Evolution of Boyd's bad boys:
2013: Out of the Furnace - Tattooed Guy
2014: Gone Girl - Jeff
2015: Run All Night - Danny Maguire
2016: Jane Got a Gun - Vic Owen
2017: Logan - Donald Pierce
2021: Beckett - Stephen Tynan
2022: The Sandman - The Corinthian
2023: Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny - Klaber
2023: Justified: City Primeval - Clement Mansell
(gifs by me)
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Below the cut is a list of all my original characters, from every fandom, organized by such. I figured I would go ahead and put this up, as well as a canon muse one, for my oc and canon starters so that way it's easier for y'all to see who is included without going to every separate muse list.
The Vampire Diaries
Elizabeth Haven Mikaelson
Roman Ryker Mikaelson
Erik Flynn Mikaelson
Kareena Dawn Mikaelson
Thyra Selene Mikaelson
Karsyn Devyn Mikaelson
Mateo Maxwell Mikaelson
Serenity Faye Mikaelson
Sawyer Finch Mikaelson
Aurelia Nova Mikaelson
Felix Ares Mikaelson
Willow Luna Mikaelson
Tobias Floyd Mikaelson
Zephyr Raven Parker
Zariyah Dove Parker
Kennedy Taylor Parker
Myles Zane Parker
Mariana Joy Parker
Paisley Juniper Parker
Braeden Talia Salvatore
Holden Atlas Salvatore
Ezra Grant Salvatore
Liberty Faye Salvatore
Jensen Graham Gilbert
Easton Reed Gilbert
Jesse Jonathan Gilbert
Elias Rhodes Gilbert
Jazmyn Sophia Gilbert
Atlas Rowan Petrova
Titus Izaiah Petrova
Kamen Maverick Pierce
Natalie Adrianna Pierce
Eleanor Marie Bennett
Salem Elijah Bennett
Gabriel Graham Gustin
Belladonna Sharie Bennett
Seraphina Rose Ward
Theodore Joseph Brickenden
Kaia Asherah Halloran
Carter William Forbes
Cameron Myles Lawrence
Jameson Tyler Rosza
Tatum Jaxson Lockwood
Tatiana Jade Lockwood
Taylor Jacob Lockwood
Axel Madden Hughes
Ashton Malik Hughes
Sebastian Sawyer Sharpe
Niall Nash Novak
Montgomery Felix Langston
Ophelia Esme Lovell
Sapphire Lee McGuire
Rami Calder McGuire
Warren Jaxon Kingsley
Jeremiah Michael Kenner
Cecilia Jaklyn Labonair
Rosemary Belle Whitlock
Hadley Kamryn Fuller
Kamryn Avery Marshall
Lorella Diane St. John
Andrew Kolton Rogers
Blair Lilith Walsh
Zachariah Cole Norwood
Matthias Lucien Delacour
Matias Camilo Garcia
Cyrus Boyd Mikaelson (spn to tvdu)
Harmony Iris Johnson (tw to tvdu)
Chandler Matthew Rawlins (tw to tvdu)
Containment
Jubilee Fawn Ellison
Carson Elijah Mayes
Maddox Rhett Lancaster
Malia Rayne Lancaster
Makai Reid Lancaster
Delilah Anne Malone
Austin Blake Coleman
Damian James Taylor
Teen Wolf
Aspen Bella Stilinski
Adrian Archer Argent
Addison Athena Argent
Lyla Sage Martin
Amaia Tala Alexander
Malik Elias Hale
Madelaine Emery Hale
Isaiah Parker Lahey
Amadora Constance Sharpe
Callum Tate Raeken
Dawson Cole Reynolds
Jared Taylor Parrish
Stephen Ezekiel Hemming
Supernatural
Amelia Mae Allen
Melody Athena Hayes
Lucilla Marie Nightstar
Eden Faith Cruz
Elijah Luke Cruz
Valentina Rosalie Hart
Adaliah Ember Darhk
Alexandria Skye Earp
Lillian Dahlia Campbell
Adriel Xavier Grant
Talon Colt Ashford
Silas Kai Parker
Josephina Jazmyn Walker
Elyza Alice Pierson (tvdu to spn)
DC Comics
Kiera Jaylin Davis
Marvel
Kailee Elizabeth Holtz (hero and villain verse)
Kaiden Edward Holtz (villain and hero verse)
Camelia Waverly Maximoff
Kaleb Jonas Barnes
Maxine Josephine Rogers
Melody Elizabeth Young
Anastasia Sloane Lenkov
Wren Nika Volkov
Wynter Nadia Volkov
Cordelia Ara Odinsdottir
Amora Delphine Brantley
Celeste Juliet Livingston
Nikolai Nathaniel Novak (tvdu to mcu)
Charmeine Ayla Hanlon (spn to mcu)
Stranger Things
Stella Blake Russell
Scarlet Ember Ward
Valerie Mae Henderson
Mitchell Elliot Mayfield
Meredith Eleanor Mayfield
Misc
Ambrosia Nyx Tartarus
Acacius Nile Tartarus
Duncan David Dalveron
Damien Dawson Dalveron
Brantley Cole Kline
Rosalie Grace Anderson
Rowena Greyson Andrews
Ryker Grant Andrews
Aviana Summer Archer
Dylan Bryce Thatcher
Sterling Atlas Ward
9-1-1
Evelyn June Buckley
Ethan Jace Buckley
Hazel Jayne Walker
Hayes Jesse Walker
Izaiah Edison Hendrix
Waverly Chloe Hendrix
Matilda Iris Monroe
Fallon Pierce Richards
Book Babes
Cyra Lux Vespara
Wilder Blaze Hawthorne
Dion Ignis Vanserra
Pyralis Jax Vanserra
Warren Forrest Hayward
Solana Aruna Meridian
Anatole Cyrus Solari
Althea Zaria Cadlawon
Tynan Kerrell Visita
Kirsi Gwyneira Nieves
Lyall Colden Whittaker
Caspian Calder Conway
Maribelle Aelia Sommer
Zodiacs
Wyatt Keegan aka Aries
Kianni Phoenix aka Sagittarius
Leon Cyrus aka Leo
River Mira aka Cancer
Dylan Lucas aka Pisces
Josephine Nova aka Scorpio
Conrad Atlas aka Taurus
Kailynn Amelia aka Capricorn
Taron Sage aka Virgo
Alice Skye aka Libra
Aaron Micah aka Aquarius
Adelaide June aka Gemini
Arianna Rose aka Gemini
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mmkay, so i’ve somehow still got a spark of patriotism in me, so the other night I watched Dublin Oldschool (2018) dir. Dave Tynan, based off of the stage-play of the same name by Emmet Kirwan who also played the lead role of Jason Kelly
It’s on Netflix atm if anyone wants to check it out- it follows the journey of Jason Kelly- aspiring DJ, habitual drug-user and walking ball of Problems, set in modern-day Dublin
I would recommend the subtitles for anyone who isn’t Irish- Dublin city accents really are...something
ngl, I thought Jason was an arsehole and the music was kinda shit and his brother was a much more likeable character but that’s just me
anyway, throughout the film Jason reconnects with his estranged brother Daniel, recovering drug addict currently roughing it on the city streets, so serious tw: drug abuse, violence, strong language
Jason does this thing where he does pretentious Deep narration every now and then, so that’s cool I suppose
i wasn’t overly impressed with most of the main characters or the pacing of the plot, though I’d still be interested in seeing the play (which is supposed to be a two man only thing which sounds kinda cool, ngl)
look, if you’re at all interested in what the sesh scene sometimes looks like, contemporary urban Ireland, or just have some time to kill and a weird fondness for Dublin slang, then here’s a film for you
if nothing else, it was nice to see and hear people and places I recognised for once
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13 most handsome ONE Championship fighters in 2015
13 most handsome ONE Championship fighters in 2015
Roger Huerta
ONE Fighting Championship has been rebranded as ONE Championship. Here are the 13 most handsome mixed martial artists who competed in the Singapore-based MMA promotion in 2015:
#13 | Brandon Vera
fight name: The Truth
division: heavyweight
country: Philippines
birth date: October 10, 1977
ONE Championship record in 2015: 1 win, 0 loss
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a6Oeh…
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My Notes from the Expanse NYCC Virtual Panel - a sort of live blog?
