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Homenagem da Assembleia ao HU de Londrina folhadelondrina.com.br - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from folhadelondrina.com.br Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Things that were big in my childhood but mean nothing to my children irishtimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from irishtimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Wanita Ni Kongsi Cara Elak Bontot Kuali & Periuk Hitam. Guna Bahan Ni Je, Mudah & Murah. Cukup Berbaloi! keluarga.my - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from keluarga.my Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
I don’t believe that you need to be of a certain age to enjoy Gods of Snooker (available on iPlayer). My hunch is that even people who weren’t there at the time will have found themselves strangely bewitched by the sight of so many rayon-clad bottoms pointing ever skywards (the table-side contortions of the average Eighties snooker star would bring to mind Nijinsky about to
Alex Higgins celebrates winning the World Championship in 1982 with wife Lynn and daughter Lauren Billy Foley Billy Foley It's one of the most iconic television moments in sport. Alex Higgins in the centre of the Crucible Theatre. The man child clutching his baby daughter in one arm and the world championship trophy in the other, crying. Just moments before, Higgins had pleaded with his wife in the crowd, with tears in his eyes. “Give me my baby … give me my baby.” Sport stars celebrating with their children has become de rigueur, but in 1982 this was exceptional. Higgins, the hard nut from Belfast who spent more time drunk than sober, desperate to kiss and hug his infant daughter.
Tonight's TV includes Ardal O'Hanlon exploring colourful vocabulary in Holy F***, rompy period drama The Pursuit of Love, Kate Garraway, Alex Higgins and Snowfall . . .
AFTER a dearth of drama during the pandemic viewers can feel spoiled this week with at least two offerings sure to be in the running for awards and acclaim when the time comes. Fargo (Channel 4, Sunday, 10pm) returns to the badlands of Kansas City for a 1950-set series. Noah Hawley’s whip-smart and delightfully cynical crime drama, now on its fourth outing, has distinguished itself down the years with big name, sometimes surprising, casting. This time, it is Chris Rock adding his name to a list that includes Billy Bob Thornton, Martin Freeman, Ted Danson and Ewan McGregor. The stand-up superstar plays Loy Cannon, part of a band of African-American gangsters who want to take the Italian-American mob on at their own game. Wonder how that works out. As added treats, also showing up are Jessie Buckley (Wild Rose), Jason Schwartzman (Rushmore), Ben Whishaw (voice of Paddington) and Timothy Olyphant (Justified).
Alex Higgins, Jimmy White and snooker's dizzying whirlwind of drink, drugs and gambling Mirror 7 hrs ago Hector Nunns There are no white supremacist groups, prisoners on Death Row, or religious zealots in Louis Theroux’s latest venture into TV documentary. The presenter with a taste for the esoteric is off screen and executive producer for the ‘Gods of Snooker’ three-parter starting next Sunday night on BBC2, which deals with the explosion of the game into UK popular culture in the 1980s, and the huge celebrities and controversies it created. So what were the origins for this new species? Some might point back all the way to naturalist David Attenborough, who as a Controller of Programming for the BBC first commissioned the short-format ‘Pot Black’ show in 1969.
Snooker's path to Crucible drama and beyond rte.ie - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rte.ie Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.