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A Picture of Katherine Mansfield
Vanessa Redgrave
(Actor, Host),
Phyllida Law
(Actor, Host),
Alan Cooke
(Director, Host)
&
0
more Rated: Format: DVD
Unrated
$38.99$38.99
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Playback Region 2 : This will not play on most DVD players sold in the U.S., U.S. Territories, Canada, and Bermuda. See other DVD options under “Other Formats & Versions”. Learn more about DVD region specifications here
Product Description
A Picture of Katherine Mansfield is a 1973 BBC television drama series starring Vanessa Redgrave as writer Katherine Mansfield. The series included dramatizations of Mansfield's life as well as adaptations of her short stories
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : Unknown
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : Unrated (Not Rated)
- Package Dimensions : 7.1 x 5.42 x 0.58 inches; 2.93 Ounces
- Director : Alan Cooke
- Media Format : PAL
- Run time : 5 hours and 7 minutes
- Release date : October 5, 2015
- Actors : Vanessa Redgrave, Phyllida Law, Jeremy Brett, Lyndon Hughes, Annette Crosbie
- Subtitles: : English
- Producers : A Picture of Katherine Mansfield (Complete Series) - 2-DVD Set
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 2.0)
- Studio : Simply Media
- ASIN : B00XNB1JXU
- Country of Origin : United Kingdom
- Number of discs : 2
- Best Sellers Rank: #251,933 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #38,450 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
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Customer reviews
4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
22 global ratings
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Top reviews from the United States
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Reviewed in the United States on November 10, 2020
I have been a huge fan of Jeremy Brett and Vanessa Redgrave. Saw the series downloaded on YouTube and was not happy with the picture quality. Totally excited to finally find the 2-disc DVD on Amazon and the discs play really well on my all-region player. This is a very "British" drama so not everyone's cup of tea. Feeling bittersweet seeing the somewhat young and curly haired Jeremy Brett. Gone way too soon. As usual, both actors acted splendidly.
Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2018
Brilliant. Would be better if the American version was available, though.
Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2022
Overall, the story is great; it is excellently told by brilliant actors/actresses. The dvd contains all the episodes, that tells the story of troubled writer-Katherine Mansfield.
For me, who was not familiar with this writer, these episodes gave me a good idea of Katherine Mansfield and her personality, experiences as well as her writing career. I have learned so much just by watching this series. Furthermore, I really liked the way the story was told and the way in which the chemistry between the actors/actresses unfolded.
There is only one thing that bothers me: each episode includes partly moments of Mansfield's life, and partly of her fiction stories. All mixed together. I would have preferred that her life story would have been told in one continuing story, and only afterwards would come her fictional stories, one by one. This is the reason for my 4 stars. Otherwise I would have given full 5.
For me, who was not familiar with this writer, these episodes gave me a good idea of Katherine Mansfield and her personality, experiences as well as her writing career. I have learned so much just by watching this series. Furthermore, I really liked the way the story was told and the way in which the chemistry between the actors/actresses unfolded.
There is only one thing that bothers me: each episode includes partly moments of Mansfield's life, and partly of her fiction stories. All mixed together. I would have preferred that her life story would have been told in one continuing story, and only afterwards would come her fictional stories, one by one. This is the reason for my 4 stars. Otherwise I would have given full 5.
Top reviews from other countries
Margaret pleming
5.0 out of 5 stars
Just what I wanted,arrived promptly.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 2, 2023
A film I wanted to see again as I enjoyed watching when it was first aired.
S. Pryor
5.0 out of 5 stars
Decent, easy-to-watch TV drama as it used to be.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 31, 2021
I only saw the first two episodes when this was first broadcast as I was otherwise occupied with getting married. I was disappointed to miss the remainder. I never was able to catch it again until seeing it was available on DVD recently. Well performed by such accomplished actors. But you need to keep your wits about you as it slips seamlessly from fact to fiction and back again. Cleverly crafted so as to include some of Katherine Mansfield's short stories. No crazy camera work, no obtrusive background music. Most enjoyable.
4 people found this helpful
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Sindri
4.0 out of 5 stars
"... Informal ..."
