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#Dentist in Hutton
joyless-somebody · 9 months
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Hey, this is a masterlist!
Find me on AO3!
Daredevil
Devil On My Windowsill
It helps
Too Close For Comfort
We’re Having Soft Tacos Later
Good Omens
Good Omentober
Queen
Joger (John Deacon/Roger Taylor)
Deacury (John Deacon/Freddie Mercury)
Froger (Freddie Mercury/Roger Taylor)
Jimercury (Jim Hutton/Freddie Mercury)
Maylor (Brian May/Roger Taylor)
Poly Queen
Miscellaneous - My Angel (also on Wattpad), The Dentist Will See You Now, Queen Oneshots (only on Wattpad)
Spider-Man (and Deadpool)
Spider-Man Vs The Common Cold
Put Me Down!
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dentalkind · 5 years
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Dentist In Brentwood
At DentalKind, a dentist in Brentwood; we offer wide range of dental treatments ranging from a a routine check-up to hygiene sessions and fillings to dental implants, orthodontics and facial aesthetics. For more detail contact us online at www.dentalkind.com or call us on +44 1277 500332
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Mercury and Me was the story of how much Jim loved Freddie and is good and valid
and he was an honest man and while the advertising and later parts about how the Garden Lodge and Mary situation were told may have been dramatized by a journalist, their love was real and true <3 
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duine-aiteach · 3 years
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Notable* LGBT+ Irish people:
*notable may be a stretch for some of the people on the list but if they are in the public eye I included them. Most of the RTÉ employees and journalists were taken from Wikipedia's list of Irish LGBT people.
Please keep in mind that for a lot of these people, especially those who lived and died long ago, it is impossible to truly know if they were LGBT+ or what modern term they would have felt most comfortable with. I have simply used my judgement from the information available when assigning modern terms to them.
Inclusion of a person here does not inherently mean I agree with their views and actions, it just means they are Irish and LGBT.
Living:
John Boyne - novelist; Dublin; gay
Francis Brennan - hotelier; Dublin; asexual
Stephen Byrne - RTÉ2 presenter; Dublin; gay
Jonathan Rachel Clynch - RTÉ presenter; genderfluid
Brendan Courtney - RTÉ presenter; Dublin; gay
Rory Cowan - actor; Dublin; gay
Lydia Foy - transgender activist, dentist; Kildare; trans woman, wlw
Ursula Halligan - TV presenter; Dublin; lesbian
Garry Hynes - playwright; Roscommon; lesbian
Adiba Jaigirdar - novelist; Dublin; queer
Brian Jennings - RTÉ Radio; gay, partner to Michael Dwyer before his death
Breda Larkin - comedian; Galway; lesbian
Fr Bernárd Lynch - Catholic priest who supported many during the AIDS crisis & first Catholic priest to enter a civil partnership; Clare; gay
Una Mullally - journalist; Dublin; lesbian
Graham Norton - TV presenter; Cork; gay
Eilish O’Carroll - actress and comedian; Dublin; lesbian
Rory O’Neill/Panti Bliss - drag queen; Mayo; gay 
Shuhada' Sadaqat/Sinéad O’Connor - singer; Dublin; fluid sexuality
Andrew Scott - actor; Dublin; gay
Steven Sharpe - musician; Tipperary; gay
Fiona Shaw - actress; Cork; lesbian 
Judith Storm - trans activist; Dublin; transvestite, wlw
Colm Tóibín - writer; Wexford; gay
Leo Varadkar - politician (TD for Fine Gael, Taoiseach and Tánaiste); Dublin; gay
Tonie Walsh - activist, founder of GCN and the Irish Queer Archive; Dublin; gay
Dead:
Anne Bonny - pirate; bisexual, partner to Calico Jack Rackham and probably partner to Mary Read; Cork; 1697-? Possible dates include 1733 and 1782. She disappeared after not being hanged in 1721.
Dr James Barry - British army surgeon; trans man, possibly mlm; Cork; 1789-1865
Edward De Lacy Evans - made the news when he was found out to be born a woman; trans man; 1830-1901
Albert D. J. Cashier - American Civil War soldier; trans man; Louth; 1843-1915
Oscar Wilde - poet and playwright; gay; Dublin; 1854-1900
Roger Casement - diplomat and nationalist; gay; Dublin; 1864-1916
Louie Bennett - suffragist and writer; lesbian, partner to Helen Chenevix; Dublin; 1870-1956
Eva Gore-Booth - poet and suffragette; lesbian; Sligo; 1870-1926
Kathleen Lynn - Sinn Féin politician, activist and medical doctor; lesbian, partner to Madeleine ffrench-Mullen; Mayo; 1874-1955
Eileen Gray - architect and artist; bisexual; Wexford; 1878-1976
Madeleine ffrench-Mullen - revolutionary and activist; lesbian, partner to Kathleen Lynn; Dublin; 1880-1944
Elizabeth O'Farrell - nurse and revolutionary; lesbian, partner to Sheila Grenan; Dublin; 1883-1957
Julia/Sheila Grenan - revolutionary and suffragette; lesbian, partner to Elizabeth O'Farrell; Dublin; 1884-1972
Nora O'Keeffe - revolutionary and feminist; lesbian, partner to Margaret Skinnider; Tipperary; 1885-1961
Helen Chenevix - suffragist; lesbian, partner to Louie Bennett; Dublin; 1886-1963
Margaret Skinnider - revolutionary and feminist; lesbian,partner to Nora O'Keeffe; 1892-1971
Francis Bacon - artist; gay; Dublin; 1909-1992
Patrick Hennessy - artist; mlm; Cork; 1915-1980
Gerard Dillon - artist; mlm; Belfast; 1916-1971
Patrick Scott - artist; gay; Cork; 1921-2014
Marie Conmee - actress and activist; lesbian; Sligo; 1933-1994
Nuala O'Faolain - writer; sapphic, partner to Nell McCafferty; Dublin; 1940-2008
Nell McCafferty - writer; Derry; lesbian, partner to Nuala O'Faolain; 1944-2024
Jim Hutton - hairdresser, long term partner of Freddie Mercury; mlm; Carlow; 1949-2010
Michael Dwyer - film critic; gay, partner to Brian Jennings; Kerry; 1951-2010
Lyra McKee - journalist; lesbian; Belfast; 1990-2019
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whatdoesshedotothem · 2 years
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[KISS] Friday 4 May 1838
8 ½
12 ¼
