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Nelson Lee (born October 16, 1975; Chinese name: 李志傑) [1] is a Taiwanese-Canadian actor. He is best known for portraying Senator Hamato Xiono in Ahsoka , and Dragon King in Stargirl . Life and career
Nelson Lee is a fictional detective who featured in the Amalgamated Press papers over a 40-year run. [1] [2] Created in 1894 by Maxwell Scott (the pseudonym of Dr. John Staniforth 1863-1927) he appeared in various publications including The Halfpenny Marvel, Pluck, The Boys' Friend, Boys' Realm, The Boys' Herald and the Union Jack [3] In 1915 he was given his own story-paper series, The Nelson ...
Nelson Lee was born in Brownsville, Jefferson County, New York, in 1807. He died in poverty in Hammond's Corners in New York, on December 21, 1870. In 1859 an account ...
Nelson Lee (born 1975) is a Taiwanese-Canadian actor. Nelson Lee may also refer to: Nelson Lee (detective), fictional British detective The Nelson Lee Library, weekly story paper that ran from 1915 to 1933; Richard Nelson Lee (1806–1872), known as Nelson Lee, English actor, theatre manager and writer
Nelson Lee was created by John William Staniforth, writing under the name Maxwell Scott, in 1894.Lee made his debut in A Dead Man’s Secret in The Halfpenny Marvel #46. The detective was an immediate sensation and continued to feature in many of the Amalgamated Press papers over the next twenty years. [1]
Simon Benjamin Brodkin (born 29 September 1977) is an English comedian, performing both on the stand-up circuit and in comedy television series. He is best known for playing a cheerful chav character called Lee Nelson, but also performs as other comedy characters, such as a Liverpudlian footballer called Jason Bent.
Lee Nelson may refer to: Lee Nelson (American football) (b. 1954), retired American football player; Lee Nelson (cricketer) (born 1990), Irish cricketer; Lee Nelson, a comedy character created by Simon Brodkin. Lee Nelson's Well Good Show, a 2010 British television comedy show; Lee Nelson's Well Funny People, a 2013 British television comedy show
He continued to use this rhythm of syllables in naming his most popular characters: Nelson Lee, Kenyon Ford, Vernon Read and Martin Dale. Of note, the name Nelson Lee was created on the spur of the moment a combination of two names, Mr. Nelson and Mr Lee, both strangers to him, that he had noticed on letters in his morning mail. [7]