(Raw and unedited straight from Windows Notepad!)
OH it's starting
Soon soon soon soon
Dominique!
Dom: IF you haven't finished season 4 it's your own fault
Stephen!
Wes!
Shorheh!
Frankie!
Cara!
Naren!
Ty!
Abraham!
(No Cas so far, this looks good)
Dom: I think this is our best season
Dom: We have some spoilerrific Season 5 stuff today
Abraham: (Story seeds for Naomi)
We're fully going into Amos' past
Lydia Lydia Lydia Baltimore
How the Expanse scarily creates fiction relevant to reality
Do you consider yourselves modern day prophets?
Ty: I take credit for all the bad things that happen (nah, j/k)
No, it's just humans doing the same dumb stuff over and over again
Technology changes everything but humans don't change that much
Nemesis the goddess that punishes hubris
Naren: THe most epic and most personal season we've done so far
TRAILER
OMG
MARCO YOU FUCK
FRED
PERSONAL BUSINESS IN B ALTIMORE
FILIP
CAMINAAAAA
OPAS TYNAN
UNITE THE FACTIONS
ROCKS
(WHERE ARE YOU ANDERSON DAAAAAAAAAAAWES)
DECEMBER 16
FIRST THREE EPISODES at once
Then weekly
Holden's still got his eye on whomever killed the Ring Builders
Shohreh (Oh of course I would love her RL outfits): Chrisjen adrift
No matter what, she will get [bleep] done
Amos gets to confront his internal and external demons and he realizes how important the Roci crew is to him
Bobbie's journey in S5 and realizing there's more than Mars, and focused more on what's important than just what's important for Mars
Drummer is off on her own
Drummer's going after Marco (YES) but will she come to regret that?
Ashford's death is going to really impact Drummer, awww
Drummer + Ashford awww
Frankie likes Bobbie's relationship with her dad, and Bobbie had a pet rat named "Mouse"
Shohreh likes how Chrisjen still lives with her father's codes
Wes admire's Amos' loyalty to the Roci and the crew, although Wes questions whether he would follow Holden on repeated death missions
Stephen loves Holden's perseverance and goal to get Amos shot in every season, but no he really loves Holden's perseverance.
Cara read the Butcher of Anderson Station novella when first cast for the show and imagined if the unnamed female character with Dawes in the novella was actually Drummer
Ty jokes Mars ships are like Apple, UNN ships are like Windows and Belter ships are like LINUX (all these random scraps put together), each reflecting their own culture in their design
Wes vs Shohreh: who would win a race in high heels
Shohreh: Boy, bring it
High heel Easter eggs this season?\
Shohreh: this is one of the most diversified shows i've ever been on, its global
Cara: This is the most diverse show on TV right now
NO CAS MENTION (Good)
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The Green Book: Writings on Irish Gothic, Supernatural and Fantastic Literature, Issue 14, The Swan River Press, Samhain 2019. Cover art by Stephen J. Clarke, info: swanriverpress.ie.
