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Kendyll Pope (born May 9, 1981) is a former American football linebacker who played for the Indianapolis Colts. He played college football at Florida State. High school career A native of Fort White, Florida, Pope attended Columbia High School, where he developed into one of the best defensive players in the state of Florida. In his senior year, he recorded 175 tackles, seven sacks and four caused fumbles, which earned him first-team Class 6A all-state honors, as well as All-American selections by USA Today and Parade. Ranked as the No. 5 linebacker in the country by SuperPrep, Pope was recruited by numerous schools. He selected Florida State over Florida, Alabama, Tennessee, and Ohio State, following the footsteps of former Seminoles and Columbia alumni Brian Allen and All-American Reinard Wilson. College career In his true freshman year at Florida State, Pope primarily saw action backing up All-American senior Tommy Polley at weakside linebacker as well as on special teams. Pope finished the season with 52 tackles (20 solo), which was best among non-starters. His season high of eight tackles (four solo, four assists) came against Virginia. As a sophomore, Pope succeeded Polley at the weakside linebacker spot, starting every regular season game for the Seminoles, but a shoulder injury caused him to miss the Seminoles' victory over Virginia Tech in the Gator Bowl. He recorded 113 tackles (52 unassisted) in the season, which trailed only senior Bradley Jennings (121), and was the most by a Seminole sophomore since Marvin Jones (125) in 1991. Pope also ranked fourth on the team with seven tackles for a loss of (−28 yards). He had a season-high 14 tackles against Wake Forest and Clemson. For his sophomore performance, Pope earned an All-ACC honorable mention. In his junior season, Pope led the team with 131 total tackles (68 solo), and recorded 10 or more tackles in eight of the Seminoles' 14 games, including five of the last six games of the season. A career-high 15 tackles came against North Carolina State. For the season, Pope also had five pass break-ups, five quarterback hurries and two interceptions, including a pick six in the 31–14 win over in-state rival Florida. Pope was named to the All-ACC second-team, and was voted No. 2 on Kirk Herbstreit's “Best of the Best Outside Linebacker” along with teammate Michael Boulware. Pope entered the 2003 season with the expectations of an All-American senior year, but was plagued with knee injuries throughout the season. Rotating with sophomore A. J. Nicholson and freshman Ernie Sims, and seeing his playing time reduced, Pope's numbers went considerably down. Playing in 10 games, he recorded 56 tackles, seven tackles for a loss, and three quarterback sacks. Professional career 2004 NFL Draft Projected to be a mid-third rounder by Sports Illustrated, Pope was described as “athletic, weak-side linebacker that excels in pass coverage.” He was drafted in the fourth round with the 107th overall pick by the Colts. Indianapolis Colts Pope missed the 2005 NFL season after being suspended for violating the NFL's Substance Abuse Policy. He was waived by the Colts on April 25, 2007, after missing two seasons due to suspension and never being reinstated. References External links Florida State Seminoles bio
place of birth
{ "answer_start": [ 189 ], "text": [ "Fort White" ] }
Kendyll Pope (born May 9, 1981) is a former American football linebacker who played for the Indianapolis Colts. He played college football at Florida State. High school career A native of Fort White, Florida, Pope attended Columbia High School, where he developed into one of the best defensive players in the state of Florida. In his senior year, he recorded 175 tackles, seven sacks and four caused fumbles, which earned him first-team Class 6A all-state honors, as well as All-American selections by USA Today and Parade. Ranked as the No. 5 linebacker in the country by SuperPrep, Pope was recruited by numerous schools. He selected Florida State over Florida, Alabama, Tennessee, and Ohio State, following the footsteps of former Seminoles and Columbia alumni Brian Allen and All-American Reinard Wilson. College career In his true freshman year at Florida State, Pope primarily saw action backing up All-American senior Tommy Polley at weakside linebacker as well as on special teams. Pope finished the season with 52 tackles (20 solo), which was best among non-starters. His season high of eight tackles (four solo, four assists) came against Virginia. As a sophomore, Pope succeeded Polley at the weakside linebacker spot, starting every regular season game for the Seminoles, but a shoulder injury caused him to miss the Seminoles' victory over Virginia Tech in the Gator Bowl. He recorded 113 tackles (52 unassisted) in the season, which trailed only senior Bradley Jennings (121), and was the most by a Seminole sophomore since Marvin Jones (125) in 1991. Pope also ranked fourth on the team with seven tackles for a loss of (−28 yards). He had a season-high 14 tackles against Wake Forest and Clemson. For his sophomore performance, Pope earned an All-ACC honorable mention. In his junior season, Pope led the team with 131 total tackles (68 solo), and recorded 10 or more tackles in eight of the Seminoles' 14 games, including five of the last six games of the season. A career-high 15 tackles came against North Carolina State. For the season, Pope also had five pass break-ups, five quarterback hurries and two interceptions, including a pick six in the 31–14 win over in-state rival Florida. Pope was named to the All-ACC second-team, and was voted No. 2 on Kirk Herbstreit's “Best of the Best Outside Linebacker” along with teammate Michael Boulware. Pope entered the 2003 season with the expectations of an All-American senior year, but was plagued with knee injuries throughout the season. Rotating with sophomore A. J. Nicholson and freshman Ernie Sims, and seeing his playing time reduced, Pope's numbers went considerably down. Playing in 10 games, he recorded 56 tackles, seven tackles for a loss, and three quarterback sacks. Professional career 2004 NFL Draft Projected to be a mid-third rounder by Sports Illustrated, Pope was described as “athletic, weak-side linebacker that excels in pass coverage.” He was drafted in the fourth round with the 107th overall pick by the Colts. Indianapolis Colts Pope missed the 2005 NFL season after being suspended for violating the NFL's Substance Abuse Policy. He was waived by the Colts on April 25, 2007, after missing two seasons due to suspension and never being reinstated. References External links Florida State Seminoles bio
member of sports team
{ "answer_start": [ 92 ], "text": [ "Indianapolis Colts" ] }
Kendyll Pope (born May 9, 1981) is a former American football linebacker who played for the Indianapolis Colts. He played college football at Florida State. High school career A native of Fort White, Florida, Pope attended Columbia High School, where he developed into one of the best defensive players in the state of Florida. In his senior year, he recorded 175 tackles, seven sacks and four caused fumbles, which earned him first-team Class 6A all-state honors, as well as All-American selections by USA Today and Parade. Ranked as the No. 5 linebacker in the country by SuperPrep, Pope was recruited by numerous schools. He selected Florida State over Florida, Alabama, Tennessee, and Ohio State, following the footsteps of former Seminoles and Columbia alumni Brian Allen and All-American Reinard Wilson. College career In his true freshman year at Florida State, Pope primarily saw action backing up All-American senior Tommy Polley at weakside linebacker as well as on special teams. Pope finished the season with 52 tackles (20 solo), which was best among non-starters. His season high of eight tackles (four solo, four assists) came against Virginia. As a sophomore, Pope succeeded Polley at the weakside linebacker spot, starting every regular season game for the Seminoles, but a shoulder injury caused him to miss the Seminoles' victory over Virginia Tech in the Gator Bowl. He recorded 113 tackles (52 unassisted) in the season, which trailed only senior Bradley Jennings (121), and was the most by a Seminole sophomore since Marvin Jones (125) in 1991. Pope also ranked fourth on the team with seven tackles for a loss of (−28 yards). He had a season-high 14 tackles against Wake Forest and Clemson. For his sophomore performance, Pope earned an All-ACC honorable mention. In his junior season, Pope led the team with 131 total tackles (68 solo), and recorded 10 or more tackles in eight of the Seminoles' 14 games, including five of the last six games of the season. A career-high 15 tackles came against North Carolina State. For the season, Pope also had five pass break-ups, five quarterback hurries and two interceptions, including a pick six in the 31–14 win over in-state rival Florida. Pope was named to the All-ACC second-team, and was voted No. 2 on Kirk Herbstreit's “Best of the Best Outside Linebacker” along with teammate Michael Boulware. Pope entered the 2003 season with the expectations of an All-American senior year, but was plagued with knee injuries throughout the season. Rotating with sophomore A. J. Nicholson and freshman Ernie Sims, and seeing his playing time reduced, Pope's numbers went considerably down. Playing in 10 games, he recorded 56 tackles, seven tackles for a loss, and three quarterback sacks. Professional career 2004 NFL Draft Projected to be a mid-third rounder by Sports Illustrated, Pope was described as “athletic, weak-side linebacker that excels in pass coverage.” He was drafted in the fourth round with the 107th overall pick by the Colts. Indianapolis Colts Pope missed the 2005 NFL season after being suspended for violating the NFL's Substance Abuse Policy. He was waived by the Colts on April 25, 2007, after missing two seasons due to suspension and never being reinstated. References External links Florida State Seminoles bio
educated at
{ "answer_start": [ 224 ], "text": [ "Columbia High School" ] }
Kendyll Pope (born May 9, 1981) is a former American football linebacker who played for the Indianapolis Colts. He played college football at Florida State. High school career A native of Fort White, Florida, Pope attended Columbia High School, where he developed into one of the best defensive players in the state of Florida. In his senior year, he recorded 175 tackles, seven sacks and four caused fumbles, which earned him first-team Class 6A all-state honors, as well as All-American selections by USA Today and Parade. Ranked as the No. 5 linebacker in the country by SuperPrep, Pope was recruited by numerous schools. He selected Florida State over Florida, Alabama, Tennessee, and Ohio State, following the footsteps of former Seminoles and Columbia alumni Brian Allen and All-American Reinard Wilson. College career In his true freshman year at Florida State, Pope primarily saw action backing up All-American senior Tommy Polley at weakside linebacker as well as on special teams. Pope finished the season with 52 tackles (20 solo), which was best among non-starters. His season high of eight tackles (four solo, four assists) came against Virginia. As a sophomore, Pope succeeded Polley at the weakside linebacker spot, starting every regular season game for the Seminoles, but a shoulder injury caused him to miss the Seminoles' victory over Virginia Tech in the Gator Bowl. He recorded 113 tackles (52 unassisted) in the season, which trailed only senior Bradley Jennings (121), and was the most by a Seminole sophomore since Marvin Jones (125) in 1991. Pope also ranked fourth on the team with seven tackles for a loss of (−28 yards). He had a season-high 14 tackles against Wake Forest and Clemson. For his sophomore performance, Pope earned an All-ACC honorable mention. In his junior season, Pope led the team with 131 total tackles (68 solo), and recorded 10 or more tackles in eight of the Seminoles' 14 games, including five of the last six games of the season. A career-high 15 tackles came against North Carolina State. For the season, Pope also had five pass break-ups, five quarterback hurries and two interceptions, including a pick six in the 31–14 win over in-state rival Florida. Pope was named to the All-ACC second-team, and was voted No. 2 on Kirk Herbstreit's “Best of the Best Outside Linebacker” along with teammate Michael Boulware. Pope entered the 2003 season with the expectations of an All-American senior year, but was plagued with knee injuries throughout the season. Rotating with sophomore A. J. Nicholson and freshman Ernie Sims, and seeing his playing time reduced, Pope's numbers went considerably down. Playing in 10 games, he recorded 56 tackles, seven tackles for a loss, and three quarterback sacks. Professional career 2004 NFL Draft Projected to be a mid-third rounder by Sports Illustrated, Pope was described as “athletic, weak-side linebacker that excels in pass coverage.” He was drafted in the fourth round with the 107th overall pick by the Colts. Indianapolis Colts Pope missed the 2005 NFL season after being suspended for violating the NFL's Substance Abuse Policy. He was waived by the Colts on April 25, 2007, after missing two seasons due to suspension and never being reinstated. References External links Florida State Seminoles bio
position played on team / speciality
{ "answer_start": [ 62 ], "text": [ "linebacker" ] }
Kendyll Pope (born May 9, 1981) is a former American football linebacker who played for the Indianapolis Colts. He played college football at Florida State. High school career A native of Fort White, Florida, Pope attended Columbia High School, where he developed into one of the best defensive players in the state of Florida. In his senior year, he recorded 175 tackles, seven sacks and four caused fumbles, which earned him first-team Class 6A all-state honors, as well as All-American selections by USA Today and Parade. Ranked as the No. 5 linebacker in the country by SuperPrep, Pope was recruited by numerous schools. He selected Florida State over Florida, Alabama, Tennessee, and Ohio State, following the footsteps of former Seminoles and Columbia alumni Brian Allen and All-American Reinard Wilson. College career In his true freshman year at Florida State, Pope primarily saw action backing up All-American senior Tommy Polley at weakside linebacker as well as on special teams. Pope finished the season with 52 tackles (20 solo), which was best among non-starters. His season high of eight tackles (four solo, four assists) came against Virginia. As a sophomore, Pope succeeded Polley at the weakside linebacker spot, starting every regular season game for the Seminoles, but a shoulder injury caused him to miss the Seminoles' victory over Virginia Tech in the Gator Bowl. He recorded 113 tackles (52 unassisted) in the season, which trailed only senior Bradley Jennings (121), and was the most by a Seminole sophomore since Marvin Jones (125) in 1991. Pope also ranked fourth on the team with seven tackles for a loss of (−28 yards). He had a season-high 14 tackles against Wake Forest and Clemson. For his sophomore performance, Pope earned an All-ACC honorable mention. In his junior season, Pope led the team with 131 total tackles (68 solo), and recorded 10 or more tackles in eight of the Seminoles' 14 games, including five of the last six games of the season. A career-high 15 tackles came against North Carolina State. For the season, Pope also had five pass break-ups, five quarterback hurries and two interceptions, including a pick six in the 31–14 win over in-state rival Florida. Pope was named to the All-ACC second-team, and was voted No. 2 on Kirk Herbstreit's “Best of the Best Outside Linebacker” along with teammate Michael Boulware. Pope entered the 2003 season with the expectations of an All-American senior year, but was plagued with knee injuries throughout the season. Rotating with sophomore A. J. Nicholson and freshman Ernie Sims, and seeing his playing time reduced, Pope's numbers went considerably down. Playing in 10 games, he recorded 56 tackles, seven tackles for a loss, and three quarterback sacks. Professional career 2004 NFL Draft Projected to be a mid-third rounder by Sports Illustrated, Pope was described as “athletic, weak-side linebacker that excels in pass coverage.” He was drafted in the fourth round with the 107th overall pick by the Colts. Indianapolis Colts Pope missed the 2005 NFL season after being suspended for violating the NFL's Substance Abuse Policy. He was waived by the Colts on April 25, 2007, after missing two seasons due to suspension and never being reinstated. References External links Florida State Seminoles bio
sport
{ "answer_start": [ 44 ], "text": [ "American football" ] }
Kendyll Pope (born May 9, 1981) is a former American football linebacker who played for the Indianapolis Colts. He played college football at Florida State. High school career A native of Fort White, Florida, Pope attended Columbia High School, where he developed into one of the best defensive players in the state of Florida. In his senior year, he recorded 175 tackles, seven sacks and four caused fumbles, which earned him first-team Class 6A all-state honors, as well as All-American selections by USA Today and Parade. Ranked as the No. 5 linebacker in the country by SuperPrep, Pope was recruited by numerous schools. He selected Florida State over Florida, Alabama, Tennessee, and Ohio State, following the footsteps of former Seminoles and Columbia alumni Brian Allen and All-American Reinard Wilson. College career In his true freshman year at Florida State, Pope primarily saw action backing up All-American senior Tommy Polley at weakside linebacker as well as on special teams. Pope finished the season with 52 tackles (20 solo), which was best among non-starters. His season high of eight tackles (four solo, four assists) came against Virginia. As a sophomore, Pope succeeded Polley at the weakside linebacker spot, starting every regular season game for the Seminoles, but a shoulder injury caused him to miss the Seminoles' victory over Virginia Tech in the Gator Bowl. He recorded 113 tackles (52 unassisted) in the season, which trailed only senior Bradley Jennings (121), and was the most by a Seminole sophomore since Marvin Jones (125) in 1991. Pope also ranked fourth on the team with seven tackles for a loss of (−28 yards). He had a season-high 14 tackles against Wake Forest and Clemson. For his sophomore performance, Pope earned an All-ACC honorable mention. In his junior season, Pope led the team with 131 total tackles (68 solo), and recorded 10 or more tackles in eight of the Seminoles' 14 games, including five of the last six games of the season. A career-high 15 tackles came against North Carolina State. For the season, Pope also had five pass break-ups, five quarterback hurries and two interceptions, including a pick six in the 31–14 win over in-state rival Florida. Pope was named to the All-ACC second-team, and was voted No. 2 on Kirk Herbstreit's “Best of the Best Outside Linebacker” along with teammate Michael Boulware. Pope entered the 2003 season with the expectations of an All-American senior year, but was plagued with knee injuries throughout the season. Rotating with sophomore A. J. Nicholson and freshman Ernie Sims, and seeing his playing time reduced, Pope's numbers went considerably down. Playing in 10 games, he recorded 56 tackles, seven tackles for a loss, and three quarterback sacks. Professional career 2004 NFL Draft Projected to be a mid-third rounder by Sports Illustrated, Pope was described as “athletic, weak-side linebacker that excels in pass coverage.” He was drafted in the fourth round with the 107th overall pick by the Colts. Indianapolis Colts Pope missed the 2005 NFL season after being suspended for violating the NFL's Substance Abuse Policy. He was waived by the Colts on April 25, 2007, after missing two seasons due to suspension and never being reinstated. References External links Florida State Seminoles bio
family name
{ "answer_start": [ 8 ], "text": [ "Pope" ] }
Bernardo Vilar Estevão Jerônimo (born 12 February 1998) is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a centre back for Allsvenskan club IFK Värnamo. References External links Bernardo Vilar at the Swedish Football Association (in Swedish) Bernardo Vilar at Playmaker Stats Bernardo Vilar at IFK Göteborg Database
family name
{ "answer_start": [ 9 ], "text": [ "Vilar" ] }
Bernardo Vilar Estevão Jerônimo (born 12 February 1998) is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a centre back for Allsvenskan club IFK Värnamo. References External links Bernardo Vilar at the Swedish Football Association (in Swedish) Bernardo Vilar at Playmaker Stats Bernardo Vilar at IFK Göteborg Database
given name
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Bernardo" ] }
Bernardo Vilar Estevão Jerônimo (born 12 February 1998) is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a centre back for Allsvenskan club IFK Värnamo. References External links Bernardo Vilar at the Swedish Football Association (in Swedish) Bernardo Vilar at Playmaker Stats Bernardo Vilar at IFK Göteborg Database
country of citizenship
{ "answer_start": [ 61 ], "text": [ "Brazil" ] }
Trafalgar Park may refer to: Trafalgar Park, Nelson, a sports venue in Nelson, New Zealand Trafalgar Park, Wiltshire, a park surrounding Trafalgar House, Wiltshire, England, UK Trafalgar Park, a neighbourhood of Kingston, Jamaica, near Liguanea Trafalgar Park, a park in Woodstock, Cape Town, South Africa
country
{ "answer_start": [ 80 ], "text": [ "New Zealand" ] }
Trafalgar Park may refer to: Trafalgar Park, Nelson, a sports venue in Nelson, New Zealand Trafalgar Park, Wiltshire, a park surrounding Trafalgar House, Wiltshire, England, UK Trafalgar Park, a neighbourhood of Kingston, Jamaica, near Liguanea Trafalgar Park, a park in Woodstock, Cape Town, South Africa
instance of
{ "answer_start": [ 121 ], "text": [ "park" ] }
The Norliss Tapes is a 1973 American made-for-television horror film directed by Dan Curtis and written by William F. Nolan, starring Roy Thinnes and Angie Dickinson. Framed through a series of tapes left behind by the missing Norliss, an investigator of the occult, it tells the story of his encounter with a widow and her artist husband who has returned from the dead. The film was originally produced by NBC as a pilot for a television series which was ultimately not produced. The film premiered as a standalone movie on the NBC network on February 21, 1973. Years later it acquired a modest cult following on the independent theater circuit. Plot David Norliss, a writer working on a book debunking spiritualists and fakers, vanishes from his home in San Francisco, California, leaving behind a series of audio tapes explaining his absence and recent investigations. The narrative unfolds as a friend, his publisher Sanford Evans, listens to the tapes. Norliss had recently investigated an incident reported by Ellen Cort, a widow who claims that she was attacked by her recently-deceased husband, James, one night on their estate near Monterey. Her husband, who had been suffering from a crippling disease, became involved in the occult after meeting a mysterious woman, Mademoiselle Jeckiel, who attended one of his art exhibitions. Cort says James was buried with a mysterious scarab ring that Jeckiel gave him. That evening in Carmel, a young woman is attacked in her car, causing her to crash and die. When she is found, her skin is a dark grey, and a coroner later confirms her body was drained of blood. Norliss travels to Carmel to meet Sheriff Tom Hartley to discuss Ellen's claims. Later, Norliss and Ellen visit James' crypt on the estate and find the ring on his hand. Norliss goes to San Francisco to meet Charles Langdon, a gallery owner who had called Ellen inquiring about purchasing James's ring. Langdon learns that the ring was buried with James and tries to steal it, but the coffin is empty. As he leaves the crypt, he is attacked by the ghoul James. Norliss meets Jeckiel, who warns him to stay away from the Cort estate. That night, Norliss and Ellen investigate James' art studio, where they find a large sculpture Ellen says was not there days before. The ghoul James attacks them. Norliss shoots him several times, but James chases them out of the studio. James rips off the door of their car as they drive away. Sheriff Hartley joins Norliss and Ellen and they find James' crypt empty. Ellen's sister, Marsha arrives at the Cort estate hoping to spend the night. When she finds nobody home, she instead lodges at a nearby motel. James breaks into the room and carries her into the nearby woods. Norliss' research discovers a series of tunnels had been built on the Cort estate in its construction in the 1920s. Lab results on clay from the large sculpture show it includes human blood. Jeckiel arrives unannounced and tells Ellen that James made a pact with the Egyptian deity Sargoth, to create a sculpture through which Sargoth could enter the world in exchange for immortality. Jeckiel says that to stop James, his scarab ring must be removed. Ellen and Jeckiel search the tunnels for James and find him resting inside a pine box coffin. Jeckiel attempts to remove the ring but James awakens and bites her neck. Fleeing through the tunnels, Ellen stumbles upon Langdon's and Marsha's corpses. Norliss finds Ellen in the tunnels and they emerge in James' art studio. Norliss and Ellen watch as James summons Sargoth, bringing the statue to life. Norliss is able to destroy them by burning the studio to the ground in a manner that Jeckiel had specified. Evans finishes listening to the tape, and wonders if Norliss's disappearance is related to the incident described on it. He begins to play another tape, which documents a second event. Cast Roy Thinnes as David Norliss Angie Dickinson as Ellen Sterns Cort Don Porter as Sanford T. Evans Claude Akins Sheriff Tom Hartley Michele Carey as Marsha Sterns Vonetta McGee as Mademoiselle Jeckiel Hurd Hatfield as Charles Langdon Bryan O'Byrne as Mr. Dobkins Robert Mandan as George Rosen Ed Gilbert as Sid Phelps Jane Dulo as Sarah Dobbins Stanley Adams as Truck Driver Bob Schott as Sargoth George DiCenzo as Man In Langdon Gallery Patrick Wright as Larry Mather Nick Dimitri as James Cort Production Originally written under the working title Demon, The Norliss Tapes was adapted from a story by Fred Mustard Stewart; writer William Nolan said that he took Stewart's basic premise of a "walking dead man" and adapted it into a teleplay that was mostly made up of his own ideas.The pilot was shot in San Francisco and Monterey, California. Release The film premiered on February 21, 1973. It was later released on DVD for the first time by Anchor Bay Entertainment in 2006, licensed by 20th Century Fox. The DVD, now out of print, featured theatrical trailers as bonus material. In the 2000s the film underwent a brief revival on the cult movie circuit, with theatrical screenings in such locations as Toronto, New York and Los Angeles. Critical reception Variety said: "Curtis directed the film with an eye to tension, and that he manages. The idea behind Nolan's script has validity, with its open dependency on the supernatural. The basic thrust, to scare, is what counts, and there Nolan, Curtis, Thinnes, and company succeed. The Hollywood Reporter also praised the film, calling it: "a lot of fun, with a new twist on the old vampire story." Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide also praised the film, calling it "a creepy, handsomely shot bogey tale that holds up surprisingly well."In Television Fright Films of the 1970s, critic Dan Deal called The Norliss Tapes "one of the lesser entries in the Dan Curtis canon," faulting it for its "over-reliance on dialogue, shallow characterization, an unimpressive monster and too much shorthand logic." Notes References Deal, David (2014). Television Fright Films of the 1970s. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-49383-8. OCLC 946776305. Senn, Bryan (2006). Golden Horrors: An Illustrated Critical Filmography of Terror Cinema, 1931-1939. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-42724-6. OCLC 163567664. Thompson, Jeff (2009). The Television Horrors of Dan Curtis: Dark Shadows, The Night Stalker and Other Productions, 1966-2006. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-78643-693-4. OCLC 930280271. External links The Norliss Tapes at IMDb The Norliss Tapes at Rotten Tomatoes The Norliss Tapes trailer at The New York Times
