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Nigél Thatch (born August 8, 1976) is an American actor. He played Malcolm X in the first two seasons of the Epix television series Godfather of Harlem [1] [2] and was nominated for a best supporting actor award at the 51st NAACP Image Awards for the role. He also portrayed Malcolm X in the 2014 film Selma. [3]
Godfather of Harlem is an American crime drama television series that premiered on September 29, 2019, on Epix. [1] The series is written by Chris Brancato and Paul Eckstein, and stars Forest Whitaker as 1960s New York City gangster Bumpy Johnson.
Opening Title Production company Cast and crew Ref. J A N U A R Y: 9 Firestorm: 20th Century Fox: Dean Semler (director); Chris Soth (screenplay); Howie Long, Scott Glenn, William Forsythe, Suzy Amis, Garwin Sanford, Sebastian Spence, Michael Greyeyes, Barry Pepper, Vladimir Kulich, Jonathon Young, Christianne Hirt, Tom McBeath, Benjamin Ratner, Alexandria Mitchell, Gavin Buhr, Danny Wattley ...
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Heather Thatcher (1896–1987), English actress; Henry Thatcher (1806–1880), American admiral; Henry Calvin Thatcher (1842—1884), the first Chief Justice of the Colorado Supreme Court; James Thatcher (MP) (fl. 1536–1565), English politician; James Thatcher (musician), American horn player; Joe Thatcher (born 1981), American Major League ...
Nigel Lawson was born on 11 March 1932 to a non-Orthodox Jewish family [3] living in Hampstead, London. [4]His father, Ralph Lawson (1904–1982), was the owner of a tea-trading firm in the City of London, while his mother, Joan Elizabeth (Davis) (died 1998), was also from a prosperous family of stockbrokers. [5]
Nigel Lawson: 11 June 1983 John Major: 26 October 1989 Chief Secretary to the Treasury: John Biffen: 5 May 1979 Leon Brittan: 5 January 1981 Peter Rees: 11 June 1983 John MacGregor: 2 September 1985 John Major: 13 June 1987 Norman Lamont: 24 July 1989 Minister of State for Treasury: Peter Rees: 6 May 1979 – 14 September 1981 The Lord ...
Following Thatcher's departure, her former chancellor Nigel Lawson labelled the poll tax as "the one great blunder of the Thatcher years". The succeeding Major government announced the abolition of the tax in spring 1991 and, in 1993, replaced it with Council Tax, a banded property tax similar in many respects to the older system of rates. [183]