We encounter and enjoy authors mostly through their writing, forgetting sometimes that there are personalities behind their words, some astonishingly well-known in their time, often now relegated to small press rediscoveries. With sufficient spans of years, these authors and their personalities pass out of memory, becoming less familiar to us as people and more so as names on title pages. But it is important to remember that these authors lived and worked, had careers and relationships; some of them died while relatively unknown, others were widely celebrated for their creations. With this in mind, I’ve decided to focus the current issue on reminiscences, interviews, and memoirs in hopes of summoning the shades of these writers and to show that in some ways their lives were not always so different from our own. To that end, you will find a number of texts I have been collecting these past few years, now nestled here comfortably beside one another. Each one, I hope, will give you some insight into the lives of these authors, who they were, and a past that is not necessarily so far distant. There are first-hand accounts by authors with whom I hope you are now familiar. Rosa Mulholland, Cheiro, and Dorothy Macardle all relate anecdotes of their own experiences with the psychical and supernatural. Elsewhere in this issue, you can spend an entertaining evening with Mervyn Wall. In this talk, given to the Bram Stoker Society in 1987, he delves into witchcraft and details the origins of his best-loved novel, The Unfortunate Fursey (1946). We have a few interviews — “chats” — with those who worked as professionals, and whose names were familiar to the broader public on a weekly basis, as their stories were published and novels serialised in magazines of the day. Among these sketches you’ll be invited to spend agreeable afternoons with L.T. Meade, Charlotte Riddell, and Katharine Tynan. While they may not discuss strictly ghastly material, I hope these interviews bring us that much closer to authors whose works still find admiration of a modern readership. You’ll also find some brief memoirs, including litterateur William Winter’s reminiscence of his fallen comrade Fitz-James O’Brien, who died in the American Civil War; and Samuel Carter Hall, who conjures two of Dublin’s gothic greats: Charles Maturin and Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu — perhaps reminding us that these authors existed in a wider social world. However, the issue commences with Albert Power’s appraisal of George Croly’s Salathiel (1828), a novel which Stoker biographer Paul Murray posited as an influence on the composition of Dracula. Although, a tale of the Wandering Jew, Salathiel might have more in common thematically with Charles Maturin’s Melmoth the Wanderer, than Bram Stoker’s more famous book. Power aptly leads us through the life of Reverend Croly and how his book fits into the literary milieu of the dark fantastic. If you would like to read more about some of these writers among these pages, you’ll find lengthier profiles in earlier issues of The Green Book. In Issue 9: Rosa Mulholland; Issue 12: Mervyn Wall; Issue 13: Cheiro and Beatrice Grimshaw. While this issue and the next will serve as an intermission in our Guide to Irish Writers of Gothic, Supernatural, and Fantastic Fiction, fear not — we will return with more entries in future instalments. (Editor’s Note, Brian J. Showers, 15 April 2020)
Contents:
"Editor's Note" by Brian J. Showers
"Who Marvels at the Mysteries of the Moon: George Croly’s Salathiel" by Albert Power
"Sketch of Fitz-James O'Brien" by William Winter
"Le Fanu and Maturin: Two Reminiscences" by Samuel Carter Hall
"About Ghosts" by Rosa Mulholland
"How I Found Adventure" by Beatrice Grimshaw
"A Biographical Sketch of Mrs. L.T. Meade" by Helen C. Black
"Sweet Singer from Over the Sea" by A Chat with Katharine Tynan
"A Chat with Mrs. J. H. Riddell" by Raymond Blathwayt
"Extracts from Confessions: Memoirs of a Modern Seer" by Cheiro
"They Say It Happened" by Dorothy Macardle
"Ghost Story of a Novelist" by Katharine Tynan
"Witchcraft and the Origins of The Unfortunate Fursey" by Mervyn Wall
"Notes on Contributors"
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Brian Epstein’s Address & Telephone Book
A small leather bound pocket address and telephone book that was owned and used by Brian Epstein. The book dates to 1967 and it consists of 57 pages of addresses and telephone number some of which are typed, some of which are in Epstein’s hand and some which have been added by hand on his behalf. // (click HERE to view more pages from the book)
The book contains a total of 404 entries - a selection of them are listed below:
A
ATV Ltd
ABC Television Ltd
AIR London Ltd.
Tom Arnold Ltd
Neil Aspinall
Artistes Car Hire
Annabels [nightclub]
Alexander’s Restaurant
Ashley Steiner Famous [talent agency]
Al Aronowitz
Atlantic Records
Eric Andersen
Bob Anthony
B
Bryce Hanmer & Co [accounting firm]
Bedford, Okrent & Co
BBC Television Centre
BBC Broadcasting House
Al Brodax
Cilla Black
Mr. & Mrs. Tony Barrow
Mr. & Mrs Don Black
Bryan Barrett
Jack Barclay Ltd [Bentley dealership]
Peter Brown
Mr. & Mrs. B. Bullough
Mr. & Mrs J. Bullough
Miss J. Balmer
Mr. &. Mrs. Ivan Bennett
Eric Burdon
Francisco Bermudez
Lionel Bart
David Bailey
Bag O’Nails
Tony Barlow
Ray Bartell
Rodney Barnes
Bruno One Restaurant
Sid Bernstein
Kenn Brodziak
Leonard Bernstein
Al Bennett
Beverly Hills Hotel
Brian Bedford
Scotty Bower
David Ballman
Bob Bonis
Bill Buist
Arthur Buist
C
Dr. Norman Cowan
Curzon House Club
Crockfords Club
Clermont Club
Cromwellian Club
Paddy Chambers
Radio Caroline
Michael Codron
Cap-Estel Le
Mr. & Mrs. J. Cassen
Columbia Pictures Ltd
Eric Clapton
Capitol Records Mexico
Michael Cooper
Roger Curtis
Neil Christian
Maureen Cleave
Thomas Clyde
Cash Box
CBS Records Ltd
Denny Cordell
William Cavendish
Caprice Restuarant
David Charkham
Capitol Records
Columbia Broadcasting System
Bob Crewe
May Cunnell
Car Hire Co. for Lincoln
Dr. Kenneth Chesky
Capitol Records (Voyle Gilmore)
Irving E. Chezar
Danny Cleary
Bobby Colomby
Bob Casper
Andre Cadet
D
Daily Express
Disc & Music Echo
Decca Records
Bernard Delfont Ltd
Bernard Delfont
Noel Dixon
Jimmy Douglas
Chris Denning
Simon Dee
Rik Dane
Dolly’s [nightclub]
Hunter Davies
Terry Doran
Pat Doncaster
Norrie Drummond
Alan David
John Dunbar
Peter Dalton
Kappy Ditson
Robert Dunlap
Robert L. David
Diana Dors
Ivor Davis
Tom Dawes
Brandon de Wilde
Don Danneman
E
Malcolm Evans
Clive J. Epstein
Mr. & Mrs. H. Epstein
EMI Records Ltd
EMI Studios
Geoffrey Ellis
Etoile Restaurant
Tim Ellis
Terry Eaton
Kenny Everett
John East
Bob Eubanks
Esther Edwards
Ahmet Ertegun
F
Alan Freeman
David Frost
Georgie Fame
Robert Fraser
Andre Fattacini
Dan Farson
Billy Fury
Barry Finch
Marianne Faithfull
Robert Fitzpatrick
Warren Frederikson
John Fisher
Danny Fields
Francis Fiorino
G
Dr. Geoffrey Gray
Hamish Grimes
Derek Grainger
Rik Gunnell
Rik Gunnell Agency Ltd
Derrick Goodman & Co.
Peter Goldman
Christopher Gibbs
David Garrick
Geoffrey Grant
Mick Green
John P. Greenside
Michael Gillet
General Artists Corp.
John Gillespie
Voyle Gilmore
George Greif
Ren Grevatt
Milton Goldman
M. Goldstein
Gary Grove
Henry Grossman
H
Mr. & Mrs. Berrell Hyman
Doreen Hyman
Mr. & Mrs. Basil J. Hyman
Mrs. A. Hyman
Steve Hardy
H. Huntsman & Son Ltd
Simon Hayes
Frankie Howerd
Henry Higgins
Chris Hutchins
Tony Howard
Wendy Hanson
Marty Himmel
Casper Halpern
John Heska
Ricky Heiman
Joe Hunter
Ty Hargrove
Hullabaloo.