Good kiss last night fine morning waited for the hairdresser A- and I and I long in dressing and not downstairs till 11 20 – breakfast – had Mr. Pearce – will embark the carriage and take all trouble – very civil – very nice clean (new) carriage and civil coachman and good horses from Pearce the coachmaker – out about 12 ½ - drove to 114 Park street Hutton tailor, and ordered grooms’ coat and waistcoat and pair of trousers (all Oxford mixed cloth) for George and left Button [?] with Hutton to be sent to [Strengitham] – then drove about seeking Miss Lloyd (recommended by Mrs. Lawton whose name we never mentioned) dressmaker upper Brook street Grosvenor – found her in Lower Brook street n°56 – A- took her a dress to make up – be at Mr. Dumergues (Dentist 2 Albemarle street) at 2 – took up Oddy and set down A- and her a few minutes past 2 – I drove off to Whitehall – Lady Stuart gone – then drove to 4 Carlton terrace – admitted – found Lady S. de R- and Louisa and Mr. Scarlett sitting with them surprised but very glad to see me – soon went in to luncheon, and helped twice to vermicelli soup Lady Eastnor and one of her younger daughters came in and then Mrs. [Dundy?] – sat 1/2 hour very comfortably – Lady S- at Eastcombe Lady Buckinghamshire’s to go to the Lodge on Monday – Lady S. de R- wanted me
SH:7/ML/E/21/0090
to put off my journey for a fortnight or longer and go with Lady S- to the Lodge – said I really could not do this – very sorry – too unwell to go to agreeableize – had thought of getting well, and then trying to agreeable – the S. de R-s have some thought of letting their house for the coronation to Marshal Soult in which case they will all go to the Lodge and there will be no room for me – said I would drive over to Eastcombe tomorrow – from Lady S. de R-s’ drove to Lady Gordons’ 34 Hertford street – found her and Georgiana and Cosmo – and saw Alicia a fine girl aetatis 16 not to be introduced of one year or more – said I would by and by order a butt of sherry for Cosmo - £80 per butt for the best – any colour I liked – Cosmo always liked to know this – he prefers medium colour, neither very brown nor very pale – about 600 bottles (did he say?) in a butt – duty about £30 – and then there would be fright – sent a great deal to Hull – some gentleman said he found the sherry (the best) stand [him] to 4/8 per bottle – more said I then I now pay – yes! said Cosmo, if you have it from a wine merchant - £3 per dozen = 5/. per bottle – sat about ½ hour with Lady G- till Lady Charlotte Luscombe? came in which sent me off – Lady G- begged to see me on my return – she was laid up with cold and rheumatism or something in her knees – I joked her about having refused me – she said as if offhand enough to be at unawares – yes! and I have never repented it but once – that is, always – of this I took no notice but by saying with a smile, I daresay we should have done very well together – Returned home direct from Herford street and took up A- about 4 and drove into the city – called en passant at Pearces’ Longacre 103 –to the Heralds’ college – Mr. Harrison not there – at the Earl marshal’s office 30 Great George street Westminster  - all busy about the coronation – the porter would let him know to call on us at 11am tomorrow and then to Fenchurch street 123 about the passage by the Princess Victoria packet to Antwerp – took our places (births) and got order for embarking the carriage – ourselves £2.2.0 each – carriage £5. total including two servants = £12.14.0 of which paid £6 – bought biscuits at Lemanns’ Threadneedle street, and thermometer at Bates’, and A- left her watch and I my McL- watch at Rundel and Bridges, and stopt a moment at Pearces’ and bought hat for George at Dudley’s 148 Regent street and home about 7 ¼ - dinner almost immediately – Potage à la julienne – part of [roast] loin of little mutton spinach and potatoes and a pudding – pint of Madeira for A- and bottle of Claret for myself of which we respectively drank ½ and both slept till 10 soon after when we went upstairs to bed – ate oranges – and dawdled over getting into bed – and had a pretty good kiss and then fell asleep
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blackkudos · 4 years
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Giancarlo Esposito
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Giancarlo Giuseppe Alessandro Esposito (Italian pronunciation: [dʒaŋˈkarlo dʒuˈzɛppe alesˈsandro eˈspɔːzito]; born April 26, 1958) is an Italian-American actor and director. He has played Gus Fring on the AMC show Breaking Bad and also plays the character on Better Call Saul, a role for which he won the Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series Award at the 2012 Critics' Choice Television Awards and was nominated for an Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series at the 2012 Primetime Emmy Awards and again at the 2019 Primetime Emmy Awards. He appeared as Moff Gideon in the live-action Star Wars series The Mandalorian on Disney+ which premiered in 2019.
He has appeared in Spike Lee films such as Do the Right Thing, School Daze, and Mo' Better Blues. His feature film appearances include Fresh, Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man, The Usual Suspects, and King of New York. He has played Tom Neville in the NBC series Revolution and Sidney Glass / Magic Mirror on ABC's Once Upon a Time. He has had roles in two Netflix original series: The Get Down, wherein he portrays Pastor Ramon Cruz, and Dear White People, which he narrates. He also voiced and portrayed "The Dentist" in the video game Payday 2.
Early life
Giancarlo Giuseppe Alessandro Esposito was born in Copenhagen, the son of Giovanni Esposito aka John C. Esposito (1931–2002), an Italian stagehand and carpenter from Naples, and Elizabeth Foster aka Leesa Foster (1926–2017), an African-American opera and nightclub singer from Alabama.
When Esposito was six, his family moved from Copenhagen, Denmark to Manhattan, New York. He attended Elizabeth Seton College in New York and earned a two-year degree in radio and television communications.
Career
Esposito made his Broadway debut at age eight, playing a slave child opposite Shirley Jones in the short-lived musical Maggie Flynn (1968), set during the New York Draft Riots of 1863. He was also a member of the youthful cast of the Stephen Sondheim-Harold Prince collaboration Merrily We Roll Along, which closed with 16 performances and 56 previews in 1981.
