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Barbara Williams (born October 19, 1953) is a Canadian-American actress. Williams has starred in the 1984 Paramount film Thief of Hearts, the 1988 film Watchers and the 1992 film Oh, What a Night. She garnered a Genie Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress at the 21st Genie Awards for Love Come Down.
Barbara and Ethan began a band together in 2008. [1] Their first album, The Belle Brigade, was co-produced by Barbara, Ethan and Matthew Wilder and released on Reprise Records in April 2011. [1] The duo has toured with such acts as Grace Potter and the Nocturnals, G. Love & Special Sauce, k.d. lang, [1] Dawes, and Blitzen Trapper. [9]
Barbara Williams may refer to: Barbara Williams (actress) (born 1953), Canadian-born American actress; Barbara Williams (skating coach), American ice hockey skating coach; Barbara Roles Williams (born 1941), American former figure skater; Barbara A. Williams, African-American radio astrophysicist; Barbara Williams (writer) (1925 – 2013 ...
The group reunited in the 1990s and performed at the Art Leboe Concert Hall in California with a new member on September 11, 2010, more than two years after the death of Barbara Gilliam, and with Val Williams and two new members at The WAVE's Love Affair Concert at Honda Center, Anaheim, California on February 11, 2017.
Language: English: Oh, What a Night is a 1992 comedy film, starring Corey Haim and Barbara Williams. [1] [2] Plot. ... Barbara Williams as Vera; Keir Dullea as Thorvald;
Perfect Pie is a 2002 Canadian film directed by Barbara Willis Sweete from a script by Judith Thompson.The screenplay was based on Thompson's play of the same name and stars Wendy Crewson, Barbara Williams, Alison Pill, and Rachel McAdams.
Barbara Williams was born January 1, 1925, in Salt Lake City, Utah, [2] daughter of Walter Wright. [3] Williams began writing when she was five years old, when she was encouraged by her teachers to act as the classroom reporter for the children's page of a local newspaper, which she kept writing for until she became the editor for that same page at the seventh grade. [4]
Barbara Ann Williams is an American radio astronomer who was the first African-American woman to earn a PhD in astronomy (University of Maryland, College Park, 1981).Her research largely focused on compact galaxy groups, in particular observations of their emissions in the H I region in order to build up a larger scale picture of the structure and evolution of galaxies.