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Molly is a two-part Australian miniseries about Australian music personality Molly Meldrum. Aired on the Seven Network, the first part premiered on 7 February 2016, with the second and final half screening on 14 February. It is based on Meldrum's biography, The Never, Um ...
Meldrum returned to Melbourne in 1912, established an art school at Elizabeth Street and began publishing his theories of art, which created a storm in the Australian art world. His school of painting attracted equally passionate followers and critics, and artists who adopted Meldrum's methods became derisively known as "Meldrumites".
Louise Collier Willcox (1865–1929) – honorary vice-president of the Virginia Equal Suffrage League; Maud E. Craig Sampson Williams (1880–1958) – suffragette from Texas; formed the El Paso Negro Woman's Civic and Equal Franchise League; Ella B. Ensor Wilson (1838–1913) – social reformer; Kansas suffragist
Lulu in Hollywood was widely and positively reviewed following its initial publication. Writing in Esquire magazine, James Wolcott described Lulu in Hollywood as "A tart, fleet, gossipy book, a whip-flicking display of wit and spite," adding "In Lulu in Hollywood, Brooks writes about her contemporaries with a darting precision and down-to-earth compassion that make the mythologizing of most ...
Max Meldrum was born in 1875 in Edinburgh, Scotland. His father, Edward Meldrum, was an analytical chemist and his mother, Christina Meldrum (née Macglashan), a schoolteacher. Products of the Scottish enlightenment, both parents fervently embraced scientific progress and empiricism.
Louise McNeill – poet, essayist, and historian of Appalachia; Wesley McNair (MA and M.Litt) – poet, writer, editor, and professor; Emily Mitchell (1997) – Anglo-American novelist; Wendy Mogel 1973 – speaker and author who looks at parenting problems through the lens of the Torah, the Talmud, and important Jewish teachings
Louise Michel is a 1971 biography of Louise Michel by Édith Thomas. Originally published by Gallimard in French, Penelope Williams translated the biography into English in 1980. References
On June 1, 2016, the Louise Meriwether First Book Prize was announced to celebrate Meriwether's achievements and continue her legacy. [32] Launched by the Feminist Press in partnership with TAYO Literary Magazine , in accordance with both organizations' missions to amplify silenced voices, [ 33 ] the contest is "seeking the best debut books by ...