During the 1980s, Esposito appeared in films such as Taps, Maximum Overdrive, King of New York, and Trading Places. He also performed in TV shows such as Miami Vice and Spenser: For Hire. He played J. C. Pierce, a cadet in the 1981 movie Taps.
In 1988 he landed his breakout role as the leader ("Dean Big Brother Almighty") of the black fraternity "Gamma Phi Gamma" in director Spike Lee's film School Daze, exploring color relations at black colleges. Over the next four years, Esposito and Lee collaborated on three other movies: Do the Right Thing, Mo' Better Blues, and Malcolm X.During the 1990s Esposito appeared in the acclaimed indie films Night on Earth, Fresh and Smoke, as well as its sequel Blue in the Face. He also appeared in the mainstream film Reckless with Mia Farrow, and Waiting to Exhale starring Whitney Houston and Angela Bassett. In 1995 Esposito was featured in a music video "California" by French superstar Mylene Farmer, directed by Abel Ferrara.
Esposito played FBI agent Mike Giardello on the TV crime drama Homicide: Life on the Street. That role drew from both his African American and Italian ancestry. He played this character during the show's seventh and final season. Mike's estranged father, shift lieutenant Al Giardello, is portrayed as subject to racism, something Esposito's character practiced in School Daze. Another multiracial role was as Sergeant Paul Gigante in the television comedy, Bakersfield P.D..
In 1997 Esposito played the film roles of Darryl in Trouble on the Corner and Charlie Dunt in Nothing to Lose. Other TV credits include NYPD Blue, Law & Order, The Practice, New York Undercover, and Fallen Angels: Fearless.
Esposito has portrayed drug dealers (Fresh, Breaking Bad, King of New York, Better Call Saul), policemen (The Usual Suspects, Derailed), political radicals (Bob Roberts, Do the Right Thing), and a demonic version of the Greek God of Sleep Hypnos from another dimension (Monkeybone). In 2001, he played Cassius Marcellus Clay, Sr. in Ali, and Miguel Algarín, friend and collaborator of Nuyorican poet Miguel Piñero, in Piñero.
In 2006 Esposito starred in Last Holiday as Senator Dillings, alongside Queen Latifah and Timothy Hutton. Also in 2006, he played an unsympathetic detective named Esposito in the 2005 film Hate Crime. The film explores homophobia.
Esposito played Robert Fuentes, a Miami businessman with shady connections, on the UPN television series South Beach. He has appeared in New Amsterdam and CSI: Miami. In Feel the Noise (2007), he played ex-musician Roberto, the Puerto Rican father of Omarion Grandberry's character, aspiring rap star "Rob".
He made his directorial debut with Gospel Hill (2008); he also produced the film and starred in it.
New York theater credits for Esposito include The Me Nobody Knows, Lost in the Stars, Seesaw, and Merrily We Roll Along. In 2008 he appeared on Broadway as Gooper in an African American production of Tennessee Williams' Pulitzer Prize-winning drama Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, directed by Debbie Allen and starring James Earl Jones, Phylicia Rashad, Anika Noni Rose, and Terrence Howard.
From 2009 to 2011, Esposito appeared in seasons 2 through 4 of the AMC drama Breaking Bad, as Gus Fring, the head of a New Mexico-based methamphetamine drug ring. In the fourth season, he was the show's primary antagonist. He received critical acclaim for this role. He won the Best Supporting Actor in a Drama award at the 2012 Critics' Choice Television Awards and was nominated for an Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series award at the 2012 Primetime Emmy Awards, but lost to co-star Aaron Paul.
He appeared in the film Rabbit Hole (2010).
Esposito appeared in the first season of the ABC program Once Upon a Time, which debuted in October 2011. He portrayed the split role of Sidney, a reporter for The Daily Mirror in the town of Storybrooke, Maine, who is the Magic Mirror, possessed by The Evil Queen in a parallel fairy tale world.
Esposito appeared in Revolution as Major Tom Neville, a central character who kills Ben Matheson in the pilot. He escorts a captured Danny to the capital Philadelphia of the Monroe Republic.
Esposito also appeared in Community as a guest star for the episode entitled "Digital Estate Planning". He performed again in the fourth season, in the episode titled "Paranormal Parentage". Esposito has additionally appeared in a video of the action role-playing sci-fi first-person shooter game Destiny, as well as plays The Dentist, a non-playable story character, in the game Payday 2.
He has joined the DC Universe Animated Original Movies series. He played Ra's al Ghul in Son of Batman and Black Spider in Batman: Assault on Arkham. He had a recurring role in the first season of The Get Down on Netflix. In 2017, Esposito reprised his role as Gus Fring in the Breaking Bad prequel series, Better Call Saul.
In 2016, Esposito voiced Akela in the film The Jungle Book, which was directed by Jon Favreau. Esposito and Favreau would work together once again in the web series The Mandalorian in which Esposito appears in a starring role, while Favreau acts as an executive producer for the series and as its writer.He plays the role of NY congressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr. in the 2019 Epix series Godfather of Harlem.
Personal life
Esposito married Joy McManigal in 1995; they later divorced. He has four daughters.
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Note
The Hutton-Mercury has an appointment with a dentist. As always Jim, Maeve, phoebe and joe have to convince Freddie to go with them.
On one hand, Freddie likes to have clean, healthy teeth. On the other hand, he hates being poked and prodded at, and he’s always on edge in case someone starts suggesting that he fix his teeth.
He doesn’t care how childish it makes him. Every single time, he digs his heels about going and it can take the whole house to convince him.
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oreolesbian · 6 years
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my fav borhap moments
- during the Top of the Pops performance where roger hits the fake cymbal with the most devastated™️ look
- brian’s mocking accent: “we’re the BBC”
- “CAMERA TWO! ABOVE THE WAIST!”
- *freddie shopping* “do they have this in my size?” “freddie this is the ladies section”
- the band just barging in on freddie’s marriage proposal and brian’s, “hi mary, how’s your dad?”