Walter Hofer
J
M.A. Jacobs & Son
David Jacobs [lawyer]
Dick James Music Ltd
Mr. & Mrs. D. James
Mick Jagger
Brian Jones
Michael Jeffries
Drummond Jackson
David Jacobs [d.j.]
Brian Joyce
Gerry Justice
K
Gibson Kemp
Johnathan King
Mr. & Mrs Maurice Kinn
Kingsway Recording Studios
Ashley Kozac
Kafetz Camera Ltd.
Reg King
Andrew Koritsas
Ed Kenmore
Walker Kundzicz
John Kurland
Murray Kauffman
L
Larry Lamb
Martin Landau
Kit Lambert
Dick Lester
Mr. & Mrs. Vic Lewis
Tony Lynch
Radio London
Mike Leander
John Lyndon
Bernard Lee
Kenny Lynch
Denny Laine
Lomax Alliance
Ed Leffler
David G. Lowe
Richard W. Lean
Goddard Lieberson
Laurie Records
Liberty Records
London Records
Alan Livingston
M
Melody Maker
Peter Murray
Keith Moon
Mr. & Mrs. G. Martin
Mr. & Mrs. Brian Matthew
Midland Bank Limited
Vyvienne Moynihan
Gerry Marsden
Ian Moody
Michael McGrath
Cathy McGowan
Mr. & Mrs. J. McCartney
Albert Marrion
Robin Maughan
Peter Maddok
Gordon Mills
Brian McEwan
John Mendell Jnr.
Marshall Migatz
Fred Morrow
Chruch McLaine
Vincent Morrone
Jeffrey Martin Co.
Gavin Murrell
Dean Martin
Gordon B. McLendon
Sal Mineo
Scott Manley
Bernard Mavnitte
Verne Miller
N
John Neville
Joanne Newfield
Tommy Nutter
Francisco Neuner
Tatsuji Nagasima
New Musical Express
NEMS Enterprises Ltd
Graham Nash
Nemperor Artists Ltd
Louis Nizer
Bob Nauss
Gene Narmore
O
George H. Ornstein
Olympic Sound Studios
A. L. Oldham
Myles Osternak
Roy Onsborg
P
Col. Tom Parker
Jerry Pam
Plaza Hotel
PAN AM. rep
Bob Perlman
Allen Pohju
Robert H. Prech
John Pritchard
Prince Of Wales Theatre
Don Paul
Sean Phillips
Jon Pertwee
Ricki Pipe
Dr. D. A. Pond
David Puttnam
David Puttnam Associates
Tom Parr
Harry Pinsker
Kenneth Partridge
Larry Parnes
Priory Nursing Home
Viv Prince
Steve Paul
R
Radnor Arms [pub]
Leo Rost
Keith Richard
Record Mirror
Dolly Robertson-Ward
Charles Ross
Rules Restuarant
Marian Rainford
Bobby Roberts
Bill Rosado
S
Vic Singh
Speakeasy [club]
Simon and Marijke
Simon Shops
Judith Symons
Keith Skeel
Tony Sharman
Simon Scott
Barrie Summers
John Singleton
Squarciafichi
Don Short
Dr. Walter Strach
Walter Shenson
John Sandoe Ltd
Bobby Shafto
Harry South
Brian Sommerville
Robert Stigwood
David Shaw
Chris Stamp
Aaron Schroeder
Stephen, Jacques & Stephen [law firm]
Leo Sullivan
Gene Schwann
Herb Schlosser
Gary Smith
Jim Stewart [co-founder, Stax Records]
John Simon
Jerry N. Schatzberg
Lex Taylor
Robert Shoot
Lauren Stanton
St. Regis Hotel
Eric Spiros
Howard Soloman
T
Taft Limousine Corp
[Sidney] Traxler (lawyer)
T.W.A. Ken S. Fletcher [director, public relations, TWA]
Derek & Joan Taylor
T.W.A. (Victor Page)
Martin Tempest
Evelyn Taylor
Twickenham Studios
Kenneth Tynan
Alistair Taylor
F. T. Turner & Son Ltd.
R. S. Taylor
Michael Taylor
George Tempest
Norm Talbott
U
United Artists Corp Ltd
U.P.I.
V
Klaus & Christine Voormann
V.I.P. Travel Ltd
W
Mark Warman
Gary Walker
Robert Whitaker
Peter Watkins
Peter Weldon
Mrs. Freda Weldon
Alan Warren
Orson Welles
Sir David Webster
Alan Williams
Dennis Wiley
Terry Wilson
Nathan Weiss
Norman Weiss
Gerry Wexler
Y
Murial Young
Bernice Young
Z
Peter Zorcon
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Summary: Professor Stephen Tynan is your Human Sexual Behaviour Professor and you've had your eye on him for quite some time. Realising this isn't the most appropriate setting to be crushing (hard) on a person, you decide to ask if you can switch classes. But will that make any difference? And what will Professor Tynan have to say about your intentions on leaving his class?
Tag(s): Angst and fluff and smut, body worship, cum swallowing, daddy kink, hurt/comfort, oral sex, teacher-student relationship, trans male character, vaginal fingering, vaginal sex.
A/N: This is a kind of redo/remix of the first Prof!Tynan fic, which I still love! But this fic is much more emotional and drama-based so it depends what you're in the mood for. Happy reading!
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Franco Zeffirelli: Film and opera director who revelled in the lavish and theatrical
The last of Italy’s post-war cinema giants, Zeffirelli worked with many of the greatest stars of the 20th century
Tom Vallance - Saturday 15 June 2019
Franco Zeffirelli, who described his style as “lavish in scale and unashamedly theatrical”, was one of the most influential, flamboyant and controversial designer-directors of the 20th century. His Florentine background and love of the Renaissance permeated his diverse work, which encompassed theatre, cinema and his greatest love, opera.
Initially an actor, then designer of sets and costumes, Zeffirelli – who has died aged 96 – confounded his mentor and lover Luchino Visconti by successfully becoming a prolific director who triumphed at La Scala, Milan, with his first operatic production, then stunned Covent Garden with his vivid staging of Cavalleria Rusticana and Pagliacci. His Shakespearean productions at the Old Vic included a legendary version of Romeo and Juliet with Judi Dench, and a rapturously received Much Ado About Nothing with Maggie Smith, Albert Finney and Robert Stephens.
