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The White-Faced Women abandon Count Olaf in The Slippery Slope after accusing him of starting a fire that killed their third sibling and when they refused to kill Sunny. Their fates have been speculated by Lemony Snicket to either have them singing sad songs in some of the gloomiest music halls in the city, living together in the Hinterlands ...
Olaf married Aud the Deep-minded (Auðr), daughter of Ketil Flatnose, the ruler of the Hebrides, according to Icelandic traditions (Landnámabók, Laxdæla saga). The Irish sources name Olaf's wife only as the daughter of a "King Aedh". [2] Olaf and Auðr had a son, Thorstein the Red (Þorsteinn rauðr), who attempted to conquer Scotland in the ...
Jamie Harris as the Hook-Handed Man, Count Olaf's main minion. Craig Ferguson as the Person of Indeterminate Gender, one of Count Olaf's minions. Jennifer Coolidge and Jane Adams as the White-Faced Women, two of Count Olaf's minions. Cedric the Entertainer as the Constable, a local detective who is skeptical of Count Olaf. Bob Clendenin as ...
Harris stars as the vile guardian Count Olaf in the six and a half hour (8 parts - 2 per each book) episodic adaptation of the beloved children's book series. He takes care of the Baudelaire ...
John DeSantis as the Bald Man, [19] a tall bald-headed man who is another member of Count Olaf's theatre troupe; Jacqueline and Joyce Robbins as the White-Faced Women, [18] two elderly twins who are members of Count Olaf's theatre troupe; Sara Canning as Jacquelyn Scieszka, Mr. Poe's standoffish secretary and a member of VFD. She possesses a ...
One player assumes the role of Count Olaf, and the other players play the Baudelaire children. Count Olaf's objective in the game is to eliminate the guardian, while the children try to keep the guardian alive. The game employs Clever Cards, Tragedy Cards, Secret Passage Tiles, and Disguise Tiles in play.
Óláfr Guðrøðarson (died 1237) (Scottish Gaelic: Amhlaibh Dubh), also known as Olaf the Black, was a thirteenth-century King of the Isles, and a member of the Crovan dynasty. [ note 1 ] He was a son of Guðrøðr Óláfsson, King of the Isles and Fionnghuala Nic Lochlainn. Óláfr was a younger son of his father; Óláfr's elder brother ...
Olaf the Black sired two sons in the Hebrides (in addition to at least 3 other sons in Norway). The sons were Leod and Gilhemoire, who became the progenitors of the Clans MacLeod and Morrison. [2] Gilhemoire and Leod were half-brothers, Leod having been born of Christiana (daughter of Ferquhar, Earl of Ross), Olaf's third wife. [citation needed]