director
{ "answer_start": [ 81 ], "text": [ "Dan Curtis" ] }
The Norliss Tapes is a 1973 American made-for-television horror film directed by Dan Curtis and written by William F. Nolan, starring Roy Thinnes and Angie Dickinson. Framed through a series of tapes left behind by the missing Norliss, an investigator of the occult, it tells the story of his encounter with a widow and her artist husband who has returned from the dead. The film was originally produced by NBC as a pilot for a television series which was ultimately not produced. The film premiered as a standalone movie on the NBC network on February 21, 1973. Years later it acquired a modest cult following on the independent theater circuit. Plot David Norliss, a writer working on a book debunking spiritualists and fakers, vanishes from his home in San Francisco, California, leaving behind a series of audio tapes explaining his absence and recent investigations. The narrative unfolds as a friend, his publisher Sanford Evans, listens to the tapes. Norliss had recently investigated an incident reported by Ellen Cort, a widow who claims that she was attacked by her recently-deceased husband, James, one night on their estate near Monterey. Her husband, who had been suffering from a crippling disease, became involved in the occult after meeting a mysterious woman, Mademoiselle Jeckiel, who attended one of his art exhibitions. Cort says James was buried with a mysterious scarab ring that Jeckiel gave him. That evening in Carmel, a young woman is attacked in her car, causing her to crash and die. When she is found, her skin is a dark grey, and a coroner later confirms her body was drained of blood. Norliss travels to Carmel to meet Sheriff Tom Hartley to discuss Ellen's claims. Later, Norliss and Ellen visit James' crypt on the estate and find the ring on his hand. Norliss goes to San Francisco to meet Charles Langdon, a gallery owner who had called Ellen inquiring about purchasing James's ring. Langdon learns that the ring was buried with James and tries to steal it, but the coffin is empty. As he leaves the crypt, he is attacked by the ghoul James. Norliss meets Jeckiel, who warns him to stay away from the Cort estate. That night, Norliss and Ellen investigate James' art studio, where they find a large sculpture Ellen says was not there days before. The ghoul James attacks them. Norliss shoots him several times, but James chases them out of the studio. James rips off the door of their car as they drive away. Sheriff Hartley joins Norliss and Ellen and they find James' crypt empty. Ellen's sister, Marsha arrives at the Cort estate hoping to spend the night. When she finds nobody home, she instead lodges at a nearby motel. James breaks into the room and carries her into the nearby woods. Norliss' research discovers a series of tunnels had been built on the Cort estate in its construction in the 1920s. Lab results on clay from the large sculpture show it includes human blood. Jeckiel arrives unannounced and tells Ellen that James made a pact with the Egyptian deity Sargoth, to create a sculpture through which Sargoth could enter the world in exchange for immortality. Jeckiel says that to stop James, his scarab ring must be removed. Ellen and Jeckiel search the tunnels for James and find him resting inside a pine box coffin. Jeckiel attempts to remove the ring but James awakens and bites her neck. Fleeing through the tunnels, Ellen stumbles upon Langdon's and Marsha's corpses. Norliss finds Ellen in the tunnels and they emerge in James' art studio. Norliss and Ellen watch as James summons Sargoth, bringing the statue to life. Norliss is able to destroy them by burning the studio to the ground in a manner that Jeckiel had specified. Evans finishes listening to the tape, and wonders if Norliss's disappearance is related to the incident described on it. He begins to play another tape, which documents a second event. Cast Roy Thinnes as David Norliss Angie Dickinson as Ellen Sterns Cort Don Porter as Sanford T. Evans Claude Akins Sheriff Tom Hartley Michele Carey as Marsha Sterns Vonetta McGee as Mademoiselle Jeckiel Hurd Hatfield as Charles Langdon Bryan O'Byrne as Mr. Dobkins Robert Mandan as George Rosen Ed Gilbert as Sid Phelps Jane Dulo as Sarah Dobbins Stanley Adams as Truck Driver Bob Schott as Sargoth George DiCenzo as Man In Langdon Gallery Patrick Wright as Larry Mather Nick Dimitri as James Cort Production Originally written under the working title Demon, The Norliss Tapes was adapted from a story by Fred Mustard Stewart; writer William Nolan said that he took Stewart's basic premise of a "walking dead man" and adapted it into a teleplay that was mostly made up of his own ideas.The pilot was shot in San Francisco and Monterey, California. Release The film premiered on February 21, 1973. It was later released on DVD for the first time by Anchor Bay Entertainment in 2006, licensed by 20th Century Fox. The DVD, now out of print, featured theatrical trailers as bonus material. In the 2000s the film underwent a brief revival on the cult movie circuit, with theatrical screenings in such locations as Toronto, New York and Los Angeles. Critical reception Variety said: "Curtis directed the film with an eye to tension, and that he manages. The idea behind Nolan's script has validity, with its open dependency on the supernatural. The basic thrust, to scare, is what counts, and there Nolan, Curtis, Thinnes, and company succeed. The Hollywood Reporter also praised the film, calling it: "a lot of fun, with a new twist on the old vampire story." Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide also praised the film, calling it "a creepy, handsomely shot bogey tale that holds up surprisingly well."In Television Fright Films of the 1970s, critic Dan Deal called The Norliss Tapes "one of the lesser entries in the Dan Curtis canon," faulting it for its "over-reliance on dialogue, shallow characterization, an unimpressive monster and too much shorthand logic." Notes References Deal, David (2014). Television Fright Films of the 1970s. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-49383-8. OCLC 946776305. Senn, Bryan (2006). Golden Horrors: An Illustrated Critical Filmography of Terror Cinema, 1931-1939. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-42724-6. OCLC 163567664. Thompson, Jeff (2009). The Television Horrors of Dan Curtis: Dark Shadows, The Night Stalker and Other Productions, 1966-2006. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-78643-693-4. OCLC 930280271. External links The Norliss Tapes at IMDb The Norliss Tapes at Rotten Tomatoes The Norliss Tapes trailer at The New York Times
screenwriter
{ "answer_start": [ 107 ], "text": [ "William F. Nolan" ] }
The Norliss Tapes is a 1973 American made-for-television horror film directed by Dan Curtis and written by William F. Nolan, starring Roy Thinnes and Angie Dickinson. Framed through a series of tapes left behind by the missing Norliss, an investigator of the occult, it tells the story of his encounter with a widow and her artist husband who has returned from the dead. The film was originally produced by NBC as a pilot for a television series which was ultimately not produced. The film premiered as a standalone movie on the NBC network on February 21, 1973. Years later it acquired a modest cult following on the independent theater circuit. Plot David Norliss, a writer working on a book debunking spiritualists and fakers, vanishes from his home in San Francisco, California, leaving behind a series of audio tapes explaining his absence and recent investigations. The narrative unfolds as a friend, his publisher Sanford Evans, listens to the tapes. Norliss had recently investigated an incident reported by Ellen Cort, a widow who claims that she was attacked by her recently-deceased husband, James, one night on their estate near Monterey. Her husband, who had been suffering from a crippling disease, became involved in the occult after meeting a mysterious woman, Mademoiselle Jeckiel, who attended one of his art exhibitions. Cort says James was buried with a mysterious scarab ring that Jeckiel gave him. That evening in Carmel, a young woman is attacked in her car, causing her to crash and die. When she is found, her skin is a dark grey, and a coroner later confirms her body was drained of blood. Norliss travels to Carmel to meet Sheriff Tom Hartley to discuss Ellen's claims. Later, Norliss and Ellen visit James' crypt on the estate and find the ring on his hand. Norliss goes to San Francisco to meet Charles Langdon, a gallery owner who had called Ellen inquiring about purchasing James's ring. Langdon learns that the ring was buried with James and tries to steal it, but the coffin is empty. As he leaves the crypt, he is attacked by the ghoul James. Norliss meets Jeckiel, who warns him to stay away from the Cort estate. That night, Norliss and Ellen investigate James' art studio, where they find a large sculpture Ellen says was not there days before. The ghoul James attacks them. Norliss shoots him several times, but James chases them out of the studio. James rips off the door of their car as they drive away. Sheriff Hartley joins Norliss and Ellen and they find James' crypt empty. Ellen's sister, Marsha arrives at the Cort estate hoping to spend the night. When she finds nobody home, she instead lodges at a nearby motel. James breaks into the room and carries her into the nearby woods. Norliss' research discovers a series of tunnels had been built on the Cort estate in its construction in the 1920s. Lab results on clay from the large sculpture show it includes human blood. Jeckiel arrives unannounced and tells Ellen that James made a pact with the Egyptian deity Sargoth, to create a sculpture through which Sargoth could enter the world in exchange for immortality. Jeckiel says that to stop James, his scarab ring must be removed. Ellen and Jeckiel search the tunnels for James and find him resting inside a pine box coffin. Jeckiel attempts to remove the ring but James awakens and bites her neck. Fleeing through the tunnels, Ellen stumbles upon Langdon's and Marsha's corpses. Norliss finds Ellen in the tunnels and they emerge in James' art studio. Norliss and Ellen watch as James summons Sargoth, bringing the statue to life. Norliss is able to destroy them by burning the studio to the ground in a manner that Jeckiel had specified. Evans finishes listening to the tape, and wonders if Norliss's disappearance is related to the incident described on it. He begins to play another tape, which documents a second event. Cast Roy Thinnes as David Norliss Angie Dickinson as Ellen Sterns Cort Don Porter as Sanford T. Evans Claude Akins Sheriff Tom Hartley Michele Carey as Marsha Sterns Vonetta McGee as Mademoiselle Jeckiel Hurd Hatfield as Charles Langdon Bryan O'Byrne as Mr. Dobkins Robert Mandan as George Rosen Ed Gilbert as Sid Phelps Jane Dulo as Sarah Dobbins Stanley Adams as Truck Driver Bob Schott as Sargoth George DiCenzo as Man In Langdon Gallery Patrick Wright as Larry Mather Nick Dimitri as James Cort Production Originally written under the working title Demon, The Norliss Tapes was adapted from a story by Fred Mustard Stewart; writer William Nolan said that he took Stewart's basic premise of a "walking dead man" and adapted it into a teleplay that was mostly made up of his own ideas.The pilot was shot in San Francisco and Monterey, California. Release The film premiered on February 21, 1973. It was later released on DVD for the first time by Anchor Bay Entertainment in 2006, licensed by 20th Century Fox. The DVD, now out of print, featured theatrical trailers as bonus material. In the 2000s the film underwent a brief revival on the cult movie circuit, with theatrical screenings in such locations as Toronto, New York and Los Angeles. Critical reception Variety said: "Curtis directed the film with an eye to tension, and that he manages. The idea behind Nolan's script has validity, with its open dependency on the supernatural. The basic thrust, to scare, is what counts, and there Nolan, Curtis, Thinnes, and company succeed. The Hollywood Reporter also praised the film, calling it: "a lot of fun, with a new twist on the old vampire story." Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide also praised the film, calling it "a creepy, handsomely shot bogey tale that holds up surprisingly well."In Television Fright Films of the 1970s, critic Dan Deal called The Norliss Tapes "one of the lesser entries in the Dan Curtis canon," faulting it for its "over-reliance on dialogue, shallow characterization, an unimpressive monster and too much shorthand logic." Notes References Deal, David (2014). Television Fright Films of the 1970s. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-49383-8. OCLC 946776305. Senn, Bryan (2006). Golden Horrors: An Illustrated Critical Filmography of Terror Cinema, 1931-1939. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-42724-6. OCLC 163567664. Thompson, Jeff (2009). The Television Horrors of Dan Curtis: Dark Shadows, The Night Stalker and Other Productions, 1966-2006. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-78643-693-4. OCLC 930280271. External links The Norliss Tapes at IMDb The Norliss Tapes at Rotten Tomatoes The Norliss Tapes trailer at The New York Times
genre
{ "answer_start": [ 57 ], "text": [ "horror film" ] }
The Norliss Tapes is a 1973 American made-for-television horror film directed by Dan Curtis and written by William F. Nolan, starring Roy Thinnes and Angie Dickinson. Framed through a series of tapes left behind by the missing Norliss, an investigator of the occult, it tells the story of his encounter with a widow and her artist husband who has returned from the dead. The film was originally produced by NBC as a pilot for a television series which was ultimately not produced. The film premiered as a standalone movie on the NBC network on February 21, 1973. Years later it acquired a modest cult following on the independent theater circuit. Plot David Norliss, a writer working on a book debunking spiritualists and fakers, vanishes from his home in San Francisco, California, leaving behind a series of audio tapes explaining his absence and recent investigations. The narrative unfolds as a friend, his publisher Sanford Evans, listens to the tapes. Norliss had recently investigated an incident reported by Ellen Cort, a widow who claims that she was attacked by her recently-deceased husband, James, one night on their estate near Monterey. Her husband, who had been suffering from a crippling disease, became involved in the occult after meeting a mysterious woman, Mademoiselle Jeckiel, who attended one of his art exhibitions. Cort says James was buried with a mysterious scarab ring that Jeckiel gave him. That evening in Carmel, a young woman is attacked in her car, causing her to crash and die. When she is found, her skin is a dark grey, and a coroner later confirms her body was drained of blood. Norliss travels to Carmel to meet Sheriff Tom Hartley to discuss Ellen's claims. Later, Norliss and Ellen visit James' crypt on the estate and find the ring on his hand. Norliss goes to San Francisco to meet Charles Langdon, a gallery owner who had called Ellen inquiring about purchasing James's ring. Langdon learns that the ring was buried with James and tries to steal it, but the coffin is empty. As he leaves the crypt, he is attacked by the ghoul James. Norliss meets Jeckiel, who warns him to stay away from the Cort estate. That night, Norliss and Ellen investigate James' art studio, where they find a large sculpture Ellen says was not there days before. The ghoul James attacks them. Norliss shoots him several times, but James chases them out of the studio. James rips off the door of their car as they drive away. Sheriff Hartley joins Norliss and Ellen and they find James' crypt empty. Ellen's sister, Marsha arrives at the Cort estate hoping to spend the night. When she finds nobody home, she instead lodges at a nearby motel. James breaks into the room and carries her into the nearby woods. Norliss' research discovers a series of tunnels had been built on the Cort estate in its construction in the 1920s. Lab results on clay from the large sculpture show it includes human blood. Jeckiel arrives unannounced and tells Ellen that James made a pact with the Egyptian deity Sargoth, to create a sculpture through which Sargoth could enter the world in exchange for immortality. Jeckiel says that to stop James, his scarab ring must be removed. Ellen and Jeckiel search the tunnels for James and find him resting inside a pine box coffin. Jeckiel attempts to remove the ring but James awakens and bites her neck. Fleeing through the tunnels, Ellen stumbles upon Langdon's and Marsha's corpses. Norliss finds Ellen in the tunnels and they emerge in James' art studio. Norliss and Ellen watch as James summons Sargoth, bringing the statue to life. Norliss is able to destroy them by burning the studio to the ground in a manner that Jeckiel had specified. Evans finishes listening to the tape, and wonders if Norliss's disappearance is related to the incident described on it. He begins to play another tape, which documents a second event. Cast Roy Thinnes as David Norliss Angie Dickinson as Ellen Sterns Cort Don Porter as Sanford T. Evans Claude Akins Sheriff Tom Hartley Michele Carey as Marsha Sterns Vonetta McGee as Mademoiselle Jeckiel Hurd Hatfield as Charles Langdon Bryan O'Byrne as Mr. Dobkins Robert Mandan as George Rosen Ed Gilbert as Sid Phelps Jane Dulo as Sarah Dobbins Stanley Adams as Truck Driver Bob Schott as Sargoth George DiCenzo as Man In Langdon Gallery Patrick Wright as Larry Mather Nick Dimitri as James Cort Production Originally written under the working title Demon, The Norliss Tapes was adapted from a story by Fred Mustard Stewart; writer William Nolan said that he took Stewart's basic premise of a "walking dead man" and adapted it into a teleplay that was mostly made up of his own ideas.The pilot was shot in San Francisco and Monterey, California. Release The film premiered on February 21, 1973. It was later released on DVD for the first time by Anchor Bay Entertainment in 2006, licensed by 20th Century Fox. The DVD, now out of print, featured theatrical trailers as bonus material. In the 2000s the film underwent a brief revival on the cult movie circuit, with theatrical screenings in such locations as Toronto, New York and Los Angeles. Critical reception Variety said: "Curtis directed the film with an eye to tension, and that he manages. The idea behind Nolan's script has validity, with its open dependency on the supernatural. The basic thrust, to scare, is what counts, and there Nolan, Curtis, Thinnes, and company succeed. The Hollywood Reporter also praised the film, calling it: "a lot of fun, with a new twist on the old vampire story." Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide also praised the film, calling it "a creepy, handsomely shot bogey tale that holds up surprisingly well."In Television Fright Films of the 1970s, critic Dan Deal called The Norliss Tapes "one of the lesser entries in the Dan Curtis canon," faulting it for its "over-reliance on dialogue, shallow characterization, an unimpressive monster and too much shorthand logic." Notes References Deal, David (2014). Television Fright Films of the 1970s. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-49383-8. OCLC 946776305. Senn, Bryan (2006). Golden Horrors: An Illustrated Critical Filmography of Terror Cinema, 1931-1939. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-42724-6. OCLC 163567664. Thompson, Jeff (2009). The Television Horrors of Dan Curtis: Dark Shadows, The Night Stalker and Other Productions, 1966-2006. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-78643-693-4. OCLC 930280271. External links The Norliss Tapes at IMDb The Norliss Tapes at Rotten Tomatoes The Norliss Tapes trailer at The New York Times
cast member
{ "answer_start": [ 151 ], "text": [ "Angie Dickinson" ] }
The Norliss Tapes is a 1973 American made-for-television horror film directed by Dan Curtis and written by William F. Nolan, starring Roy Thinnes and Angie Dickinson. Framed through a series of tapes left behind by the missing Norliss, an investigator of the occult, it tells the story of his encounter with a widow and her artist husband who has returned from the dead. The film was originally produced by NBC as a pilot for a television series which was ultimately not produced. The film premiered as a standalone movie on the NBC network on February 21, 1973. Years later it acquired a modest cult following on the independent theater circuit. Plot David Norliss, a writer working on a book debunking spiritualists and fakers, vanishes from his home in San Francisco, California, leaving behind a series of audio tapes explaining his absence and recent investigations. The narrative unfolds as a friend, his publisher Sanford Evans, listens to the tapes. Norliss had recently investigated an incident reported by Ellen Cort, a widow who claims that she was attacked by her recently-deceased husband, James, one night on their estate near Monterey. Her husband, who had been suffering from a crippling disease, became involved in the occult after meeting a mysterious woman, Mademoiselle Jeckiel, who attended one of his art exhibitions. Cort says James was buried with a mysterious scarab ring that Jeckiel gave him. That evening in Carmel, a young woman is attacked in her car, causing her to crash and die. When she is found, her skin is a dark grey, and a coroner later confirms her body was drained of blood. Norliss travels to Carmel to meet Sheriff Tom Hartley to discuss Ellen's claims. Later, Norliss and Ellen visit James' crypt on the estate and find the ring on his hand. Norliss goes to San Francisco to meet Charles Langdon, a gallery owner who had called Ellen inquiring about purchasing James's ring. Langdon learns that the ring was buried with James and tries to steal it, but the coffin is empty. As he leaves the crypt, he is attacked by the ghoul James. Norliss meets Jeckiel, who warns him to stay away from the Cort estate. That night, Norliss and Ellen investigate James' art studio, where they find a large sculpture Ellen says was not there days before. The ghoul James attacks them. Norliss shoots him several times, but James chases them out of the studio. James rips off the door of their car as they drive away. Sheriff Hartley joins Norliss and Ellen and they find James' crypt empty. Ellen's sister, Marsha arrives at the Cort estate hoping to spend the night. When she finds nobody home, she instead lodges at a nearby motel. James breaks into the room and carries her into the nearby woods. Norliss' research discovers a series of tunnels had been built on the Cort estate in its construction in the 1920s. Lab results on clay from the large sculpture show it includes human blood. Jeckiel arrives unannounced and tells Ellen that James made a pact with the Egyptian deity Sargoth, to create a sculpture through which Sargoth could enter the world in exchange for immortality. Jeckiel says that to stop James, his scarab ring must be removed. Ellen and Jeckiel search the tunnels for James and find him resting inside a pine box coffin. Jeckiel attempts to remove the ring but James awakens and bites her neck. Fleeing through the tunnels, Ellen stumbles upon Langdon's and Marsha's corpses. Norliss finds Ellen in the tunnels and they emerge in James' art studio. Norliss and Ellen watch as James summons Sargoth, bringing the statue to life. Norliss is able to destroy them by burning the studio to the ground in a manner that Jeckiel had specified. Evans finishes listening to the tape, and wonders if Norliss's disappearance is related to the incident described on it. He begins to play another tape, which documents a second event. Cast Roy Thinnes as David Norliss Angie Dickinson as Ellen Sterns Cort Don Porter as Sanford T. Evans Claude Akins Sheriff Tom Hartley Michele Carey as Marsha Sterns Vonetta McGee as Mademoiselle Jeckiel Hurd Hatfield as Charles Langdon Bryan O'Byrne as Mr. Dobkins Robert Mandan as George Rosen Ed Gilbert as Sid Phelps Jane Dulo as Sarah Dobbins Stanley Adams as Truck Driver Bob Schott as Sargoth George DiCenzo as Man In Langdon Gallery Patrick Wright as Larry Mather Nick Dimitri as James Cort Production Originally written under the working title Demon, The Norliss Tapes was adapted from a story by Fred Mustard Stewart; writer William Nolan said that he took Stewart's basic premise of a "walking dead man" and adapted it into a teleplay that was mostly made up of his own ideas.The pilot was shot in San Francisco and Monterey, California. Release The film premiered on February 21, 1973. It was later released on DVD for the first time by Anchor Bay Entertainment in 2006, licensed by 20th Century Fox. The DVD, now out of print, featured theatrical trailers as bonus material. In the 2000s the film underwent a brief revival on the cult movie circuit, with theatrical screenings in such locations as Toronto, New York and Los Angeles. Critical reception Variety said: "Curtis directed the film with an eye to tension, and that he manages. The idea behind Nolan's script has validity, with its open dependency on the supernatural. The basic thrust, to scare, is what counts, and there Nolan, Curtis, Thinnes, and company succeed. The Hollywood Reporter also praised the film, calling it: "a lot of fun, with a new twist on the old vampire story." Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide also praised the film, calling it "a creepy, handsomely shot bogey tale that holds up surprisingly well."In Television Fright Films of the 1970s, critic Dan Deal called The Norliss Tapes "one of the lesser entries in the Dan Curtis canon," faulting it for its "over-reliance on dialogue, shallow characterization, an unimpressive monster and too much shorthand logic." Notes References Deal, David (2014). Television Fright Films of the 1970s. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-49383-8. OCLC 946776305. Senn, Bryan (2006). Golden Horrors: An Illustrated Critical Filmography of Terror Cinema, 1931-1939. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-42724-6. OCLC 163567664. Thompson, Jeff (2009). The Television Horrors of Dan Curtis: Dark Shadows, The Night Stalker and Other Productions, 1966-2006. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-78643-693-4. OCLC 930280271. External links The Norliss Tapes at IMDb The Norliss Tapes at Rotten Tomatoes The Norliss Tapes trailer at The New York Times
narrative location
{ "answer_start": [ 759 ], "text": [ "San Francisco" ] }
