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Search resuls for: "Nancy Drew"


6 mentions found


Kenneth Mitchell, a Canadian actor known for his roles on the series “Star Trek: Discovery” and the film “Captain Marvel,” died on Saturday. He had lived with the neurological disorder amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or A.L.S., which causes paralysis and death, for more than five years, according to a statement from Mr. Mitchell’s family posted to his social media. Mr. Mitchell played the Klingons Kol, Kol-Sha, and Tenavik, as well as Aurellio, on “Star Trek: Discovery,” and voiced several other characters in an episode of “Star Trek: Lower Decks.”In “Captain Marvel,” he played the father of the superhero, Carol Danvers. He was also known for portraying Eric Green on the series “Jericho,” Joshua Dodd in the series “Nancy Drew,” a hockey player in the film “Miracle,” and appeared in several other film and television series.
Persons: Kenneth Mitchell, Marvel, , Mitchell’s, Mitchell, Kol, Captain Marvel, Carol Danvers, Eric Green, ” Joshua Dodd, Nancy Drew Organizations: Locations: Canadian
But it's Taylor Swift who got her into finally watching the Super Bowl with me. But as she started to get older, unicorns and Taylor Swift dance parties started to beat out football for her. AdvertisementThat was before news broke this fall that Taylor Swift was dating Travis Kelce, who is (as my daughter discovered) an actually good football player. AdvertisementLike "Snow on the Beach," discovering we can watch football together feels fragile and magical. It took Taylor Swift to bring us "Out of the Woods."
Persons: Taylor Swift, Travis Kelce's, , it's Taylor Swift, She's, hiccuping, Nancy Drew, Travis Kelce, Loving Taylor didn't, Taylor, Travis Organizations: Service, Michigan Wolverines, Michigan, Rose, Seahawks, Chiefs Locations: Indonesia, Jakarta, Seattle
It is the rare night I fall asleep before turning a few pages of a book. So, I was quite surprised to find myself immersed in Louise Penny’s Inspector Gamache novels, all 18 of them. Knowing that I would not run out of books, no matter how many sleepless nights I might be facing, calmed me. Returning to my Louise Penny mystery that night, I realized that perhaps it was the memory of those lonely nights from my childhood that kept me from reading mystery books. The women physicians who took care of me are a stunning reminder of how the world has changed since my childhood.
Persons: Maggie Mulqueen, Louise Penny’s, Gamache, Maggie Mulqueen Maggie Mulqueen, Peter, Gamache’s, , , Nancy Drew, Louise Penny Organizations: CNN Locations: Brookline , Massachusetts
Leah Lewis is only 26, but she's already spent more than half her life trying to make it as an actor. In "Elemental," Lewis voices the lead character Ember, a fire-type living in a world where residents embodying fire, water, air and land co-exist in Element City. For Lewis, it's one of a handful of bigger roles she's landed in a few short years. Even when I landed some kind of success with "Nancy Drew," "The Half of It," now "Elemental," I think, "Are you sure?" I've done the work, and the work really leads me to feel like I'm not like faking it.
Persons: Leah Lewis, she's, she'll, Lewis, Ember, it's, George, Fan, Nancy Drew, Netflix's, Alice Wu, Peter Sohn, I've, I'm, AAPI creatives, They'd Organizations: Disney, Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, Hollywood, CNBC, Pixar, American, Pacific Locations: Los Angeles , California, Los Angeles, City, Wade, Georgia, Shanghai, China, American
Mama pulls the curtains back to welcome the sunlight.” So begins Tiffany Hammond’s “A Day With No Words,” which debuted at No. “I do not speak,” the boy lets readers know. I use a tablet to be heard, pushing buttons with pictures that speak my words.”Hammond writes what she knows: She has autism, as do her sons, who are 16 and 14. “I didn’t know I was autistic until I was 18,” Hammond said in a phone interview. I needed to figure out, how do I talk to you?”
CNN —Although the main character’s name was inspired by the poetic line “Wednesday’s child is full of woe,” “Wednesday” is generally a delight, thanks almost entirely to Jenna Ortega. Having outgrown her Disney Channel days, Ortega makes the Addams Family’s now-high-school-age daughter the coolest humorless goth sociopath you’ll ever meet, in a Netflix series that’s more kooky than spooky or ooky. – a “five-fingered discount.” The writers extract a great deal of comedic mileage from that extremity, so give them a hand. Seeking to bring something new a property like the Addams Family, which has been done so many times before, isn’t easy without altering its DNA. To its credit, “Wednesday” rises to the challenge and mostly manages to make it look like a snap.
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