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 19, 2016
English television and film actor and director Alan Cooke`s television miniseries which was written by English playwright and screenwriter Robin Chapman, is inspired by real events in the life of a New Zealand student. It premiered on the British television channel BBC Two (1964) and is a United Kingdom production which was produced by producer Rosemary Hill (1927-1989). It tells the story about a daughter and British Subject who was born Kathleen Mansfield Beauchamp in Oceania and who said: “A ship that got wrecked every day. And ... always Stanley who …”
Distinctly and subtly directed by English filmmaker Alan Cooke, this quietly paced and somewhat fictional tale which is narrated mostly from the main character`s point of view, draws a literary portrayal of a woman of independence who once wrote: “… to become a direct human being.” (1927). While notable for its atmospheric milieu depictions, this dialog-driven and narrative-driven story was made eight centuries after the birth of an Englishman, Bishop of Albano (1149-1154) and Pope (1154-1159) named Adrian IV (c.1100-1159), the Isle of May Priory (1150s) on the Isle of May in Scotland where a human being named Adrian of May (9th century) may have lived, a town named Jena in Germany was mentioned (1182), seven centuries after a Frenchwoman, Her Ladyship the Duchess of Brittany (1166-1201) and Countess of Richmond (1166-1201) named Constance (1166-1201) mothered an Englishwoman named Eleanor, Fair Maid of Brittany (c. 1184-1241) and called the Pearl of Brittany who was heiress to Aquitaine which became (2016) part of Aquitaine-Limousin-Poitou-Charentes in France, was imprisoned (1202) at the Corfe Castle (11th century) in England, a market town named Ayr (1205) in Scotland, a town named Prestwick in South Ayrshire, Scotland where there is a mercat cross (12th century) was granted (1214) status as Royal burgh, a town named Augusta (1232) in Sicily, Syracuse in Italy, the twelve Eleanor crosses (1291-1294) in England, four centuries after a Scottish clársach named the Lamont Harp or the Caledonian Harp (15th century), the Yeomen Warders of Her Majesty`s Royal Palace and Fortress of the Tower of London (1485) who cares for the individually named ravens of the Tower whose wings are clipped, an Italian father and brother arrived (1497) at the Island of Newfoundland, three centuries after a city gate in Vilnius in Lithuania named Gate of Dawn (1522) where there is a painting named “Our Lady of the Gate of Dawn” (16th century), a Canada-Greenland border named the Davis Strait was explored (1585-1587) by an Englishman, two centuries after Acadia (1604-1713) in Canada, an English ship named Discovery (17th century), an English ship named Sarah Constant (1607-1615), a port settlement named Québec City (1608) in Canada, a British Overseas Colony named Newfoundland Colony (1610-1907), an English sailor discovered (1610) the Hudson Bay in Canada, a place in Nunavut, Canada named Devon Islands where there is a headland named Cape Vera was sighted (1616), a Scottish Master Mason to the Crown (1631-1636), Trois-Riviéres (1634) in Québec, Canada, Lord Chief Justice of the King`s Bench (1756-1788) and 1st Earl of Mansfield (1843) named William Murray (1705-1793) assumed office (1783-1783) as Lord Speaker, a protected area named the Isle of May Lighthouse (1635) in Scotland, daughters of France called the King`s Daughters (1663-1673) who moved to New France (1534-1765) in a country of ten provinces and three territories named Canada, the Edict of Fontainebleau (1685) in the French Republic, King and Queen`s County (1691) in Virginia in the United States, Sault Ste. Marie (1668) which was granted (1912) city status in Ontario, Canada on St. Marys River where there is a waterway named Ste. Marie Canal (1895), a century after a marriage (1722) at Notre Dame Basilica (1888) in Montréal, Canada, the Spanish Steps (1725) in Rome, Italy, King and Queen`s Court House (c. 1750) in Virginia, United States and Prospect (1754) in Halifax (1996), Nova Scotia, Canada.