His best films were either Shakespearean or operatic ones, and included The Taming of the Shrew with Taylor and Burton, a Romeo and Juliet with two teenage unknowns, and Hamlet with Mel Gibson – plus a sumptuous film of La Traviata and a sweepingly dramatic, though drastically reshaped and cut, version of Verdi’s Otello with Placido Domingo. The treasured Covent Garden productions of Lucia di Lammermoor with Joan Sutherland and Tosca with Maria Callas were his work, and he created one of the most lavish opera productions ever seen with his Turandot at the Metropolitan.
On television his epic production Jesus of Nazareth has become a worldwide staple. He worked with both Olivier and Gielgud, and he gathered together an all-star cast for his film Tea With Mussolini, loosely based on his own childhood memories of the expatriate British ladies in Italy who helped raise him just before the Second World War. He also fought with the Italian resistance during the conflict, found God when he was nearly killed in a car accident with Gina Lollobrigida, and since 1960 had been heavily involved in right-wing politics, eventually becoming a member of the Italian senate, representing the Forza Italia party in 1996.
Born out of wedlock in Florence, Italy in 1923, his surname was the result of an accident. Since his father would not acknowledge him, and his mother was married, he had to be given an invented name and his mother chose Zeffiretti, after the “little breezes” of an aria in Cosi Fan Tutte, but it was misspelt in the register as Zeffirelli. He was raised by a peasant woman for two years, then after his mother was widowed she took him into her family, but her death when Zeffirelli was six years old resulted in his being passed to his father’s cousin, Aunt Lide.
His initial ambition was to be an architect, but Lide’s lover Gustavo was an amateur baritone, and he introduced the boy to opera and the cinema, both of which were to be life-long passions. He later described his reaction to his first opera, Die Walkure, as “hardly a refined appreciation, more like a child of today gawping at Star Wars”.
He had his first real taste of theatre when, while fighting with the partisans in the Second World War, he met the music and ballet expert Richard Buckle and helped him stage a troop show. Seeing Olivier’s film of Henry V chrystallised Zeffirelli’s ambition. He recalled: “I knew then what I was going to do. Architecture was not for me; it had to be the stage. I wanted to do something like the production I was witnessing.”
After the war, he was working as an assistant scenic painter when he met the man he described as “probably the single most important person I have ever known”, the director Luchino Visconti. On their first meeting backstage he told Visconti that he was an actor, to which Visconti replied: “So you should be, with your looks.”
Visconti gave the youth small parts in his stage productions of Crime and Punishment (1946) and Eurydice (1947), and he made his screen debut in Luigi Zampa’s L’Onorevole Angelina (1947) starring Anna Magnani, after which Visconti used Zeffirelli and Francesco Rosi as his assistants on his film La Terra Trema (1948), filmed on location with a cast of Sicilian fishermen, and distinguished by its superb photography. Said Zeffirelli: “This is my main debt to Luchino in filmmaking: his passionate attention to detail. Everything was always researched to a point far beyond the needs of the actual scene. You immersed yourself in the period, the place, its culture, so that even though the audience might not take in every detail they would be absolutely convinced of its essential ‘rightness’.”
For a production of As You Like It (1948) Visconti hired Salvador Dali as designer but, when the surrealist’s plans proved impractical, Visconti asked Zeffirelli to help out. He then gave Zeffirelli the first work for which he was independently credited, as designer of Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire (1949).
Visconti and Zeffirelli were now living together in Rome, but worked separately for a spell before reuniting for the film Bellissima (1951) starring Anna Magnani, on which Zeffirelli again served as an assistant. After working briefly with Rossellini and Antonioni, he designed one of Visconti’s greatest theatrical triumphs, a production of Chekhov’s Three Sisters (1952), and worked as his assistant on the film Senso (1954), but the often stormy relationship of the two men was coming to an end.
When Zeffirelli was asked to design a production of Rossini’s L’Italiana in Algeri at La Scala, he saw it as an opportunity to break with the world of Roman theatre. With its cast clad mainly in light blues and whites, the sunny production of 1953 was rapturously received and the manager of La Scala, Antonio Ghiringhelli, decided to follow it with La Cenerentola (1954) with the same creative team.
But director Corrado Pavolini had fallen ill, and Zeffirelli, with the backing of Simionato, asked if he could be both director and designer. The result was another great success, and the director’s first experience of handling a large chorus.
Zeffirelli was immediately asked to direct two productions the following season, Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’amore and Rossini’s Il Turco in Italia (both 1955). He was also told that Maria Callas wanted to sing Donna Fiorilla in the Rossini and had specifically asked that he should direct it.
Zeffirelli had first met Callas when As You Like It had been running in Rome at the same time as Parsifal, in which Callas sang the role of Kundry. Tullio Serafin, who was a major influence on Zeffirelli, introduced both him and Visconti to “this very plump Greek-American girl with a terrible New York whine allied to a rather prim, matronly manner. She sounded awful and looked worse.” Then she had sung, and Zefirelli had been entranced. “I followed her to Florence to see her Traviata and hung around her dressing room like a lovesick boy,” he recalled.
Zeffirelli would shortly realise his longstanding ambition to direct a film. Camping (1957) was a modest, sentimental story of two young lovers on a motorcycle, but the public liked it. He was then called back to Dallas, Texas, to stage La Traviata for Callas, and succeeded in eclipsing Visconti’s previous staging with an audaciously cinematic production, using multiple sets and dispensing entirely with the interval between the second and third acts.
At the end of 1959 Zeffirelli was invited back to Covent Garden to create new productions of Cavalleria Rusticana and Pagliacci, which were to prompt the Old Vic to ask him to direct Romeo and Juliet, with the particular request that he reproduce the Mediterranean feeling of his opera productions. For this Zeffirelli was determined to use a truly youthful leading pair and cast two young players starting out, Judi Dench and John Stride. “Judi was small and doll-like and looked even younger than her age, just the way I’d always imagined Juliet should be,” he said. The production, so different from all previous accounts of Shakespeare’s tragedy – the director even replaced the balcony with battlements – was loathed by London’s theatre critics next day, who condemned the acting, the sets and the direction. But the following Sunday London’s most respected critic, Kenneth Tynan, called it “a revelation, even perhaps a revolution ... The Vic has done nothing better for a decade.” Romeo and Juliet immediately became a sell-out and extended the length of its season.