The Norliss Tapes is a 1973 American made-for-television horror film directed by Dan Curtis and written by William F. Nolan, starring Roy Thinnes and Angie Dickinson. Framed through a series of tapes left behind by the missing Norliss, an investigator of the occult, it tells the story of his encounter with a widow and her artist husband who has returned from the dead. The film was originally produced by NBC as a pilot for a television series which was ultimately not produced. The film premiered as a standalone movie on the NBC network on February 21, 1973. Years later it acquired a modest cult following on the independent theater circuit. Plot David Norliss, a writer working on a book debunking spiritualists and fakers, vanishes from his home in San Francisco, California, leaving behind a series of audio tapes explaining his absence and recent investigations. The narrative unfolds as a friend, his publisher Sanford Evans, listens to the tapes. Norliss had recently investigated an incident reported by Ellen Cort, a widow who claims that she was attacked by her recently-deceased husband, James, one night on their estate near Monterey. Her husband, who had been suffering from a crippling disease, became involved in the occult after meeting a mysterious woman, Mademoiselle Jeckiel, who attended one of his art exhibitions. Cort says James was buried with a mysterious scarab ring that Jeckiel gave him. That evening in Carmel, a young woman is attacked in her car, causing her to crash and die. When she is found, her skin is a dark grey, and a coroner later confirms her body was drained of blood. Norliss travels to Carmel to meet Sheriff Tom Hartley to discuss Ellen's claims. Later, Norliss and Ellen visit James' crypt on the estate and find the ring on his hand. Norliss goes to San Francisco to meet Charles Langdon, a gallery owner who had called Ellen inquiring about purchasing James's ring. Langdon learns that the ring was buried with James and tries to steal it, but the coffin is empty. As he leaves the crypt, he is attacked by the ghoul James. Norliss meets Jeckiel, who warns him to stay away from the Cort estate. That night, Norliss and Ellen investigate James' art studio, where they find a large sculpture Ellen says was not there days before. The ghoul James attacks them. Norliss shoots him several times, but James chases them out of the studio. James rips off the door of their car as they drive away. Sheriff Hartley joins Norliss and Ellen and they find James' crypt empty. Ellen's sister, Marsha arrives at the Cort estate hoping to spend the night. When she finds nobody home, she instead lodges at a nearby motel. James breaks into the room and carries her into the nearby woods. Norliss' research discovers a series of tunnels had been built on the Cort estate in its construction in the 1920s. Lab results on clay from the large sculpture show it includes human blood. Jeckiel arrives unannounced and tells Ellen that James made a pact with the Egyptian deity Sargoth, to create a sculpture through which Sargoth could enter the world in exchange for immortality. Jeckiel says that to stop James, his scarab ring must be removed. Ellen and Jeckiel search the tunnels for James and find him resting inside a pine box coffin. Jeckiel attempts to remove the ring but James awakens and bites her neck. Fleeing through the tunnels, Ellen stumbles upon Langdon's and Marsha's corpses. Norliss finds Ellen in the tunnels and they emerge in James' art studio. Norliss and Ellen watch as James summons Sargoth, bringing the statue to life. Norliss is able to destroy them by burning the studio to the ground in a manner that Jeckiel had specified. Evans finishes listening to the tape, and wonders if Norliss's disappearance is related to the incident described on it. He begins to play another tape, which documents a second event. Cast Roy Thinnes as David Norliss Angie Dickinson as Ellen Sterns Cort Don Porter as Sanford T. Evans Claude Akins Sheriff Tom Hartley Michele Carey as Marsha Sterns Vonetta McGee as Mademoiselle Jeckiel Hurd Hatfield as Charles Langdon Bryan O'Byrne as Mr. Dobkins Robert Mandan as George Rosen Ed Gilbert as Sid Phelps Jane Dulo as Sarah Dobbins Stanley Adams as Truck Driver Bob Schott as Sargoth George DiCenzo as Man In Langdon Gallery Patrick Wright as Larry Mather Nick Dimitri as James Cort Production Originally written under the working title Demon, The Norliss Tapes was adapted from a story by Fred Mustard Stewart; writer William Nolan said that he took Stewart's basic premise of a "walking dead man" and adapted it into a teleplay that was mostly made up of his own ideas.The pilot was shot in San Francisco and Monterey, California. Release The film premiered on February 21, 1973. It was later released on DVD for the first time by Anchor Bay Entertainment in 2006, licensed by 20th Century Fox. The DVD, now out of print, featured theatrical trailers as bonus material. In the 2000s the film underwent a brief revival on the cult movie circuit, with theatrical screenings in such locations as Toronto, New York and Los Angeles. Critical reception Variety said: "Curtis directed the film with an eye to tension, and that he manages. The idea behind Nolan's script has validity, with its open dependency on the supernatural. The basic thrust, to scare, is what counts, and there Nolan, Curtis, Thinnes, and company succeed. The Hollywood Reporter also praised the film, calling it: "a lot of fun, with a new twist on the old vampire story." Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide also praised the film, calling it "a creepy, handsomely shot bogey tale that holds up surprisingly well."In Television Fright Films of the 1970s, critic Dan Deal called The Norliss Tapes "one of the lesser entries in the Dan Curtis canon," faulting it for its "over-reliance on dialogue, shallow characterization, an unimpressive monster and too much shorthand logic." Notes References Deal, David (2014). Television Fright Films of the 1970s. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-49383-8. OCLC 946776305. Senn, Bryan (2006). Golden Horrors: An Illustrated Critical Filmography of Terror Cinema, 1931-1939. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-42724-6. OCLC 163567664. Thompson, Jeff (2009). The Television Horrors of Dan Curtis: Dark Shadows, The Night Stalker and Other Productions, 1966-2006. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-78643-693-4. OCLC 930280271. External links The Norliss Tapes at IMDb The Norliss Tapes at Rotten Tomatoes The Norliss Tapes trailer at The New York Times
title
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "The Norliss Tapes" ] }
The Norliss Tapes is a 1973 American made-for-television horror film directed by Dan Curtis and written by William F. Nolan, starring Roy Thinnes and Angie Dickinson. Framed through a series of tapes left behind by the missing Norliss, an investigator of the occult, it tells the story of his encounter with a widow and her artist husband who has returned from the dead. The film was originally produced by NBC as a pilot for a television series which was ultimately not produced. The film premiered as a standalone movie on the NBC network on February 21, 1973. Years later it acquired a modest cult following on the independent theater circuit. Plot David Norliss, a writer working on a book debunking spiritualists and fakers, vanishes from his home in San Francisco, California, leaving behind a series of audio tapes explaining his absence and recent investigations. The narrative unfolds as a friend, his publisher Sanford Evans, listens to the tapes. Norliss had recently investigated an incident reported by Ellen Cort, a widow who claims that she was attacked by her recently-deceased husband, James, one night on their estate near Monterey. Her husband, who had been suffering from a crippling disease, became involved in the occult after meeting a mysterious woman, Mademoiselle Jeckiel, who attended one of his art exhibitions. Cort says James was buried with a mysterious scarab ring that Jeckiel gave him. That evening in Carmel, a young woman is attacked in her car, causing her to crash and die. When she is found, her skin is a dark grey, and a coroner later confirms her body was drained of blood. Norliss travels to Carmel to meet Sheriff Tom Hartley to discuss Ellen's claims. Later, Norliss and Ellen visit James' crypt on the estate and find the ring on his hand. Norliss goes to San Francisco to meet Charles Langdon, a gallery owner who had called Ellen inquiring about purchasing James's ring. Langdon learns that the ring was buried with James and tries to steal it, but the coffin is empty. As he leaves the crypt, he is attacked by the ghoul James. Norliss meets Jeckiel, who warns him to stay away from the Cort estate. That night, Norliss and Ellen investigate James' art studio, where they find a large sculpture Ellen says was not there days before. The ghoul James attacks them. Norliss shoots him several times, but James chases them out of the studio. James rips off the door of their car as they drive away. Sheriff Hartley joins Norliss and Ellen and they find James' crypt empty. Ellen's sister, Marsha arrives at the Cort estate hoping to spend the night. When she finds nobody home, she instead lodges at a nearby motel. James breaks into the room and carries her into the nearby woods. Norliss' research discovers a series of tunnels had been built on the Cort estate in its construction in the 1920s. Lab results on clay from the large sculpture show it includes human blood. Jeckiel arrives unannounced and tells Ellen that James made a pact with the Egyptian deity Sargoth, to create a sculpture through which Sargoth could enter the world in exchange for immortality. Jeckiel says that to stop James, his scarab ring must be removed. Ellen and Jeckiel search the tunnels for James and find him resting inside a pine box coffin. Jeckiel attempts to remove the ring but James awakens and bites her neck. Fleeing through the tunnels, Ellen stumbles upon Langdon's and Marsha's corpses. Norliss finds Ellen in the tunnels and they emerge in James' art studio. Norliss and Ellen watch as James summons Sargoth, bringing the statue to life. Norliss is able to destroy them by burning the studio to the ground in a manner that Jeckiel had specified. Evans finishes listening to the tape, and wonders if Norliss's disappearance is related to the incident described on it. He begins to play another tape, which documents a second event. Cast Roy Thinnes as David Norliss Angie Dickinson as Ellen Sterns Cort Don Porter as Sanford T. Evans Claude Akins Sheriff Tom Hartley Michele Carey as Marsha Sterns Vonetta McGee as Mademoiselle Jeckiel Hurd Hatfield as Charles Langdon Bryan O'Byrne as Mr. Dobkins Robert Mandan as George Rosen Ed Gilbert as Sid Phelps Jane Dulo as Sarah Dobbins Stanley Adams as Truck Driver Bob Schott as Sargoth George DiCenzo as Man In Langdon Gallery Patrick Wright as Larry Mather Nick Dimitri as James Cort Production Originally written under the working title Demon, The Norliss Tapes was adapted from a story by Fred Mustard Stewart; writer William Nolan said that he took Stewart's basic premise of a "walking dead man" and adapted it into a teleplay that was mostly made up of his own ideas.The pilot was shot in San Francisco and Monterey, California. Release The film premiered on February 21, 1973. It was later released on DVD for the first time by Anchor Bay Entertainment in 2006, licensed by 20th Century Fox. The DVD, now out of print, featured theatrical trailers as bonus material. In the 2000s the film underwent a brief revival on the cult movie circuit, with theatrical screenings in such locations as Toronto, New York and Los Angeles. Critical reception Variety said: "Curtis directed the film with an eye to tension, and that he manages. The idea behind Nolan's script has validity, with its open dependency on the supernatural. The basic thrust, to scare, is what counts, and there Nolan, Curtis, Thinnes, and company succeed. The Hollywood Reporter also praised the film, calling it: "a lot of fun, with a new twist on the old vampire story." Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide also praised the film, calling it "a creepy, handsomely shot bogey tale that holds up surprisingly well."In Television Fright Films of the 1970s, critic Dan Deal called The Norliss Tapes "one of the lesser entries in the Dan Curtis canon," faulting it for its "over-reliance on dialogue, shallow characterization, an unimpressive monster and too much shorthand logic." Notes References Deal, David (2014). Television Fright Films of the 1970s. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-49383-8. OCLC 946776305. Senn, Bryan (2006). Golden Horrors: An Illustrated Critical Filmography of Terror Cinema, 1931-1939. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-42724-6. OCLC 163567664. Thompson, Jeff (2009). The Television Horrors of Dan Curtis: Dark Shadows, The Night Stalker and Other Productions, 1966-2006. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-78643-693-4. OCLC 930280271. External links The Norliss Tapes at IMDb The Norliss Tapes at Rotten Tomatoes The Norliss Tapes trailer at The New York Times
duration
{ "answer_start": [ 6193 ], "text": [ "72" ] }
Gladden Creek is a stream in Dent and Shannon counties in the Ozarks of southern Missouri. It is a tributary of the Current River. The stream headwaters are in Dent County at 37°32′33″N 91°28′44″W and the confluence with the Current is in Shannon County at 37°22′36″N 91°32′51″W. The source area for the stream lies about six miles south of Salem and it flows southeast to south generally parallel to and west of Missouri Route 19 past Custer and Gladden. It enters Shannon County just northwest of Rector and enters the Current River at Akers.Gladden Creek has the name of the local Gladden family. See also List of rivers of Missouri == References ==
instance of
{ "answer_start": [ 19 ], "text": [ "stream" ] }
Gladden Creek is a stream in Dent and Shannon counties in the Ozarks of southern Missouri. It is a tributary of the Current River. The stream headwaters are in Dent County at 37°32′33″N 91°28′44″W and the confluence with the Current is in Shannon County at 37°22′36″N 91°32′51″W. The source area for the stream lies about six miles south of Salem and it flows southeast to south generally parallel to and west of Missouri Route 19 past Custer and Gladden. It enters Shannon County just northwest of Rector and enters the Current River at Akers.Gladden Creek has the name of the local Gladden family. See also List of rivers of Missouri == References ==
located in the administrative territorial entity
{ "answer_start": [ 81 ], "text": [ "Missouri" ] }
Gathugu is a settlement in Kenya's Central Province. == References ==
country
{ "answer_start": [ 27 ], "text": [ "Kenya" ] }
Gathugu is a settlement in Kenya's Central Province. == References ==
located in the administrative territorial entity
{ "answer_start": [ 35 ], "text": [ "Central Province" ] }
Christina Strain is an American comic book colorist, writer and screenwriter. Strain formerly worked for Marvel Comics as a colorist before pursuing a career as a writer. Strain's notable works include; the award-winning Marvel series Runaways, Marvel's Generation-X, the Syfy TV show, The Magicians, and the Netflix series Shadow and Bone. Life Strain was born in Seoul, South Korea on April 27, 1981. She lived in South Korea for the majority of her youth, as her mother was from Gunsan, South Korea and her father was an Air Force officer stationed in South Korea. Except for a brief three years living in Illinois, from 1983 to 1986, Strain lived in South Korea for about fifteen years, during which she lived near a military base and attended Seoul American Elementary School and High School Upon graduating high school, Strain moved back to the United States in 1999 to attend Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge where she majored in graphic design.Strain resides in Los Angeles, California with her husband Jon Shiring, a lead engineer at Respawn Entertainment, and their adopted son. Career Strain got her start in comics working as a colorist for CrossGen in 2003. She was let go after two months working at CrossGen when the company began having financial problems and eventually went bankrupt in 2004. Weeks after losing her job at CrossGen, Strain began working for UDON and Aspen. Strain worked for UDON from 2003 to 2005, during which she contacted and impressed the Editor-in-Chief of UDON, Erik Ko, who helped her get a job at Marvel Comics. One of the first comics Strain worked on for Marvel was Runaways, which she worked on as an official colorist for about 6 years. Other prominent comics Strain worked on for Marvel include; Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane, S.H.I.E.L.D., and World War Hulk. Additionally, Strain colored several Jay Company exclusive comic covers such as the Grimm Fairy Tales. Strain worked as a colorist for Marvel for 8 years, before she retired at 32 and decided to go to grad school at the American Film Institute. Initially, Strain was interested in 3-D graphics, but after taking a comic-writing class she realized she really wanted to write stories, so she switched her focus to screenwriting.While she was transitioning to a writing career, Strain collaborated with various artists to produce original works. Strain and Adrian Alphona, who previously worked together on the Marvel series Runaways, collaborated on an art book. Together they published Sweetness in 2011, consisting of random art illustrated by Aphona and colored and finished by Strain. In 2011, Strain met Jayd Aït-Kaci, an artist she long admired according to a Newsarama interview, through a mutual friend. Strain proposed that they collaborate on a webcomic and pitched various story ideas, of which Aït-Kaci liked The Fox Sister the best. Strain wrote the script for The Fox Sister and Aït-Kaci illustrated it, and they published the first few pages of The Fox Sister in July 2017 on their official website. Strain and Aït-Kaci always planned to officially publish The Fox Sister as a 9x12 hardbound comic book, and in 2012 they compiled and published the first chapter of their webcomic.The Fox Sister takes inspiration from the Korean folklore also called the Fox Sister, and is about a kumiho, a nine-tailed fox demon. On the webcomics official website, Stain describes The Fox Sister as a "Korean Supernatural thriller/dram-edy story" set in South Korea in the 1960s. As of October 2017 Strain has completed writing the fourth and final chapter of The Fox Sister. However, The Fox Sister is officially on hiatus according to the webcomic's website, and as of December 2018, only 17 pages of chapter four have been released. The Fox Sister continues to be available to freely read online. After her career switch from colorist to writer, Strain began working as a staff writer for the Syfy TV series, The Magicians, during its second season. As of December 2018, Strain continues to be employed as a staff writer for The Magicians. While writing for The Magicians, Strain returned to the comic book industry when Chris Robinson, the Editor of Marvel, asked her to write a short story for a Civil War anthology, Civil War II: Choosing Sides. After writing for the anthology, Strain was officially reintroduced to the comic world as a writer when she was asked to write for the rebooted X-Men series, Generation X. Strain was allowed to create her own concept and list of mutant characters for the rebooted Generation X, thus Strain came up with the concept of "lovable losers". Strain chose to feature a mix of original and already established but lesser known mutants, such as Nathaniel Carver created by Strain, and Nature Girl (Lin Li) created by Jason Latour. The relaunched Generation X series ran for a year, from 2017 to 2018 and published 11 issues, ending at No. 87 under the Marvel Legacy relaunch's numbering system . Bibliography Colorist Marvel (2003–2011) Amazing Fantasy vol. 2, No. 15 Cover Araña| The Heart of the Spider No. 12 Cover Astonishing X-Men vol. 5, and No. 29 Avengers Fairy Tales No. 1, #3 Captain Britain and MI13 Annual 01 Civil War: Front Line No. 1 Daredevil: Shadowland Omnibus Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Exodus #1 Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Utopia Dark Reign: Young Avengers No. 1 Daughters of the Dragon #1–6 Deadpool Classic vol. 2 Giant-Size Avengers No. 1 The Hulk 100 Project Hulk Chronicles: WWH #2–6 I ♥ Marvel: Marvel Ai Incredible Hercules vol. 4, vol. 5, No. 126 The Incredible Hulk vol. 14 Loners #1–5 Marvel Fairy Tales Marvel Heroes Extra No. 7 Marvel Holiday Special 2004, 2005 Marvel Icons No. 26, #36 Marvel Mega No. 24 Marvel Monster Edition No. 35 Marvel Now!: X-Men No. 1 Marvel Tales Flip Magazine No. 15 Marvel Romance Redux: But I Thought He Loved Me! Cover Marvel Adventures Spider-Man #16,19,20 Covers Marvel Adventures Fantastic Four No. 13 Cover Mary Jane #1–4 Mary Jane: Homecoming #1–4 Mighty Marvel: Women of Marvel The Mighty World of Marvel #1–3, No. 5 Ms. Marvel No. 41 Ms. Marvel: War of the Marvels Must Have #1 New Avengers No. 13 Original of Marvel Comics: X-Men #1 Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane #1-present Runaways (2003) vol. 2, vol. 3, #8–10,13–18 Runaways (2005) vol. 4, vol. 5, vol. 6, vol. 7, vol. 8 #1–30 Runaways Saga (2007) Runaways (2008) vol. 9, vol. 10, vol. 11, #1–14 S.H.I.E.L.D. (2010) #1–6 S.H.I.E.L.D. (2011) Collected edition 01, and No. 4 Secret Invasion (2008) Secret Invasion by Brian Michael Bendis Omnibus Secret Invasion: Runaways/Young Avengers #1–3 Shadowland #1–3 Shane the She Devil: Survival of the Fittest #1 Siege: Thor Spider-Man Fairy Tales No. 3 Spider-Man Family No. 4 Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane #1–20 Spider-Man Unlimited No. 7 Strange #1–2 Target Marvel Age Mary Jane: Circle of Friends (2004) Thor (1996) No. 600, #604–605, #607–609 Thor (2007) vol. 2, vol. 3 Thor (2008) No. 8 Thor by J. Michael Straczynski Omnibus (2010) Thor Giant-Size Finale No. 1 Thor: the Trial of Thor (2009) No. 1 Thor: the Trial of Thor (2017) Uncanny X-Force vol. 1, #3–5 Uncanny X-Men What If? Civil War vol. 4 What If? X-Men-Rise And Fall of the Shi'ar Empire No. 1 Wolverine (1989) No. 232 Wolverine (1997) No. 184 Wolverine (2003) No. 67 Wolverine By Mark Millar Omnibus (2013) Women of Marvel Poster Book (2006) World War Hulk (2007) #1–5 World War Hulk (2008) #1–5 World War Hulk Prologue: World Breaker (2007) #1 X-Men (1991) No. 191 X-Men (2013) vol. 1, No. 2 X-Men [FRA] (1997) No. 127, #140, No. 143, #147, No. 159, #161 X-Men [GER] (2001) No. 81, #95–96, No. 99, #105, No. 108, #113 X-Men [NL] No. 298 X-Men Extra No. 61, #100 X-Men Legacy vol. 1, # 208 X-Men Universe #2–5 X-Men: Divided We Stand No. 2 X-Men: Manifest Destiny #4–5 X-Men: Pixie Strikes Back #1–4 X-Men: Kitty Pryde-Shadow & Flame No. 1, Covers #2–5 Uncanny X-Men Annual No. 1 X-Men No. 191 Young Avengers Presents No. 4 Aspen (2003–2005) Aspen Seasons 2005: Spring Fathom vol. 2, #0–4 Fathom Beginnings No. 1 Fathom: Dawn of War #0–3 Fathom Omnibus vol. 1, vol. 2 Fathom Sonderheft #3 DC (2003–2005) Action Comics #812–813 (separations) Adventures of Superman #625–626 (separations) DC Comics Presents: Supergirl/Superman #1 Love is Love Supergirl vol. 5, No. 0 Superman vol. 2, #202–203 (separations) Superman: Godfall (2004) Superman/Batman vol. 2, No. 19, #3 Misc Archard's Agents: The Case of the Puzzled Pugilist Atomika #1–7 G.I. Joe #31–33 (Fantome Back-up Story) Meridian #19, No. 42 Phonogram: The Singles Club #4 Shi: Illustrated Warrior No. 2, 4 Street Fighter II vol. 4 Street Fighter Tribute (2008) Artbook Sweetness, coauthored with Adrian Alphona (line artist) The Ultimate Graphic Novel Collection vol. 55 (#51), vol. 59 (#53) Violent Messiahs No. 7 Jay Company exclusive covers (Note: Many Jay Company Exclusives have multiple covers done by the same or different artists) Grimm Fairy Tales: Return to Wonderland No. 0 Purgatori No. 1, 3 Writer Civil War II: Choosing Sides No. 6 Generation X vol. 1, vol. 2, #1–9, #85–87 Self-published The Fox Sister, webcomic illustrated by Jayd Aït-Kaci Screenwriter Wake Up (Short) (2014) Zelos (Short) (2015) In Pursuit (Short) (2016) The Magicians (2017–2019) 2.07 - Plan B (2017) 2.12 - Ramifications (co-writer with David Reed, 2017) 3.10 - The Art of the Deal (2018) 4.06 - A Timeline and Place (2019) 4.11 - The 4-1-1 (co-writer with Henry Alonso Myers, 2019) Shadow and Bone (2021) Finding 'Ohana (2021) References External links Christina Strain on IMDb Christina Strain at the Comic Book DB Christina Strain at the Grand Comics Database Christina Strain: Comics at Marvel The Fox Sister
place of birth
{ "answer_start": [ 366 ], "text": [ "Seoul" ] }
