Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Carol Smillie" ¶ 0
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Smillie and is
Carol Patricia Smillie ( born 23 December 1961 ) is a Scottish television personality, model and actress.
Smillie is also the co-author of Carol Smillie's Working Mum's Handbook.
Smillie is the youngest of four siblings, with two sisters and a brother.
In June 2009, Ian Smillie of Canadian-based NGO, Partnership Africa Canada ( PAC ), and one of the founder members of the Kimberley Process resigned his position accusing the regulator of failing to regulate and saying he could no longer contribute to the " pretense that failure is success ".
Return to Eden is an Australian television drama series starring Rebecca Gilling, James Reyne, Wendy Hughes and James Smillie.

Smillie and for
Between 2007 and 2010, Smillie was the figurehead campaign model for the Scottish company The Edinburgh Woollen Mill, Alongside her daughter Christie, she was the advertising model for the Ortak jewellery company, fronting the company's new range for Autumn / Winter 2010.
Her art tutor was into abstract art, which was an area that didn ’ t really work for Smillie, “ Throwing paint at a wall, wasn ’ t what I expected ”.
Smillie left the agency she had been working for whilst at college, and joined the Best Modelling Agency, run by Fiona Best an ex-model.
Smillie worked for the agency throughout the eighties becoming one of Fiona Best ’ s favourite models, because of her professional attitude and reliability, something a number of the other agency models lacked.
You know me from Wheel of Fortune but I'd really like to do something else now, so I'm willing to work for nothing to get some stuff on tape " Through her perseverance Smillie managed to pick up the odd presenting job and soon had enough material to create a show-reel to present to TV companies.
Smillie was so successful as a holiday reporter, that stints followed on BBC One for the Holiday programme.
Smillie stayed as the main presenter for 13 series, leaving in 2003.
In 1996 Smillie was selected to present The National Lottery Show for the BBC.
In 2003, after leaving Changing Rooms, Smillie departed the BBC for the Channel five show Dream Holiday Homes.
Also the properties were situated in various Southern European locations, and at the end of each show Smillie would auction off the property for the price of a £ 1 phone call to a lucky viewer picked at random.
Smillie was back working for STV Productions in 2005 as presenter of the short-lived ITV daytime show The People's Court.
In 1919, Lloyd George sent for the leaders of the Triple Alliance, one of whom was miner's leader Robert Smillie, a founder member of the Independent Labour Party in 1889 who was to become a Labour Party MP in the first 1924 Labour government.
Smillie was sacked in January 1999 with the team looking destined for the drop.
Former designer on the show Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen took over presenting the show from Carol Smillie in 2003 for series 14 and 15.
The music video for the song, directed by Peter Smillie, takes place at a Mardi Gras-like carnival.
Gilling and Smillie would reprise their roles for a 22-part weekly series screened in 1986.
Smillie, who had been in Barcelona working with John McNair as the representative Youth section of the International Bureau for Revolutionary Socialist Unity.

Smillie and BBC
Smillie achieved further recognition a few years later when she appeared on the BBC television channel, firstly as a reporter on The Travel Show, and then Holiday, often as the programme's presenter.
BBC Manchester were impressed enough to offer Smillie the reporter's job on BBC Two's The Travel Show.
In 1996, Smillie became the original presenter of BBC Two's new DIY show Changing Rooms.
In 1998, Smillie was awarded her own mid-morning chat-show on BBC One entitled Smillie's People.
Kane found fame on Changing Rooms, which ran on BBC TV 1996-2004 and was hosted by Carol Smillie and later Laurence Llewellyn-Bowen, in which he appears as a talkative cockney builder who helps out with DIY jobs the contestants cannot handle.

Smillie and series
Smillie gradually improved as the series progressed, as the scores in the table below reflect.

Smillie and Changing
Smillie ’ s earliest memories are of having her nappy changed and, when put in her pram to go to sleep, being frightened by the wallpaper, which she finds amusing considering her later fame with the television programme Changing Rooms.
During her time on the show, Smillie and the Changing Rooms team won A National TV Award and an INDIE Award and were BAFTA nominated.
Changing Rooms was originally hosted by Carol Smillie, and assisting with the remodeling was Cockney carpenter, " Handy " Andy Kane.

Smillie and which
In the UK a Labour Party anti-war activist Robert Smillie isuued a statement in June 1919 condeming the continuation blockade in which he also claimed that 100, 000 German civilians had died.
Ancona's impression of Smillie used the catchphrase " I ’ m Smiley Smiley Carol Smillie ", which Smillie adopted and has entered into popular culture when referencing her.
As a child, Smillie attended Simshill Primary School, which was very close to where she lived.
Smillie eventually attained seven O-levels, fabric and fashion being one, which was the direction she felt her career would lead.
Smillie studied at Langside College to get the other two, but only managed to get one, which she has attributed to too much freedom and enjoying herself with her friends.

Smillie and her
Smillie had a happy idyllic childhood growing up in a three-bedroom bungalow in Glasgow, sharing a room with her two older sisters.
Smillie realised that it was a huge financial effort by her parents to send her there, but academically she did not shine.
At 18 years of age, Smillie embarked on her first year at the Glasgow School of Art, studying Art, Design and Fashion, with the vague idea of becoming a fashion designer.
To subsidise her studies Smillie worked in a cocktail bar, and after approaching a local Glasgow model agency, took up part-time modelling.
Smillie believing that this was his way of saying, " I don't think you've got what it takes ", decided to leave the Glasgow School of Art, and embarked on modelling as her new career.
Smillie met her husband Alex Knight, also a former model, through Fiona's agency and at one point they even considered buying the business, but they decided against it as Smillie realised that looking after a group of young models was not something she wished to take on.
During the early nineties Smillie sent her cv to all the video and production companies in Scotland, stating that " My name's Carol Smillie.
In September 1998 Smillie was presented with the famous Red Book about her life, on the long-running television show This Is Your Life.

0.426 seconds.