Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Myra MacPherson (born 1934) is an American author, biographer, and journalist known for writing about politics, the Vietnam War, feminism, and death and dying. Although her work has appeared in many publications, she had a long affiliation with The Washington Post newspaper.
From 1964 to 1985, Siegel was married to writer Myra MacPherson. [1] They had two children, Michael Siegel, a political communications director, and Leah Siegel, who was a Dallas bureau producer for ESPN. [1] [6] On November 11, 1985, Siegel suffered a heart attack. [2] In 1989 he was diagnosed with colon cancer.
Michelle Doris Thomas (September 23, 1968 – December 23, 1998) [1] [2] was an American actress. She was known for her roles as Justine Phillips on the NBC sitcom The Cosby Show (1988–1990), as Myra Monkhouse on the ABC/CBS sitcom Family Matters (1993–1998), and as Callie Rogers on the CBS soap opera The Young and the Restless (1998).
Myra MacPherson of The Washington Post wrote that "To many she was a brazen and bombastic woman, to others she was a heroine who attacked a liberal permissiveness they felt had brought chaos to the land." [32] The National Review said: Martha Mitchell brought to [the Nixon Administration] a welcome touch of zaniness and genuine good humor.
On December 12, 1957, at the age of 13, Myra Brown married Jerry Lee Lewis, then 22, in Hernando, Mississippi. [3] [2] When Lewis arrived in London for a 37-date tour in May 1958, Brown revealed to a reporter at the airport that she was his wife. [4] Lewis asserted that Brown was 15 years old and was his wife of two months.
Gordon Macpherson, Founder of Macpherson Menswear – Palmerston North, New Zealand. Hector Macpherson (1851–1924), Scottish journalist and writer; Jeanie MacPherson(1886–1946), American silent actress, writer and director; Malcolm MacPherson (1943–2009), American journalist and author; Myra MacPherson, American journalist and author
"Myra Meets His Family" is a work of short fiction by F. Scott Fitzgerald first appearing in The Saturday Evening Post on March 20, 1920. The story was collected in The Price Was High: Fifty Uncollected Stories by F. Scott Fitzgerald (1979) by Harcourt, Brace & Company [1] [2] "Myra Meets His Family" was among the first stories accepted by The Saturday Evening Post for publication. [3]
MacPherson, Myra (2014). The scarlet sisters : sex, suffrage, and scandal in the Gilded Age (First ed.). New York, NY: Twelve. ISBN 9780446570237. LCCN 2013027618. biography of Victoria Woodhull and Tennessee Celeste Claflin; Shone, Steve J. (2019). "The Seductiveness of Tennie C. Claflin and of Her Ideas". Women of Liberty. Studies in Critical ...