Christina Strain is an American comic book colorist, writer and screenwriter. Strain formerly worked for Marvel Comics as a colorist before pursuing a career as a writer. Strain's notable works include; the award-winning Marvel series Runaways, Marvel's Generation-X, the Syfy TV show, The Magicians, and the Netflix series Shadow and Bone. Life Strain was born in Seoul, South Korea on April 27, 1981. She lived in South Korea for the majority of her youth, as her mother was from Gunsan, South Korea and her father was an Air Force officer stationed in South Korea. Except for a brief three years living in Illinois, from 1983 to 1986, Strain lived in South Korea for about fifteen years, during which she lived near a military base and attended Seoul American Elementary School and High School Upon graduating high school, Strain moved back to the United States in 1999 to attend Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge where she majored in graphic design.Strain resides in Los Angeles, California with her husband Jon Shiring, a lead engineer at Respawn Entertainment, and their adopted son. Career Strain got her start in comics working as a colorist for CrossGen in 2003. She was let go after two months working at CrossGen when the company began having financial problems and eventually went bankrupt in 2004. Weeks after losing her job at CrossGen, Strain began working for UDON and Aspen. Strain worked for UDON from 2003 to 2005, during which she contacted and impressed the Editor-in-Chief of UDON, Erik Ko, who helped her get a job at Marvel Comics. One of the first comics Strain worked on for Marvel was Runaways, which she worked on as an official colorist for about 6 years. Other prominent comics Strain worked on for Marvel include; Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane, S.H.I.E.L.D., and World War Hulk. Additionally, Strain colored several Jay Company exclusive comic covers such as the Grimm Fairy Tales. Strain worked as a colorist for Marvel for 8 years, before she retired at 32 and decided to go to grad school at the American Film Institute. Initially, Strain was interested in 3-D graphics, but after taking a comic-writing class she realized she really wanted to write stories, so she switched her focus to screenwriting.While she was transitioning to a writing career, Strain collaborated with various artists to produce original works. Strain and Adrian Alphona, who previously worked together on the Marvel series Runaways, collaborated on an art book. Together they published Sweetness in 2011, consisting of random art illustrated by Aphona and colored and finished by Strain. In 2011, Strain met Jayd Aït-Kaci, an artist she long admired according to a Newsarama interview, through a mutual friend. Strain proposed that they collaborate on a webcomic and pitched various story ideas, of which Aït-Kaci liked The Fox Sister the best. Strain wrote the script for The Fox Sister and Aït-Kaci illustrated it, and they published the first few pages of The Fox Sister in July 2017 on their official website. Strain and Aït-Kaci always planned to officially publish The Fox Sister as a 9x12 hardbound comic book, and in 2012 they compiled and published the first chapter of their webcomic.The Fox Sister takes inspiration from the Korean folklore also called the Fox Sister, and is about a kumiho, a nine-tailed fox demon. On the webcomics official website, Stain describes The Fox Sister as a "Korean Supernatural thriller/dram-edy story" set in South Korea in the 1960s. As of October 2017 Strain has completed writing the fourth and final chapter of The Fox Sister. However, The Fox Sister is officially on hiatus according to the webcomic's website, and as of December 2018, only 17 pages of chapter four have been released. The Fox Sister continues to be available to freely read online. After her career switch from colorist to writer, Strain began working as a staff writer for the Syfy TV series, The Magicians, during its second season. As of December 2018, Strain continues to be employed as a staff writer for The Magicians. While writing for The Magicians, Strain returned to the comic book industry when Chris Robinson, the Editor of Marvel, asked her to write a short story for a Civil War anthology, Civil War II: Choosing Sides. After writing for the anthology, Strain was officially reintroduced to the comic world as a writer when she was asked to write for the rebooted X-Men series, Generation X. Strain was allowed to create her own concept and list of mutant characters for the rebooted Generation X, thus Strain came up with the concept of "lovable losers". Strain chose to feature a mix of original and already established but lesser known mutants, such as Nathaniel Carver created by Strain, and Nature Girl (Lin Li) created by Jason Latour. The relaunched Generation X series ran for a year, from 2017 to 2018 and published 11 issues, ending at No. 87 under the Marvel Legacy relaunch's numbering system . Bibliography Colorist Marvel (2003–2011) Amazing Fantasy vol. 2, No. 15 Cover Araña| The Heart of the Spider No. 12 Cover Astonishing X-Men vol. 5, and No. 29 Avengers Fairy Tales No. 1, #3 Captain Britain and MI13 Annual 01 Civil War: Front Line No. 1 Daredevil: Shadowland Omnibus Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Exodus #1 Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Utopia Dark Reign: Young Avengers No. 1 Daughters of the Dragon #1–6 Deadpool Classic vol. 2 Giant-Size Avengers No. 1 The Hulk 100 Project Hulk Chronicles: WWH #2–6 I ♥ Marvel: Marvel Ai Incredible Hercules vol. 4, vol. 5, No. 126 The Incredible Hulk vol. 14 Loners #1–5 Marvel Fairy Tales Marvel Heroes Extra No. 7 Marvel Holiday Special 2004, 2005 Marvel Icons No. 26, #36 Marvel Mega No. 24 Marvel Monster Edition No. 35 Marvel Now!: X-Men No. 1 Marvel Tales Flip Magazine No. 15 Marvel Romance Redux: But I Thought He Loved Me! Cover Marvel Adventures Spider-Man #16,19,20 Covers Marvel Adventures Fantastic Four No. 13 Cover Mary Jane #1–4 Mary Jane: Homecoming #1–4 Mighty Marvel: Women of Marvel The Mighty World of Marvel #1–3, No. 5 Ms. Marvel No. 41 Ms. Marvel: War of the Marvels Must Have #1 New Avengers No. 13 Original of Marvel Comics: X-Men #1 Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane #1-present Runaways (2003) vol. 2, vol. 3, #8–10,13–18 Runaways (2005) vol. 4, vol. 5, vol. 6, vol. 7, vol. 8 #1–30 Runaways Saga (2007) Runaways (2008) vol. 9, vol. 10, vol. 11, #1–14 S.H.I.E.L.D. (2010) #1–6 S.H.I.E.L.D. (2011) Collected edition 01, and No. 4 Secret Invasion (2008) Secret Invasion by Brian Michael Bendis Omnibus Secret Invasion: Runaways/Young Avengers #1–3 Shadowland #1–3 Shane the She Devil: Survival of the Fittest #1 Siege: Thor Spider-Man Fairy Tales No. 3 Spider-Man Family No. 4 Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane #1–20 Spider-Man Unlimited No. 7 Strange #1–2 Target Marvel Age Mary Jane: Circle of Friends (2004) Thor (1996) No. 600, #604–605, #607–609 Thor (2007) vol. 2, vol. 3 Thor (2008) No. 8 Thor by J. Michael Straczynski Omnibus (2010) Thor Giant-Size Finale No. 1 Thor: the Trial of Thor (2009) No. 1 Thor: the Trial of Thor (2017) Uncanny X-Force vol. 1, #3–5 Uncanny X-Men What If? Civil War vol. 4 What If? X-Men-Rise And Fall of the Shi'ar Empire No. 1 Wolverine (1989) No. 232 Wolverine (1997) No. 184 Wolverine (2003) No. 67 Wolverine By Mark Millar Omnibus (2013) Women of Marvel Poster Book (2006) World War Hulk (2007) #1–5 World War Hulk (2008) #1–5 World War Hulk Prologue: World Breaker (2007) #1 X-Men (1991) No. 191 X-Men (2013) vol. 1, No. 2 X-Men [FRA] (1997) No. 127, #140, No. 143, #147, No. 159, #161 X-Men [GER] (2001) No. 81, #95–96, No. 99, #105, No. 108, #113 X-Men [NL] No. 298 X-Men Extra No. 61, #100 X-Men Legacy vol. 1, # 208 X-Men Universe #2–5 X-Men: Divided We Stand No. 2 X-Men: Manifest Destiny #4–5 X-Men: Pixie Strikes Back #1–4 X-Men: Kitty Pryde-Shadow & Flame No. 1, Covers #2–5 Uncanny X-Men Annual No. 1 X-Men No. 191 Young Avengers Presents No. 4 Aspen (2003–2005) Aspen Seasons 2005: Spring Fathom vol. 2, #0–4 Fathom Beginnings No. 1 Fathom: Dawn of War #0–3 Fathom Omnibus vol. 1, vol. 2 Fathom Sonderheft #3 DC (2003–2005) Action Comics #812–813 (separations) Adventures of Superman #625–626 (separations) DC Comics Presents: Supergirl/Superman #1 Love is Love Supergirl vol. 5, No. 0 Superman vol. 2, #202–203 (separations) Superman: Godfall (2004) Superman/Batman vol. 2, No. 19, #3 Misc Archard's Agents: The Case of the Puzzled Pugilist Atomika #1–7 G.I. Joe #31–33 (Fantome Back-up Story) Meridian #19, No. 42 Phonogram: The Singles Club #4 Shi: Illustrated Warrior No. 2, 4 Street Fighter II vol. 4 Street Fighter Tribute (2008) Artbook Sweetness, coauthored with Adrian Alphona (line artist) The Ultimate Graphic Novel Collection vol. 55 (#51), vol. 59 (#53) Violent Messiahs No. 7 Jay Company exclusive covers (Note: Many Jay Company Exclusives have multiple covers done by the same or different artists) Grimm Fairy Tales: Return to Wonderland No. 0 Purgatori No. 1, 3 Writer Civil War II: Choosing Sides No. 6 Generation X vol. 1, vol. 2, #1–9, #85–87 Self-published The Fox Sister, webcomic illustrated by Jayd Aït-Kaci Screenwriter Wake Up (Short) (2014) Zelos (Short) (2015) In Pursuit (Short) (2016) The Magicians (2017–2019) 2.07 - Plan B (2017) 2.12 - Ramifications (co-writer with David Reed, 2017) 3.10 - The Art of the Deal (2018) 4.06 - A Timeline and Place (2019) 4.11 - The 4-1-1 (co-writer with Henry Alonso Myers, 2019) Shadow and Bone (2021) Finding 'Ohana (2021) References External links Christina Strain on IMDb Christina Strain at the Comic Book DB Christina Strain at the Grand Comics Database Christina Strain: Comics at Marvel The Fox Sister
occupation
{ "answer_start": [ 64 ], "text": [ "screenwriter" ] }
Christina Strain is an American comic book colorist, writer and screenwriter. Strain formerly worked for Marvel Comics as a colorist before pursuing a career as a writer. Strain's notable works include; the award-winning Marvel series Runaways, Marvel's Generation-X, the Syfy TV show, The Magicians, and the Netflix series Shadow and Bone. Life Strain was born in Seoul, South Korea on April 27, 1981. She lived in South Korea for the majority of her youth, as her mother was from Gunsan, South Korea and her father was an Air Force officer stationed in South Korea. Except for a brief three years living in Illinois, from 1983 to 1986, Strain lived in South Korea for about fifteen years, during which she lived near a military base and attended Seoul American Elementary School and High School Upon graduating high school, Strain moved back to the United States in 1999 to attend Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge where she majored in graphic design.Strain resides in Los Angeles, California with her husband Jon Shiring, a lead engineer at Respawn Entertainment, and their adopted son. Career Strain got her start in comics working as a colorist for CrossGen in 2003. She was let go after two months working at CrossGen when the company began having financial problems and eventually went bankrupt in 2004. Weeks after losing her job at CrossGen, Strain began working for UDON and Aspen. Strain worked for UDON from 2003 to 2005, during which she contacted and impressed the Editor-in-Chief of UDON, Erik Ko, who helped her get a job at Marvel Comics. One of the first comics Strain worked on for Marvel was Runaways, which she worked on as an official colorist for about 6 years. Other prominent comics Strain worked on for Marvel include; Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane, S.H.I.E.L.D., and World War Hulk. Additionally, Strain colored several Jay Company exclusive comic covers such as the Grimm Fairy Tales. Strain worked as a colorist for Marvel for 8 years, before she retired at 32 and decided to go to grad school at the American Film Institute. Initially, Strain was interested in 3-D graphics, but after taking a comic-writing class she realized she really wanted to write stories, so she switched her focus to screenwriting.While she was transitioning to a writing career, Strain collaborated with various artists to produce original works. Strain and Adrian Alphona, who previously worked together on the Marvel series Runaways, collaborated on an art book. Together they published Sweetness in 2011, consisting of random art illustrated by Aphona and colored and finished by Strain. In 2011, Strain met Jayd Aït-Kaci, an artist she long admired according to a Newsarama interview, through a mutual friend. Strain proposed that they collaborate on a webcomic and pitched various story ideas, of which Aït-Kaci liked The Fox Sister the best. Strain wrote the script for The Fox Sister and Aït-Kaci illustrated it, and they published the first few pages of The Fox Sister in July 2017 on their official website. Strain and Aït-Kaci always planned to officially publish The Fox Sister as a 9x12 hardbound comic book, and in 2012 they compiled and published the first chapter of their webcomic.The Fox Sister takes inspiration from the Korean folklore also called the Fox Sister, and is about a kumiho, a nine-tailed fox demon. On the webcomics official website, Stain describes The Fox Sister as a "Korean Supernatural thriller/dram-edy story" set in South Korea in the 1960s. As of October 2017 Strain has completed writing the fourth and final chapter of The Fox Sister. However, The Fox Sister is officially on hiatus according to the webcomic's website, and as of December 2018, only 17 pages of chapter four have been released. The Fox Sister continues to be available to freely read online. After her career switch from colorist to writer, Strain began working as a staff writer for the Syfy TV series, The Magicians, during its second season. As of December 2018, Strain continues to be employed as a staff writer for The Magicians. While writing for The Magicians, Strain returned to the comic book industry when Chris Robinson, the Editor of Marvel, asked her to write a short story for a Civil War anthology, Civil War II: Choosing Sides. After writing for the anthology, Strain was officially reintroduced to the comic world as a writer when she was asked to write for the rebooted X-Men series, Generation X. Strain was allowed to create her own concept and list of mutant characters for the rebooted Generation X, thus Strain came up with the concept of "lovable losers". Strain chose to feature a mix of original and already established but lesser known mutants, such as Nathaniel Carver created by Strain, and Nature Girl (Lin Li) created by Jason Latour. The relaunched Generation X series ran for a year, from 2017 to 2018 and published 11 issues, ending at No. 87 under the Marvel Legacy relaunch's numbering system . Bibliography Colorist Marvel (2003–2011) Amazing Fantasy vol. 2, No. 15 Cover Araña| The Heart of the Spider No. 12 Cover Astonishing X-Men vol. 5, and No. 29 Avengers Fairy Tales No. 1, #3 Captain Britain and MI13 Annual 01 Civil War: Front Line No. 1 Daredevil: Shadowland Omnibus Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Exodus #1 Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Utopia Dark Reign: Young Avengers No. 1 Daughters of the Dragon #1–6 Deadpool Classic vol. 2 Giant-Size Avengers No. 1 The Hulk 100 Project Hulk Chronicles: WWH #2–6 I ♥ Marvel: Marvel Ai Incredible Hercules vol. 4, vol. 5, No. 126 The Incredible Hulk vol. 14 Loners #1–5 Marvel Fairy Tales Marvel Heroes Extra No. 7 Marvel Holiday Special 2004, 2005 Marvel Icons No. 26, #36 Marvel Mega No. 24 Marvel Monster Edition No. 35 Marvel Now!: X-Men No. 1 Marvel Tales Flip Magazine No. 15 Marvel Romance Redux: But I Thought He Loved Me! Cover Marvel Adventures Spider-Man #16,19,20 Covers Marvel Adventures Fantastic Four No. 13 Cover Mary Jane #1–4 Mary Jane: Homecoming #1–4 Mighty Marvel: Women of Marvel The Mighty World of Marvel #1–3, No. 5 Ms. Marvel No. 41 Ms. Marvel: War of the Marvels Must Have #1 New Avengers No. 13 Original of Marvel Comics: X-Men #1 Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane #1-present Runaways (2003) vol. 2, vol. 3, #8–10,13–18 Runaways (2005) vol. 4, vol. 5, vol. 6, vol. 7, vol. 8 #1–30 Runaways Saga (2007) Runaways (2008) vol. 9, vol. 10, vol. 11, #1–14 S.H.I.E.L.D. (2010) #1–6 S.H.I.E.L.D. (2011) Collected edition 01, and No. 4 Secret Invasion (2008) Secret Invasion by Brian Michael Bendis Omnibus Secret Invasion: Runaways/Young Avengers #1–3 Shadowland #1–3 Shane the She Devil: Survival of the Fittest #1 Siege: Thor Spider-Man Fairy Tales No. 3 Spider-Man Family No. 4 Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane #1–20 Spider-Man Unlimited No. 7 Strange #1–2 Target Marvel Age Mary Jane: Circle of Friends (2004) Thor (1996) No. 600, #604–605, #607–609 Thor (2007) vol. 2, vol. 3 Thor (2008) No. 8 Thor by J. Michael Straczynski Omnibus (2010) Thor Giant-Size Finale No. 1 Thor: the Trial of Thor (2009) No. 1 Thor: the Trial of Thor (2017) Uncanny X-Force vol. 1, #3–5 Uncanny X-Men What If? Civil War vol. 4 What If? X-Men-Rise And Fall of the Shi'ar Empire No. 1 Wolverine (1989) No. 232 Wolverine (1997) No. 184 Wolverine (2003) No. 67 Wolverine By Mark Millar Omnibus (2013) Women of Marvel Poster Book (2006) World War Hulk (2007) #1–5 World War Hulk (2008) #1–5 World War Hulk Prologue: World Breaker (2007) #1 X-Men (1991) No. 191 X-Men (2013) vol. 1, No. 2 X-Men [FRA] (1997) No. 127, #140, No. 143, #147, No. 159, #161 X-Men [GER] (2001) No. 81, #95–96, No. 99, #105, No. 108, #113 X-Men [NL] No. 298 X-Men Extra No. 61, #100 X-Men Legacy vol. 1, # 208 X-Men Universe #2–5 X-Men: Divided We Stand No. 2 X-Men: Manifest Destiny #4–5 X-Men: Pixie Strikes Back #1–4 X-Men: Kitty Pryde-Shadow & Flame No. 1, Covers #2–5 Uncanny X-Men Annual No. 1 X-Men No. 191 Young Avengers Presents No. 4 Aspen (2003–2005) Aspen Seasons 2005: Spring Fathom vol. 2, #0–4 Fathom Beginnings No. 1 Fathom: Dawn of War #0–3 Fathom Omnibus vol. 1, vol. 2 Fathom Sonderheft #3 DC (2003–2005) Action Comics #812–813 (separations) Adventures of Superman #625–626 (separations) DC Comics Presents: Supergirl/Superman #1 Love is Love Supergirl vol. 5, No. 0 Superman vol. 2, #202–203 (separations) Superman: Godfall (2004) Superman/Batman vol. 2, No. 19, #3 Misc Archard's Agents: The Case of the Puzzled Pugilist Atomika #1–7 G.I. Joe #31–33 (Fantome Back-up Story) Meridian #19, No. 42 Phonogram: The Singles Club #4 Shi: Illustrated Warrior No. 2, 4 Street Fighter II vol. 4 Street Fighter Tribute (2008) Artbook Sweetness, coauthored with Adrian Alphona (line artist) The Ultimate Graphic Novel Collection vol. 55 (#51), vol. 59 (#53) Violent Messiahs No. 7 Jay Company exclusive covers (Note: Many Jay Company Exclusives have multiple covers done by the same or different artists) Grimm Fairy Tales: Return to Wonderland No. 0 Purgatori No. 1, 3 Writer Civil War II: Choosing Sides No. 6 Generation X vol. 1, vol. 2, #1–9, #85–87 Self-published The Fox Sister, webcomic illustrated by Jayd Aït-Kaci Screenwriter Wake Up (Short) (2014) Zelos (Short) (2015) In Pursuit (Short) (2016) The Magicians (2017–2019) 2.07 - Plan B (2017) 2.12 - Ramifications (co-writer with David Reed, 2017) 3.10 - The Art of the Deal (2018) 4.06 - A Timeline and Place (2019) 4.11 - The 4-1-1 (co-writer with Henry Alonso Myers, 2019) Shadow and Bone (2021) Finding 'Ohana (2021) References External links Christina Strain on IMDb Christina Strain at the Comic Book DB Christina Strain at the Grand Comics Database Christina Strain: Comics at Marvel The Fox Sister
Commons category
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Christina Strain" ] }
Christina Strain is an American comic book colorist, writer and screenwriter. Strain formerly worked for Marvel Comics as a colorist before pursuing a career as a writer. Strain's notable works include; the award-winning Marvel series Runaways, Marvel's Generation-X, the Syfy TV show, The Magicians, and the Netflix series Shadow and Bone. Life Strain was born in Seoul, South Korea on April 27, 1981. She lived in South Korea for the majority of her youth, as her mother was from Gunsan, South Korea and her father was an Air Force officer stationed in South Korea. Except for a brief three years living in Illinois, from 1983 to 1986, Strain lived in South Korea for about fifteen years, during which she lived near a military base and attended Seoul American Elementary School and High School Upon graduating high school, Strain moved back to the United States in 1999 to attend Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge where she majored in graphic design.Strain resides in Los Angeles, California with her husband Jon Shiring, a lead engineer at Respawn Entertainment, and their adopted son. Career Strain got her start in comics working as a colorist for CrossGen in 2003. She was let go after two months working at CrossGen when the company began having financial problems and eventually went bankrupt in 2004. Weeks after losing her job at CrossGen, Strain began working for UDON and Aspen. Strain worked for UDON from 2003 to 2005, during which she contacted and impressed the Editor-in-Chief of UDON, Erik Ko, who helped her get a job at Marvel Comics. One of the first comics Strain worked on for Marvel was Runaways, which she worked on as an official colorist for about 6 years. Other prominent comics Strain worked on for Marvel include; Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane, S.H.I.E.L.D., and World War Hulk. Additionally, Strain colored several Jay Company exclusive comic covers such as the Grimm Fairy Tales. Strain worked as a colorist for Marvel for 8 years, before she retired at 32 and decided to go to grad school at the American Film Institute. Initially, Strain was interested in 3-D graphics, but after taking a comic-writing class she realized she really wanted to write stories, so she switched her focus to screenwriting.While she was transitioning to a writing career, Strain collaborated with various artists to produce original works. Strain and Adrian Alphona, who previously worked together on the Marvel series Runaways, collaborated on an art book. Together they published Sweetness in 2011, consisting of random art illustrated by Aphona and colored and finished by Strain. In 2011, Strain met Jayd Aït-Kaci, an artist she long admired according to a Newsarama interview, through a mutual friend. Strain proposed that they collaborate on a webcomic and pitched various story ideas, of which Aït-Kaci liked The Fox Sister the best. Strain wrote the script for The Fox Sister and Aït-Kaci illustrated it, and they published the first few pages of The Fox Sister in July 2017 on their official website. Strain and Aït-Kaci always planned to officially publish The Fox Sister as a 9x12 hardbound comic book, and in 2012 they compiled and published the first chapter of their webcomic.The Fox Sister takes inspiration from the Korean folklore also called the Fox Sister, and is about a kumiho, a nine-tailed fox demon. On the webcomics official website, Stain describes The Fox Sister as a "Korean Supernatural thriller/dram-edy story" set in South Korea in the 1960s. As of October 2017 Strain has completed writing the fourth and final chapter of The Fox Sister. However, The Fox Sister is officially on hiatus according to the webcomic's website, and as of December 2018, only 17 pages of chapter four have been released. The Fox Sister continues to be available to freely read online. After her career switch from colorist to writer, Strain began working as a staff writer for the Syfy TV series, The Magicians, during its second season. As of December 2018, Strain continues to be employed as a staff writer for The Magicians. While writing for The Magicians, Strain returned to the comic book industry when Chris Robinson, the Editor of Marvel, asked her to write a short story for a Civil War anthology, Civil War II: Choosing Sides. After writing for the anthology, Strain was officially reintroduced to the comic world as a writer when she was asked to write for the rebooted X-Men series, Generation X. Strain was allowed to create her own concept and list of mutant characters for the rebooted Generation X, thus Strain came up with the concept of "lovable losers". Strain chose to feature a mix of original and already established but lesser known mutants, such as Nathaniel Carver created by Strain, and Nature Girl (Lin Li) created by Jason Latour. The relaunched Generation X series ran for a year, from 2017 to 2018 and published 11 issues, ending at No. 87 under the Marvel Legacy relaunch's numbering system . Bibliography Colorist Marvel (2003–2011) Amazing Fantasy vol. 2, No. 15 Cover Araña| The Heart of the Spider No. 12 Cover Astonishing X-Men vol. 5, and No. 29 Avengers Fairy Tales No. 1, #3 Captain Britain and MI13 Annual 01 Civil War: Front Line No. 1 Daredevil: Shadowland Omnibus Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Exodus #1 Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Utopia Dark Reign: Young Avengers No. 1 Daughters of the Dragon #1–6 Deadpool Classic vol. 2 Giant-Size Avengers No. 1 The Hulk 100 Project Hulk Chronicles: WWH #2–6 I ♥ Marvel: Marvel Ai Incredible Hercules vol. 4, vol. 5, No. 126 The Incredible Hulk vol. 14 Loners #1–5 Marvel Fairy Tales Marvel Heroes Extra No. 7 Marvel Holiday Special 2004, 2005 Marvel Icons No. 26, #36 Marvel Mega No. 24 Marvel Monster Edition No. 35 Marvel Now!: X-Men No. 1 Marvel Tales Flip Magazine No. 15 Marvel Romance Redux: But I Thought He Loved Me! Cover Marvel Adventures Spider-Man #16,19,20 Covers Marvel Adventures Fantastic Four No. 13 Cover Mary Jane #1–4 Mary Jane: Homecoming #1–4 Mighty Marvel: Women of Marvel The Mighty World of Marvel #1–3, No. 5 Ms. Marvel No. 41 Ms. Marvel: War of the Marvels Must Have #1 New Avengers No. 13 Original of Marvel Comics: X-Men #1 Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane #1-present Runaways (2003) vol. 2, vol. 3, #8–10,13–18 Runaways (2005) vol. 4, vol. 5, vol. 6, vol. 7, vol. 8 #1–30 Runaways Saga (2007) Runaways (2008) vol. 9, vol. 10, vol. 11, #1–14 S.H.I.E.L.D. (2010) #1–6 S.H.I.E.L.D. (2011) Collected edition 01, and No. 4 Secret Invasion (2008) Secret Invasion by Brian Michael Bendis Omnibus Secret Invasion: Runaways/Young Avengers #1–3 Shadowland #1–3 Shane the She Devil: Survival of the Fittest #1 Siege: Thor Spider-Man Fairy Tales No. 3 Spider-Man Family No. 4 Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane #1–20 Spider-Man Unlimited No. 7 Strange #1–2 Target Marvel Age Mary Jane: Circle of Friends (2004) Thor (1996) No. 600, #604–605, #607–609 Thor (2007) vol. 2, vol. 3 Thor (2008) No. 8 Thor by J. Michael Straczynski Omnibus (2010) Thor Giant-Size Finale No. 1 Thor: the Trial of Thor (2009) No. 1 Thor: the Trial of Thor (2017) Uncanny X-Force vol. 1, #3–5 Uncanny X-Men What If? Civil War vol. 4 What If? X-Men-Rise And Fall of the Shi'ar Empire No. 1 Wolverine (1989) No. 232 Wolverine (1997) No. 184 Wolverine (2003) No. 67 Wolverine By Mark Millar Omnibus (2013) Women of Marvel Poster Book (2006) World War Hulk (2007) #1–5 World War Hulk (2008) #1–5 World War Hulk Prologue: World Breaker (2007) #1 X-Men (1991) No. 191 X-Men (2013) vol. 1, No. 2 X-Men [FRA] (1997) No. 127, #140, No. 143, #147, No. 159, #161 X-Men [GER] (2001) No. 81, #95–96, No. 99, #105, No. 108, #113 X-Men [NL] No. 298 X-Men Extra No. 61, #100 X-Men Legacy vol. 1, # 208 X-Men Universe #2–5 X-Men: Divided We Stand No. 2 X-Men: Manifest Destiny #4–5 X-Men: Pixie Strikes Back #1–4 X-Men: Kitty Pryde-Shadow & Flame No. 1, Covers #2–5 Uncanny X-Men Annual No. 1 X-Men No. 191 Young Avengers Presents No. 4 Aspen (2003–2005) Aspen Seasons 2005: Spring Fathom vol. 2, #0–4 Fathom Beginnings No. 1 Fathom: Dawn of War #0–3 Fathom Omnibus vol. 1, vol. 2 Fathom Sonderheft #3 DC (2003–2005) Action Comics #812–813 (separations) Adventures of Superman #625–626 (separations) DC Comics Presents: Supergirl/Superman #1 Love is Love Supergirl vol. 5, No. 0 Superman vol. 2, #202–203 (separations) Superman: Godfall (2004) Superman/Batman vol. 2, No. 19, #3 Misc Archard's Agents: The Case of the Puzzled Pugilist Atomika #1–7 G.I. Joe #31–33 (Fantome Back-up Story) Meridian #19, No. 42 Phonogram: The Singles Club #4 Shi: Illustrated Warrior No. 2, 4 Street Fighter II vol. 4 Street Fighter Tribute (2008) Artbook Sweetness, coauthored with Adrian Alphona (line artist) The Ultimate Graphic Novel Collection vol. 55 (#51), vol. 59 (#53) Violent Messiahs No. 7 Jay Company exclusive covers (Note: Many Jay Company Exclusives have multiple covers done by the same or different artists) Grimm Fairy Tales: Return to Wonderland No. 0 Purgatori No. 1, 3 Writer Civil War II: Choosing Sides No. 6 Generation X vol. 1, vol. 2, #1–9, #85–87 Self-published The Fox Sister, webcomic illustrated by Jayd Aït-Kaci Screenwriter Wake Up (Short) (2014) Zelos (Short) (2015) In Pursuit (Short) (2016) The Magicians (2017–2019) 2.07 - Plan B (2017) 2.12 - Ramifications (co-writer with David Reed, 2017) 3.10 - The Art of the Deal (2018) 4.06 - A Timeline and Place (2019) 4.11 - The 4-1-1 (co-writer with Henry Alonso Myers, 2019) Shadow and Bone (2021) Finding 'Ohana (2021) References External links Christina Strain on IMDb Christina Strain at the Comic Book DB Christina Strain at the Grand Comics Database Christina Strain: Comics at Marvel The Fox Sister
family name
{ "answer_start": [ 10 ], "text": [ "Strain" ] }
