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Christina Ong (née Fu, born October 1947) [1] [2] [3] is a Singaporean businesswoman who owns the COMO Group, which includes London-listed Club 21 fashion stores [4] and COMO Hotels and Resorts. [5] Ong is cited as "one of the wealthiest women in the world". [1] [4] As of 2021, Christina and her husband were ranked 25th on Singapore's richest ...
Club 21 [2] is a luxury retail company established in 1972 by Singaporean entrepreneur-hotelier Christina Ong. [3] Club 21 started as a small boutique in Singapore's Tanglin Shopping Centre and has expanded to operate multi-label fashion stores at Four Seasons Singapore, as well as licensed boutiques in Australia, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia and Singapore, [4] Taiwan, Thailand ...
The company was founded in 1991 by Christina Ong and her husband Ong Beng Seng. The company commenced operations with the opening of The Halkin hotel in London, England in 1991. [6] This was followed by the opening of Parrot Cay resort in Turks and Caicos in 1998, and the Cocoa Island resort in the Maldives in 2002. In 2004, the company ...
All about the 'Mad Men' star's love life, and her soon-to-be husband.
Life is a 2015 biographical drama film directed by Anton Corbijn and written by Luke Davies. It is based on the friendship of Life photographer Dennis Stock and American actor James Dean , starring Robert Pattinson as Stock and Dane DeHaan as Dean.
Life Partners is a 2014 American romantic comedy drama film directed by Susanna Fogel and co-written with Joni Lefkowitz. It is Fogel's feature film directorial debut . The film stars Leighton Meester , Gillian Jacobs , Adam Brody , Greer Grammer , Gabourey Sidibe , and Julie White .
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images Christina Ricci has been a showbiz sweetheart for more than three decades — and she shows no signs of slowing down. In an exclusive interview with Us Weekly, the ...
The A.V. Club named it in its top 100 flops. [5] TV Guide gave the film 2 stars out of 4 and commented that the film "starts with a bang and ends in a long, protracted whimper" and Stephen Holden from The New York Times said you "feel as if you have just sat through an earnest made-for-television movie" and in the end "an honorable dud". [6] [7]