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Britain Dalton (born December 12, 2001) is an American actor known for his role as Lo’ak, the second son of Jake Sully and Neytiri, in the science fiction film Avatar: The Way of Water (2022). Career
Dalton is a surname of Norman origin found in Ireland and Britain and places where people from those backgrounds emigrated to. The Hiberno-Norman D'Alton (later Dalton) family controlled an area of the Irish midlands following the Norman invasion and assimilation into Ireland.
Avatar: The Way of Water was written and directed by James Cameron, The cast includes Sam Worthington, Zoë Saldaña, Joel David Moore, Sigourney Weaver, CCH Pounder, Stephen Lang, Giovanni Ribisi, Kate Winslet, Cliff Curtis, Trinity Bliss, Jamie Flatters, Britain Dalton, and Jack Champion, and was set 13 years after the first film in the year ...
Sir Richard John Dalton KCMG (born 10 October 1948) is a former senior member of the British Diplomatic Service. His assignments included British Ambassador to Libya and Iran . He retired from the Diplomatic Service in 2006.
Hugh Dalton was born in Neath in South Wales. His father, John Neale Dalton, was a Church of England clergyman who became chaplain to Queen Victoria, tutor to the princes Albert Victor and his younger brother George (later King George V), and a canon of Windsor.
[12] Dalton used the Irish Republican Army (IRA) during the Irish War of Independence as a model for the organisation. [ 13 ] [ 14 ] [ 15 ] Sir Frank Nelson was nominated by SIS to be director of the new organisation, [ 16 ] and a senior civil servant , Gladwyn Jebb , transferred from the Foreign Office to it, with the title of Chief Executive ...
Timothy Leonard Dalton Leggett was born on 21 March 1946 in Colwyn Bay, Wales, to an English father, Peter Dalton Leggett, who was a captain in the Special Operations Executive (SOE) during the Second World War and was an advertising executive at the time of his son's birth; and an American mother, Dorothy Scholes, of Italian and Irish descent.
Thomas Frederick Dalton-Morgan, DSO, OBE, DFC & Bar (23 March 1917 – 18 September 2004) was a fighter pilot and flying ace of the Royal Air Force during the Second World War. [1] He flew during the Battle of Britain , and is counted amongst the ranks of ' The Few '.