Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Alan MacNaughtan (4 March 1920 – 29 August 2002) was a Scottish actor, born in Bearsden, Dunbartonshire, Scotland. [1] He was educated at the Glasgow Academy , trained at RADA , and graduated in 1940 with the Bancroft Gold Medal. [ 2 ]
Alan Aylesworth Macnaughton PC OC QC (July 30, 1903 – July 16, 1999) was a Canadian lawyer and politician who served as Speaker of the House of Commons of Canada from 1963 to 1966. Life and career [ edit ]
Macnaughtan is a Scottish surname. Notable people with the surname include: Alan MacNaughtan (1920–2002), Scottish actor; Andrew MacNaughtan (1964–2012), Canadian photographer and music video director; Sarah Broom Macnaughtan (1864–1916), Scottish-born novelist
Cast: Trevor Peacock, Alan MacNaughtan, Teddy Turner, Vivian Pickles, Tony Haygarth, Jim Broadbent, Daniel Day-Lewis, Richenda Carey, Geoffrey Palmer, Roger Hammond, Benjamin Whitrow, Oona Kirsch, Richard Kane 2 March 1986: Hotel du Lac [20] [21] Christopher Hampton From the novel by Anita Brookner: Giles Foster: Sue Birtwistle
It featured Zhivila Roche as Molly Gibson, Alan MacNaughtan as Dr. Gibson, and Helen Christie as Clare Kirkpatrick. [2] A radio adaptation, dramatized in nine hour-long parts by Barry Campbell and directed by Jane Morgan, was produced in 1983 and first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in August that year. It starred Tom Wilkinson and Kathryn Hurlbutt. [3]
My Son, My Son; Genre: Drama: Based on: My Son, My Son by Howard Spring: Written by: Julian Bond: Directed by: Peter Cregeen: Starring: Michael Williams Frank Grimes Kate Binchy
"The Town of No Return" is the first episode of the fourth series of the 1960s cult British spy-fi television series The Avengers, starring Patrick Macnee and Diana Rigg in her Avengers debut, and guest starring Alan MacNaughton, Patrick Newell, Terence Alexander.
The Sandbaggers is a British spy thriller television series created by Ian Mackintosh, about men and women on the front lines of the Cold War.Set contemporaneously with its original broadcast on ITV from 1978 to 1980, The Sandbaggers examines the effect of espionage on the personal and professional lives of British intelligence officers and their American colleagues.