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Margaretta Mary Winifred Scott [1] (13 February 1912 – 15 April 2005) was an English stage, screen and television actress whose career spanned over seventy years. [2] She is best remembered for playing the eccentric widow Mrs. Pumphrey in the BBC television series All Creatures Great and Small (1978–1990).
Fanny Margaretta Holcroft was the daughter of Thomas Holcroft and his third wife, Dinah Robinson, who died shortly after giving birth to her. When she was baptized at the age of five, her name was registered as "Fanny," so it was not a nickname, though some records refer to her as "Frances."
Scott died in 1918. The Mary Augusta Scott Papers, ca. 1870 - 1917, are held at Vassar College Archives and Special Collections. [2]In 2016, a portrait of the first seven women to receive Ph.D.s from Yale, which those seven women all did in 1894, was placed in Sterling Memorial Library at Yale. [1]
Margaretta (Rita) Williams (1933-2018) was a Welsh academic, lexicographer, Celtic linguist, translator and Breton scholar. She was elected an Honorary Member of the Welsh Gorsedd in 1994. She was awarded the French Order of the Ermine award in 1996 for her championing of the Welsh and Breton languages and literature over many decades.
One day the mother accidentally gives her daughter-in-law the wrong medication and Ann nearly dies. The doctor saves his wife, but then accuses his mother of attempted murder. In the end, it turns out Emma the maid was responsible for accidentally switching the pills, and with the crisis over, mother, son and daughter-in-law realise they must ...
Margaretta Craig (1902–1963), American nurse and a missionary; Margaretta D'Arcy (born 1934), Irish actress, writer, playwright, and activist; Margaretta Dressler, née Park (f. 1890s), wife of William F. Dressler; Margaretta Eagar (1863—1936), Irish woman who was a nanny to the daughters of the Emperor and Empress of Russia
Calling Paul Temple is a 1948 British crime film directed by Maclean Rogers and starring John Bentley, Dinah Sheridan and Margaretta Scott. [1] It was the second in a series of four Paul Temple films distributed by Butcher's Film Service. [2] The first was Send for Paul Temple (1946), with Anthony Hulme as Paul Temple.
Walter Scott, later Lord Scott of Buccleuch. Margaret Scott, sometimes said to have married to Robert Scott of Thirlestane. Mary Scott, who married William Elliott of Lariston; After Walter Scott died on 17 April 1574 she completed rebuilding work at Branxholme Castle in October 1576 and had this achievement carved in stone on the building. [2]