann von Biron for many years.
She remarried.
She remarried, thinking he had died in Vietnam, whereas he was MIA and held for years in a POW camp.
She remarried Arthur's younger brother, Henry, shortly after his succession in 1509 and became queen consort.
She is now remarried to Tony, a wealthy man who owns one of the other horses in the race.
She died February 10, 1550, and thereafter Cranach remarried, wedding Magdalena Schurff on May 24, 1551.
She remarried in 1988 to Sayyid Mohammed Al-Saleh ; they have two sons, Talal and Abdulhamid.
She had a difficult time after her father remarried.
She remarried to John F. O ' Leary, the former Deputy Secretary of Energy, on April 24, 1980.
She was accused of witchcraft because the puritans believed that Osborne had her own self-interests in mind for she had remarried ( to an indentured servant ).
She may have briefly travelled to France and Spain in her guise but soon returned to England and remarried.
She later remarried and took the name Muriel Humphrey Brown.
She hid herself away and waited until Erchinoald remarried.
She remarried in 1879 and left Reza to the care of his uncle, who, in turn, sent Reza away to his friend Amir Tuman Kazim Khan, an army officer.
She is currently Fawzia Shirin, having remarried in 1949 and having her royal titles no longer recognized by the Egyptian government after the Egyptian Revolution of 1952.
She remarried on April 17, 1998 to marketing executive Liam McQuade and has one daughter with him, Kate Rae McQuade.
She ruled it with her son William until she remarried and he renounced it.
She died in childbirth bearing his only son, Francis, in 1678, and Godolphin never remarried.
She was sent to prison, and afterwards remarried, but was deserted by her new husband and buried next to Davies on her death in 1652.
She headed the Troy Female Seminary until she remarried in 1838 and left the school in the hands of her son and daughter-in-law.
She never remarried.

She and 1962
The campus newspaper The Daily Texan ran a profile of her in the issue dated July 27, 1962, headlined " She Dares To Be Different ".
She also made a number of television appearances from 1953 through 1962, as a guest star in dramatic shows or installments of anthology series.
She began to study Art History in the University of Helsinki in 1962 but in autumn 1963 she changed her studies to law, and obtained her Master of Laws degree in 1968 specializing in criminal law.
She outlived him by 58 years, dying in 1962.
She appears as the cover model on jazz pianist Bill Evans ' 1962 album, Moon Beams.
She played an officious headmistress in The Happiest Days of Your Life at the Apollo Theatre in 1948 and such classical roles as Madame Desmortes in Ring Round the Moon ( Globe Theatre, 1950 ), Lady Wishfort in The Way of the World ( Lyric Hammersmith, 1953 and Saville Theatre, 1956 ) and Mrs Candour in The School for Scandal ( Haymarket Theatre, 1962 ).
She obtained a master's degree ( MA ) from Radcliffe in 1962 and pursued further graduate studies at Harvard University for two years but never finished because she failed to complete her dissertation on “ The English Metaphysical Romance.
She played opposite Laurence Olivier in Term of Trial ( 1962 ).
She designed baptismal rolls for the wall behind the font in 1948 and 1962.
She joined the Royal Shakespeare Company in December 1961 playing Anya in The Cherry Orchard at the Aldwych Theatre in London, and made her Stratford-upon-Avon debut in April 1962 as Isabella in Measure for Measure.
Helen Timmons Henderson ( 1877 – 1925 ) helped participate in the work of the Buchanan Mission School at Council, Va. She and Sarah Lee Fain ( 1888 – 1962 ) of Norfolk became the first two women to be elected into the Virginia General Assembly.
She also help fully desegregate the Cumberland Valley council in 1962.
She focused her career on choreography for Broadway shows: Flower Drum Song ( 1958, directed by Gene Kelly ), Bravo Giovanni ( 1962 ), She Loves Me ( 1963 ) and Funny Girl ( 1964 ).
She also undertook a tour of Israel around the same time, which was well-received ; she sang some songs in German during her concerts, including, from 1962, a German version of Pete Seeger's anti-war anthem " Where Have All the Flowers Gone ", thus breaking the unofficial taboo against the use of German in Israel.
She graduated from the Institute of Notre Dame, a Catholic all-girls high school in Baltimore, and from Trinity College ( now Trinity Washington University ) in Washington, D. C., in 1962 with a B. A.
She was also a member of the influential Pilkington Committee on Broadcasting from 1960 to 1962.
She began post-graduate work in 1962, at the Sorbonne in Paris, France, with a thesis on the poems of George Meredith, and the following year, married Stephen Clarkson, a University of Toronto political science professor.
She then had two top 10 hits in the UK that were not released as singles in her native country: " Speak To Me Pretty " peaked at No. 3 in early 1962, followed by " Here Comes That Feeling ", which reached No. 5.
She also made a pair of intimate vocal / guitar / double bass albums of jazz standards: After Hours ( 1961 ) with guitarist Mundell Lowe and double bassist George Duvivier and Sarah + 2 ( 1962 ) with guitarist Barney Kessell and double bassist Joe Comfort.
She had her final top-ten hit, " Vacation ", in 1962.
She returned to theatre ( between films ) more often in the 1950s and 1960s, playing in London and on tour in such roles as Edith Fenton in The Hat Trick ( 1950 ); Felicity, Countess of Marshwood, in Relative Values ( 1951 and 1953 ); Grace Smith in A Question of Fact ( 1953 ); Lady Yarmouth in The Night of the Ball ( 1954 ); Mrs. St. Maugham in The Chalk Garden ( 1955 – 56 ), Dame Mildred in The Bright One ( 1958 ); Mrs. Vincent in Look on Tempests ( 1960 ); Mrs. Gantry ( Bobby ) in The Bird of Time ( 1961 ); Mrs. Moore in A Passage to India ( 1962 ); Mrs Tabret in The Sacred Flame ( 1966 and 1967 ); Prue Salter in Let's All Go Down the Strand ( 1967 ); Emma Littlewood in Out of the Question ( 1968 ); Lydia in His, Hers and Theirs ( 1969 ); and others.
She made television performances on Ford Theatre, General Electric Theater, and the Schlitz Playhouse of Stars, continuing to act until 1962.
She continued to appear in movies through the mid-1960s, including Picnic ( 1955 ), A Majority of One ( 1961 ), Five Finger Exercise ( 1962 ), Gypsy ( 1962 ), and The Trouble with Angels ( 1966 ).

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