Christina Strain is an American comic book colorist, writer and screenwriter. Strain formerly worked for Marvel Comics as a colorist before pursuing a career as a writer. Strain's notable works include; the award-winning Marvel series Runaways, Marvel's Generation-X, the Syfy TV show, The Magicians, and the Netflix series Shadow and Bone. Life Strain was born in Seoul, South Korea on April 27, 1981. She lived in South Korea for the majority of her youth, as her mother was from Gunsan, South Korea and her father was an Air Force officer stationed in South Korea. Except for a brief three years living in Illinois, from 1983 to 1986, Strain lived in South Korea for about fifteen years, during which she lived near a military base and attended Seoul American Elementary School and High School Upon graduating high school, Strain moved back to the United States in 1999 to attend Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge where she majored in graphic design.Strain resides in Los Angeles, California with her husband Jon Shiring, a lead engineer at Respawn Entertainment, and their adopted son. Career Strain got her start in comics working as a colorist for CrossGen in 2003. She was let go after two months working at CrossGen when the company began having financial problems and eventually went bankrupt in 2004. Weeks after losing her job at CrossGen, Strain began working for UDON and Aspen. Strain worked for UDON from 2003 to 2005, during which she contacted and impressed the Editor-in-Chief of UDON, Erik Ko, who helped her get a job at Marvel Comics. One of the first comics Strain worked on for Marvel was Runaways, which she worked on as an official colorist for about 6 years. Other prominent comics Strain worked on for Marvel include; Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane, S.H.I.E.L.D., and World War Hulk. Additionally, Strain colored several Jay Company exclusive comic covers such as the Grimm Fairy Tales. Strain worked as a colorist for Marvel for 8 years, before she retired at 32 and decided to go to grad school at the American Film Institute. Initially, Strain was interested in 3-D graphics, but after taking a comic-writing class she realized she really wanted to write stories, so she switched her focus to screenwriting.While she was transitioning to a writing career, Strain collaborated with various artists to produce original works. Strain and Adrian Alphona, who previously worked together on the Marvel series Runaways, collaborated on an art book. Together they published Sweetness in 2011, consisting of random art illustrated by Aphona and colored and finished by Strain. In 2011, Strain met Jayd Aït-Kaci, an artist she long admired according to a Newsarama interview, through a mutual friend. Strain proposed that they collaborate on a webcomic and pitched various story ideas, of which Aït-Kaci liked The Fox Sister the best. Strain wrote the script for The Fox Sister and Aït-Kaci illustrated it, and they published the first few pages of The Fox Sister in July 2017 on their official website. Strain and Aït-Kaci always planned to officially publish The Fox Sister as a 9x12 hardbound comic book, and in 2012 they compiled and published the first chapter of their webcomic.The Fox Sister takes inspiration from the Korean folklore also called the Fox Sister, and is about a kumiho, a nine-tailed fox demon. On the webcomics official website, Stain describes The Fox Sister as a "Korean Supernatural thriller/dram-edy story" set in South Korea in the 1960s. As of October 2017 Strain has completed writing the fourth and final chapter of The Fox Sister. However, The Fox Sister is officially on hiatus according to the webcomic's website, and as of December 2018, only 17 pages of chapter four have been released. The Fox Sister continues to be available to freely read online. After her career switch from colorist to writer, Strain began working as a staff writer for the Syfy TV series, The Magicians, during its second season. As of December 2018, Strain continues to be employed as a staff writer for The Magicians. While writing for The Magicians, Strain returned to the comic book industry when Chris Robinson, the Editor of Marvel, asked her to write a short story for a Civil War anthology, Civil War II: Choosing Sides. After writing for the anthology, Strain was officially reintroduced to the comic world as a writer when she was asked to write for the rebooted X-Men series, Generation X. Strain was allowed to create her own concept and list of mutant characters for the rebooted Generation X, thus Strain came up with the concept of "lovable losers". Strain chose to feature a mix of original and already established but lesser known mutants, such as Nathaniel Carver created by Strain, and Nature Girl (Lin Li) created by Jason Latour. The relaunched Generation X series ran for a year, from 2017 to 2018 and published 11 issues, ending at No. 87 under the Marvel Legacy relaunch's numbering system . Bibliography Colorist Marvel (2003–2011) Amazing Fantasy vol. 2, No. 15 Cover Araña| The Heart of the Spider No. 12 Cover Astonishing X-Men vol. 5, and No. 29 Avengers Fairy Tales No. 1, #3 Captain Britain and MI13 Annual 01 Civil War: Front Line No. 1 Daredevil: Shadowland Omnibus Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Exodus #1 Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Utopia Dark Reign: Young Avengers No. 1 Daughters of the Dragon #1–6 Deadpool Classic vol. 2 Giant-Size Avengers No. 1 The Hulk 100 Project Hulk Chronicles: WWH #2–6 I ♥ Marvel: Marvel Ai Incredible Hercules vol. 4, vol. 5, No. 126 The Incredible Hulk vol. 14 Loners #1–5 Marvel Fairy Tales Marvel Heroes Extra No. 7 Marvel Holiday Special 2004, 2005 Marvel Icons No. 26, #36 Marvel Mega No. 24 Marvel Monster Edition No. 35 Marvel Now!: X-Men No. 1 Marvel Tales Flip Magazine No. 15 Marvel Romance Redux: But I Thought He Loved Me! Cover Marvel Adventures Spider-Man #16,19,20 Covers Marvel Adventures Fantastic Four No. 13 Cover Mary Jane #1–4 Mary Jane: Homecoming #1–4 Mighty Marvel: Women of Marvel The Mighty World of Marvel #1–3, No. 5 Ms. Marvel No. 41 Ms. Marvel: War of the Marvels Must Have #1 New Avengers No. 13 Original of Marvel Comics: X-Men #1 Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane #1-present Runaways (2003) vol. 2, vol. 3, #8–10,13–18 Runaways (2005) vol. 4, vol. 5, vol. 6, vol. 7, vol. 8 #1–30 Runaways Saga (2007) Runaways (2008) vol. 9, vol. 10, vol. 11, #1–14 S.H.I.E.L.D. (2010) #1–6 S.H.I.E.L.D. (2011) Collected edition 01, and No. 4 Secret Invasion (2008) Secret Invasion by Brian Michael Bendis Omnibus Secret Invasion: Runaways/Young Avengers #1–3 Shadowland #1–3 Shane the She Devil: Survival of the Fittest #1 Siege: Thor Spider-Man Fairy Tales No. 3 Spider-Man Family No. 4 Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane #1–20 Spider-Man Unlimited No. 7 Strange #1–2 Target Marvel Age Mary Jane: Circle of Friends (2004) Thor (1996) No. 600, #604–605, #607–609 Thor (2007) vol. 2, vol. 3 Thor (2008) No. 8 Thor by J. Michael Straczynski Omnibus (2010) Thor Giant-Size Finale No. 1 Thor: the Trial of Thor (2009) No. 1 Thor: the Trial of Thor (2017) Uncanny X-Force vol. 1, #3–5 Uncanny X-Men What If? Civil War vol. 4 What If? X-Men-Rise And Fall of the Shi'ar Empire No. 1 Wolverine (1989) No. 232 Wolverine (1997) No. 184 Wolverine (2003) No. 67 Wolverine By Mark Millar Omnibus (2013) Women of Marvel Poster Book (2006) World War Hulk (2007) #1–5 World War Hulk (2008) #1–5 World War Hulk Prologue: World Breaker (2007) #1 X-Men (1991) No. 191 X-Men (2013) vol. 1, No. 2 X-Men [FRA] (1997) No. 127, #140, No. 143, #147, No. 159, #161 X-Men [GER] (2001) No. 81, #95–96, No. 99, #105, No. 108, #113 X-Men [NL] No. 298 X-Men Extra No. 61, #100 X-Men Legacy vol. 1, # 208 X-Men Universe #2–5 X-Men: Divided We Stand No. 2 X-Men: Manifest Destiny #4–5 X-Men: Pixie Strikes Back #1–4 X-Men: Kitty Pryde-Shadow & Flame No. 1, Covers #2–5 Uncanny X-Men Annual No. 1 X-Men No. 191 Young Avengers Presents No. 4 Aspen (2003–2005) Aspen Seasons 2005: Spring Fathom vol. 2, #0–4 Fathom Beginnings No. 1 Fathom: Dawn of War #0–3 Fathom Omnibus vol. 1, vol. 2 Fathom Sonderheft #3 DC (2003–2005) Action Comics #812–813 (separations) Adventures of Superman #625–626 (separations) DC Comics Presents: Supergirl/Superman #1 Love is Love Supergirl vol. 5, No. 0 Superman vol. 2, #202–203 (separations) Superman: Godfall (2004) Superman/Batman vol. 2, No. 19, #3 Misc Archard's Agents: The Case of the Puzzled Pugilist Atomika #1–7 G.I. Joe #31–33 (Fantome Back-up Story) Meridian #19, No. 42 Phonogram: The Singles Club #4 Shi: Illustrated Warrior No. 2, 4 Street Fighter II vol. 4 Street Fighter Tribute (2008) Artbook Sweetness, coauthored with Adrian Alphona (line artist) The Ultimate Graphic Novel Collection vol. 55 (#51), vol. 59 (#53) Violent Messiahs No. 7 Jay Company exclusive covers (Note: Many Jay Company Exclusives have multiple covers done by the same or different artists) Grimm Fairy Tales: Return to Wonderland No. 0 Purgatori No. 1, 3 Writer Civil War II: Choosing Sides No. 6 Generation X vol. 1, vol. 2, #1–9, #85–87 Self-published The Fox Sister, webcomic illustrated by Jayd Aït-Kaci Screenwriter Wake Up (Short) (2014) Zelos (Short) (2015) In Pursuit (Short) (2016) The Magicians (2017–2019) 2.07 - Plan B (2017) 2.12 - Ramifications (co-writer with David Reed, 2017) 3.10 - The Art of the Deal (2018) 4.06 - A Timeline and Place (2019) 4.11 - The 4-1-1 (co-writer with Henry Alonso Myers, 2019) Shadow and Bone (2021) Finding 'Ohana (2021) References External links Christina Strain on IMDb Christina Strain at the Comic Book DB Christina Strain at the Grand Comics Database Christina Strain: Comics at Marvel The Fox Sister
given name
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Christina" ] }
Tony Mauricio (born 22 March 1994) is a French professional footballer who plays as a winger for Sochaux. He started his career with his hometown club Limoges, and has also represented LB Châteauroux, where he played six games in Ligue 2. Personal life Mauricio was born in France, and is of Portuguese descent. Career statistics As of 4 December 2018 References External links Tony Mauricio at foot-national.com Tony Mauricio at FootballDatabase.eu Tony Mauricio – French league stats at LFP – also available in French Tony Mauricio at Soccerway
place of birth
{ "answer_start": [ 151 ], "text": [ "Limoges" ] }
Tony Mauricio (born 22 March 1994) is a French professional footballer who plays as a winger for Sochaux. He started his career with his hometown club Limoges, and has also represented LB Châteauroux, where he played six games in Ligue 2. Personal life Mauricio was born in France, and is of Portuguese descent. Career statistics As of 4 December 2018 References External links Tony Mauricio at foot-national.com Tony Mauricio at FootballDatabase.eu Tony Mauricio – French league stats at LFP – also available in French Tony Mauricio at Soccerway
country of citizenship
{ "answer_start": [ 275 ], "text": [ "France" ] }
Tony Mauricio (born 22 March 1994) is a French professional footballer who plays as a winger for Sochaux. He started his career with his hometown club Limoges, and has also represented LB Châteauroux, where he played six games in Ligue 2. Personal life Mauricio was born in France, and is of Portuguese descent. Career statistics As of 4 December 2018 References External links Tony Mauricio at foot-national.com Tony Mauricio at FootballDatabase.eu Tony Mauricio – French league stats at LFP – also available in French Tony Mauricio at Soccerway
member of sports team
{ "answer_start": [ 185 ], "text": [ "LB Châteauroux" ] }
Tony Mauricio (born 22 March 1994) is a French professional footballer who plays as a winger for Sochaux. He started his career with his hometown club Limoges, and has also represented LB Châteauroux, where he played six games in Ligue 2. Personal life Mauricio was born in France, and is of Portuguese descent. Career statistics As of 4 December 2018 References External links Tony Mauricio at foot-national.com Tony Mauricio at FootballDatabase.eu Tony Mauricio – French league stats at LFP – also available in French Tony Mauricio at Soccerway
Commons category
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Tony Mauricio" ] }
Tony Mauricio (born 22 March 1994) is a French professional footballer who plays as a winger for Sochaux. He started his career with his hometown club Limoges, and has also represented LB Châteauroux, where he played six games in Ligue 2. Personal life Mauricio was born in France, and is of Portuguese descent. Career statistics As of 4 December 2018 References External links Tony Mauricio at foot-national.com Tony Mauricio at FootballDatabase.eu Tony Mauricio – French league stats at LFP – also available in French Tony Mauricio at Soccerway
family name
{ "answer_start": [ 5 ], "text": [ "Mauricio" ] }
Tony Mauricio (born 22 March 1994) is a French professional footballer who plays as a winger for Sochaux. He started his career with his hometown club Limoges, and has also represented LB Châteauroux, where he played six games in Ligue 2. Personal life Mauricio was born in France, and is of Portuguese descent. Career statistics As of 4 December 2018 References External links Tony Mauricio at foot-national.com Tony Mauricio at FootballDatabase.eu Tony Mauricio – French league stats at LFP – also available in French Tony Mauricio at Soccerway
given name
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Tony" ] }
Tony Mauricio (born 22 March 1994) is a French professional footballer who plays as a winger for Sochaux. He started his career with his hometown club Limoges, and has also represented LB Châteauroux, where he played six games in Ligue 2. Personal life Mauricio was born in France, and is of Portuguese descent. Career statistics As of 4 December 2018 References External links Tony Mauricio at foot-national.com Tony Mauricio at FootballDatabase.eu Tony Mauricio – French league stats at LFP – also available in French Tony Mauricio at Soccerway
languages spoken, written or signed
{ "answer_start": [ 40 ], "text": [ "French" ] }
Dr. Mehdi Shaghaghi Zarghamee (Persian: مهدی شقاقی ضرغامی) is a former Chancellor of Arya Mehr University of Technology (currently Sharif University of Technology) in Iran, former professor at the Department of Mathematics and Computer Sciences, and founder of the Isfahan University of Technology. Dr. Zarghamee currently works as Senior Principal in the Division of Engineering Mechanics and Infrastructure of Simpson Gumpertz & Heger Inc. Most notably, was the principal investigator for the structural modeling of the 9/11 collapse of the World Trade Center Towers for the NIST. Dr. Zarghamee earned his Ph.D. in Structural Engineering from the University of Illinois and his S.M. in Mathematics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. == References ==
country of citizenship
{ "answer_start": [ 168 ], "text": [ "Iran" ] }
Dr. Mehdi Shaghaghi Zarghamee (Persian: مهدی شقاقی ضرغامی) is a former Chancellor of Arya Mehr University of Technology (currently Sharif University of Technology) in Iran, former professor at the Department of Mathematics and Computer Sciences, and founder of the Isfahan University of Technology. Dr. Zarghamee currently works as Senior Principal in the Division of Engineering Mechanics and Infrastructure of Simpson Gumpertz & Heger Inc. Most notably, was the principal investigator for the structural modeling of the 9/11 collapse of the World Trade Center Towers for the NIST. Dr. Zarghamee earned his Ph.D. in Structural Engineering from the University of Illinois and his S.M. in Mathematics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. == References ==
educated at
{ "answer_start": [ 710 ], "text": [ "Massachusetts Institute of Technology" ] }
Dr. Mehdi Shaghaghi Zarghamee (Persian: مهدی شقاقی ضرغامی) is a former Chancellor of Arya Mehr University of Technology (currently Sharif University of Technology) in Iran, former professor at the Department of Mathematics and Computer Sciences, and founder of the Isfahan University of Technology. Dr. Zarghamee currently works as Senior Principal in the Division of Engineering Mechanics and Infrastructure of Simpson Gumpertz & Heger Inc. Most notably, was the principal investigator for the structural modeling of the 9/11 collapse of the World Trade Center Towers for the NIST. Dr. Zarghamee earned his Ph.D. in Structural Engineering from the University of Illinois and his S.M. in Mathematics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. == References ==
employer
{ "answer_start": [ 132 ], "text": [ "Sharif University of Technology" ] }
Dr. Mehdi Shaghaghi Zarghamee (Persian: مهدی شقاقی ضرغامی) is a former Chancellor of Arya Mehr University of Technology (currently Sharif University of Technology) in Iran, former professor at the Department of Mathematics and Computer Sciences, and founder of the Isfahan University of Technology. Dr. Zarghamee currently works as Senior Principal in the Division of Engineering Mechanics and Infrastructure of Simpson Gumpertz & Heger Inc. Most notably, was the principal investigator for the structural modeling of the 9/11 collapse of the World Trade Center Towers for the NIST. Dr. Zarghamee earned his Ph.D. in Structural Engineering from the University of Illinois and his S.M. in Mathematics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. == References ==
given name
{ "answer_start": [ 4 ], "text": [ "Mehdi" ] }
Lore Krainer (4 November 1930 – 3 July 2020) was an Austrian actress, restaurateur, and cabaret singer-songwriter. Personal life Krainer was born at Graz, Styria, and ran a restaurant, known as Girardi-Keller in Graz, where she performed with her own lyrics and songs. In 1972, she was engaged by Gerhard Bronner in his Cabaret Fledermaus. From 30 October 1978 to 28 June 2009, Krainer could be heard every Sunday morning in the radio cabaret Der Guglhupf founded by Bronner and Peter Wehle on Ö1 Listen. It was last broadcast on 28 June 2009. For several years, she appeared on the ORF television program Seniorenclub. In 1984, as the first non-Viennese, she was awarded the Nestroy-Ring.In her free time she liked to play tarot, namely the variant Königrufen, and was known as "the doyenne of the Austrian tarot". She scored some tournament victories in this game. She died at Oberwaltersdorf, aged 89. References External links Lore Krainer discography at Discogs
place of birth
{ "answer_start": [ 150 ], "text": [ "Graz" ] }
Lore Krainer (4 November 1930 – 3 July 2020) was an Austrian actress, restaurateur, and cabaret singer-songwriter. Personal life Krainer was born at Graz, Styria, and ran a restaurant, known as Girardi-Keller in Graz, where she performed with her own lyrics and songs. In 1972, she was engaged by Gerhard Bronner in his Cabaret Fledermaus. From 30 October 1978 to 28 June 2009, Krainer could be heard every Sunday morning in the radio cabaret Der Guglhupf founded by Bronner and Peter Wehle on Ö1 Listen. It was last broadcast on 28 June 2009. For several years, she appeared on the ORF television program Seniorenclub. In 1984, as the first non-Viennese, she was awarded the Nestroy-Ring.In her free time she liked to play tarot, namely the variant Königrufen, and was known as "the doyenne of the Austrian tarot". She scored some tournament victories in this game. She died at Oberwaltersdorf, aged 89. References External links Lore Krainer discography at Discogs
place of death
{ "answer_start": [ 880 ], "text": [ "Oberwaltersdorf" ] }
Lore Krainer (4 November 1930 – 3 July 2020) was an Austrian actress, restaurateur, and cabaret singer-songwriter. Personal life Krainer was born at Graz, Styria, and ran a restaurant, known as Girardi-Keller in Graz, where she performed with her own lyrics and songs. In 1972, she was engaged by Gerhard Bronner in his Cabaret Fledermaus. From 30 October 1978 to 28 June 2009, Krainer could be heard every Sunday morning in the radio cabaret Der Guglhupf founded by Bronner and Peter Wehle on Ö1 Listen. It was last broadcast on 28 June 2009. For several years, she appeared on the ORF television program Seniorenclub. In 1984, as the first non-Viennese, she was awarded the Nestroy-Ring.In her free time she liked to play tarot, namely the variant Königrufen, and was known as "the doyenne of the Austrian tarot". She scored some tournament victories in this game. She died at Oberwaltersdorf, aged 89. References External links Lore Krainer discography at Discogs
country of citizenship
{ "answer_start": [ 52 ], "text": [ "Austria" ] }
Lore Krainer (4 November 1930 – 3 July 2020) was an Austrian actress, restaurateur, and cabaret singer-songwriter. Personal life Krainer was born at Graz, Styria, and ran a restaurant, known as Girardi-Keller in Graz, where she performed with her own lyrics and songs. In 1972, she was engaged by Gerhard Bronner in his Cabaret Fledermaus. From 30 October 1978 to 28 June 2009, Krainer could be heard every Sunday morning in the radio cabaret Der Guglhupf founded by Bronner and Peter Wehle on Ö1 Listen. It was last broadcast on 28 June 2009. For several years, she appeared on the ORF television program Seniorenclub. In 1984, as the first non-Viennese, she was awarded the Nestroy-Ring.In her free time she liked to play tarot, namely the variant Königrufen, and was known as "the doyenne of the Austrian tarot". She scored some tournament victories in this game. She died at Oberwaltersdorf, aged 89. References External links Lore Krainer discography at Discogs
family name
{ "answer_start": [ 5 ], "text": [ "Krainer" ] }
Lore Krainer (4 November 1930 – 3 July 2020) was an Austrian actress, restaurateur, and cabaret singer-songwriter. Personal life Krainer was born at Graz, Styria, and ran a restaurant, known as Girardi-Keller in Graz, where she performed with her own lyrics and songs. In 1972, she was engaged by Gerhard Bronner in his Cabaret Fledermaus. From 30 October 1978 to 28 June 2009, Krainer could be heard every Sunday morning in the radio cabaret Der Guglhupf founded by Bronner and Peter Wehle on Ö1 Listen. It was last broadcast on 28 June 2009. For several years, she appeared on the ORF television program Seniorenclub. In 1984, as the first non-Viennese, she was awarded the Nestroy-Ring.In her free time she liked to play tarot, namely the variant Königrufen, and was known as "the doyenne of the Austrian tarot". She scored some tournament victories in this game. She died at Oberwaltersdorf, aged 89. References External links Lore Krainer discography at Discogs
given name
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Lore" ] }
Cerconota bathyphaea is a moth in the family Depressariidae. It was described by Edward Meyrick in 1932. It is found in Panama. == References ==
parent taxon
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Cerconota" ] }
Cerconota bathyphaea is a moth in the family Depressariidae. It was described by Edward Meyrick in 1932. It is found in Panama. == References ==
taxon name
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Cerconota bathyphaea" ] }
Peter Garland may refer to: Peter Garland (composer) (born 1952), American composer Peter Garland (footballer) (born 1971), English former footballer Peter A. Garland (1923–2005), U.S. Representative from Maine
occupation
{ "answer_start": [ 44 ], "text": [ "composer" ] }
Peter Garland may refer to: Peter Garland (composer) (born 1952), American composer Peter Garland (footballer) (born 1971), English former footballer Peter A. Garland (1923–2005), U.S. Representative from Maine
family name
{ "answer_start": [ 6 ], "text": [ "Garland" ] }
Peter Garland may refer to: Peter Garland (composer) (born 1952), American composer Peter Garland (footballer) (born 1971), English former footballer Peter A. Garland (1923–2005), U.S. Representative from Maine
given name
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Peter" ] }
Peter Garland may refer to: Peter Garland (composer) (born 1952), American composer Peter Garland (footballer) (born 1971), English former footballer Peter A. Garland (1923–2005), U.S. Representative from Maine
languages spoken, written or signed
{ "answer_start": [ 125 ], "text": [ "English" ] }
Elgar: Fantasy of a Composer on a Bicycle is a 2002 British documentary film by Ken Russell who had made a film about Elgar 40 years earlier. Cast Louisa Nicholas as Alice, Elgar’s Daughter References External links Elgar: Fantasy of a Composer on a Bicycle at IMDb Elgar at BFI Elgar at Letterboxd
instance of
{ "answer_start": [ 72 ], "text": [ "film" ] }
Elgar: Fantasy of a Composer on a Bicycle is a 2002 British documentary film by Ken Russell who had made a film about Elgar 40 years earlier. Cast Louisa Nicholas as Alice, Elgar’s Daughter References External links Elgar: Fantasy of a Composer on a Bicycle at IMDb Elgar at BFI Elgar at Letterboxd
director
{ "answer_start": [ 80 ], "text": [ "Ken Russell" ] }
Elgar: Fantasy of a Composer on a Bicycle is a 2002 British documentary film by Ken Russell who had made a film about Elgar 40 years earlier. Cast Louisa Nicholas as Alice, Elgar’s Daughter References External links Elgar: Fantasy of a Composer on a Bicycle at IMDb Elgar at BFI Elgar at Letterboxd
genre
{ "answer_start": [ 60 ], "text": [ "documentary film" ] }
The Teakettle Experimental Forest is a part of the Sierra National Forest that is set aside for research into forest ecology. The forest is located 80 kilometres (50 mi) east of Fresno, California, between Yosemite and Kings Canyon National Parks. The area is old-growth forest at 2,000 to 2,800 metres (6,600 to 9,200 ft) elevation and consists primarily of mixed-conifer and red fir forest common on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada. The forest was established in the 1930s when California state and federal agencies began exploring how the Central Valley of California's water supply might be increased through management of Sierra Nevada watersheds. In 1938, a 1,300 hectares (3,200 acres) area surrounding Teakettle Creek was designated the Teakettle Experimental Area and five drainages were chosen for study. Stream gauge stations and sediment basins were built in the 1940s. Research collaborators have come from the following institutions and agencies: California State University, Michigan Technological University, National Aeronautics and Space Administration-Goddard Space Flight Center, Oregon State University, University of California, Berkeley, University of California, University of Maryland, Virginia Commonwealth University, Universidad Metropolitana, University of Michigan, University of Nevada, University of Washington, USDA Forest Service, Forest Inventory and Analysis Program, Sierra National Forest, and Southern Research Station. There is a bunkhouse cabin, dry laboratory, and storage garage. The experimental forest is gated and relatively remote. == References ==
instance of
{ "answer_start": [ 110 ], "text": [ "forest" ] }
The Teakettle Experimental Forest is a part of the Sierra National Forest that is set aside for research into forest ecology. The forest is located 80 kilometres (50 mi) east of Fresno, California, between Yosemite and Kings Canyon National Parks. The area is old-growth forest at 2,000 to 2,800 metres (6,600 to 9,200 ft) elevation and consists primarily of mixed-conifer and red fir forest common on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada. The forest was established in the 1930s when California state and federal agencies began exploring how the Central Valley of California's water supply might be increased through management of Sierra Nevada watersheds. In 1938, a 1,300 hectares (3,200 acres) area surrounding Teakettle Creek was designated the Teakettle Experimental Area and five drainages were chosen for study. Stream gauge stations and sediment basins were built in the 1940s. Research collaborators have come from the following institutions and agencies: California State University, Michigan Technological University, National Aeronautics and Space Administration-Goddard Space Flight Center, Oregon State University, University of California, Berkeley, University of California, University of Maryland, Virginia Commonwealth University, Universidad Metropolitana, University of Michigan, University of Nevada, University of Washington, USDA Forest Service, Forest Inventory and Analysis Program, Sierra National Forest, and Southern Research Station. There is a bunkhouse cabin, dry laboratory, and storage garage. The experimental forest is gated and relatively remote. == References ==
located in the administrative territorial entity
{ "answer_start": [ 186 ], "text": [ "California" ] }
Irakli Revishvili (Georgian: ირაკლი რევიშვილი; born November 3, 1989) is a Georgian swimmer, who specialized in freestyle events. He represented his nation Georgia at the 2008 Summer Olympics, and has currently owned two Georgian national records in both the 200 and 400 m freestyle. Revishvili also trained for the national swimming team under the tutelage of head coach and 2004 Olympian Zurab Khomasuridze. Revishvili received a card invitation from FINA to compete as a lone Georgian male swimmer in the 200 m freestyle at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. He pulled away from a small field of swimmers to take victory in the opening heat with 1:53.60, but failed to advance further to the semifinals, finishing fifty-third overall in the prelims. References External links NBC Olympics Profile
sex or gender
{ "answer_start": [ 488 ], "text": [ "male" ] }
Irakli Revishvili (Georgian: ირაკლი რევიშვილი; born November 3, 1989) is a Georgian swimmer, who specialized in freestyle events. He represented his nation Georgia at the 2008 Summer Olympics, and has currently owned two Georgian national records in both the 200 and 400 m freestyle. Revishvili also trained for the national swimming team under the tutelage of head coach and 2004 Olympian Zurab Khomasuridze. Revishvili received a card invitation from FINA to compete as a lone Georgian male swimmer in the 200 m freestyle at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. He pulled away from a small field of swimmers to take victory in the opening heat with 1:53.60, but failed to advance further to the semifinals, finishing fifty-third overall in the prelims. References External links NBC Olympics Profile