Made a century after a Scottish gentlewoman named Joanna Baille (1762-1851) from a village where a Scotswoman forenamed Marion lived, who intended her plays for the stage and not for the closet moved (1769) to Hamilton, South Lanarkshire in Scotland and then moved (1772) to Glasgow, Scotland where she attended a boarding school and visited the theatre, New Glasgow (1776) in Canada, the Evacuation (1783) of the United Empire Loyalists (1789) from New York, United States to Canada, eleven English ships named the First Fleet (1787), Fort Vermilion (1788) on the Peace River in Northern Alberta, Canada, the dechristianization of France during the French Revolution (1789-1801), a Scottish-Canadian tacksman named Sir Alexander Mackenzie (1764-1820) from the Isle of Lewis in the Western Isles of Scotland started (1789) his journey in a canoe from the Mackenzie River which runs to the Arctic Ocean, a life named Pigeon was described (1790) by an Englishman, the Constitutional Act (1791) in Ontario, Canada, Upper Canada and Lower Canada or The Canadas (1791-1841), Thornhill (1794) in Ontario, Canada, a Scottish businessman named James McGill (1744-1813) who moved from Scotland to Canada lived (18th century) in Notre-Dame Street (1672) in Canada, Ward Islands was observed (1802) by an Australian, a port city named Newcastle (1804) in NSW in Australia, an Australian observed (1810) the Campbell Islands in New Zealand, the birth of a daughter of Australia named Anne Flinders (1812-1892), Perth (1816) in Lanark County, Ontario in Canada which is named after a Scottish market town, Cornwallis Island in Northern Canada which is separated by the Wellington Channel from Devon Island was visited (1819) by an Englishman from Bath, Somerset, England, Albany (1826) in Western Australia which was named by a Scotsman surnamed Stirling, a life named the Northwestern Wolf was described (1829) by a Scotsman surnamed Richardson, a life named Agathis Australis was described (1829) by a Scotsman who moved from Scotland to England, Augusta (1830) in Western Australia where the Blackwood River emerges into Flinders Bay, an inland city named Wagga Wagga in New South Wales in Australia was sightseen (1829), Camera Obscura and the World of Illusions (1835) in Castlehill, the Royal Mile, Edinburgh in Scotland by a woman middle named Theresa, seven women voted in Ontario, Canada, Queenscliff (1836) in Victoria, Australia, Queen`s and Lord Treasurer Remembrancer (1836) in Scotland, the Flag of Nova Scotia (1838), the birth of a daughter of Canada named Eliza Jane Creighton (1840-1929), Okiata was capital city (1840-1841) of New Zealand, Auckland (1840) in New Zealand, Auckland was capital city (1841-1865) of New Zealand, a Scottish ship named Duchess of Argyle sailed (1841) from the Scottish Lowlands to a city named Auckland on the North Island of New Zealand, Kingston (1673) on the Great Lakes in Ontario, Canada was (1841) named the capital of the Province of Canada, the birth (1843) of an Irishwoman forenamed Sarah in County Kerry, Munster in Ireland, a Welshwoman named Augusta Hall Waddington, Lady Llanover (1802-1896) and called Gwenynen Gwent from a county named Monmouthshire (1535) in Wales who advocated for the Welsh Triple Harp (17th century), started advocating for the Welsh Collegiate Institution (1847) in Llandovery, Carmarthenshire in Wales, Niagara Falls Suspension Bridge (1848-1897) over the Niagara River which flows from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario, a waterway which runs through the Canadian Arctic Archipelago named the Wellington Channel was sightseen (1851) by a Scotsman from Aberdeen, Scotland forenamed William, Fort William First Nation (1853) on the end of Lake Superior in the Thunder Bay District (1871) in Ontario, Canada, a town named Aurora (1854) in Ontario, Canada, Ararat (1857) in Victoria, Australia, a mining town named Mary Kathleen (1860s-1982) between Mount Isa (1923) and Cloncurry (1967) in Queensland, Australia and a series of natural springs in Australia was named (1861-1862) Daly Waters.
