TitleYearStatusCharacterAFI's 100 Years... 100 Cheers: America's Most Inspiring Movies2006TV Movie documentaryHerselfLegends Ball2006TV Movie documentaryHerself106 & Park Top 10 Live2006TV SeriesHerselfThe Oprah Winfrey Show2006TV SeriesHerself - Guest12th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards2006TV SpecialHerselfThe 11th Annual Critics' Choice Awards2006TV Movie documentaryHerselfAn Evening of Stars: Tribute to Stevie Wonder2006TV Movie documentaryHerselfA Capitol Fourth2005TV SpecialHerselfThe 59th Annual Tony Awards2005TV SpecialHerself - Presenter36th NAACP Image Awards2005TV SpecialHerself - PresenterParty Planner with David Tutera2005TV SeriesHerselfTsunami Aid: A Concert of Hope2005TV SpecialHerselfThe Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts2004TV MovieHerselfCelebrity Poker Showdown2004TV SeriesHerselfEllen: The Ellen DeGeneres Show2004TV SeriesHerself - GuestThe Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn2004TV SeriesHerself - GuestJimmy Kimmel Live!
Daisy Pearce has come in for harsh criticism of her commentary during the first game of the season, with some AFL fans still not willing to give the footy great a chance despite her obvious talent behind the microphone.
Pearce, one of the most respected commentators in the country on top of being an AFLW icon, admitted last year that criticism of her broadcast style had ‘drained’ her.
She was involved in a spat with ex-AFL legends Dermott Brereton and Rex Hunt, with the latter accusing Channel Seven of ‘ruining the game’ by allowing her to commentate.
Charles Darwin was born on February 12, 1809, in Shrewsbury, England. His father, Robert Darwin, was a physician, the son of Erasmus Darwin, a poet, philosopher, and naturalist. Charles's mother, Susannah Wedgwood Darwin, died when he was eight years old. At age 16, Darwin left Shrewsbury to study medicine at Edinburgh University. He later enrolled in Cambridge University to prepare for a career as a clergyman in the Church of England.
Gayle Hunnicutt, an American actress who shed her Texas accent before building a three-decade career on the British stage and screen, playing glamorous femme fatales and costume-drama heroines while making headlines for her marriages to two very different men — the flamboyant actor David Hemmings and the cerebral journalist Simon Jenkins — died Aug. 31 at a hospital in London. She was 80.
Her death, from an unspecified illness, was confirmed by Jenkins, her former husband.
A coterie of financial elites — from the unseasoned to the unsavory — are launching more than a dozen restaurants in the Hamptons and on the North Fork to serve the moneyed masses starved for dining options as the East End booms.
The roster of restaurateurs includes the first venture from Valerie Mnuchin, the socialite sister of former US Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, and hedge fund vampire Heath Freeman — known as the “grim reaper of American newspapers.