country of citizenship
{ "answer_start": [ 19 ], "text": [ "Georgia" ] }
Irakli Revishvili (Georgian: ირაკლი რევიშვილი; born November 3, 1989) is a Georgian swimmer, who specialized in freestyle events. He represented his nation Georgia at the 2008 Summer Olympics, and has currently owned two Georgian national records in both the 200 and 400 m freestyle. Revishvili also trained for the national swimming team under the tutelage of head coach and 2004 Olympian Zurab Khomasuridze. Revishvili received a card invitation from FINA to compete as a lone Georgian male swimmer in the 200 m freestyle at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. He pulled away from a small field of swimmers to take victory in the opening heat with 1:53.60, but failed to advance further to the semifinals, finishing fifty-third overall in the prelims. References External links NBC Olympics Profile
occupation
{ "answer_start": [ 84 ], "text": [ "swimmer" ] }
Irakli Revishvili (Georgian: ირაკლი რევიშვილი; born November 3, 1989) is a Georgian swimmer, who specialized in freestyle events. He represented his nation Georgia at the 2008 Summer Olympics, and has currently owned two Georgian national records in both the 200 and 400 m freestyle. Revishvili also trained for the national swimming team under the tutelage of head coach and 2004 Olympian Zurab Khomasuridze. Revishvili received a card invitation from FINA to compete as a lone Georgian male swimmer in the 200 m freestyle at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. He pulled away from a small field of swimmers to take victory in the opening heat with 1:53.60, but failed to advance further to the semifinals, finishing fifty-third overall in the prelims. References External links NBC Olympics Profile
sport
{ "answer_start": [ 325 ], "text": [ "swimming" ] }
Irakli Revishvili (Georgian: ირაკლი რევიშვილი; born November 3, 1989) is a Georgian swimmer, who specialized in freestyle events. He represented his nation Georgia at the 2008 Summer Olympics, and has currently owned two Georgian national records in both the 200 and 400 m freestyle. Revishvili also trained for the national swimming team under the tutelage of head coach and 2004 Olympian Zurab Khomasuridze. Revishvili received a card invitation from FINA to compete as a lone Georgian male swimmer in the 200 m freestyle at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. He pulled away from a small field of swimmers to take victory in the opening heat with 1:53.60, but failed to advance further to the semifinals, finishing fifty-third overall in the prelims. References External links NBC Olympics Profile
participant in
{ "answer_start": [ 171 ], "text": [ "2008 Summer Olympics" ] }
Devin Allen is an American photographer, photojournalist, and activist based in Baltimore, Maryland. He gained national attention after the Freddie Gray protests in 2015, when his documentary photograph entitled "Baltimore Uprising" was published as Time magazine's May 2015 cover photo. His documentary photo of the George Floyd protests was published as Time's June 2020 cover.Allen's photographs are held in the Smithsonian collection of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. Career Baltimore Uprising and other projects (2015–2019) Allen gained national attention and media prominence after the 2015 protests following the death of Freddie Gray. However, Allen shared his first protest photographs a year later, following the police killing of Michael Brown, an 18-year old black-male resident of Ferguson, Missouri on August 9, 2014. The murder sparked protests across the neighborhood where the incident took place. After the death of Freddie Gray in April 2015, Allen—who grew up five minutes from where Freddie Gray's encounter with the police occurred—documented the protests and posted his subsequent photos on Instagram. Across three weeks of the protests, Allen took around 10,000 photos. His images capturing the protests went viral and were covered by the BBC, The Washington Post, The New York Times , and others. A photo Allen took of the protests on April 25, 2015 was chosen as Time magazine's May 2015 cover, making Allen the third amateur photographer to be featured on the cover of Time. The photograph, titled Baltimore Uprising, shows a man running away from a pack of charging police officers in the city of Baltimore. After Allen uploaded the photograph from his camera to his phone, it took him several hours to realize the photograph had gone viral, as he had continued photographing the protests until after dark that evening.In 2015, building off his recent media attention from Time magazine, Allen launched "Through Their Eyes", a youth program that teaches photography to Baltimore city school students, specifically those from districts with underfunded arts education programs. The program includes giving cameras to students, as well as organizing educational workshops and art exhibitions of student work. In 2016, Allen's photography exhibit "A Beautiful Ghetto" was held at the Gallery Slought. In 2017, Allen published his first photography book as a coffee table book titled A Beautiful Ghetto. The book was nominated for the 49th NAACP Image Awards in the category of "Outstanding Literary Work – Debut Author".Allen was selected as the first recipient of the Gordon Parks Foundation Fellowship in 2017. The Fellowship supported the continuation of his "Through Their Eyes" project. George Floyd protests (2020–present) After the murder of George Floyd, a Black American killed during arrest by a white police officer named Derek Chauvin, Allen attended a Baltimore protest on June 5, 2020 organized by demonstrators representing the city's Black transgender community. At the protest, he captured a photograph that was featured on the cover of Time magazine. The photograph shows a protester sitting with a megaphone, while other demonstrators lie down on the ground.In July 2020, Allen was selected as a Leica Ambassador. Personal life Allen was born and raised in West Baltimore. As of 2020, Allen is still active in the Baltimore community and says that his goal when documenting events like the protests is to make sure he tells the whole story.According to a report on National Public Radio (NPR), Devin Allen received his first camera as a gift from his grandmother in 2013. It was a Canon camera that she bought on credit from Best Buy, as per NPR. References External links Devin Allen on Instagram "Devin Allen's work in the Smithsonian Collection". National Museum of African American History and Culture. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
sex or gender
{ "answer_start": [ 809 ], "text": [ "male" ] }
Devin Allen is an American photographer, photojournalist, and activist based in Baltimore, Maryland. He gained national attention after the Freddie Gray protests in 2015, when his documentary photograph entitled "Baltimore Uprising" was published as Time magazine's May 2015 cover photo. His documentary photo of the George Floyd protests was published as Time's June 2020 cover.Allen's photographs are held in the Smithsonian collection of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. Career Baltimore Uprising and other projects (2015–2019) Allen gained national attention and media prominence after the 2015 protests following the death of Freddie Gray. However, Allen shared his first protest photographs a year later, following the police killing of Michael Brown, an 18-year old black-male resident of Ferguson, Missouri on August 9, 2014. The murder sparked protests across the neighborhood where the incident took place. After the death of Freddie Gray in April 2015, Allen—who grew up five minutes from where Freddie Gray's encounter with the police occurred—documented the protests and posted his subsequent photos on Instagram. Across three weeks of the protests, Allen took around 10,000 photos. His images capturing the protests went viral and were covered by the BBC, The Washington Post, The New York Times , and others. A photo Allen took of the protests on April 25, 2015 was chosen as Time magazine's May 2015 cover, making Allen the third amateur photographer to be featured on the cover of Time. The photograph, titled Baltimore Uprising, shows a man running away from a pack of charging police officers in the city of Baltimore. After Allen uploaded the photograph from his camera to his phone, it took him several hours to realize the photograph had gone viral, as he had continued photographing the protests until after dark that evening.In 2015, building off his recent media attention from Time magazine, Allen launched "Through Their Eyes", a youth program that teaches photography to Baltimore city school students, specifically those from districts with underfunded arts education programs. The program includes giving cameras to students, as well as organizing educational workshops and art exhibitions of student work. In 2016, Allen's photography exhibit "A Beautiful Ghetto" was held at the Gallery Slought. In 2017, Allen published his first photography book as a coffee table book titled A Beautiful Ghetto. The book was nominated for the 49th NAACP Image Awards in the category of "Outstanding Literary Work – Debut Author".Allen was selected as the first recipient of the Gordon Parks Foundation Fellowship in 2017. The Fellowship supported the continuation of his "Through Their Eyes" project. George Floyd protests (2020–present) After the murder of George Floyd, a Black American killed during arrest by a white police officer named Derek Chauvin, Allen attended a Baltimore protest on June 5, 2020 organized by demonstrators representing the city's Black transgender community. At the protest, he captured a photograph that was featured on the cover of Time magazine. The photograph shows a protester sitting with a megaphone, while other demonstrators lie down on the ground.In July 2020, Allen was selected as a Leica Ambassador. Personal life Allen was born and raised in West Baltimore. As of 2020, Allen is still active in the Baltimore community and says that his goal when documenting events like the protests is to make sure he tells the whole story.According to a report on National Public Radio (NPR), Devin Allen received his first camera as a gift from his grandmother in 2013. It was a Canon camera that she bought on credit from Best Buy, as per NPR. References External links Devin Allen on Instagram "Devin Allen's work in the Smithsonian Collection". National Museum of African American History and Culture. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
occupation
{ "answer_start": [ 27 ], "text": [ "photographer" ] }
Devin Allen is an American photographer, photojournalist, and activist based in Baltimore, Maryland. He gained national attention after the Freddie Gray protests in 2015, when his documentary photograph entitled "Baltimore Uprising" was published as Time magazine's May 2015 cover photo. His documentary photo of the George Floyd protests was published as Time's June 2020 cover.Allen's photographs are held in the Smithsonian collection of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. Career Baltimore Uprising and other projects (2015–2019) Allen gained national attention and media prominence after the 2015 protests following the death of Freddie Gray. However, Allen shared his first protest photographs a year later, following the police killing of Michael Brown, an 18-year old black-male resident of Ferguson, Missouri on August 9, 2014. The murder sparked protests across the neighborhood where the incident took place. After the death of Freddie Gray in April 2015, Allen—who grew up five minutes from where Freddie Gray's encounter with the police occurred—documented the protests and posted his subsequent photos on Instagram. Across three weeks of the protests, Allen took around 10,000 photos. His images capturing the protests went viral and were covered by the BBC, The Washington Post, The New York Times , and others. A photo Allen took of the protests on April 25, 2015 was chosen as Time magazine's May 2015 cover, making Allen the third amateur photographer to be featured on the cover of Time. The photograph, titled Baltimore Uprising, shows a man running away from a pack of charging police officers in the city of Baltimore. After Allen uploaded the photograph from his camera to his phone, it took him several hours to realize the photograph had gone viral, as he had continued photographing the protests until after dark that evening.In 2015, building off his recent media attention from Time magazine, Allen launched "Through Their Eyes", a youth program that teaches photography to Baltimore city school students, specifically those from districts with underfunded arts education programs. The program includes giving cameras to students, as well as organizing educational workshops and art exhibitions of student work. In 2016, Allen's photography exhibit "A Beautiful Ghetto" was held at the Gallery Slought. In 2017, Allen published his first photography book as a coffee table book titled A Beautiful Ghetto. The book was nominated for the 49th NAACP Image Awards in the category of "Outstanding Literary Work – Debut Author".Allen was selected as the first recipient of the Gordon Parks Foundation Fellowship in 2017. The Fellowship supported the continuation of his "Through Their Eyes" project. George Floyd protests (2020–present) After the murder of George Floyd, a Black American killed during arrest by a white police officer named Derek Chauvin, Allen attended a Baltimore protest on June 5, 2020 organized by demonstrators representing the city's Black transgender community. At the protest, he captured a photograph that was featured on the cover of Time magazine. The photograph shows a protester sitting with a megaphone, while other demonstrators lie down on the ground.In July 2020, Allen was selected as a Leica Ambassador. Personal life Allen was born and raised in West Baltimore. As of 2020, Allen is still active in the Baltimore community and says that his goal when documenting events like the protests is to make sure he tells the whole story.According to a report on National Public Radio (NPR), Devin Allen received his first camera as a gift from his grandmother in 2013. It was a Canon camera that she bought on credit from Best Buy, as per NPR. References External links Devin Allen on Instagram "Devin Allen's work in the Smithsonian Collection". National Museum of African American History and Culture. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
family name
{ "answer_start": [ 6 ], "text": [ "Allen" ] }
Devin Allen is an American photographer, photojournalist, and activist based in Baltimore, Maryland. He gained national attention after the Freddie Gray protests in 2015, when his documentary photograph entitled "Baltimore Uprising" was published as Time magazine's May 2015 cover photo. His documentary photo of the George Floyd protests was published as Time's June 2020 cover.Allen's photographs are held in the Smithsonian collection of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. Career Baltimore Uprising and other projects (2015–2019) Allen gained national attention and media prominence after the 2015 protests following the death of Freddie Gray. However, Allen shared his first protest photographs a year later, following the police killing of Michael Brown, an 18-year old black-male resident of Ferguson, Missouri on August 9, 2014. The murder sparked protests across the neighborhood where the incident took place. After the death of Freddie Gray in April 2015, Allen—who grew up five minutes from where Freddie Gray's encounter with the police occurred—documented the protests and posted his subsequent photos on Instagram. Across three weeks of the protests, Allen took around 10,000 photos. His images capturing the protests went viral and were covered by the BBC, The Washington Post, The New York Times , and others. A photo Allen took of the protests on April 25, 2015 was chosen as Time magazine's May 2015 cover, making Allen the third amateur photographer to be featured on the cover of Time. The photograph, titled Baltimore Uprising, shows a man running away from a pack of charging police officers in the city of Baltimore. After Allen uploaded the photograph from his camera to his phone, it took him several hours to realize the photograph had gone viral, as he had continued photographing the protests until after dark that evening.In 2015, building off his recent media attention from Time magazine, Allen launched "Through Their Eyes", a youth program that teaches photography to Baltimore city school students, specifically those from districts with underfunded arts education programs. The program includes giving cameras to students, as well as organizing educational workshops and art exhibitions of student work. In 2016, Allen's photography exhibit "A Beautiful Ghetto" was held at the Gallery Slought. In 2017, Allen published his first photography book as a coffee table book titled A Beautiful Ghetto. The book was nominated for the 49th NAACP Image Awards in the category of "Outstanding Literary Work – Debut Author".Allen was selected as the first recipient of the Gordon Parks Foundation Fellowship in 2017. The Fellowship supported the continuation of his "Through Their Eyes" project. George Floyd protests (2020–present) After the murder of George Floyd, a Black American killed during arrest by a white police officer named Derek Chauvin, Allen attended a Baltimore protest on June 5, 2020 organized by demonstrators representing the city's Black transgender community. At the protest, he captured a photograph that was featured on the cover of Time magazine. The photograph shows a protester sitting with a megaphone, while other demonstrators lie down on the ground.In July 2020, Allen was selected as a Leica Ambassador. Personal life Allen was born and raised in West Baltimore. As of 2020, Allen is still active in the Baltimore community and says that his goal when documenting events like the protests is to make sure he tells the whole story.According to a report on National Public Radio (NPR), Devin Allen received his first camera as a gift from his grandmother in 2013. It was a Canon camera that she bought on credit from Best Buy, as per NPR. References External links Devin Allen on Instagram "Devin Allen's work in the Smithsonian Collection". National Museum of African American History and Culture. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
given name
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Devin" ] }
Jeanne E. Poppe (born July 6, 1957) is a Minnesota politician and former member of the Minnesota House of Representatives. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), she represented District 27B, which includes all or portions of Dodge, Freeborn, and Mower counties in the southeastern part of the state. She is an educator and counselor at Riverland Community College, with campuses in Albert Lea, Austin and Owatonna. Early life, education, and career Poppe was born in Houston, Minnesota and attended Houston High School where she graduated in 1975. She graduated from the University of Wisconsin in River Falls, receiving her B.A. in Sociology and Criminal Justice in 1980. She earned her M.S. in Counseling from Winona State University in Winona in 1985.She has been a college counselor at Riverland Community College since 1999, also serving as president of the Minnesota State College Faculty Counselors Association from 2002-2004. Prior to her work as a counselor, she was the college's director of admissions from 1995–1999, and the women's center director from 1993-1995. She was a workforce career counselor for the Private Industry Council from 1989–1993, and a senior citizens' paralegal for Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services from 1984-1989.Active in her local community through the years, Poppe served on the Austin City Council (Ward 2) from 1994 to 2002, and was secretary of the Austin Human Rights Commission from 2002 to 2004. She has been a trustee of the Austin Area Foundation since 2003, and a member of the Austin Area League of Women Voters since 1987. Minnesota House of Representatives Elections Poppe ran unsuccessfully in 2002 against Rep. Jeff Anderson. She was first elected in 2004 defeating Anderson in a close race. She was re-elected in 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012, and 2014, 2016, and 2018 before being unseated in 2020. Committee assignments For the 89th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe is a part of: Agriculture Finance Committee (DFL Lead) Agriculture Policy Committee Capital Investment Committee Environment and Natural Resources Policy and Finance Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 88th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture Policy (Chair) Committee Environment, Natural Resources and Agriculture Finance Committee Higher Education Finance and Policy Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 87th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture and Rural Development Policy and Finance Committee Higher Education Policy and Finance Committee Redistricting CommitteeFor the 86th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Subcommittee: Higher Education and Workforce Development Finance and Policy Division Bioscience and Workforce Development Policy and Oversight Division Committee Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division State and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 85th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Committee Finance Subcommittee: Agriculture, Rural Economies and Veterans Affairs Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: Education Finance and Economic Competitiveness Finance Division: Higher Education and Work Force Development Policy and Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division Governmental Operations, Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 84th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Environment and Natural Resources Committee Local Government Committee Rules and Legislative Administration Committee Tenure Poppe was sworn in on January 4, 2005. She served in the 84th, 85th, 86th, 87th, 88th, 89th, 90th, and 91st Minnesota Legislatures. Personal life Poppe resides in Austin, Minnesota, and was married to Bob Vilt who died July 13, 2017. They have three children, Lydia, Casey, Skyler. References External links Jeanne Poppe at Minnesota Legislators Past & Present Rep. Poppe Web Page Project Votesmart - Rep. Jeanne Poppe Profile Minnesota Public Radio Votetracker: Rep. Jeanne Poppe Jeanne Poppe Campaign Web Site
place of birth
{ "answer_start": [ 493 ], "text": [ "Houston" ] }
Jeanne E. Poppe (born July 6, 1957) is a Minnesota politician and former member of the Minnesota House of Representatives. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), she represented District 27B, which includes all or portions of Dodge, Freeborn, and Mower counties in the southeastern part of the state. She is an educator and counselor at Riverland Community College, with campuses in Albert Lea, Austin and Owatonna. Early life, education, and career Poppe was born in Houston, Minnesota and attended Houston High School where she graduated in 1975. She graduated from the University of Wisconsin in River Falls, receiving her B.A. in Sociology and Criminal Justice in 1980. She earned her M.S. in Counseling from Winona State University in Winona in 1985.She has been a college counselor at Riverland Community College since 1999, also serving as president of the Minnesota State College Faculty Counselors Association from 2002-2004. Prior to her work as a counselor, she was the college's director of admissions from 1995–1999, and the women's center director from 1993-1995. She was a workforce career counselor for the Private Industry Council from 1989–1993, and a senior citizens' paralegal for Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services from 1984-1989.Active in her local community through the years, Poppe served on the Austin City Council (Ward 2) from 1994 to 2002, and was secretary of the Austin Human Rights Commission from 2002 to 2004. She has been a trustee of the Austin Area Foundation since 2003, and a member of the Austin Area League of Women Voters since 1987. Minnesota House of Representatives Elections Poppe ran unsuccessfully in 2002 against Rep. Jeff Anderson. She was first elected in 2004 defeating Anderson in a close race. She was re-elected in 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012, and 2014, 2016, and 2018 before being unseated in 2020. Committee assignments For the 89th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe is a part of: Agriculture Finance Committee (DFL Lead) Agriculture Policy Committee Capital Investment Committee Environment and Natural Resources Policy and Finance Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 88th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture Policy (Chair) Committee Environment, Natural Resources and Agriculture Finance Committee Higher Education Finance and Policy Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 87th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture and Rural Development Policy and Finance Committee Higher Education Policy and Finance Committee Redistricting CommitteeFor the 86th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Subcommittee: Higher Education and Workforce Development Finance and Policy Division Bioscience and Workforce Development Policy and Oversight Division Committee Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division State and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 85th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Committee Finance Subcommittee: Agriculture, Rural Economies and Veterans Affairs Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: Education Finance and Economic Competitiveness Finance Division: Higher Education and Work Force Development Policy and Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division Governmental Operations, Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 84th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Environment and Natural Resources Committee Local Government Committee Rules and Legislative Administration Committee Tenure Poppe was sworn in on January 4, 2005. She served in the 84th, 85th, 86th, 87th, 88th, 89th, 90th, and 91st Minnesota Legislatures. Personal life Poppe resides in Austin, Minnesota, and was married to Bob Vilt who died July 13, 2017. They have three children, Lydia, Casey, Skyler. References External links Jeanne Poppe at Minnesota Legislators Past & Present Rep. Poppe Web Page Project Votesmart - Rep. Jeanne Poppe Profile Minnesota Public Radio Votetracker: Rep. Jeanne Poppe Jeanne Poppe Campaign Web Site
position held
{ "answer_start": [ 73 ], "text": [ "member of the Minnesota House of Representatives" ] }
