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Their daughter, Susan Wooldridge, is also an actress and their son, Hugh Wooldridge is a theatre director and producer. Scott died from pneumonia and breast cancer [1] at her home in London on 15 April 2005, aged 93, and is buried with her husband, John, at St Lawrence's Church, Cholesbury, Buckinghamshire. The headstone lists her as Margaretta ...
Portrayed by Margaretta Scott, Lady Southwold's sister, Lady Katherine "Kate" Castleton (died 1921), was to have presented Elizabeth to King Edward VII at a Londonderry House ball in 1905. By 1912, she is known as 'stone deaf and not very good company' dying in 1921 and leaving James £1,000, some of which he used to buy an aeroplane.
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 ...
A former Playboy model killed herself and her 7-year-old son after jumping from a hotel in Midtown New York City on Friday morning. The New York Post reports that 47-year-old Stephanie Adams ...
Margaret was born Daisy Bertha Mary Scudamore in Portsmouth, she was the youngest of five children of William George, [1] a shipwright at HM Portsmouth, and Clara (née Linington), all residing at 7 Melbourne Place, Southsea. She left home at the age of 18 and found her way to the London offices of theatrical agent, Sir John Denton.
Margaret Scott (Australian author) (1934–2005), Australian author, poet and television personality; Maggie Scott, Lady Scott (born 1960), member of the Scottish Faculty of Advocates and Queen's Counsel; Maggie Scott (1955), British actor, feminist, textile artist and wife of actor Paul Freeman; USS Margaret Scott, a U.S. Navy Stone Fleet ship
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.
Margaret Scott has a memorial bench at the Salem Witch Trials Memorial, along with the rest of the men and women who were executed. Arthur Miller , who wrote The Crucible , a play based on the trials, spoke at the dedication, as did Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel . [ 1 ]