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Holmes's major works of Romantic biography include: Shelley: The Pursuit which won him the Somerset Maugham Award in 1974; Coleridge: Early Visions, which won him the 1989 Whitbread Book of the Year Prize (now the Costa Book Awards); Coleridge: Darker Reflections, the second and final volume of his Coleridge biography which won the Duff Cooper Prize and the Heinemann Award; and Dr. Johnson and ...
Born as Catherine Smith, Russell's father was the actor Nicholas Smith, best known for playing Mr Rumbold in the BBC sitcom Are You Being Served. Her mother, Mary Smith, was a social worker. She is married to film producer Richard Holmes whose films include Waking Ned, The Ritual, God's Own Country and Eden Lake. They have two children: Sam ...
Holmes confessed to the murder to his second wife. Milford Cole of Baltimore, disappeared after receiving a telegram from Holmes to come to Chicago in July 1894. [31] An additional possible victim was Lucy Burbank; her bankbook was found with human hair in a chimney flue at the "Castle" in 1895. [37]
Footsteps: Adventures of a Romantic Biographer is an autobiographical book by the biographer Richard Holmes, published in 1985. Harper Perennial first published reprints of Footsteps in 2005. [ 1 ]
Richard Holmes (Connecticut settler) (1633–1704), founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut; Richard Rivington Holmes (1835–1911), British archivist and courtier; Richard Holmes (military historian) (1946–2011), British soldier and military historian; Richard E. Holmes (born 1944), first black student to enroll at Mississippi State University
Richard "Rick" Holmes (born March 16, 1963, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American actor. He received his BA from Gettysburg College and an MFA in acting from New York University . He has played numerous stage roles, including roles in such Broadway productions as Cabaret , Spamalot , Peter and the Starcatcher and Matilda , among others.
It also covers how he groomed, sexually molested, and trafficked a 15 year old child, Dawn Schiller. Finally, it covers Eddie Nash and Wonderland murders, as well as Holmes' death from AIDS. It is narrated principally by journalist Mike Sager, whose Rolling Stone story "The Devil and John Holmes" inspired the films Boogie Nights and Wonderland. [4]
Holmes's first album, on Pacific Jazz with guest Ben Webster, was recorded in March 1961. [1] He recorded many albums for Pacific Jazz, Prestige, Groove Merchant, and Muse, many of them with Houston Person.