Jeanne E. Poppe (born July 6, 1957) is a Minnesota politician and former member of the Minnesota House of Representatives. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), she represented District 27B, which includes all or portions of Dodge, Freeborn, and Mower counties in the southeastern part of the state. She is an educator and counselor at Riverland Community College, with campuses in Albert Lea, Austin and Owatonna. Early life, education, and career Poppe was born in Houston, Minnesota and attended Houston High School where she graduated in 1975. She graduated from the University of Wisconsin in River Falls, receiving her B.A. in Sociology and Criminal Justice in 1980. She earned her M.S. in Counseling from Winona State University in Winona in 1985.She has been a college counselor at Riverland Community College since 1999, also serving as president of the Minnesota State College Faculty Counselors Association from 2002-2004. Prior to her work as a counselor, she was the college's director of admissions from 1995–1999, and the women's center director from 1993-1995. She was a workforce career counselor for the Private Industry Council from 1989–1993, and a senior citizens' paralegal for Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services from 1984-1989.Active in her local community through the years, Poppe served on the Austin City Council (Ward 2) from 1994 to 2002, and was secretary of the Austin Human Rights Commission from 2002 to 2004. She has been a trustee of the Austin Area Foundation since 2003, and a member of the Austin Area League of Women Voters since 1987. Minnesota House of Representatives Elections Poppe ran unsuccessfully in 2002 against Rep. Jeff Anderson. She was first elected in 2004 defeating Anderson in a close race. She was re-elected in 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012, and 2014, 2016, and 2018 before being unseated in 2020. Committee assignments For the 89th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe is a part of: Agriculture Finance Committee (DFL Lead) Agriculture Policy Committee Capital Investment Committee Environment and Natural Resources Policy and Finance Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 88th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture Policy (Chair) Committee Environment, Natural Resources and Agriculture Finance Committee Higher Education Finance and Policy Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 87th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture and Rural Development Policy and Finance Committee Higher Education Policy and Finance Committee Redistricting CommitteeFor the 86th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Subcommittee: Higher Education and Workforce Development Finance and Policy Division Bioscience and Workforce Development Policy and Oversight Division Committee Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division State and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 85th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Committee Finance Subcommittee: Agriculture, Rural Economies and Veterans Affairs Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: Education Finance and Economic Competitiveness Finance Division: Higher Education and Work Force Development Policy and Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division Governmental Operations, Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 84th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Environment and Natural Resources Committee Local Government Committee Rules and Legislative Administration Committee Tenure Poppe was sworn in on January 4, 2005. She served in the 84th, 85th, 86th, 87th, 88th, 89th, 90th, and 91st Minnesota Legislatures. Personal life Poppe resides in Austin, Minnesota, and was married to Bob Vilt who died July 13, 2017. They have three children, Lydia, Casey, Skyler. References External links Jeanne Poppe at Minnesota Legislators Past & Present Rep. Poppe Web Page Project Votesmart - Rep. Jeanne Poppe Profile Minnesota Public Radio Votetracker: Rep. Jeanne Poppe Jeanne Poppe Campaign Web Site
educated at
{ "answer_start": [ 738 ], "text": [ "Winona State University" ] }
Jeanne E. Poppe (born July 6, 1957) is a Minnesota politician and former member of the Minnesota House of Representatives. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), she represented District 27B, which includes all or portions of Dodge, Freeborn, and Mower counties in the southeastern part of the state. She is an educator and counselor at Riverland Community College, with campuses in Albert Lea, Austin and Owatonna. Early life, education, and career Poppe was born in Houston, Minnesota and attended Houston High School where she graduated in 1975. She graduated from the University of Wisconsin in River Falls, receiving her B.A. in Sociology and Criminal Justice in 1980. She earned her M.S. in Counseling from Winona State University in Winona in 1985.She has been a college counselor at Riverland Community College since 1999, also serving as president of the Minnesota State College Faculty Counselors Association from 2002-2004. Prior to her work as a counselor, she was the college's director of admissions from 1995–1999, and the women's center director from 1993-1995. She was a workforce career counselor for the Private Industry Council from 1989–1993, and a senior citizens' paralegal for Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services from 1984-1989.Active in her local community through the years, Poppe served on the Austin City Council (Ward 2) from 1994 to 2002, and was secretary of the Austin Human Rights Commission from 2002 to 2004. She has been a trustee of the Austin Area Foundation since 2003, and a member of the Austin Area League of Women Voters since 1987. Minnesota House of Representatives Elections Poppe ran unsuccessfully in 2002 against Rep. Jeff Anderson. She was first elected in 2004 defeating Anderson in a close race. She was re-elected in 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012, and 2014, 2016, and 2018 before being unseated in 2020. Committee assignments For the 89th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe is a part of: Agriculture Finance Committee (DFL Lead) Agriculture Policy Committee Capital Investment Committee Environment and Natural Resources Policy and Finance Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 88th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture Policy (Chair) Committee Environment, Natural Resources and Agriculture Finance Committee Higher Education Finance and Policy Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 87th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture and Rural Development Policy and Finance Committee Higher Education Policy and Finance Committee Redistricting CommitteeFor the 86th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Subcommittee: Higher Education and Workforce Development Finance and Policy Division Bioscience and Workforce Development Policy and Oversight Division Committee Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division State and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 85th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Committee Finance Subcommittee: Agriculture, Rural Economies and Veterans Affairs Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: Education Finance and Economic Competitiveness Finance Division: Higher Education and Work Force Development Policy and Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division Governmental Operations, Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 84th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Environment and Natural Resources Committee Local Government Committee Rules and Legislative Administration Committee Tenure Poppe was sworn in on January 4, 2005. She served in the 84th, 85th, 86th, 87th, 88th, 89th, 90th, and 91st Minnesota Legislatures. Personal life Poppe resides in Austin, Minnesota, and was married to Bob Vilt who died July 13, 2017. They have three children, Lydia, Casey, Skyler. References External links Jeanne Poppe at Minnesota Legislators Past & Present Rep. Poppe Web Page Project Votesmart - Rep. Jeanne Poppe Profile Minnesota Public Radio Votetracker: Rep. Jeanne Poppe Jeanne Poppe Campaign Web Site
member of political party
{ "answer_start": [ 139 ], "text": [ "Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party" ] }
Jeanne E. Poppe (born July 6, 1957) is a Minnesota politician and former member of the Minnesota House of Representatives. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), she represented District 27B, which includes all or portions of Dodge, Freeborn, and Mower counties in the southeastern part of the state. She is an educator and counselor at Riverland Community College, with campuses in Albert Lea, Austin and Owatonna. Early life, education, and career Poppe was born in Houston, Minnesota and attended Houston High School where she graduated in 1975. She graduated from the University of Wisconsin in River Falls, receiving her B.A. in Sociology and Criminal Justice in 1980. She earned her M.S. in Counseling from Winona State University in Winona in 1985.She has been a college counselor at Riverland Community College since 1999, also serving as president of the Minnesota State College Faculty Counselors Association from 2002-2004. Prior to her work as a counselor, she was the college's director of admissions from 1995–1999, and the women's center director from 1993-1995. She was a workforce career counselor for the Private Industry Council from 1989–1993, and a senior citizens' paralegal for Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services from 1984-1989.Active in her local community through the years, Poppe served on the Austin City Council (Ward 2) from 1994 to 2002, and was secretary of the Austin Human Rights Commission from 2002 to 2004. She has been a trustee of the Austin Area Foundation since 2003, and a member of the Austin Area League of Women Voters since 1987. Minnesota House of Representatives Elections Poppe ran unsuccessfully in 2002 against Rep. Jeff Anderson. She was first elected in 2004 defeating Anderson in a close race. She was re-elected in 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012, and 2014, 2016, and 2018 before being unseated in 2020. Committee assignments For the 89th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe is a part of: Agriculture Finance Committee (DFL Lead) Agriculture Policy Committee Capital Investment Committee Environment and Natural Resources Policy and Finance Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 88th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture Policy (Chair) Committee Environment, Natural Resources and Agriculture Finance Committee Higher Education Finance and Policy Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 87th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture and Rural Development Policy and Finance Committee Higher Education Policy and Finance Committee Redistricting CommitteeFor the 86th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Subcommittee: Higher Education and Workforce Development Finance and Policy Division Bioscience and Workforce Development Policy and Oversight Division Committee Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division State and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 85th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Committee Finance Subcommittee: Agriculture, Rural Economies and Veterans Affairs Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: Education Finance and Economic Competitiveness Finance Division: Higher Education and Work Force Development Policy and Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division Governmental Operations, Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 84th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Environment and Natural Resources Committee Local Government Committee Rules and Legislative Administration Committee Tenure Poppe was sworn in on January 4, 2005. She served in the 84th, 85th, 86th, 87th, 88th, 89th, 90th, and 91st Minnesota Legislatures. Personal life Poppe resides in Austin, Minnesota, and was married to Bob Vilt who died July 13, 2017. They have three children, Lydia, Casey, Skyler. References External links Jeanne Poppe at Minnesota Legislators Past & Present Rep. Poppe Web Page Project Votesmart - Rep. Jeanne Poppe Profile Minnesota Public Radio Votetracker: Rep. Jeanne Poppe Jeanne Poppe Campaign Web Site
occupation
{ "answer_start": [ 51 ], "text": [ "politician" ] }
Jeanne E. Poppe (born July 6, 1957) is a Minnesota politician and former member of the Minnesota House of Representatives. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), she represented District 27B, which includes all or portions of Dodge, Freeborn, and Mower counties in the southeastern part of the state. She is an educator and counselor at Riverland Community College, with campuses in Albert Lea, Austin and Owatonna. Early life, education, and career Poppe was born in Houston, Minnesota and attended Houston High School where she graduated in 1975. She graduated from the University of Wisconsin in River Falls, receiving her B.A. in Sociology and Criminal Justice in 1980. She earned her M.S. in Counseling from Winona State University in Winona in 1985.She has been a college counselor at Riverland Community College since 1999, also serving as president of the Minnesota State College Faculty Counselors Association from 2002-2004. Prior to her work as a counselor, she was the college's director of admissions from 1995–1999, and the women's center director from 1993-1995. She was a workforce career counselor for the Private Industry Council from 1989–1993, and a senior citizens' paralegal for Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services from 1984-1989.Active in her local community through the years, Poppe served on the Austin City Council (Ward 2) from 1994 to 2002, and was secretary of the Austin Human Rights Commission from 2002 to 2004. She has been a trustee of the Austin Area Foundation since 2003, and a member of the Austin Area League of Women Voters since 1987. Minnesota House of Representatives Elections Poppe ran unsuccessfully in 2002 against Rep. Jeff Anderson. She was first elected in 2004 defeating Anderson in a close race. She was re-elected in 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012, and 2014, 2016, and 2018 before being unseated in 2020. Committee assignments For the 89th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe is a part of: Agriculture Finance Committee (DFL Lead) Agriculture Policy Committee Capital Investment Committee Environment and Natural Resources Policy and Finance Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 88th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture Policy (Chair) Committee Environment, Natural Resources and Agriculture Finance Committee Higher Education Finance and Policy Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 87th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture and Rural Development Policy and Finance Committee Higher Education Policy and Finance Committee Redistricting CommitteeFor the 86th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Subcommittee: Higher Education and Workforce Development Finance and Policy Division Bioscience and Workforce Development Policy and Oversight Division Committee Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division State and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 85th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Committee Finance Subcommittee: Agriculture, Rural Economies and Veterans Affairs Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: Education Finance and Economic Competitiveness Finance Division: Higher Education and Work Force Development Policy and Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division Governmental Operations, Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 84th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Environment and Natural Resources Committee Local Government Committee Rules and Legislative Administration Committee Tenure Poppe was sworn in on January 4, 2005. She served in the 84th, 85th, 86th, 87th, 88th, 89th, 90th, and 91st Minnesota Legislatures. Personal life Poppe resides in Austin, Minnesota, and was married to Bob Vilt who died July 13, 2017. They have three children, Lydia, Casey, Skyler. References External links Jeanne Poppe at Minnesota Legislators Past & Present Rep. Poppe Web Page Project Votesmart - Rep. Jeanne Poppe Profile Minnesota Public Radio Votetracker: Rep. Jeanne Poppe Jeanne Poppe Campaign Web Site
family name
{ "answer_start": [ 10 ], "text": [ "Poppe" ] }
Jeanne E. Poppe (born July 6, 1957) is a Minnesota politician and former member of the Minnesota House of Representatives. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), she represented District 27B, which includes all or portions of Dodge, Freeborn, and Mower counties in the southeastern part of the state. She is an educator and counselor at Riverland Community College, with campuses in Albert Lea, Austin and Owatonna. Early life, education, and career Poppe was born in Houston, Minnesota and attended Houston High School where she graduated in 1975. She graduated from the University of Wisconsin in River Falls, receiving her B.A. in Sociology and Criminal Justice in 1980. She earned her M.S. in Counseling from Winona State University in Winona in 1985.She has been a college counselor at Riverland Community College since 1999, also serving as president of the Minnesota State College Faculty Counselors Association from 2002-2004. Prior to her work as a counselor, she was the college's director of admissions from 1995–1999, and the women's center director from 1993-1995. She was a workforce career counselor for the Private Industry Council from 1989–1993, and a senior citizens' paralegal for Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services from 1984-1989.Active in her local community through the years, Poppe served on the Austin City Council (Ward 2) from 1994 to 2002, and was secretary of the Austin Human Rights Commission from 2002 to 2004. She has been a trustee of the Austin Area Foundation since 2003, and a member of the Austin Area League of Women Voters since 1987. Minnesota House of Representatives Elections Poppe ran unsuccessfully in 2002 against Rep. Jeff Anderson. She was first elected in 2004 defeating Anderson in a close race. She was re-elected in 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012, and 2014, 2016, and 2018 before being unseated in 2020. Committee assignments For the 89th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe is a part of: Agriculture Finance Committee (DFL Lead) Agriculture Policy Committee Capital Investment Committee Environment and Natural Resources Policy and Finance Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 88th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture Policy (Chair) Committee Environment, Natural Resources and Agriculture Finance Committee Higher Education Finance and Policy Committee Ways and Means CommitteeFor the 87th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Agriculture and Rural Development Policy and Finance Committee Higher Education Policy and Finance Committee Redistricting CommitteeFor the 86th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Subcommittee: Higher Education and Workforce Development Finance and Policy Division Bioscience and Workforce Development Policy and Oversight Division Committee Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division State and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 85th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Finance Committee Finance Subcommittee: Agriculture, Rural Economies and Veterans Affairs Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: Education Finance and Economic Competitiveness Finance Division: Higher Education and Work Force Development Policy and Finance Division Finance Subcommittee: State Government Finance Division Governmental Operations, Reform, Technology and Elections CommitteeFor the 84th Minnesota Legislature, Poppe was part of: Environment and Natural Resources Committee Local Government Committee Rules and Legislative Administration Committee Tenure Poppe was sworn in on January 4, 2005. She served in the 84th, 85th, 86th, 87th, 88th, 89th, 90th, and 91st Minnesota Legislatures. Personal life Poppe resides in Austin, Minnesota, and was married to Bob Vilt who died July 13, 2017. They have three children, Lydia, Casey, Skyler. References External links Jeanne Poppe at Minnesota Legislators Past & Present Rep. Poppe Web Page Project Votesmart - Rep. Jeanne Poppe Profile Minnesota Public Radio Votetracker: Rep. Jeanne Poppe Jeanne Poppe Campaign Web Site
given name
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Jeanne" ] }
Dargo may refer to: Dargo Department, a department and rural commune of Namentenga Province in Centre-Nord Region, Burkina Faso Dargo, Burkina Faso, the capital of the Dargo Department in Burkina Faso Dargo, Vedensky District, a village in Chechnya Dargo, Victoria, a small town in the state of Victoria, Australia Dargo River, a river in the Alpine and East Gippsland regions of Victoria, Australia Craig Dargo (born 1978), a Scottish professional football player and coach Haval Dargo, a sport utility vehicle also known as the Haval Big Dog
country
{ "answer_start": [ 306 ], "text": [ "Australia" ] }
Dargo may refer to: Dargo Department, a department and rural commune of Namentenga Province in Centre-Nord Region, Burkina Faso Dargo, Burkina Faso, the capital of the Dargo Department in Burkina Faso Dargo, Vedensky District, a village in Chechnya Dargo, Victoria, a small town in the state of Victoria, Australia Dargo River, a river in the Alpine and East Gippsland regions of Victoria, Australia Craig Dargo (born 1978), a Scottish professional football player and coach Haval Dargo, a sport utility vehicle also known as the Haval Big Dog
instance of
{ "answer_start": [ 275 ], "text": [ "town" ] }
Dargo may refer to: Dargo Department, a department and rural commune of Namentenga Province in Centre-Nord Region, Burkina Faso Dargo, Burkina Faso, the capital of the Dargo Department in Burkina Faso Dargo, Vedensky District, a village in Chechnya Dargo, Victoria, a small town in the state of Victoria, Australia Dargo River, a river in the Alpine and East Gippsland regions of Victoria, Australia Craig Dargo (born 1978), a Scottish professional football player and coach Haval Dargo, a sport utility vehicle also known as the Haval Big Dog
located in the administrative territorial entity
{ "answer_start": [ 257 ], "text": [ "Victoria" ] }
Dargo may refer to: Dargo Department, a department and rural commune of Namentenga Province in Centre-Nord Region, Burkina Faso Dargo, Burkina Faso, the capital of the Dargo Department in Burkina Faso Dargo, Vedensky District, a village in Chechnya Dargo, Victoria, a small town in the state of Victoria, Australia Dargo River, a river in the Alpine and East Gippsland regions of Victoria, Australia Craig Dargo (born 1978), a Scottish professional football player and coach Haval Dargo, a sport utility vehicle also known as the Haval Big Dog
contains the administrative territorial entity
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Dargo" ] }
Dargo may refer to: Dargo Department, a department and rural commune of Namentenga Province in Centre-Nord Region, Burkina Faso Dargo, Burkina Faso, the capital of the Dargo Department in Burkina Faso Dargo, Vedensky District, a village in Chechnya Dargo, Victoria, a small town in the state of Victoria, Australia Dargo River, a river in the Alpine and East Gippsland regions of Victoria, Australia Craig Dargo (born 1978), a Scottish professional football player and coach Haval Dargo, a sport utility vehicle also known as the Haval Big Dog
Commons category
{ "answer_start": [ 250 ], "text": [ "Dargo, Victoria" ] }
Dargo may refer to: Dargo Department, a department and rural commune of Namentenga Province in Centre-Nord Region, Burkina Faso Dargo, Burkina Faso, the capital of the Dargo Department in Burkina Faso Dargo, Vedensky District, a village in Chechnya Dargo, Victoria, a small town in the state of Victoria, Australia Dargo River, a river in the Alpine and East Gippsland regions of Victoria, Australia Craig Dargo (born 1978), a Scottish professional football player and coach Haval Dargo, a sport utility vehicle also known as the Haval Big Dog
associated electoral district
{ "answer_start": [ 360 ], "text": [ "Gippsland" ] }
Dargo may refer to: Dargo Department, a department and rural commune of Namentenga Province in Centre-Nord Region, Burkina Faso Dargo, Burkina Faso, the capital of the Dargo Department in Burkina Faso Dargo, Vedensky District, a village in Chechnya Dargo, Victoria, a small town in the state of Victoria, Australia Dargo River, a river in the Alpine and East Gippsland regions of Victoria, Australia Craig Dargo (born 1978), a Scottish professional football player and coach Haval Dargo, a sport utility vehicle also known as the Haval Big Dog
different from
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Dargo" ] }
Dargo may refer to: Dargo Department, a department and rural commune of Namentenga Province in Centre-Nord Region, Burkina Faso Dargo, Burkina Faso, the capital of the Dargo Department in Burkina Faso Dargo, Vedensky District, a village in Chechnya Dargo, Victoria, a small town in the state of Victoria, Australia Dargo River, a river in the Alpine and East Gippsland regions of Victoria, Australia Craig Dargo (born 1978), a Scottish professional football player and coach Haval Dargo, a sport utility vehicle also known as the Haval Big Dog
native label
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Dargo" ] }
Terry-Jo Myers (born July 23, 1962) is an American professional golfer who played on the LPGA Tour. Myers won three times on the LPGA Tour between 1988 and 1997.Myers suffered from interstitial cystitis throughout her career. She was awarded the 1997 Heather Farr Player Award by the LPGA Tour and the 1998 Ben Hogan Award from the Golf Writers Association of America. Professional wins LPGA Tour wins (3) LPGA Tour playoff record (1–0) References External links Terry-Jo Myers at the LPGA Tour official site Terry-Jo Myers at the Legends Tour former site
occupation
{ "answer_start": [ 64 ], "text": [ "golfer" ] }
Terry-Jo Myers (born July 23, 1962) is an American professional golfer who played on the LPGA Tour. Myers won three times on the LPGA Tour between 1988 and 1997.Myers suffered from interstitial cystitis throughout her career. She was awarded the 1997 Heather Farr Player Award by the LPGA Tour and the 1998 Ben Hogan Award from the Golf Writers Association of America. Professional wins LPGA Tour wins (3) LPGA Tour playoff record (1–0) References External links Terry-Jo Myers at the LPGA Tour official site Terry-Jo Myers at the Legends Tour former site
sport
{ "answer_start": [ 64 ], "text": [ "golf" ] }
Terry-Jo Myers (born July 23, 1962) is an American professional golfer who played on the LPGA Tour. Myers won three times on the LPGA Tour between 1988 and 1997.Myers suffered from interstitial cystitis throughout her career. She was awarded the 1997 Heather Farr Player Award by the LPGA Tour and the 1998 Ben Hogan Award from the Golf Writers Association of America. Professional wins LPGA Tour wins (3) LPGA Tour playoff record (1–0) References External links Terry-Jo Myers at the LPGA Tour official site Terry-Jo Myers at the Legends Tour former site
family name
{ "answer_start": [ 9 ], "text": [ "Myers" ] }
Terry-Jo Myers (born July 23, 1962) is an American professional golfer who played on the LPGA Tour. Myers won three times on the LPGA Tour between 1988 and 1997.Myers suffered from interstitial cystitis throughout her career. She was awarded the 1997 Heather Farr Player Award by the LPGA Tour and the 1998 Ben Hogan Award from the Golf Writers Association of America. Professional wins LPGA Tour wins (3) LPGA Tour playoff record (1–0) References External links Terry-Jo Myers at the LPGA Tour official site Terry-Jo Myers at the Legends Tour former site
given name
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Terry" ] }
Dargah Bela is a small village in Vaishali district of Bihar, India.
