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In London in 1940, Catrin Cole is hired by the Ministry of Information to help write scripts for propaganda films. Her male colleagues need her to craft realistic dialogue for female characters, but they refuse to credit her and pay her less than a man's wage.
Martha R Field. Martha Reinhard Smallwood Field (May 24, 1854 – December 19, 1898), known as Mattie Field, was an American journalist.She usually wrote under the pen name Catherine Cole or Catharine Cole. [1]
Catherine Cole is an Australian author and academic. She lives between Australia, South West France and the UK. Cole's work in the fields of fiction, poetry, non-fiction, and academic writing has been widely published both in Australia in the UK, US, China and Vietnam. Her book Dry Dock was a finalist for the 2000 Ned Kelly Award for Best First ...
In the same year, she appeared as the fictional young screenwriter Catrin Cole in Their Finest, a wartime romcom about a propaganda film crew working during the Second World War. Arterton's performance amongst the impressive ensemble of supporting actors (Bill Nighy, Sam Claflin, and Eddie Marsan) was generally well received. [50]
Cole won the role of Clarissa Payne in What a Girl Wants (2003), while still at drama school. She graduated early to begin filming. She was then cast as Juliet in a production of Romeo and Juliet at Clwyd Theatr Cymru. [3] Cole's first lead role was that of Cassie Hughes in Hex. She played the role for the whole of the first season and the ...
Red Nose Day 2009 was a fund-raising event organised by Comic Relief, broadcast live on BBC One, BBC Two and BBC Three from the evening of 13 March 2009 to early the following morning.
Catherine Storr, Lady Balogh (née Catherine Cole; 21 July 1913 – 8 January 2001, [1]) was an English children's writer, best known for her novel Marianne Dreams and for a series of books about a wolf ineptly pursuing a young girl, beginning with Clever Polly and the Stupid Wolf. She also wrote under the name Helen Lourie. [2]
Storr was, as one of his obituarists observed, "no stranger to suffering at formative stages of his life." [1] He married twice, to Catherine Cole (who became a children's writer under her married name) in 1942 and writer Catherine Peters in 1970 after the first marriage ended in divorce.