Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Layne Beachley was born Tania Maris Gardner on 24 May 1972 in Sydney. [9] Her mother was only 17 years old and unmarried so Layne was adopted by Neil and Valerie Beachley, who lived in nearby Manly. When Layne was only six years old, Valerie suffered a post-operative brain haemorrhage and died, leaving Layne and her brother to be raised by Neil ...
Pengilly and wife Layne Beachley in 2012. Pengilly has one daughter, April Rose Pengilly (who is an actress), born in 1988, with his ex-girlfriend Karen Hutchinson. Hutchinson and Pengilly were together for ten years, in which time she toured with the band. [12] In December 1993, Pengilly married singer Deni Hines. The marriage lasted ten ...
Beachley Classic is an event on the ASP World Surfing Tour. The event is held every year at Manly Beach or Dee Why in Sydney and has the richest prize money in Women's surfing . [ 1 ]
Image credits: blakelively “Excuse me,” Lively interjects. “My friend and I, when we were in the 10th grade, had crazy crushes, and we’d drive around and stalk these guys.
From a song: This is a redirect from a song title to a more general, relevant article such as an album, film or artist where the song is mentioned.Redirecting to the specific album or film in which the song appears is preferable to redirecting to the artist when possible.
01011001 is the seventh studio album by Arjen Anthony Lucassen's long-running Ayreon project. "01011001" is the binary representation of the ASCII value of the letter Y. ...
Beneath the Dark is a 2010 American mystery-thriller film directed by Chad Feehan, and starring Josh Stewart, Jamie-Lynn Sigler and Chris Browning. It was originally titled Wake [ 1 ] and was inspired by the novel The Shining .
John DeFore of The Hollywood Reporter wrote, "Beneath the Darkness is a teens-in-trouble thriller with barely enough momentum to make it to the end credits" and that "it's clear nobody in the production has any interest [in making a pulpy fun movie]" and "the screenplay is too proud of its going-nowhere literary allusions". [6]