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She is married to actor/director Constantine Paraskevopoulos. [1] Career. In 2008, ...
Shooting the Warwicks is an American film directed by Adam Rifkin and adapted from his Showtime series Reality Show.It was released in August 2015. Both the film and the series star Adam Rifkin, Constantine Paraskevopoulos, Scott Anderson, Monika Tilling and Kelley Hensley.
King Paul accepted Papandreou's resignation on 31 December 1963, and Ioannis Paraskevopoulos formed an interim government to serve until the 1964 elections. [2] The ERE had been weakened prior to the elections when Konstantinos Karamanlis abandoned politics and exiled himself in Paris.
The single was a commercial failure in the United States, failing to chart. Video directed by Constantine Paraskevopoulos. The first version of the music video featured a group of female dancers (including Kimberly Wyatt from The Pussycat Dolls) dancing around Lachey and featured several close-ups of him. Lachey filmed the video, and later won ...
appointed by the King Constantine II from defectors of the Center Union Fifth Cabinet of Georgios Papandreou: 19 February 1964 - 15 July 1965 Georgios Papandreou: Center Union: Cabinet of Ioannis Paraskevopoulos: 16 December 1963 - 18 February 1964 Ioannis Paraskevopoulos: caretaker government to hold 1964 Greek legislative election
Constantine II (Greek: Κωνσταντίνος Βʹ, romanized: Konstantínos II, pronounced [ˌkonsta(n)ˈdinos o ˈðefteros]; 2 June 1940 – 10 January 2023) [1] was the last king of Greece, reigning from 6 March 1964 until the abolition of the Greek monarchy on 1 June 1973.
King Constantine II openly opposed Papandreou's government, and there were frequent ultra-rightist plots in the Army, which destabilised the government. Finally, the King engineered a split in the Centre Union, and in July 1965, in a crisis known as the Apostasia or Iouliana, he dismissed the government following a dispute over control of the ...
In Asia Minor, Paraskevopoulos was dismissed and replaced by Lt. General Anastasios Papoulas, at the head of the re-constituted Army of Asia Minor; by March 1921, the purges had removed the three Corps commanders, seven of nine divisional commanders, and a large portion of regimental commanders.