- *chicken screaming* “GALILEO”
- “nOT THE COFFEE MACHINE”
- “when my hand is on your grease gun? that’s very subtle isn’t it?” “IT’S A METAPHOR BRIAN”
- just the whole band making fun of roger and his car kink™️
- *kenny on the radio* “ladies and ladies”
- the wayne’s world reference
- “who even is galileo?”
- john getting the shittiest bedroom and just accepting it with a sigh cause he doesn’t get the respect he deserves
- ROGERINA
- *freddie with a new haircut and mustache* “what do you think?” *roger shrugging* “gayer?” “no, roger the house”
- “what do you guys think of david?” *prolonged silence* “he’s a nice chap” “i think he’s gay”
- freddie just taking the liberty to name jim beach, miami because jim was just too darn boring
- “it goes on forever, six bloody minutes” “i pity your wife if you think six minutes is forever”
- *freddie literally talking to his fiancé who he hasn’t spoken to in a while* “how are the cats?”
- “you look like an angry lizard”
- freddie’s parents asking if jim hutton was a ‘work friend’
- freddie blowing his mom a kiss during live aid
- “what even is a rhapsody?” “it’s an epic poem”
- freddie’s mom handing out his baby pics to the band and freddie just yeeting out of the room to play piano
- the entire live aid performance AHHHHHH
- “ready freddie?”
- the ‘ay-oh’ of solidarity between freddie and another patient when he got his hiv diagnosis
- “do you know how many jim hutton’s there are in london?”
- “roger there’s only room in this band for one hysterical queen”
- *shatters a window* “you can take that out of our loyalties you twat!”
- “no one likes opera” “i like opera”
- the OUTFITS
- “i want to throw a party” “who are we inviting?” “PEOPLE”
- the picture of fred and jim in the credits
- brian kicking freddie out of the room just cause he felt like it
- gwilym lee, aka time-traveling brian may
- “’oh where’s madonna?’”
- freddie playing opera music and throwing shit everywhere while the band dances along
- “how many more galileo’s do you want?”
- accurate broke college student™️ representation when the boys literally sell their van to afford a recording session
- “i think you’ve got to turn it clockwise john” “DO YOU WANT TO DO IT?”
- “we’re stuck in the middle of nowhere and i’m eating a ham sandwich”
- “i’ve got better things to do on a saturday night. i can name them.”
- “higher” “if i go any higher only dogs will hear me” “HIGHER” “my nuts are literally in my chest”
- tired mom™️ deaky literally playing the riff of ‘another one bites the dust’ just to break up a fight
- “i can sing” “not with those teeth mate” *sings* “i’ll think about your offer”
- THE CATS
- freddie jumping into a chair and spilling champagne everywhere
- the entire “ay-oh” sequence from live aid and me screaming it along with freddie
- the boys getting so into recording ‘bohemian rhapsody’ that they all just fucking topple over each other
- freddie smacking brian’s ass during ‘fat bottomed girls’ and screaming, “he’s got one too!”
- every. single. concert. montage.
- cutting to a frowning ray foster during the live aid performance on the line ‘no time for losers’
- “you’re a legend fred.” “you’re bloody right i’m a legend. we’re all legends...but you are right i am a legend.”
- brian “i was born with this hair” may
- *freddie having mary translate to her deaf father* “tell your dad you’re an epic shag.” “freddie he can read lips”
- *reporter asking freddie if one of his song lyrics implies that he has multiple partners* “you should ask rog that”
- *reporter trying to imply that freddie might be sick* *john leaning in* “i had a cold once”
- “what are you doing after this?” “homework”
- “take 26 of fred’s...thing”
- “roger’s a dentist” “nO i’m not”
- “an astrophysicist, so you’re the smart one” *brian smirking at roger* “yes, yes i am”
- “i fired paul” “under what pretext?” “villainy”
- “we’ve made our decision...what’s our decision again?”
- “miami will be our new manager” “no i won’t” *the band starts playing ‘another one bites the dust’* “FINE I’LL DO IT”
- “freddie fucking mercury”
- the experimental music session
- brian, john, and roger deliberately being late to meet freddie to tease him about his always being late
- “so roger, what exactly is the sexiest part of a car?”
- “what lyrics are these? you call me sweet...like i’m some kind of cheese”
- “it’s not disco. it’s queen.”
- jim and freddie’s relationship despite the little screen time they had
- the look™️ john and brian share when freddie interacts with the crowd during live aid
- roger and his gong
- “we’ll punch a hole right through the roof of that stadium” “actually wembley doesn’t have a roof” “then we’ll punch a hole through the sky”
- *brian teaching the stomp clap pattern for ‘we will rock you’* *john gives a look™️* “brilliant”
- “roger’s arguments. brian’s rewrites...deaky’s funny looks”
- freddie all up on the camera man during live aid
- the invention of the broken mic stand
- “HUMPY BONG???”
- “my voice sounds like a vulture’s crotch”
- *freddie warming up* *turns to his cats* “what? you think you can do any better? everyone’s a critic.”
- “it’s just a bit weird roger. what exactly are you doing with that car?”
- “here with their new single, ‘i’m in love with my car’!” “other side” “oh, ‘bohemian rhapsody’!”