Made a century after the Katherine River in Northern Territory in Australia was named (1862) by a Scotsman from Dysart, Fife, Scotland named John McDouall Stuart (1815-1866), the Diamantina River which rises in the Swords Range in Queensland, Australia was named (1866) for an Australian Lady, a town named Roma (1867) in Queensland, Australia, Scottish gentlemen made Queen`s Park Football Club (1867) in Glasgow, Scotland, Parliament of Canada (1867), Prime Minister of Canada (1867), Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Ontario (1867), New Brunswick (1867) in Canada, the Canadian Confederation (1867) where British colonies were united into a Dominion of Canada and the country was divided into four provinces, five Alberta women respectively forenamed Henrietta, Louise, Nellie, Irene and Emily who were called the Valiant Five asked: “Does the word Persons in Section 24 of the British North America Act (1867) include female persons? an Australian noblewoman from the United States of the Ionian Islands (1815-1864) in the United Kingdom who was born in Greece named Diamantina di Roma, Lady Bowen (1832/33-1893) went (1868) to New Zealand, an Ulster Scot surnamed Bracken who moved from Ireland to Australia and who wrote the national anthem of New Zealand (1876), moved (1869) from Australia to New Zealand, Darwin (1869) on the Timor Sea in Northern Territory, Australia, the Aboriginal Protection Act (1869) in Australia, Sûreté du Québec (1870) in Canada, Indian Rights for Indian Women (1872) in Alberta, Canada, Prince Edward Island (1873) in Canada, a daughter of New Zealand named Ada Pike Wells (1863-1933) moved (1873) from England to New Zealand, less than a century after St Kilda (1875) in Dunedin (1848) in New Zealand, Fort Calgary (1875) in Canada, a Canadian physician named Emily Howard Stowe (1831-1903) made the Toronto Women`s Literary Club (1876) in Canada which was renamed (1883) the Toronto Women`s Suffrage Association, the Indian Act (1876) in Canada, an Englishman named Sir Leslie Stephen (1832-1904) married (1878) an Englishwoman named Julia Stephen (1846-1895), Mary Ann Shadd Cary House (1881) in Washington, D.C. in the United States, the Victorian Women`s Suffrage Society (1884-1908) in Melbourne, Australia and an Englishwoman from Bristol in England who is the sister of a Alice and a Lucy named Clara Weekes (1852-1937) who moved from England to Australia, advocated for women in the Victorian Lady Teachers Association (1884-1917), a man from New Zealand named Harold Beauchamp (1858-1938) and a woman from Australia named Annie Burnell Dyer (1863-1918) were married (1884) at a Cathedral Church in Wellington, Acts of Parliament in Australia named Half-Caste Act (1886), the Electoral division of Flinders (1887-1992) in Queensland in Australia. Ladykirk and Norham Bridge (1887) in the Anglo-Scottish border, British Gymnastics (1888) and an only daughter and Scotswoman surnamed Macmillan attended (1888) St Leonard and St Katherine School (1877) in St Andrews, Scotland.
Made less than a century after the Canada (Ontario Boundary) Act (1889) which confirmed Ontario`s right to Northwestern Ontario, a portrait named “Lily Hanbury” (1890s), the Manitoba Schools Question (1890-1896) in Canada where French was abolished as an official language, a Scotswoman and Headmistress from Aberdeen named Dame Louisa Innes Lumsden (1840-1935) introduced Women`s Lacrosse (1890) in St Andrews in Scotland, the St. Clair River (1891) under the St. Clair River in Canada, the women of Canada where (1894) playing ice hockey at the McGill University (1821) in Montréal, Canada, a territory named Yukon (1898) in Canada, Territory of Hawaii (1898-1959) in the United States, a Canadian ship named Gwendoline (1893-1897) was (1898) salvaged, a portrait named “Hilda Louise Hanbury” (1900), Queen of Australia (1901), the Australian Senate (1901), the Australian House of Representatives (1901), seven American women made the Coloured Women`s Club of Montréal (1902) in Canada, the Commonwealth Franchise Act (1902) which made Australia the first country to allow women, only Australian and New Zealand Māori, to stand for Parliament, a daughter of Canada forenamed Ann and middle named Augusta (1857-1943) was appointed President (1903) of the Dominion Women`s Enfranchisement Association (1889), a Canada-United States border town named Fort Frances (1903) in Ontario, Canada, the Shire of Diamantina (1903) in Queensland, Australia, a daughter of Canada middle named Cora was appointed President of the Canadian Women`s Press Club (1904), a town named Ladysmith (1904) in British Columbia (1871), Canada, a phrase named Ad Mare Usque Ad Mare was used (1905) on the head of the ceremonial mace of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan (1905) in Canada, the Walker Theatre (1907) in Smith Street, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, the Icelandic Women`s Suffrage Society (1908) in Winnipeg (1738) in Canada, a Bermudian vestrywoman named Gladys Carlyon de Courcy Misick Morrell (1888-1969) who has a brother named John and a sister named Rachel obtained (1911) a university degree in England and was hindered from attending law school, the opening (1912) of the Political Equality League (1912-1916) in Manitoba, Canada where a daughter of Canada from Woodstock (1851) in Canada named Winona Margaret Dixon Flett (1884-1922) who has a sister forenamed Lynn was an executive, a daughter of Iceland named Margret Jonsdottir Benedictsson (1866-1956) was the first President, Middlesex Guildhall (1913) in Parliament Square (1968) in the United Kingdom, a village named Fraser (1914) in Canada, the women of a prairie named Manitoba (1870) in Canada, a place settled by Germans in Nelson, New Zealand which is located between Richmond (1842), named (1854) after the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames (1965), Wakefield (1843) was named (1914) Hope, Katherine who wrote: “The American Woman sat where she always sat against the glass wall.” (1920) and who journeyed with the Cook Strait Ferry from Wellington to Picton near the head of the Queen Charlotte Sound in New Zealand, met (1916) an Englishwoman forenamed Adeline who published (1918) her short story, Middleton (1916) in Central West Queensland in Australia and Saskatchewan and Alberta women were granted Women`s Suffrage (1916).
