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She is married to Andrew Lachman, her second husband, and has three children. She was formerly the President and CEO of American Jewish World Service , an international development agency. [ citation needed ]
Edward Lachman (born March 31, 1948) is an American cinematographer and director. He has primarily worked in independent film, and has served as director of photography on films by Todd Haynes (including Far from Heaven in 2002 and Carol in 2015, both of which earned Lachman Oscar nominations [1]), Ulrich Seidl, Wim Wenders, Steven Soderbergh and Paul Schrader.
The Compulsory Husband is a 1930 British comedy film directed by Monty Banks and Harry Lachman and starring Banks, Lillian Manton and Clifford Heatherley. [1] It was based on a novel of the same title by John Glyder.
Throughout Far From Heaven, one of the central conflicts faced by the main protagonist Cathy Whitaker comes from her attraction towards Raymond Deagan, the son of her recently deceased gardener, and how it develops in the face of her estrangement from her husband, Frank Whitaker, as he deals with his developing homosexual tendencies. [7]
The Independent's Christopher Hirst wrote that there is "much in Lachman's book to entertain and inform those who wished they had lived through the Sixties and those who did but can't remember it. If you want to know about, say, beatnik king Brion Gysin, ley-line apostle John Michell and Zen master Alan Watts, this is the place to start." [3]
A Secret Life: The Lies and Scandals of President Grover Cleveland is a 2011 historical book by American author Charles Lachman. The book is about President Grover Cleveland's 1884 presidential campaign and the allegations that a decade earlier Cleveland had fathered an illegitimate son and had the child's mother committed to a mental asylum.
Gary Joseph Lachman (born December 24, 1955), also known as Gary Valentine, is an American writer and musician. He came to prominence in the mid-1970s as the bass guitarist for rock band Blondie . Since the 1990s, Lachman has written full-time, often about mysticism and occultism .
Harry B. Lachman (June 29, 1886 – March 19, 1975) was an American artist, set designer, and film director. [1]He was born in La Salle, Illinois on June 29, 1886. Lachman was educated at the University of Michigan before becoming a magazine and book illustrator, contributing 4 colour illustrations to the 1907 work John Smith, Gentleman Adventurer by Charles Harcourt Ainslie Forbes-Lindsay. [2]