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Jennifer Lyon was born in Nevada, but grew up in Washington and The Dalles, Oregon. She enjoyed hiking, playing soccer , and photography. At the age of 18, Jennifer learned Spanish when she participated in the foreign exchange program around 1990.
Born in India as the daughter of a French East India Company officer, she married George Grand, an officer of the English East India Company. After her marriage, she had a scandalous liaison with Bengal councillor Philip Francis in Calcutta .
Jennifer Lyon is an American actress. She is known for her roles as Jennifer Husser on the TNT series Claws (2017), Mackenzie Bradford-Lopez on the FX sitcom Saint George (2014), Lindsey Salazar on the FX drama Justified (2010), and most recently Esther Finch in Netflix's series Dead Boy Detectives (2024).
Jennifer Lyon Bell (born August 6, 1969 in Concord, Massachusetts) is an erotic film director/producer, curator, teacher, and writer. She is one of the early members of the feminist pornography [ 1 ] movement and ethical porn [ 2 ] movement, alongside Erika Lust , Shine Louise Houston , Tristan Taormino , and Maria Beatty .
Dar Lyon (1898–1964), English cricketer; Duffy Lyon (1929–2011), American farmer and butter sculptor; Edward E. Lyon (1871–1931), US soldier and war hero; Elinor Lyon (1921–2008), English author; Francis D. Lyon (1905–1996), American film editor; Francis Strother Lyon (1800–1882), American and Confederate States politician
Lady of the Glen: A Novel of 17th-Century Scotland and the Massacre of Glencoe is a 1996 historical fiction novel by American author Jennifer Roberson.It is a re-telling of the 1692 Massacre of Glencoe, and focuses on the romance between Catriona of Clan Campbell and Alasdair Og MacDonald of Clan Donald, each from rival clans.
Thomas Elmer Huff (January 8, 1938 – January 16, 1990) was a best-selling American author of 23 gothic and romance novels as T. E. Huff and Tom E. Huff and under the female pen names Edwina Marlow, Beatrice Parker, Katherine St. Clair, and Jennifer Wilde.
Jennifer, also spelled Jenifer or Jenefer, is a feminine given name, the Cornish form of Guinevere, [1] that became popular in the English-speaking world in the 20th century. Etymology [ edit ]