Made less than a century after a city in New South Wales, Australia named Griffith (1916), a daughter of Canada from Sarnia, Canada named Roberta Catherine MacAdams (1880-1959) who was accepted by the RCAMC (1904-1968) was elected (1917-1921) MLA for Alberta. the women of Ontario were granted Women`s Suffrage (1917), High Commission of Australia (1918) in London, England, an act of painting in Cornwall, England named “Portrait of Katherine Mansfield” (1918) by an American sculptor named Anne Estelle Rice (1877-1959), Cairns (1876) between the Coral Sea and the Great Dividing Range in Far North Queensland in Australia was proclaimed (1923) a city, Katherine (1926) in Australia, Central Australia (1927-1931) and The Residency (1927) in Alice Springs (1872), Northern Territory (1911), O`Connor (1928) in Canberra, Australia, the Divorce Act (Ontario) (1930) in Canada, stairways named the Mayflower Steps (1934) in Plymouth, Devon, England, a border crossing named Thousand Island Bridge (1937) over St. Lawrence River which unites Hill Island in Ontario, Canada with Wellesley Island in New York in the United States, Dreamtime (1938) by a son of Australia, Blue Water Bridge (1938) across the St. Clair River in Ontario, Canada, a Scotswoman from Glasgow, Scotland who moved to New Zealand and returned from New Zealand to Glasgow, Scotland named Catherine Sword Campbell Stewart (1881-1943) assumed office (1938-1943) as MP for Wellington West (1938-1946), a claimed dependent territory which is named after an Englishwoman middle named Charlotte Mary, named Queen Maud Land (1939) in Antarctica, Plan Kathleen (1940-1941) in Ireland, a Canadian schoolteacher named Agnes Campbell Macphail (1890-1954) assumed office (1943-1945) as MPP for York East (1867-1996) in Ontario, Canada, a daughter of Australia named Dame Dorothy Margaret Tangney (1911-1985) was elected (1943-1968) Senator for Western Australia, an Irishwoman named Constantia Elizabeth Maxwell (1886-1962) was appointed (1945-1951) Lecky Professor (1913) in Ireland, Dixon Street Flats (1944) in Wellington, New Zealand, Letters Patent (1947) in Canada, Newfoundland and Labrador (1949) in Canada, a term named Atlantic Canada (1949), Inuit women were granted (1951) Women`s Suffrage, islands between Nunavut (1999) and Northern Territories (1870) in Northern Canada which were sighted in 1616 were renamed the Queen Elizabeth Islands (1953), the Royal New Zealand Ballet (1953) in Wellington, New Zealand, First Nations were granted (1954) the right to vote in Ontario in Canada, Elizabeth (1955) in Adelaide, Australia, a city named Cannon Beach (1956) in the United States where an American who has sisters named Ann, Lucy, Elizabeth and Frances named William Clark (1770-1838) from Caroline County (1728) which is named after a Princess of Wales and Queen consort of Great Britain and Ireland (1727-1827) in Virginia, United States journeyed (1805), Lewis and Clark National and State Parks (1958) in Pacific County (1851) in the United States, First Nations women were granted (1961) Women`s Suffrage, the Shire of Leonora (1961) in Perth, Western Australia where there is a place between Leinster (1976), Wiluna (1898) named Kathleen (1900), Rwanda (1962), LaViolette Bridge (1967) in Canada, Royal Commission on the Status of Women (1967) in Canada where a Canadian Senator (1978-1983) forenamed Florence who moved from the United States to Canada was chair, a residential area in Canberra, Australia named Aranda was published (1967), a park named La Ronde (1967) in chemin Macdonald, Île Sainte-Hélène, Montréal, Québec in Canada on an island in North American, an American author middle named Virginia participated in the Boston Marathon (1897) and reached (1967) the finish line, a United Kingdom spaceship named Ariel 3 (1967-1969) and the Divorce Act (1968) in Canada.
