Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
He sells his Blackpool fish-and-chip shop to his friend Bobby so that he and Dorothy can pay the bank the £30,000 that their father owed. Dorothy Sutcliffe (Josephine Tewson), the flustering, legitimate daughter of Herbert Sutcliffe and his wife. She doesn't take to Neville immediately, but later sees through the exterior and accepts him into ...
Hotpants or hot pants are extremely short shorts. The term was first used by Women's Wear Daily in 1970 to describe shorts made in luxury fabrics such as velvet and satin for fashionable wear, rather than their more practical equivalents that had been worn for sports or leisure since the 1930s. Hotpants are worn above the knees around the thigh ...
What links here; Related changes; Upload file; Special pages; Permanent link; Page information; Cite this page; Get shortened URL; Download QR code
After several failed gimmicks, Dorothy and Paul bring Steve to a gay bar, where he is inspired to transform their business into a male striptease show for women. Renaming the club "Chippendales", Steve enlists the help of Emmy-winning choreographer Nick De Noia while Dorothy suggests that the staff wear collars and cuffs based on the Playboy ...
Dottie Sutcliffe (born 27 August 1946) is a Rhodesian former swimmer. She competed in three events for Rhodesia at the 1960 Summer Olympics. [1] References
Dorothy Hoyle: Jean Fergusson: 2010–2011 Mr Westmore Dominic Geraghty 2011 DS Redfern: Paul Warriner 2010–2011 Jeff Cullen: Steven Houghton: 2011 Russ Gray: Finton Flynn 2010–2011 Cheryl Gray: Holly Quin-Ankrah: 2010–2011 Chris Gray: Will Thorp: 2010–2011 Ciaran McCarthy: Keith Duffy: 2002–2005, 2010–2011 Jonno Richardson: David ...
Dolphin shorts are a style of unisex shorts designed to be worn for athletics.They are typically very short and were originally made from nylon with contrasting binding, side slits, and rounded corners, with a waistband at the top—a style popular in the 1980s.
Principles was a UK-based fashion retailer founded in 1984.. The firm was launched by the Burton Group (later the Arcadia Group) as an attempt to capitalise on the new modern trends in fashion; the mid-1980s was the boom era for the yuppie, a new upmarket cultural movement, and power dressing was a key trend: at the time, the Group's ladies' fashion operations (chiefly Dorothy Perkins) were ...