- the montage of all the bad reviews ‘bohemian rhapsody’ got
- “every band wants more” “every band’s not queen”
- “i sound like shit, do it again” “okay, it’s your money” *tired john* “literally”
- BISMILLAH BULLSHIT
- rami malek
more fav parts
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tabloidtoc · 4 years
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Us, July 13
You can buy a copy of this issue for your very own at my eBay store: https://www.ebay.com/str/bradentonbooks 
Cover: Blake Shelton and Gwen Stefani wedding countdown 
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Page 1: First Look -- Kerry Washington doing yoga 
Page 4: Who Wore It Best? Rachel Brosnahan vs. Nicky Hilton Rothschild ✅, Tessa Thompson ✅ vs. Kaia Gerber 
Page 6: Loose Talk -- Hoda Kotb on being home with fiance Joel Schiffman, Tiffany Haddish reflecting on her future career choices, Bobby Berk recounting the time a RHONYC star stole from his showroom, Miley Cyrus recalling her recovery from vocal surgery in 2019, Michelle Obama on ending racial inequality 
Page 8: Contents 
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Page 10: Hot Pics -- Kylie Jenner goes blonde while out in Beverly Hills, Prince William visits Oxford Vaccine Group researchers to learn about their progress in the fight against Covid-19
Page 12: Pregnant Ciara, Scout Willis dances like nobody’s watching, Emilia Clarke plays fetch with her dog Ted in a London park 
Page 13: The cast of Jersey Shore with host Steve Harvey on Celebrity Family Feud, Bella Hadid in a black bikini for a photo shoot, Britney Spears and Sam Asghari wear masks at the beach 
Page 14: Natural Instinct -- stars get the itch to spend time outside -- David Beckham with a walking stick, Demi Lovato and Max Ehrich in Joshua Tree, Christie Brinkley and son Jack in Sag Harbor, Henry Golding and wife Liv Lo camping in Big Bear Lake 
Page 15: The entire Kardashian-Jenner clan including Stormi’s dad Travis Scott and Kourtney Kardashian relax at Kanye West’s home in Wyoming 
Page 16: Summer Sets -- coordinated cuties are safe and chic in masking masks -- Farrah Abraham and her daughter Sophia, Lizzo, Olivia Culpo, Busy Philipps, Nancy Pelosi 
Page 20: Stars They’re Just Like Us -- Pierce Brosnan dries off with a towel, Ali Larter buys groceries from Whole Foods, Camila Alves cooks, Diane Kruger goes to the dentist 
Page 22: Stars’ Kids They’re Just Like Us -- Kevin Hart’s son Kenzo is ready to get down to business, Sutton Foster and daughter Emily garden, Gabrielle Union and Dwyane Wade’s daughter Kaavia checks herself out in a mirror, Pink and Carey Hart’s daughter Willow practices archery 
Page 24: Love Lives -- For Kelly Rowland hunkering down with husband Tim Weatherspoon has reminded her why she fell in love with him in the first place
Page 25: Artem Chigvintsev and Nikki Bella’s love is built to last, Lady Gaga and Michael Polansky have been having a lot of fun together, Nina Dobrev and Shaun White attended Camila Morrone’s birthday yacht party and they’re very comfortable around each other 
Page 26: Hollywood Moms -- Beverley Mitchell on her pregnancy and kids Kenzie and Hutton 
Page 28: Hot Hollywood -- Meghan Markle and Jessica Mulroney’s friendship is canceled; Meghan decided to cut ties with her bestie after the stylist was accused of racist bullying against influencer Sasha Exeter and while Jessica publicly apologized for her remarks on Instagram Meghan was offended when her designer pal dragged her name into it 
Page 29: The hackers who attacked Grubman Shire Meiselas & Sacks the high-powered entertainment law firm whose clients include Mariah Carey and Nicki Minaj and LeBron James posted a new threat saying they’re ready to auction off information on the A-listers starting at $600,000 a pop, ever since Jimmy Kimmel who’s been under heavy fire for performing in black face in the ‘90s revealed he’d be taking time off for a summer vacation some have wondered if the late-night talk show host is ever coming back to TV but Jimmy says it’s nonsense
Page 30: A Day in the Life At-Home Edition -- Stephen “tWitch” Boss and Allison Holker show how they isolate 
Page 32: Cover Story -- Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton’s dream wedding -- the sweet duo are pulling out all the stops as they gear up to finally say I Do 
Page 36: David Foster -- the soundtrack of my life -- the accomplished composer chats about Netflix’s documentary David Foster: Off the Record 
Page 38: Reunited and It Feels So Good -- breaking up is hard to do so these couples got back together sometimes more than once -- Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom, John Legend and Chrissy Teigen, Zayn Malik and Gigi Hadid 
Page 39: Gabrielle Union and Dwyane Wade, Dax Shepard and Kristen Bell, Prince William and Kate Middleton, Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos 
Page 40: Style -- Hollywood’s latest jewelry obsession is fun mismatched earrings 
Page 42: Beauty -- Save Our Skin -- Victoria Beckham 
Page 44: Us Musts -- Padma Lakshmi mixes up activism and cuisine on her new show Taste the Nation 
Page 45: Entertainment 
Page 46: Fashion Police -- puff-sleeve edition -- Olivia Colman, Cate Blanchett, Zoe Kazan 
Page 47: Chloe Sevigny, Camila Cabello, Eliza Scanlen 
Page 48: 25 Things You Don’t Know About Me -- Neal McDonough 
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natashacheriex-blog · 5 years
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I DID IT! 💪🏻 Yes, I was terrified. Yes my anxiety was out of control and YES I was panicking bit time. But.. I did it! 😄🎉 I've been ignoring the pain of my wisdom teeth for so long hoping I'd get lucky that one day the pain just wouldn't return but it always did. I knew it was time to get it sorted so I saw my Dentist and had a referral done to a lovely surgery in Hutton (although I wasn't thinking nice things about it at the time🤣) and finally had them out. I've never been sedated before so I was scared of the unknown. I've never liked drinking or drugs as I hate the feeling of not being in control so this was nerve wrecking for me. Especially as I knew I'd never be able to have three of them pulled without any sedation. 😱 You all told me I'd be fine. And I was 🤗. And now I know that if I need to ever be sedated later on for what ever reason then I know I don't have to be scared as much! 🎉 If you haven't seen the footage of me afterwards which is bloody embarrassing 😂 it's in my highlights under Wisdom Removal! #wisdomteethremoval #anesthetic #wisdomteeth #toothextraction #natsnavy #anxiety #sedation #panicattacks #dentist #scared #relieved #highasf #funny #amusing #hincharmy #imahincher #hinching #teeth #tooth #bravery #thankyou #support (at Essex, United Kingdom) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bv7i5mQlQEW/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=o7cy6vitk8hw
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dentalkind · 4 years
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Dentist In Hutton
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DentalKind, a high-quality Dentist In Hutton, Stock offers superb patient care and finest dental treatments like Dental Implants, Root Canal Treatments, Teeth Whitening and Orthodontic treatments. Our well-experienced team utilizes the latest and best-in-class result-oriented dental technologies to offer safe surgeries, satisfaction and value for money. For more detail contact us online at www.dentalkind.com
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weltratsel · 7 years
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[Article] Only the bright commit suicide
By Sean Thomas // January 16 2004, 12:00am, The Times
Does a controversial theory linking intelligence with suicide rates help to explain why so many scientists kill themselves?
