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OliveTheBoy had his senior high school education at the Opoku Ware Senior High School in Kumasi, Ashanti Region of Ghana.He is currently enrolled at the University of Ghana and the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology [3] for his tertiary education.
The Irish boy band Boyzone took the song to No. 2 in the UK in 1994. "Love Me for a Reason" was the title track to the album of the same name , which featured a blue-eyed soul format (their fourth style change in less than a decade) arranged by H. B. Barnum .
Olive, the Other Reindeer is a 1999 American animated Christmas comedy musical television film written by Steve Young, based on the 1997 children's book by Vivian Walsh and J. Otto Seibold, and directed by Academy Award-nominated animator Steve Moore (credited as "Oscar Moore").
In 2017, a version by Scotty Boy and Lizzie Curious went to number one on the US Dance Club Songs chart. [81] A singer under the name Astræa (Jennifer Ann) released a version for the 2018 Lloyds TV advert. [82] In 2020, progressive rock band Esoterica released a cover of the song on their fourth studio album, In Dreams.
Oliver is a masculine given name of Old French and Medieval British origin. The name has been generally associated with the Latin term olivarius, meaning "olive tree planter", [1] [2] or "olive branch bearer" [3] Other proposed origins include the Germanic names *wulfa-"wolf" and *harja-"army"; [4] the Old Norse Óleifr (); a genuinely West Germanic name, perhaps from ala-"all" and wēra "true ...
Mark Lester (born Mark A. Letzer; [1] 11 July 1958) is an English former child actor who starred in a number of British and European films in the 1960s and 1970s. In 1968 he played the title role in the film Oliver!, a musical version of the stage production by Lionel Bart based on Charles Dickens' novel Oliver Twist.
Olive Snook (Kristin Chenoweth) is the waitress at Ned's restaurant and his next-door neighbor. She is romantically interested in Ned but is often thwarted from pursuing her interest, due at first to the piemaker's social aversion and later to Chuck "faking her own death" and coming out of nowhere.
Olive Oyl in her debut (strip printed December 19, 1919) In the strip as written by Segar, Olive is a scrappy, headstrong young woman (her age varying between her late teens and 26) visually characterized by her exaggeratedly slim build (evolving from its previous more realistically proportioned form by the late 1920s) and her long black hair (usually presented as rolled in a neat bun, like ...