The following year, 1961, Zeffirelli directed Fastaff at Covent Garden, then made his debut at Glyndebourne with L’Elisir d’amore. In Dallas, he staged a controversial Don Giovanni with Joan Sutherland and Elizabeth Schwarzkopf, setting the opera in the burnt-out aftermath of a catastrophe, then returned to England to create an Othello for the Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford. It turned out disastrously. Wanting an elegant, cultured Othello, he cast John Gielgud, with young Ian Bannen as Iago. “Whatever chemistry makes a director and his actors work was missing with us three ... Gielgud and Bannen were like oil and water and somehow Gielgud and I never seemed to react together.” A few months later the Old Vic Romeo and Juliet opened in New York and was a critical and commercial triumph, with Zeffirelli receiving a special Tony Award for design and direction.
In 1967 he directed his first major film, The Taming of the Shrew (1967), starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, and described by one critic as “a mixture of classical Shakespeare, the Marx brothers and a Renaissance painting”. It was a great success, and Zeffirelli followed it with Romeo and Juliet (1968), starring newcomers Leonard Whiting and Olivia Hussey. Writer Bruce Robinson, who played Benvolio in the film, later claimed that Zeffirelli tried to seduce him, and that he was the model for the lecherous Uncle Monty in Robinson’s 1987 film Withnail and I.
Given a small budget by Paramount, Romeo and Juliet made $50m – the highest ratio of investment to earnings in the history of the studio. “The effect on me was stunning,” he said. “It made me a lot of money, transforming me from someone who’d always lived at the limits of his income to someone who could be described as rich, and it elevated me from being a European celebrity to someone who was famous internationally.”
A few months later Zefferelli was critically injured when the car he was in, driven by Gina Lollobrigida, skidded and smashed into a barrier, sending him through the windscreen. Months of facial surgery preceded his return to work with a triumphant staging of Pagliacci and Cavalleria Rusticana at the Metropolitan. His accident had delayed his plans to film the life of Francis of Assissi, which he thought relevant to the “peace and love” movement of the Sixties. Titled Brother Sun, Sister Moon, the film appeared in 1972 and was criticised as simplistic and naive.
In 1975 Zeffirelli embarked on a project that would take two years to complete – an ambitious television miniseries based on the life of Christ, titled Jesus of Nazareth. Featuring a starry cast supporting Robert Powell as Jesus and Olivia Hussey as Mary, the series was screened worldwide over Easter and was given the exceptional accolade of a mention by the Pope in his Psalm Sunday message.
Zeffirelli next staged Alfred de Musset’s Lorenzaccio for the Comedie Francaise, and a triumphant Otello at La Scala (both 1976). Starring Placido Domingo, Mirella Freni and Piero Cappuccilli, with Carlos Kleiber conducting, Otello was the first La Scala premiere to be televised live.
A second de Filippo play, Filumena, was another hit for the National, after which Zeffirelli went to Hollywood. Though his films The Champ (1979) and Endless Love (1981) attracted audiences, they were decried by critics.
Returning to La Scala in 1981 to stage Cavelleria Rusticana and Pagliacci, both starring Domingo, Zeffirelli filmed both productions, partly in the opera house and partly on location in Sicily. When shown on television in the US, Pagliaci won both a Grammy and Emmy. Teresa Stratas, the film’s soprano, then starred in La Boheme for Zeffirelli at the Metropolitan, and he realised he had the perfect star for a filmed version of La Traviata. When Jose Carreras declined to play Alfredo, Domingo accepted the role.
Visually entrancing, and extremely moving, La Traviata is one of the finest opera films. The film version of Otello is comparable in its power and spectacle, though marred for purists by some drastic cutting.
In 1985 Zeffirelli designed his first ballet, Swan Lake, for La Scala, his revolutionary approach – particularly his replacement of tutus with calf-length dresses for the ballerinas – causing Mikhail Baryshnikov to withdraw from the production. He then made a film his detractors seized on – a ludicrous account of Toscanini’s early years, Young Toscanini (1988). The director was happier with an impressive Hamlet (1990) starring Mel Gibson, and a television film of Don Carlos (1992). But a version of Jane Eyre (1996) suffered from the mismatching of its leads, Charlotte Gainsbourg and William Hurt.
The cast of Tea With Mussolini (1999) was high-powered, including Maggie Smith, Judi Dench, Joan Plowright, Lily Tomlin and Cher, and made Zeffirelli’s labour of love watchable if unsatisfying.
His last films were Callas Forever (2002), a dramatisation of the singer’s last years, and Tre Fratelli (2005). In 2003 he was nominated for a Laurence Olivier Award for his set designs for Absolutely! (Perhaps), and in November 2004 he was given an honorary knighthood.
In 2009, he was awarded the inaugural Premio Colesseo, which is given to those who have enhanced Rome’s reputation.
Franco Zeffirelli, film and opera director, born 12 February 1923, died 15 June 2019
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/franco-zeffirelli-obituary-film-theatre-director-italy-romeo-and-juliet-tosca-maria-callas-a8959971.html
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Tynan Wood et Stefaan Morrow - New Zealand School of Dance - Photographe Stephen A'Court
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Marietta girls, Warren boys win Jeremy Anderson Invite | News, Sports, Jobs
Photo by Jordan Holland
Marietta’s Ciara Space runs during Saturday’s Jeremy Anderson Invitational at Fort Frye High School.
BEVERLY — The Marietta girls and Warren boys swept the team titles Saturday at the second annual Jeremy Anderson Invitational at Fort Frye High School, and Belpre’s El
Photo by Jordan Holland
Belpre’s Eli Fullerton celebrates after winning Saturday’s Jeremy Anderson Invitational at Fort Frye High School.
Photo by Jordan Holland
Marietta’s Ciara Space runs during Saturday’s Jeremy Anderson Invitational at Fort Frye High School.
i Fullerton claimed his third straight individual title to start the 2020 season.
The Warren boys, led by an eighth place finish from Brennan Perdue, barely beat out second place Fisher Catholic. When the final scores were originally announced, Fisher Catholic had won by two points. However, a later announcement revealed there was an error in the scoring and that Warren had actually edged the Irish 56-58. The Warriors’ tent erupted in excitement at the announcement as they won their fourth straight team title to start the season.
“That’s our fourth win in a row,” said Warren head coach Ryan Werry. “We’ve finished first four races in a row. That’s kind of the boys’ goal, but our ultimate goal is to just keep getting better each week. Each one is a practice leading up to districts. We have goal as a team, we want that district. We want to challenge that. So far the boys have bought in and they’re really working hard.”
Perdue clocked in at 16 minutes, 41 seconds to lead the Warren pack, but Matthews Rauch’s 11th place finish (16:58), Bryson Angelo’s 12th place finish (17:11), Andrew Vincent’s 15th place finish (17:27) and Justin Pate’s 16th place finish (17:36) also helped fuel the victory.