The past few months have seen a series of notable suicides by scientists. Yesterday we heard details of the strange pact in which Dr Michael Griffin and his wife Adele took their lives in a Devon hotel. Two days before that, Harold Shipman killed himself. Early this month the body of Richard Stevens, a haematologist, was found in the Lake District; we await the Hutton report into the suicide of Dr David Kelly.
These are disparate cases: no one seeks to associate a mass murderer with a blameless government scientist or a troubled consultant physician. Yet these men had things in common: they were intelligent and analytical, with similar educational backgrounds. Could there be a theme that helps to explain their suicides?
Writers, psychologists and philosophers have long argued over the reasons for suicide. The problem they all face is that statistics on the subject are notoriously slippery. Take seasonal variations. Some people claim that suicide is related to climate and light, and especially to “the winter blues”. It is true that suicidal thoughts reach a peak in January (when the Samaritans get most calls). Yet in the West the peak months for actual suicide attempts are, universally, the spring and summer months of April, May and June (the only geographical exception is the Antipodes, where suicide rates peak in their late spring: November and December).
The deeper you dig, the more confusing it gets. More women claim to have depressed or suicidal feelings, yet more men commit the deed. Could it be, as some scientists argue, that this is because men are less averse to violence, even self-inflicted? There are further complexities: how do we explain the surreal fact that immediately after Marilyn Monroe’s suicide, rates of self-murder in the US rose by 12 per cent? Or that suicide attempts are most common at both extremes of the adult age range, ie, among over-65s and those in their teens and twenties? Or that suicide rates can fall dramatically when the means become less accessible (as happened in Britain when we switched from lethal coke gas to less dangerous natural gas)?
The subject is a swirl of conflicting data into which only the bravest of scientists will venture to step. One who has is Martin Voracek, a researcher at the University of Vienna Medical School. In a paper to be published in the next few months, the psychologist makes a claim that may shed some light on those suicides of scientists. His startling theory is that suicide can be positively correlated with intelligence — in other words, the smarter people are, the more likely they are to kill themselves.
Voracek’s starting point is the fact that suicide is a growing problem in the Western world: someone commits suicide in America every 15 minutes, and the World Health Organisation claims that suicide accounts for at least 2 per cent of Western deaths. The rate of suicide in parts of Sweden has risen by 250 per cent in the past 40 years.
Most sociologists have argued that this is because of the so-called anomie of modern Western life — that something in urbanised, industrialised society alienates us from friends, faith and family, the mainstays of human happiness. Voracek, though, argues that the higher rate of Western suicide could be because people are, on average, more intelligent in the Western world (and are apparently becoming more intelligent still, as worldwide average IQs rise over time — something called the Flynn effect).
To back up his theory, Voracek has taken the controversial tables of national average IQ values published recently by Professor Richard Lynn and his colleague at the University of Ulster, Tatu Vanhanen. But instead of correlating these IQ levels with national GDP per head (as, provocatively, Lynn and Vanhanen have), Voracek has compared the various IQ averages with national suicide rates.
The results are, prima facie, impressive: there is a strong correlation between suicide rates and national average IQ in most of the countries surveyed. For instance, Jamaica, with a low average IQ of 72, has suicide rates of 0.5 for men and 0.2 for women (all suicide figures are per 100,000 person-years). Albania, with an average IQ of 90, has low suicide rates of 2.9 and 1.7. Germany by contrast, with its average IQ of 102, has suicide rates of 21.8 and 8.3; Japan, with an average IQ of 105, has suicide rates of 25 and 12.
Wherever you look, and whatever the culture, the same pattern can be seen: in Azerbaijan, Greece, Kuwait and Chile there are lower average IQ levels and lower suicide rates; in Austria, Korea, Singapore and Norway there are higher average IQ levels and higher suicide rates. One exception is the UK, with a relatively high average IQ (100) and a relatively low (at least for the West) suicide rate — 11 for men and 3.3 for women.
The obvious objection to these statistics is that suicide rates still have nothing to do with brains and everything to do with industrialisation, affluence and modernity — that advanced capitalist societies are less nurturing of the troubled soul. Yet Voracek insists that he has “partialed out” the variables of wealth, rate of divorce, unemployment and average age. He says that even when you make these factors statistically irrelevant, there is still a correlation between national IQ and the rate of self-murder.
Voracek also cites something called the Terman Genetic Study of Genius. This was a study of the entire life cycles of 1,528 gifted Californian children born in 1920-21. One of many fascinating facts revealed by the Terman study was that the suicide rate among these super-bright individuals was 33 per 100,000 person-years — about three times the average rate for the US (which is, anyway, fairly high on a global ranking).
So why should there be such an apparently strong connection between intelligence and suicide? Voracek points to a 1981 study by Denys deCatanzaro, a Canadian evolutionary psychologist. In his research, deCatanzaro posited the idea that for suicide to take place, a certain threshold of self-awareness, of intelligence, must be crossed. Such higher intelligence could only be human, hence the rarity if not impossibility of animal “suicide”.
DeCatanzaro went on to suggest that from an evolutionary perspective — excepting certain religious beliefs and military scenarios — almost the only time it could make Darwinian “sense” for someone to commit suicide was when they became aware, or wrongly convinced, that they were probably not going to have more or any children, and/or that they were becoming a burden to kin who might otherwise go on to have children.
It is a reductionist viewpoint but a powerful one — and using these concepts, Voracek wonders whether anyone who can achieve such a critical and lucid self-analysis is simply more likely to be smart.
But deCatanzaro, though he has yet to read Voracek’s paper, rejects the Voracek theory. For a start, the Canadian thinks that comparative IQ studies such as those of Lynn and Vanhanen are clumsy and “could be viewed as racist”.
DeCatanzaro believes instead that suicide-rate differentials are explainable by — yes — modernity and industrialisation. He adds that there are, anyway, huge problems with national suicide-rate comparisons because the methods and reliability of data collection are so different. Authorities in Roman Catholic countries, for example, are loath to condemn anyone to Hell for the mortal sin of self-murder; hence, perhaps, the low rates of recorded suicide in Latin America.
