Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Strasser was offered the role of Cathy Craig on One Life to Live, but ended up joining the show as Dorian Lord in 1979, when Claire Malis left the role. Strasser had four stints as Dorian, leaving the show in 1987 and returning to play Dorian again from 1993 to 2000, 2003 to August 25, 2011, and then again in the online revival of the series in ...
After reaching Fort Astoria, Dorion and her family returned with a trapping party to the Snake River area. [5] As the months became colder, some of the party stayed to build a cabin on the Snake River while the rest, including Giles Le Clarc and the Dorion family, continued to travel to a better trapping area. [ 6 ]
Dorian then attempts to kill Mitch by bribing Viki's new husband, Charlie Banks (Brian Kerwin), but then attempt to do so herself. Mitch threatens Dorian's girls, and her sister Melinda mysteriously dies in her sleep off-screen. Dorian continued in her role as Mayor of Llanview throughout 2010 and 2011.
William C. Doran (December 21, 1884 – January 23, 1965) [1] [2] was an associate justice of the California Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division 1, from October 14, 1935, until 1958. Biography
In 1976, Victor suffers a heart attack and dies after wife Dorian denies him medication, and in his wake Dorian wreaks havoc on the Lord family. [29] Viki and Joe have a son, Kevin Lord Riley, who is soon kidnapped by jealous Cathy Craig Lord (then Jennifer Harmon), but is later returned. [30]
Having apparently lost a third sister to pneumonia, Dorian and Melinda are each other's only family. Dorian treats Eileen Riley Siegel for her addiction to painkillers, and soon became romantically involved with Dr. Mark Toland, the husband of Eileen's daughter Julie Siegel Toland. A furious Melinda, who had also developed a crush on Mark ...
Williams was [1] educated at Hawtreys prep school, [2] then Harrow School and served as a soldier. He was, from the 1950s until his retirement in 1980, [ 3 ] the voice of show jumping on British television , [ 4 ] succeeded by Raymond Brooks-Ward who broadcast with Williams from 1956. [ 5 ]
Dorian Williams may refer to: Dorian Williams (equestrian) (1914–1985), British equestrian; Dorian Williams (American football) (born 2001), American football player