country
{ "answer_start": [ 62 ], "text": [ "India" ] }
Dargah Bela is a small village in Vaishali district of Bihar, India.
located in the administrative territorial entity
{ "answer_start": [ 55 ], "text": [ "Bihar" ] }
Dorcas Wright "Dede" Gardner is an American film producer. She was president since the founding, and then co-president since 2013 of Plan B Entertainment. She is a two-time Oscar winner for 12 Years a Slave and Moonlight, the first woman to win two Oscars for Best Picture. Her films Selma, The Tree of Life, The Big Short, Vice, Minari and Women Talking were additionally nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Biography Gardner received her BA in English from Columbia University and MFA from California Institute of the Arts. Filmography She was a producer in all films unless otherwise noted. Film Location ManagerThanks Television Awards and nominations In 2012, Gardner and her fellow producers were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture for The Tree of Life. In 2014, she won the Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie 12 Years a Slave alongside co-producers Brad Pitt, Steve McQueen, Jeremy Kleiner and Anthony Katagas. In 2015, she was nominated once again for the Academy Award for Best Picture for producing Selma alongside fellow producers Oprah Winfrey, Jeremy Kleiner, and Christian Colson. In 2017, she won her second Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie, Moonlight. She becomes the first female producer to win two Academy Awards for Best Picture. Academy Awards AACTA International Awards AFI Awards Alliance of Women Film Journalists American Black Film Festival Awards Circuit Community Awards Black Reel Awards British Academy Film Awards CinEuphoria Awards Golden Raspberry Awards Gotham Awards Independent Spirit Awards Italian Online Movie Awards Online Film & Television Association Awards Primetime Emmy Awards Producers Guild of America Awards References External links Dede Gardner at IMDb
sex or gender
{ "answer_start": [ 1245 ], "text": [ "female" ] }
Dorcas Wright "Dede" Gardner is an American film producer. She was president since the founding, and then co-president since 2013 of Plan B Entertainment. She is a two-time Oscar winner for 12 Years a Slave and Moonlight, the first woman to win two Oscars for Best Picture. Her films Selma, The Tree of Life, The Big Short, Vice, Minari and Women Talking were additionally nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Biography Gardner received her BA in English from Columbia University and MFA from California Institute of the Arts. Filmography She was a producer in all films unless otherwise noted. Film Location ManagerThanks Television Awards and nominations In 2012, Gardner and her fellow producers were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture for The Tree of Life. In 2014, she won the Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie 12 Years a Slave alongside co-producers Brad Pitt, Steve McQueen, Jeremy Kleiner and Anthony Katagas. In 2015, she was nominated once again for the Academy Award for Best Picture for producing Selma alongside fellow producers Oprah Winfrey, Jeremy Kleiner, and Christian Colson. In 2017, she won her second Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie, Moonlight. She becomes the first female producer to win two Academy Awards for Best Picture. Academy Awards AACTA International Awards AFI Awards Alliance of Women Film Journalists American Black Film Festival Awards Circuit Community Awards Black Reel Awards British Academy Film Awards CinEuphoria Awards Golden Raspberry Awards Gotham Awards Independent Spirit Awards Italian Online Movie Awards Online Film & Television Association Awards Primetime Emmy Awards Producers Guild of America Awards References External links Dede Gardner at IMDb
occupation
{ "answer_start": [ 44 ], "text": [ "film producer" ] }
Dorcas Wright "Dede" Gardner is an American film producer. She was president since the founding, and then co-president since 2013 of Plan B Entertainment. She is a two-time Oscar winner for 12 Years a Slave and Moonlight, the first woman to win two Oscars for Best Picture. Her films Selma, The Tree of Life, The Big Short, Vice, Minari and Women Talking were additionally nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Biography Gardner received her BA in English from Columbia University and MFA from California Institute of the Arts. Filmography She was a producer in all films unless otherwise noted. Film Location ManagerThanks Television Awards and nominations In 2012, Gardner and her fellow producers were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture for The Tree of Life. In 2014, she won the Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie 12 Years a Slave alongside co-producers Brad Pitt, Steve McQueen, Jeremy Kleiner and Anthony Katagas. In 2015, she was nominated once again for the Academy Award for Best Picture for producing Selma alongside fellow producers Oprah Winfrey, Jeremy Kleiner, and Christian Colson. In 2017, she won her second Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie, Moonlight. She becomes the first female producer to win two Academy Awards for Best Picture. Academy Awards AACTA International Awards AFI Awards Alliance of Women Film Journalists American Black Film Festival Awards Circuit Community Awards Black Reel Awards British Academy Film Awards CinEuphoria Awards Golden Raspberry Awards Gotham Awards Independent Spirit Awards Italian Online Movie Awards Online Film & Television Association Awards Primetime Emmy Awards Producers Guild of America Awards References External links Dede Gardner at IMDb
award received
{ "answer_start": [ 391 ], "text": [ "Academy Award for Best Picture" ] }
Dorcas Wright "Dede" Gardner is an American film producer. She was president since the founding, and then co-president since 2013 of Plan B Entertainment. She is a two-time Oscar winner for 12 Years a Slave and Moonlight, the first woman to win two Oscars for Best Picture. Her films Selma, The Tree of Life, The Big Short, Vice, Minari and Women Talking were additionally nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Biography Gardner received her BA in English from Columbia University and MFA from California Institute of the Arts. Filmography She was a producer in all films unless otherwise noted. Film Location ManagerThanks Television Awards and nominations In 2012, Gardner and her fellow producers were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture for The Tree of Life. In 2014, she won the Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie 12 Years a Slave alongside co-producers Brad Pitt, Steve McQueen, Jeremy Kleiner and Anthony Katagas. In 2015, she was nominated once again for the Academy Award for Best Picture for producing Selma alongside fellow producers Oprah Winfrey, Jeremy Kleiner, and Christian Colson. In 2017, she won her second Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie, Moonlight. She becomes the first female producer to win two Academy Awards for Best Picture. Academy Awards AACTA International Awards AFI Awards Alliance of Women Film Journalists American Black Film Festival Awards Circuit Community Awards Black Reel Awards British Academy Film Awards CinEuphoria Awards Golden Raspberry Awards Gotham Awards Independent Spirit Awards Italian Online Movie Awards Online Film & Television Association Awards Primetime Emmy Awards Producers Guild of America Awards References External links Dede Gardner at IMDb
Commons category
{ "answer_start": [ 1738 ], "text": [ "Dede Gardner" ] }
Dorcas Wright "Dede" Gardner is an American film producer. She was president since the founding, and then co-president since 2013 of Plan B Entertainment. She is a two-time Oscar winner for 12 Years a Slave and Moonlight, the first woman to win two Oscars for Best Picture. Her films Selma, The Tree of Life, The Big Short, Vice, Minari and Women Talking were additionally nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Biography Gardner received her BA in English from Columbia University and MFA from California Institute of the Arts. Filmography She was a producer in all films unless otherwise noted. Film Location ManagerThanks Television Awards and nominations In 2012, Gardner and her fellow producers were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture for The Tree of Life. In 2014, she won the Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie 12 Years a Slave alongside co-producers Brad Pitt, Steve McQueen, Jeremy Kleiner and Anthony Katagas. In 2015, she was nominated once again for the Academy Award for Best Picture for producing Selma alongside fellow producers Oprah Winfrey, Jeremy Kleiner, and Christian Colson. In 2017, she won her second Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie, Moonlight. She becomes the first female producer to win two Academy Awards for Best Picture. Academy Awards AACTA International Awards AFI Awards Alliance of Women Film Journalists American Black Film Festival Awards Circuit Community Awards Black Reel Awards British Academy Film Awards CinEuphoria Awards Golden Raspberry Awards Gotham Awards Independent Spirit Awards Italian Online Movie Awards Online Film & Television Association Awards Primetime Emmy Awards Producers Guild of America Awards References External links Dede Gardner at IMDb
family name
{ "answer_start": [ 21 ], "text": [ "Gardner" ] }
Dorcas Wright "Dede" Gardner is an American film producer. She was president since the founding, and then co-president since 2013 of Plan B Entertainment. She is a two-time Oscar winner for 12 Years a Slave and Moonlight, the first woman to win two Oscars for Best Picture. Her films Selma, The Tree of Life, The Big Short, Vice, Minari and Women Talking were additionally nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Biography Gardner received her BA in English from Columbia University and MFA from California Institute of the Arts. Filmography She was a producer in all films unless otherwise noted. Film Location ManagerThanks Television Awards and nominations In 2012, Gardner and her fellow producers were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture for The Tree of Life. In 2014, she won the Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie 12 Years a Slave alongside co-producers Brad Pitt, Steve McQueen, Jeremy Kleiner and Anthony Katagas. In 2015, she was nominated once again for the Academy Award for Best Picture for producing Selma alongside fellow producers Oprah Winfrey, Jeremy Kleiner, and Christian Colson. In 2017, she won her second Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie, Moonlight. She becomes the first female producer to win two Academy Awards for Best Picture. Academy Awards AACTA International Awards AFI Awards Alliance of Women Film Journalists American Black Film Festival Awards Circuit Community Awards Black Reel Awards British Academy Film Awards CinEuphoria Awards Golden Raspberry Awards Gotham Awards Independent Spirit Awards Italian Online Movie Awards Online Film & Television Association Awards Primetime Emmy Awards Producers Guild of America Awards References External links Dede Gardner at IMDb
given name
{ "answer_start": [ 15 ], "text": [ "Dede" ] }
Dorcas Wright "Dede" Gardner is an American film producer. She was president since the founding, and then co-president since 2013 of Plan B Entertainment. She is a two-time Oscar winner for 12 Years a Slave and Moonlight, the first woman to win two Oscars for Best Picture. Her films Selma, The Tree of Life, The Big Short, Vice, Minari and Women Talking were additionally nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Biography Gardner received her BA in English from Columbia University and MFA from California Institute of the Arts. Filmography She was a producer in all films unless otherwise noted. Film Location ManagerThanks Television Awards and nominations In 2012, Gardner and her fellow producers were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture for The Tree of Life. In 2014, she won the Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie 12 Years a Slave alongside co-producers Brad Pitt, Steve McQueen, Jeremy Kleiner and Anthony Katagas. In 2015, she was nominated once again for the Academy Award for Best Picture for producing Selma alongside fellow producers Oprah Winfrey, Jeremy Kleiner, and Christian Colson. In 2017, she won her second Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie, Moonlight. She becomes the first female producer to win two Academy Awards for Best Picture. Academy Awards AACTA International Awards AFI Awards Alliance of Women Film Journalists American Black Film Festival Awards Circuit Community Awards Black Reel Awards British Academy Film Awards CinEuphoria Awards Golden Raspberry Awards Gotham Awards Independent Spirit Awards Italian Online Movie Awards Online Film & Television Association Awards Primetime Emmy Awards Producers Guild of America Awards References External links Dede Gardner at IMDb
nominated for
{ "answer_start": [ 391 ], "text": [ "Academy Award for Best Picture" ] }
Dorcas Wright "Dede" Gardner is an American film producer. She was president since the founding, and then co-president since 2013 of Plan B Entertainment. She is a two-time Oscar winner for 12 Years a Slave and Moonlight, the first woman to win two Oscars for Best Picture. Her films Selma, The Tree of Life, The Big Short, Vice, Minari and Women Talking were additionally nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Biography Gardner received her BA in English from Columbia University and MFA from California Institute of the Arts. Filmography She was a producer in all films unless otherwise noted. Film Location ManagerThanks Television Awards and nominations In 2012, Gardner and her fellow producers were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture for The Tree of Life. In 2014, she won the Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie 12 Years a Slave alongside co-producers Brad Pitt, Steve McQueen, Jeremy Kleiner and Anthony Katagas. In 2015, she was nominated once again for the Academy Award for Best Picture for producing Selma alongside fellow producers Oprah Winfrey, Jeremy Kleiner, and Christian Colson. In 2017, she won her second Academy Award for Best Picture for the movie, Moonlight. She becomes the first female producer to win two Academy Awards for Best Picture. Academy Awards AACTA International Awards AFI Awards Alliance of Women Film Journalists American Black Film Festival Awards Circuit Community Awards Black Reel Awards British Academy Film Awards CinEuphoria Awards Golden Raspberry Awards Gotham Awards Independent Spirit Awards Italian Online Movie Awards Online Film & Television Association Awards Primetime Emmy Awards Producers Guild of America Awards References External links Dede Gardner at IMDb
name in native language
{ "answer_start": [ 1738 ], "text": [ "Dede Gardner" ] }
Alexarchus or Alexarch (Greek: Ἀλέξαρχος) was an Ancient Macedonian scholar and officer, son of Antipater and brother of Cassander. He lived around 350 to 290 BC. He is mentioned as the founder of a utopian town called Ouranopolis, in Chalcidice. Here he is said to have introduced a number of neologisms, which, though very expressive, appear to have been regarded as slang or pedantic. Glossary ἀπύτης aputes <caller> for keryx herald (Attic ἠπύω êpuô, Doric and Arcadian apuô, call to) ἀργυρὶς argyris <silver cup> for drachma βροτοκέρτης brotokertes <mortal-shaver> for koureus barber ἡμεροτροφὶς hemerotrophis <daily-food> for choinix dry measure ὀρθροβόας orthroboas <morning-shouter> for alektor, alektryon rooster References Sources This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William, ed. (1870). "Alexarchus (1)". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. p. 128.
father
{ "answer_start": [ 96 ], "text": [ "Antipater" ] }
Alexarchus or Alexarch (Greek: Ἀλέξαρχος) was an Ancient Macedonian scholar and officer, son of Antipater and brother of Cassander. He lived around 350 to 290 BC. He is mentioned as the founder of a utopian town called Ouranopolis, in Chalcidice. Here he is said to have introduced a number of neologisms, which, though very expressive, appear to have been regarded as slang or pedantic. Glossary ἀπύτης aputes <caller> for keryx herald (Attic ἠπύω êpuô, Doric and Arcadian apuô, call to) ἀργυρὶς argyris <silver cup> for drachma βροτοκέρτης brotokertes <mortal-shaver> for koureus barber ἡμεροτροφὶς hemerotrophis <daily-food> for choinix dry measure ὀρθροβόας orthroboas <morning-shouter> for alektor, alektryon rooster References Sources This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William, ed. (1870). "Alexarchus (1)". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. p. 128.
occupation
{ "answer_start": [ 68 ], "text": [ "scholar" ] }
Alexarchus or Alexarch (Greek: Ἀλέξαρχος) was an Ancient Macedonian scholar and officer, son of Antipater and brother of Cassander. He lived around 350 to 290 BC. He is mentioned as the founder of a utopian town called Ouranopolis, in Chalcidice. Here he is said to have introduced a number of neologisms, which, though very expressive, appear to have been regarded as slang or pedantic. Glossary ἀπύτης aputes <caller> for keryx herald (Attic ἠπύω êpuô, Doric and Arcadian apuô, call to) ἀργυρὶς argyris <silver cup> for drachma βροτοκέρτης brotokertes <mortal-shaver> for koureus barber ἡμεροτροφὶς hemerotrophis <daily-food> for choinix dry measure ὀρθροβόας orthroboas <morning-shouter> for alektor, alektryon rooster References Sources This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William, ed. (1870). "Alexarchus (1)". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. p. 128.
name in native language
{ "answer_start": [ 31 ], "text": [ "Ἀλέξαρχος" ] }
Monte Freidour is a mountain in the Cottian Alps, Metropolitan City of Turin in Piedmont, north-western Italy. It has an elevation of 1.451 m, with a secondary summit at 1,445 metres (4,741 ft), and is composed of gneiss cliffs overlooking the town of Cumiana. History At the top of the mountain is a monument celebrating the 8 members of the crew (F/Sgt. C.W. Lawton (Australian), Sgt.s T.D. Fotheringham, E.H.A. Clift, G. Tennison, D.W. Bishop, D.R. Wellon, S.E. Lockton and J. Bucks) of a British Liberator bomber that crashed there on 14 October 1944, during a mission in support of Italian partisans. Access to the summit The peak can also be reached from Talucco, a frazione of Pinerolo, and from Cantalupa or Giaveno. The Monte Tre Denti is located nearby. The summit can also be reache bu mountain bike. References Media related to Monte Freidour at Wikimedia Commons
country
{ "answer_start": [ 104 ], "text": [ "Italy" ] }
Monte Freidour is a mountain in the Cottian Alps, Metropolitan City of Turin in Piedmont, north-western Italy. It has an elevation of 1.451 m, with a secondary summit at 1,445 metres (4,741 ft), and is composed of gneiss cliffs overlooking the town of Cumiana. History At the top of the mountain is a monument celebrating the 8 members of the crew (F/Sgt. C.W. Lawton (Australian), Sgt.s T.D. Fotheringham, E.H.A. Clift, G. Tennison, D.W. Bishop, D.R. Wellon, S.E. Lockton and J. Bucks) of a British Liberator bomber that crashed there on 14 October 1944, during a mission in support of Italian partisans. Access to the summit The peak can also be reached from Talucco, a frazione of Pinerolo, and from Cantalupa or Giaveno. The Monte Tre Denti is located nearby. The summit can also be reache bu mountain bike. References Media related to Monte Freidour at Wikimedia Commons
instance of
{ "answer_start": [ 20 ], "text": [ "mountain" ] }
Monte Freidour is a mountain in the Cottian Alps, Metropolitan City of Turin in Piedmont, north-western Italy. It has an elevation of 1.451 m, with a secondary summit at 1,445 metres (4,741 ft), and is composed of gneiss cliffs overlooking the town of Cumiana. History At the top of the mountain is a monument celebrating the 8 members of the crew (F/Sgt. C.W. Lawton (Australian), Sgt.s T.D. Fotheringham, E.H.A. Clift, G. Tennison, D.W. Bishop, D.R. Wellon, S.E. Lockton and J. Bucks) of a British Liberator bomber that crashed there on 14 October 1944, during a mission in support of Italian partisans. Access to the summit The peak can also be reached from Talucco, a frazione of Pinerolo, and from Cantalupa or Giaveno. The Monte Tre Denti is located nearby. The summit can also be reache bu mountain bike. References Media related to Monte Freidour at Wikimedia Commons
located in the administrative territorial entity
{ "answer_start": [ 50 ], "text": [ "Metropolitan City of Turin" ] }
Monte Freidour is a mountain in the Cottian Alps, Metropolitan City of Turin in Piedmont, north-western Italy. It has an elevation of 1.451 m, with a secondary summit at 1,445 metres (4,741 ft), and is composed of gneiss cliffs overlooking the town of Cumiana. History At the top of the mountain is a monument celebrating the 8 members of the crew (F/Sgt. C.W. Lawton (Australian), Sgt.s T.D. Fotheringham, E.H.A. Clift, G. Tennison, D.W. Bishop, D.R. Wellon, S.E. Lockton and J. Bucks) of a British Liberator bomber that crashed there on 14 October 1944, during a mission in support of Italian partisans. Access to the summit The peak can also be reached from Talucco, a frazione of Pinerolo, and from Cantalupa or Giaveno. The Monte Tre Denti is located nearby. The summit can also be reache bu mountain bike. References Media related to Monte Freidour at Wikimedia Commons
Commons category
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "Monte Freidour" ] }
Lanyon is an historic homestead and grazing property located on the southern outskirts of Canberra in the Australian Capital Territory. History The site was first occupied following white settlement by Timothy Beard, who depastured cattle on the Limestone Plains as early as 1829. Beard had been transported to Australia for life and arrived in the colony in 1806. After receiving his pardon he entered the pastoral industry as a squatter. Beard's huts were located on the Molonglo River near Queanbeyan and on the site of Lanyon homestead. Beard was forced out of the area by land grants and later became an innkeeper at Bringelly (Moore, 1982). The Wright family James Wright and his friend John Hamilton Mortimer Lanyon settled at Lanyon in 1833 as squatters after arriving from London earlier that year. (James also took his wife and his 5 children with him.) In 1835 they purchased several adjoining blocks on the Murrumbidgee River, then the edge of legal occupation within the nineteen counties. Wright and Lanyon established an orchard, vegetable gardens, planted wheat and purchased cattle and sheep and set up a dairy herd. Fifteen convicts were assigned to Wright and Lanyon by 1835, increasing to thirty by 1837. Wright's elder brother William arrived in 1836 and purchased adjoining land. William died in 1837 following a shooting accident. Lanyon returned to England and died in 1841. Wright married Mary Davis in 1838 and the first three of their eight children were born at Lanyon. Wright encountered financial difficulties and was forced to sell Lanyon in 1841 and move to nearby Cuppacumbalong station. The Wrights had established a self-supporting community at Lanyon of up to 60 people. The design of Wright's courtyard buildings is said to be reminiscent of his native Derbyshire (ACT Government, 1994). The Cunningham family Lanyon was next purchased by Andrew Cunningham, a banker from Fyfeshire in Scotland. Cunningham arrived in Sydney with his family in 1845 and settled at Congwarra, north west of Lanyon. The Cunninghams built the present Lanyon homestead from local fieldstone in 1859. Lanyon was carrying 25,000 sheep by the time of Andrew Cunningham's death in 1887 and the Cunninghams had acquired five properties. Cunningham's sons James and Andrew Jackson Cunningham operated the properties in partnership, with James at Tuggeranong and Andrew at Lanyon. In 1905 Andrew Jackson married Louisa Leman and extended and redecorated the homestead. Andrew died in 1913 and Louisa sold the contents of the homestead and returned to Sydney. James Cunningham moved his family from Tuggeranong to Lanyon in 1915. The Field family After James' death in 1921 his son Andy oversaw Lanyon until 1926 when the property was sold to Harry Osborne of Currandooley, near Bungendore. The Osbornes sold the property in 1930 to Thomas Field who had large landholdings in New South Wales and Queensland. The Field family lived in Sydney but visited Lanyon often. They implemented major changes, including modern farming methods, large scale pasture improvement and irrigation of lucerne. By the late 1960s, the growth of the National Capital had necessitated the resumption of large tracts of farmland south of Canberra. Up to a dozen rural leases, in parts of South Woden and Weston Creek, were resumed to make way for development of Tuggeranong, the second of Canberra's urban satellites Lanyon, was the largest single parcel of freehold land in the ACT. Tom Field lodged plans to sub-divide some of his 9,000 acres (36 km2). When the Federal Government proceeded to acquire Lanyon, Field refused an offer of $1.875m and sought compensation of $33m, the amount a private valuer had placed on the land when assessed at urban values.The matter of Field versus the Commonwealth of Australia eventually proceeded to Australia’s High Court. The government defended the level of compensation it had offered Mr Field, concerned too that if successful, the ‘Field Case’ would set a dangerous precedent for compensation on freehold land throughout Australia. The Federal Government acquired Lanyon for $3.7m in 1974. In the early to mid-1970s the McMahon and Whitlam Governments withdrew the rural leases for Lanyon, Cuppacumbalong Homestead and Gold Creek Homestead. Lanyon today The government converted the homestead into the Sidney Nolan Gallery which opened to the public in 1975. It housed a collection of the paintings of Sir Sidney Nolan. A purpose-built gallery for the Nolan collection was built in the grounds in 1980. An extensive conservation and restoration program was undertaken and the homestead is now managed as a house museum, within a working property, by the ACT Government and the National Trust of Australia (ACT). Lanyon Homestead was threatened by the 2003 Canberra bushfires, which also threatened the nearby township of Tharwa. On 18 January 2003, as fires were approaching Canberra, the homestead was hosting a wedding. The fire situation deteriorated, prompting the evacuation of Tharwa, which was defended and saved by Southern Rural Fire Brigades. The Lanyon Homestead was not impacted by fire, though it did come under ember attack. A single fire truck was on hand to hose down and protect the historic homestead. Given the age of Lanyon, this was certainly not the first time the property had faced bushfires. == References ==
country
{ "answer_start": [ 106 ], "text": [ "Australia" ] }