In this argument deCatanzaro is backed up by Dr Rory O’Connor, senior lecturer in health psychology at the University of Stirling and head of its suicidal behaviour research group.
Dr O’Connor likewise rejects the intelligence/suicide thesis, and also cites the case of Roman Catholicism. “Look at Ireland,” says O’Connor. “Suicide rates have exploded there in the past 40 years. In part this is because suicide has got more common, but even more important is the fact that the manner of recording suicide has changed, has become more assiduous, and this is because the religious culture has changed. Voracek’s thinking is very problematic. Suicide is multi-factorial.”
Yet there is some support for Voracek’s suicide/smartness correlation. Dr Keith Ashcroft, a forensic psychologist based in Manchester, notes that “suicide is indeed more common among the professional classes: scientists like vets and dentists have notoriously high suicide rates”.
In fact, Ashcroft has a telling theory of his own. He thinks that “emotional intelligence” is relevant to the IQ/suicide question. Ashcroft wonders whether people with very high IQs might tend to have lower emotional intelligence — ie, inferior “people skills”. After all, everyone is aware of the cliché of the lonely genius, unable to fit in with society, who is eventually driven to suicide by his isolation.
It is certainly a plausible image. But given the swirl of conflicting facts, and the sensitivities of the entire subject, perhaps the only thing we should say assuredly is that we need a lot more research.
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whatdoesshedotothem · 3 years
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Friday 4 May 1838: SH:7/ML/E/21/0089
8 ½
12 ¼
Good kiss last night fine morning waited for the hairdresser A- and I and I long in dressing and not downstairs till 11 20 – breakfast – had Mr. Pearce – will embark the carriage and take all trouble – very civil – very nice clean (new) carriage and civil coachman and good horses from Pearce the coachmaker – out about 12 ½ - drove to 114 Park street Hutton tailor, and ordered grooms’ coat and waistcoat and pair of trousers (all Oxford mixed cloth) for George and left Button [?] with Hutton to be sent to [Strengitham] – then drove about seeking Miss Lloyd (recommended by Mrs. Lawton whose name we never mentioned) dressmaker upper Brook street Grosvenor – found her in Lower Brook street n°56 – A- took her a dress to make up – be at Mr. Drumagues (Dentist 2 Albemarle street) at 2 – took up Oddy and set down A- and her a few minutes past 2 – I drove off to Whitehall – Lady Stuart gone – then drove to 4 Carlton terrace – admitted – found Lady S. de R- and Louisa and Mr. Scarlett sitting with them surprised but very glad to see me – soon went in to luncheon, and helped twice to vermicelli soup Lady Eastnor and one of her younger daughters came in and then Mrs. [Dundy?] – sat 1/2 hour very comfortably – Lady S- at Eastcombe Lady Buckinghamshire’s to go to the Lodge on Monday – Lady S. de R- wanted me
SH:7/ML/E/21/0090
to put off my journey for a fortnight or longer and go with Lady S- to the Lodge – said I really could not do this – very sorry – too unwell to go to agreeableize – had thought of getting well, and then trying to agreeable – the S. de R-s have some thought of letting their house for the cornation to Marshal Soult in which case they will all go to the Lodge and there will be no room for me – said I would drive over to Eastcombe tomorrow – from Lady S. de R-s’ drove to Lady Gordons’ 34 Hertford street – found her and Georgiana and Cosmo – and saw Alicia a fine girl aetatis 16 not to be introduced of one year or more – said I would by and by order a butt of sherry for Cosmo - £80 per butt for the best – any colour I liked – Cosmo always liked to know this – he prefers medium colour, neither very brown nor very pale – about 600 bottles (did he say?) in a butt – duty about £30 – and then there would be fright – sent a great deal to Hull – some gentleman said he found the sherry (the best) stand [him] to 4/8 per bottle – more said I then I now pay – yes! said Cosmo, if you have it from a wine merchant - £3 per dozen = 5/. per bottle – sat about ½ hour with Lady G- till Lady Charlotte Luscombe? came in which sent me off – Lady G- begged to see me on my return – she was laid up with cold and rheumatism or something in her knees – I joked her about having refused me – she said as if offhand enough to be at unawares – yes! and I have never repented it but once – that is, always – of this I took no notice but by saying with a smile, I daresay we should have done very well together – Returned home direct from Herford street and took up A- about 4 and drove into the city – called en passant at Pearces’ Longacre 103 –to the Heralds’ college – Mr. Harrison not there – at the Earl marshals office 30 Great George street Westminster  - all busy about the coronation – the porter would let him know to call on us at 11am tomorrow and then to Fenchurch street 123 about the passage by the Princess Victoria packet to Antwerp – took our places (births) and got order for embarking the carriage – ourselves £2.2.0 each – carriage £5. total including two servants = £12.14.0 of which paid £6 – bought biscuits at Lemanns’ Threadneedle street, and thermometer at Bates’, and A- left her watch and I my McL- watch at Rundel and Bridges, and stopt a moment at Pearces’ and bought hat for George at Dudley’s 148 Regent street and home about 7 ¼ - dinner almost immediately – Potage à la julienne – part of [roast] loin of little mutton spinach and potatoes and a pudding – pint of Madeira for A- and bottle of Claret for myself of which we respectively drank ½ and both slept till 10 soon after when we went upstairs to bed – ate oranges – and dawdled over getting into bed – and had a pretty good kiss and then fell asleep
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blackkudos · 7 years
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Cleavon Little
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Cleavon Jake Little (June 1, 1939 – October 22, 1992) was an American stage, film, and television actor. He began his career in the late 1960s on the stage. In 1970, he starred in the Broadway production of Purlie, for which he earned both a Drama Desk and a Tony Award. In 1972, he starred as the irreverent Dr. Jerry Noland on the ABC sitcom Temperatures Rising. Two years later, Little starred in the role for which he is best known, as Sheriff Bart in the 1974 Mel Brooks comedy Blazing Saddles.