“Brennan’s been finishing first on our team,” Werry said. “Matthew Rauch has been a pretty steady second. He’s been moving up and lots of improvement for him from last year. Andrew Vincent worked hard over the summer. Our top five boys really stuck together over the summer and they worked hard. They’re showing it. Work over the summer and it pays off in the fall.”
Photo by Jordan Holland
Belpre’s Eli Fullerton celebrates after winning Saturday’s Jeremy Anderson Invitational at Fort Frye High School.
For the third time this season, the Belpre duo of Fullerton and Blake Rodgers finished 1-2 in a race.
Fullerton, an All-Ohio runner last season, shattered the course record of 16:34, clocking in at an impressive 15:28. The previous record was held by former Fort Frye Cadet Justin Anderson, younger brother of Jeremy Anderson, who passed away unexpectedly last year.
Fullerton overcame some early-race aches to put together a dominant performance.
“First 100 meters my legs were hurting a little bit,” the Golden Eagle said. “We had a lot of tough workouts this week. But after that I felt really good, really strong. So I just tried to keep it consistent all day.
“My goal was to go under 16-flat. I heard it was a pretty fast course. Wasn’t expecting to go 15:28 and definitely wasn’t expecting Blake to break 16 either. So proud of the team. We’ve been putting in a lot of hard work. It’s just awesome.”
Rodgers, just a freshman, finished in 15:51.
“He’s just killing it every single practice and we’re just going at it,” Fullerton said of his teammate.
Davis Leach added a 27th place (18:31) finish for Belpre, followed by Evan Wells in 31st (19:06) and Kayden Wright in 45th (20:10). It all added up to a third place finish for the short-handed Golden Eagles.
“We don’t have our third or seventh runner right now,” Fullerton said. “They’re both injured at the moment but they should be back this coming weekend at Belpre. Pretty happy with third overall.”
Fisher Catholic’s Patrick Kerney placed third (16:01) while teammates Aiden Jackson (16:28) an Noah Sharp (16:36) finished sixth and seventh, respectively.
Bellaire’s Jacob Definbaugh grabbed fourth place with a time of 16:06. Marietta freshman Ezra Minard earned a top five finish, clocking in at 16:21 for fifth place. Eastern’s Brayden O’Brien (16:49) came in ninth while Fort Frye freshman Phinn Spindler rounded out the top 10 with a time of 16:55.
The Cadet boys placed ninth as a team. Caldwell finished fourth as a team with Andrew Sheanshang (17:36) coming in 17th to produce the Redskins’ top finish.
The Tiger boys placed fifth as a team, led by Minard. Nathan Johnson added a 16th place finish (18:46) while Ethan Young was close behind in 28th (18:52).
On the girls side, it was Marietta which took home the first place trophy. The Tigers defeated second place Warren, 70-84.
“The girls have been working hard in practice and it’s paying off,” said MHS head coach Jon Tynan. “We’ve been changing some things up trying to keep them fresh for race day. It’s super exciting to see them come together like this.”
Ciara Space was the race’s leader for two miles, but Fisher Catholic’s Natalie Boyden took the lead down the stretch and won with a time of 19:18, a new course record.
Space finished second with a time of 19:25
“Ciara Space has been doing a great job for us this season,” Tynan praised. “She’s really going to have a great senior year. We’re looking forward to seeing what she’s got.”
Ava Gebczyk gave the Tigers a fourth place finish at 20:02, finishing just behind Warren’s Grace Randall, who clocked in at 20:01.
Coming in 13th and 14th were Marietta’s Lynncoln Tynan (21:33) and Hannah Lovejoy (21:35), respectively, giving the Tigers four runners in the top 14.
“Having four of the top 14 — and Mahlen (Becker) really pulled in our fifth one there to help us secure that victory,” coach Tynan said. “It was a good day of racing.”
Becker placed 43rd with a time of 23:50.
Allison Werry gave Warren a pair of top 10 finishers, placing ninth with a time of 21:02. Devanne Reynolds finished 20th (22:07), Madelyn Dougherty was 29th (22:47) and Lily Herriott was 32nd (23:03).
“This is a fast course, but our girls just keep improving,” said coach Werry. “At the Broughton race, we finished third behind Marietta and Caldwell. We were looking to move a spot up, win it or get second. That was a team focus today.”
Completing the top 10 in the girls race were Buckeye Trail’s Katherine Williams (5th, 20:07), Federal Hocking’s Rosemary Stephens (6th, 20:07), Caldwell’s Sage Speck (7th, 20:16), Shenandoah’s Kendall Mackie (8th, 20:46) and River’s Mara Beard (10th, 21:07).
Speck, who won the Broughton Invitational earlier this season, helped Caldwell place third as a team. Brynn Block (18th, 21:52), Calli Hesson (24th, 22:19), Katie Franklin (26th, 22:35) and Emma Lowe (27th, 22:38) were Caldwell’s other big contributors.
Morgan’s Emily Pinkerton just missed the top 10, placing 11th with a time of 21:15. Waterford’s Kaylor Offenberger clocked in at 21:42 to place 16th, while Morgan’s Dahlia Hill was right behind in 17th with a time of 21:51.
The Belpre boys won the middle school team title. The Golden Eagles got second, third and fourth place finishes from Austin Jenkins (12:33), Carter Norman (12:47) and Johnny Miller (12:47), respectively.
Eastern’s Connor Nolan won the individual title with a time of 11:33. Marietta’s Tyler Frye placed fifth (12:47), Waterford’s Troy Gibson was sixth (12:49), Caldwell’s Charles Estadt was seventh (12:52), Waterford’s Aiden Jones was eighth (13:01), Shenandoah’s Jarrett Wentworth was ninth (13:04) and Waterford’s Gavin Offenberger was 10th (13:13).
Fort Frye dominated the girls middle school race, taking the team title with four girls in the top five. Emma Richards won the race with a time of 12:53, followed by Cadence Waller (2nd, 13:07), Laine Spindler (3rd, 13:52) and Maggie Fulton (5th, 14:23.)
Marietta’s Millie Becker placed fourth (14:07), Waterford’s Seneca Lang was sixth (14:43), Belpre’s Shyanna Miller was seventh (14:46), River’s Mallory Brake was eighth (14:56), Caldwell’s Alexis Franklin placed ninth (14:57) and Waterford’s Alyssa Mooney came in 10th (15:31.)
Warren’s head coach had high praise for the level of competition the race featured.