Made less than a century after Yvelines (1968) in Versailles, Île-de-France (1976) in France where there is a palace named the Queen`s Hamlet (1783), Caithness Glass (1961) in Wick, Caithness, Scotland was granted (1968) a Royal Warrant by the Queen Mother, the Mohawk Institute Residential School (1828-1969) was closed, the Mitchell College of Advanced Education (1970) in Bathurst (1814), New South Wales, Australia, a Canadian Honourable Lady named Thérèse MacDonald (1896-1981) assumed office (1970-1971) as Senator for Mille Isles, Québec, Canada, an Australian actress named Anne-Louise Lambert was blessed (1970) with a sister named Sarah, Young Point Provincial Park (1971) on the north shore of Sturgeon Lake in Alberta (1905) in Canada, Ontario, Native Women`s Association (1971) in Canada, Calgary House (1823) in the Isle of Mull in Scotland was (1971) designated, a place named Queensland (1973) in Calgary (1875) in Alberta, Canada, Kings Highway (1974) in Australia, Queen Elizabeth II Court (1976) in a city named Regina (1882) and nicknamed The Queen City in Canada, Queen of the Solomon Islands (1978), LˈAux Meadows in Canada was (1979) designated, Norfolk Islands (1979) between Australia, New Zealand and a special collectivity of France (1999) named New Caledonia which was observed (1774) by an Englishman forenamed James who married (1762) an Englishwoman forenamed Elizabeth, twenty-eight Aboriginal women walked the Indian Women`s March (1979) from Québec to Ottawa, Canada, a Canadian ballerina middle named Adrianne from Ontario enrolled (1979) at Erinvale School of Dance (1979) in Meadowvale, Canada where the Aquitaine River flows, Lakefield National Park (1979) in the Shire of Cook (1919) in Far North Queensland, Australia which stretches from Princess Charlotte Bay (1815) to a town named Laura, “O Canada” (1980), St Clair (1981) in New South Wales, Australia, Agnes Macphail Elementary School (1981) in Scarborough (1796-1998), Ontario in Canada, the National Theatre School (1951) in Berlin, Germany was granted (1981) university status, City of Wagga Wagga (1981) in Australia, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II brought the Constitution Act (1982) in Canada into effect with a signature and the Patriation of Canada (1982), a New Zealand pianist named Sharon Lea O`Neill from a settlement named Nelson (1841) which was made a city by royal charter (1858) on the South Island in New Zealand sang: “… eyes cold steel blue … avenue … Maxine …” (1983), a Northern Irish stage and television actress named Bríd Brennan acted in a narrative feature named “Maeve” (1983), the Division of Gilmore, the Division of Lyons and the Division of Goldstein (1984) in Australia, a Māori-Welsh-New Zealand actress from the Bay of Islands in Northland, New Zealand named Rena Owen who qualified as a nurse in Auckland and portrayed (1977) Bloody Mary, started acting (1984) in London, England, “Advance Fair Australia” (1984), Bill C-31 to Amend the Indian Act passed into law (1985) in Canada, Katherine Mansfield Birthplace in Thornedon, Wellington in New Zealand was (1986) designated, the Divorce Act (1986) in Canada, a statue named “African Woman and Child” (1986) in Edinburgh, Scotland by a Catholic Scotswoman named Anne Ross Davidson (1937-2008), the Otago Girlsˈ High School (1871) where a New Zealand-Jewish businesswoman named Ethel Rebecca Benjamin (1875-1943) from Dunedin in the South Island of New Zealand who was admitted (1897) as a barrister and solicitor was educated (1883-1892), was listed (1987) as a Category I Historic Place, the Flag of Québec (1987) in Canada, the Electoral Division of Katherine (1987) in Northern Territory, Australia and the University of Greenland (1987).