In the 1980s, Little continued to appear in stage productions, films, and in guest spots on television series. In 1989, he won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor for his appearance on the NBC sitcom Dear John. From 1991 to 1992, he starred on the Fox sitcom True Colors.
Early life
Little was born in Chickasha, Oklahoma. He was the brother of singer DeEtta Little, best known for her performance of "Gonna Fly Now", the main theme to Rocky. He was raised in California, graduating in 1957 from Kearny High School and attended San Diego City College, and then San Diego State University, where he earned a bachelor's degree in dramatic arts. After receiving a full scholarship to graduate school at Juilliard, he moved to New York. After completing studies at Juilliard, Little trained at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts.
Career
Little made his professional debut in February 1967, appearing off-Broadway at the Village Gate as the Muslim Witch in the original production of Barbara Garson's MacBird. This was followed by the role of Foxtrot in the original production of Bruce Jay Friedman's long-running play Scuba Duba which premiered in October 1967.
The following year, he made his first film appearance in a small uncredited role in What's So Bad About Feeling Good? (1968), and his first television appearance as a guest star on two episodes of Felony Squad. A series of small roles followed in films such as John and Mary (1969) and Cotton Comes to Harlem (1970).
Little made his Broadway debut in 1969 as Lee Haines in John Sebastian and Murray Schisgal's musical Jimmy Shine with Dustin Hoffman in the title role. In 1971, he returned to Broadway to portray the title role in Ossie Davis's musical Purlie, for which he won a Tony Award and a Drama Desk Award for best actor in a musical.
A year later, Little was hired as an ensemble player on the syndicated TV variety weekly The David Frost Revue and he portrayed Shogo in Narrow Road to the Deep North on Broadway. In 1971, Little was chosen to portray the blind radio personality Super Soul in the car-chase movie Vanishing Point. The same year, he played Hawthorne Dooley in the pilot for The Waltons called "The Homecoming: A Christmas Story", helping John-Boy Walton search for his father; then again in season four, in an episode called "The Fighter", about a prizefighter who desired to build a church and be a preacher. He also played a burglar in a 1971 episode of All in the Family titled "Edith Writes a Song".
He then starred in the ABC sitcom Temperatures Rising, which aired in three different iterations from 1972–74, with Little's character of Dr. Jerry Noland as the only common element. In 1974, he starred in the television disaster film The Day the Earth Moved, opposite Jackie Cooper and Stella Stevens. He was also cast as Sheriff Bart in the 1974 comedy film Blazing Saddles, after the studio rejected Richard Pryor, who co-wrote the script. Studio executives were apparently concerned about Pryor's reliability, given his reputation for drug use and unpredictable behavior, and thought Little would be a safer choice. This role earned him a BAFTA Award nomination as most promising newcomer.
In 1975, Little returned to Broadway to portray the role of Lewis in the original production of Murray Schisgal's All Over Town under the direction of Dustin Hoffman. The following year, he appeared as Willy Stepp in the original production of Ronald Ribman's The Poison Tree at the Ambassador Theatre. He played a supporting role to Richard Pryor in the racing movie Greased Lightning (1977), based on the true life story of Wendell Scott, the first black stock car racing winner in America.
Later career
In the years after Blazing Saddles, Little appeared in many less successful films, such as FM (1978), Scavenger Hunt (1979), The Salamander (1981), High Risk (1981), Jimmy the Kid (1982), Surf II (1984), and Toy Soldiers (1984). He also made guest appearances on The Mod Squad, The Rookies, Police Story, The Rockford Files, The Love Boat, Fantasy Island, ABC Afterschool Specials, The Fall Guy, MacGyver, The Waltons and ALF.
He co-starred opposite Lauren Hutton and Jim Carrey in the 1985 horror comedy Once Bitten. He returned to the New York stage in 1981 in the Off-Broadway production The Resurrection of Lady Lester, a "poetic mood song" by OyamO, playing the legendary jazz saxophonist Lester Young. In 1985, Little returned to Broadway to appear as Midge in Herb Gardner's Tony Award-winning play I'm Not Rappaport, reuniting with Dear John star Judd Hirsch in New York and later on tour. The Broadway cast also featured Jace Alexander and Mercedes Ruehl.
In 1989 he had a role in Fletch Lives, the sequel to 1985's Fletch. The same year he appeared in the Dear John episode "Stand By Your Man", for which he won the Outstanding Guest Actor Emmy, defeating Robert Picardo, Jack Gilford, Leslie Nielsen, and Sammy Davis, Jr.
Little was slated to star in the TV series Mr. Dugan, where he was to play a black Congressman, but that series was poorly received by real black Congressmen and was canceled before making it to air. In 1991, he replaced Frankie Faison as Ronald Freeman, a black dentist married to a white housewife, on the Fox sitcom True Colors. The same year, he also had a supporting role in the television series Bagdad Cafe, appearing in 12 episodes. Later that year, he was cast as a civil-rights lawyer in the TV docudrama, Separate but Equal, starring Sidney Poitier, who portrayed the first black U. S. Supreme Court Justice, Thurgood Marshall, NAACP lead attorney in the 1954 Supreme Court case desegregating public schools. He also appeared in the TV series MacGyver as Frank Colton, half of a bounty hunter brother duo.
Little's last appearance as an actor was in a guest role on a 1992 episode of the television series Tales from the Crypt entitled "This'll Kill Ya."
Death
Often afflicted by ulcers and general stomach problems throughout his life, Little died of colorectal cancer on October 22, 1992. His body was cremated and the ashes were scattered into the Pacific Ocean.
Legacy
For Little's contribution to motion pictures, he was honored with a star February 1, 1994, on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The star is located on the south side of Hollywood Blvd., near El Cerrito Place.
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— Professional Dental (@teethcareuk) September 14, 2017
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jistnews2016 · 7 years
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Celebrity Dentist Jamie Newlands Is Found Dead In Glasgow
Jamie Newlands, 39, found dead by police in countryside outside Glasgow. His family had raised the alarm on Friday evening after he failed to return home. Jamie ran the Berkeley and was known as 'Scotland's dentist to the stars'. Clients included Texas star Sharleen Spiteri and Aston Villa player Alan Hutton. For Jist.News click here
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