“We came into this not knowing, and then we started seeing some teams show up, and we were like, ‘OK, we’re going to have a race today,’” Werry said. “That’s what we want. We want the challenge. We don’t want to be complacent. We want to go places where we’re going to be challenged.”
2nd annual Jeremy Anderson Invitational
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS: Warren 56, Fisher Catholic 58, Belpre 94, Caldwell 115, Marietta 132, Bellaire 138, Shenandoah 180, Federal Hocking 196, Fort Frye 222, Morgan 237, Crooksville 281, Waterford 311
TOP TEN: Eli Fullerton (Belpre) 15:28*; Blake Rodgers (Belpre) 15:51; 3. Patrick Kenney (Fisher Catholic) 16:01; Jacob Defibaugh (Bellaire) 16:06; Ezra Minard (Marietta) 16:21; Aiden Jackson (Fisher Catholic) 16:28; Noah Sharp (Fisher Catholic) 16:36; Brennan Perdue (Warren) 16:41; Brayden O-Brien (Eastern) 16:49; Phinn Spindler (Fort Frye) 16:55
Local teams
Warren: 8. Brennan Perdue 16:41; 11. Matthew Rauch 16:58; 12. Bryson Angelo 17:11; 15. Andrew Vincent 17:27; 16. Justin Pate 17:36
Belpre: 1. Eli Fullerton 15:28*; 2. Blake Rodgers 15:51; 22. Davis Leach 18:31; 31. Evan Wells 19:06; 45. Kayden Wright 20:10
Caldwell: 17. Andrew Sheanshang 17:36; 20. Lucas King 18:03; 21. Blake Miller 18:15; 29. Noah Scheich 18:58; 39. Ben Maskiell 19:28
Marietta: 5. Ezra Minard 16:21; 25. Nathan Johnson 18:46; 28. Ethan Young 18:52; 32. Isaac Lough 19:09; 51. Evan Masselli 20:41
Shenandoah: 24. Aidan Snyder 18:33; 36. Cale Bond 19:24; 37. Caden Chicwak 19:27; 47. Grant Stottsberry 20:15; 49. Mason Stottsberry 20:32
Federal Hocking: 14. Brayden Tabler 17:27; 23. Evan McPherson 18:32; 34. Cedric Newman-Simpson 19:19; 70. Iden Miller 22:03; 82. Myles Vorisek 22:49
Fort Frye: 10. Phinn Spindler 16:55; 40. Alex Henke 19:36; 52. Wyatt Fulton 20:42; 68. Brayden Becker 21:55; 76. Nathan Powell 22:20
Morgan: 30. Cody Young 19:03; 43. Caleb Jacomet 20:03; 54. Josef Jacomet 20:45; 59. Hunter Hill 21:02; 73. 22:06
Waterford: 46. Jarrett Armstrong 20:11; 72. Chase Schott 22:06; 75. Tyson Moore 22:13; 77. Evan Strickler 22:24; 85. Luke Stollar 23:01
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS: Marietta 70, Warren 84, Caldwell 92, Fisher Catholic 131, Buckeye Trail 139, Alexander 143, Eastern 152, River 177, Morgan 199, Federal Hocking 227, Belpre 279
TOP TEN: Natalie Boyden (Fisher Catholic) 19:18*; Ciara Space (Marietta) 19:25; Grace Randall (Warren) 20:01; Ava Gebczyk (Marietta) 20:02; Kathryn Williams (Buckeye Trail) 20:07; Rosemary Stephens (Federal Hocking) 20:07; Sage Speck (Caldwell) 20:16; Kendall Mackie (Shenandoah) 20:46; Allison Werry (Warren) 21:02; Mara Beard (River) 21:07
Local teams
Marietta: 2. Ciara Space 19:25; 4. Ava Gebczyk 20:02; 13. Lynncoln Tynan 21:33; 14. Hannah Lovejoy 21:35; 43. Mahlen Becker 23:50
Warren: 3. Grace Randall 20:01; 9. Allison Werry 21:02; 20. Devanne Reynolds 22:07; 29. Madelyn Dougherty 22:47; 32. Lily Herriott 23:03
Caldwell: 7. Sage Speck 20:16; 18. Brynn Block 21:52; 24. Calli Hesson 22:19; 26. Katie Franklin 22:35; 27. Emma Lowe 22:38
Morgan: 11. Emily Pinkerton 21:15; 17. Dahlia Hill 21:51; 54. Addie Young 24:57; 81. Kylea Holloway 28:34; 83. Elizabeth Bankes 29:16
Federal Hocking: 6. Rosemary Stephens 20:07; 42. Sage Helon 23:42; 69. Emma Lucas 26:52; 74. Olivia Amlin 27:37; 82. Magnolia Ballew 29:00
Belpre: 48. Maddie Sprigg 24:21; 53. Kelly Erb 24:55; 68. Carissa Sprigg 26:46; 77. Trista Harpold 27:53; 96. Audrey Johnson 34:38
MIDDLE SCHOOL BOYS: Belpre 38, Waterford 50, Buckeye Trail 56, Shenandoah 71
TOP TEN: Connor Nolan (Eastern) 11:33*; Austin Jenkins (Belpre) 12:33; Carter Norman (Belpre) 12:47; Johnny Miller (Belpre) 12:47; Tyler Frye (Marietta) 12:47; Troy Gibson (Waterford) 12:49; Charles Estadt (Caldwell) 12:52; Aiden Jones (Waterford) 13:01; Jarrett Wentworth (Shenandoah) 13:04; Gavin Offenberger (Waterford) 13:13
MIDDLE SCHOOL GIRLS: Fort Frye 17, Southern 63, Marietta 74, Alexander 76, Crooksville 95
TOP TEN: Emma Richards (Fort Frye) 12:53*; Cadence Waller (Fort Frye) 13:07; Laine Spindler (Fort Frye) 13:52; Millie Becker (Marietta) 14:07; Maggie Fulton (Fort Frye) 14:23; Seneca Lang (Waterford) 14:43; Shyanna Miller (Belpre) 14:46; Mallory Brake (River) 14:56; Alexis Franklin (Caldwell) 14:57; Alyssa Mooney (Waterford) 15:31
*course record
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13 most handsome ONE Fighting Championship fighters in 2013
13 most handsome ONE Fighting Championship fighters in 2013
Peter Davis
Based in Singapore, ONE Fighting Championship held seven events in 2013, which marked its third year. Aside from its home country, the other countries that played host to the events of the mixed martial arts promotion were Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines.
ONE Fighting Championship held one event in 2011 and five events in 2012. Here are the 13 most handsome MMA fighters who…
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