Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Andy de la Tour (born 1948) is an English actor and screenwriter.He is the brother of actress Frances de la Tour [1] and partner of actress Susan Wooldridge.. de la Tour has appeared in films Plenty, Notting Hill, the Roman Polanski's Oliver Twist, 44 Inch Chest, and The Confessions, and in television The Young Ones, Filthy Rich & Catflap, Bottom, Kavanagh QC and The Brief.
She is the sister of actor and screenwriter Andy de la Tour. [6] An episode of the BBC series Who Do You Think You Are?, first broadcast on 22 October 2015, revealed de la Tour to be a descendant of the aristocratic Delaval family. [7] Politically, de la Tour is a socialist and was a member of the Workers' Revolutionary Party in the 1970s. [8]
Mark Arden, Paul Bradley, Lee Cornes, Steve Dixon, Stephen Frost, Steve Kelly, Jan Prince, Kay Stoneham, Andy de la Tour and Alan Freeman. Featuring "Ken Bishop's Nice Twelve" Peter Brewis, Simon Brint, Stewart Copeland, Chris Difford, Martin Dobson, Derek Griffiths, Jools Holland, Rowland Rivron: Episode chronology
Meanwhile in 1981 Allen returned to the Edinburgh festival with Andy De La Tour, Jim Barclay and Pauline Melville and Alternative Cabaret at the Assembly Rooms was a noted hit. Highlights of the ensuing national tour were released as an album ‘Alternative Cabaret’ on Original Records later that year. [8]
Susan Wooldridge (born 31 July 1950) is a British actress. She won the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for Hope and Glory (1987). Her television credits include Jewel in the Crown, (1984), All Quiet on the Preston Front (1994–95), and Twenty Thousand Streets Under the Sky (2005).
“The Grand Tour” producer Andy Wilman says the seeds for his success were sown at school — which he attended with Jeremy Clarkson. “I went to school with him which is like, argh,” Wilman ...
Authorities charged Fatburger owner Fat Brands and Chairman Andy Wiederhorn of running a scheme that netted him $47 million in bogus loans from the company.
The painting depicts an impoverished blind beggar singing in the street to the music of his hurdy-gurdy, an instrument traditionally associated with street singers.The hurdy-gurdy, portrayed in great detail in de la Tour's canvas, works by means of a hand turned wheel rubbing against a set of strings, whose pitch can be adjusted by hand operated wedges.