Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Miss Ironside's School (also called Miss Ironside's Day School and Miss Ironside's School For Girls) was a school at 2 Elvaston Place, in Kensington. The journalist John Walsh, writing in The Daily Telegraph, called it "legendary". It was founded in 1920 by Miss Irene Ironside, the aunt of artists Robin and Christopher Ironside.

  2. Miss Ironside's School (also called Miss Ironside's Day School and Miss Ironside's School For Girls) was a school at 2 Elvaston Place, in Kensington. The journalist John Walsh, writing in The Daily Telegraph, called it legendary.

  3. She attended Miss Ironside's School in Kensington. Career. During a film-acting career that lasted from the early 1960s until 1975, she appeared in about 30 films, the TV series Man of the World (1962), and was at one point under consideration as a replacement for Diana Rigg in The Avengers.

  4. Ironside attended Miss Ironside's School in Kensington, where her great-aunt was headmistress. Career. Ironside writes a column, "Dilemmas", for The Independent, an agony column for the Idler, and a monthly column for The Oldie. Her first book, Chelsea Bird, was published when she was 19.

  5. 7 de sept. de 2020 · The Oxford-educated, upper-class rebel: Bridget Rose Dugdale was a debutante turned IRA bomber… and now she’s in the frame for an infamous 1970s art heist. by RuthDE | Sep 7, 2020 | 2020, Daily Mail, Journalism, September. Anthony Amore alleges IRA bomber Rose Dugdale stole The Guitar Player in 1974. The American museum security ...

  6. 18 de mar. de 2024 · My school days with the IRA terrorist, Rose Dugdale, who has died at 82. By Virginia Ironside. Virginia Ironside recalls Rose Dugdale – the deb who beat up her parents’ friends, stole Old Masters and built missile-launchers. Her life has just been made into a new film, Baltimore, released on March 22.

  7. Miss Ironside's School (also called Miss Ironside's Day School and Miss Ironside's School For Girls) was a school at 2 Elvaston Place, in Kensington. The journalist John Walsh, writing in The Daily Telegraph , called it "legendary".