Made less than a century after a Canadian member of Her Majesty`s Privy Council for Canada named Ethel Dorothy Blondin-Andrew assumed office (1988-2006) as MP, the Australian Bicentenary (1988), Parliament House (1922) in Wellington, New Zealand by a Scottish architect surnamed Campbell who lived in Dunedin, New Zealand was (1989) designated, a borough (2002) in Le-Plateau-Mont-Royal was named (1990) for a French nurse named Jeanne Mance (1606-1673) who has a mother named Catherine and who arrived (1642) on the Island of Montreal with Frenchwomen from the Society of Our Lady of Montreal (1639-1653) who colonized Canada, the Division of Riverina (1992) in NSW, Australia, a major geographical area named Murray-Darling basin (1993) in Australia, the Electoral division of Giles (1993) in South Australia which is named for an Englishman from Bristol, England who moved from England to Australia, a Canadian lawyer and MLA (1986-1988) for British Columbia, The Right Honourable named Avril Pædra Cook Douglas Campbell assumed office (1993-1993) as Prime Minister of Canada, a village named Swords in Leinster, Ireland became (1994) a county town, the Shire of Mitchell (1994) in Victoria, Australia, an Australian report named Bringing Them Home (1995-1997) considering the Aboriginal Australians and the Torres Strait Islander, Fort Good Hope in Canada became (1995) a charter community, the closing of Gordon Indian Residential School (1850s-1996), Blue Lake in NSW, Australia was recognised (1996) as a wetland, a daughter of America named Erin Jessica Cahill was selected (1996) by the Barton and Williams School of Dance (1989), a Scotswoman from Glasgow, Scotland surnamed Reilly sang: “Taking on waters sailing a restless sea from a … in far off territory … you`re searching for sanctuary … get to France Mary, Queen of Chance will they find … new romance … bind you … I see a …” (1996), the Maynooth University (1997) in County Kildare in Ireland, an Australian Wiradjuri elder named Jenny Munro stood (1998) as an independent in the Division of Sydney (1968), a United Kingdom individual sailing ship named Kathleen & May (1900) was (1998) restored, a place in New Zealand where there is a town named Oban which is named after a town between Helensburgh in the Highlands and Islands and Fort William in the Scottish Highlands named Oban was named (1998) Stewart Island/Rakiura, Ministry for Culture and Heritage (1999) in New Zealand, an Irishwoman named Marian Harkin stood (1999) as an independent for the Connacht-Ulster constituency (1979-2004), City of Toronto (1998), a Canadian viceroy, The Right Honourable named Adrienne Louise Poy Clarkson was sworn in (1999-2005) as Governor General of Canada, a daughter of Canada from Edmonton (1795) on the North Saskatchewan River in Alberta in Canada named Patricia Duncan assumed office (2000-2002) as Premier of the Yukon (1978), a village named London (1826) in Ontario, Canada where there is a river named the Thames River was (2000) designated, the Flag of Ottawa (2000), a UK submarine named HMCS Windsor (1992) was acquired (2001) by Canada and a Scottish advocate who was admitted (1980) named Anne Mather Smith, Lady Smith was appointed (2001) Senator of the College of Justice in Scotland. the revival (2002) of a national and noble historical instrument of Ireland and the Scottish Highlands and Islands known as the wire-strung harp, the Gaelic harp, the early clarsach and the early Irish harp by an Irishwoman and a plaque to Mary, Queen of Scots (2002) on The Shore in Leith, Scotland and an Australian QC from Perth in Western Australia named Diana Bryant was appointed (2004) Chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia (1976).
Made a century after towns named Port Union, Melrose, Little Catalina and Catalina were integrated into a town named Trinity Bay North (2005) in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, a Canadian-American and a Northern Irish voice sang: “I find a map and draw a straight line … stateliness … the distance … like an Island …” (2006), London Rollergirls (2006), a New Zealand mother, wife and songwriter from Wellington named Brooke Fraser Ligertwood sang: “… on a thousandth hill, I think of Albertine - - there in her eyes what I don`t see with my … Rwanda … I cannot let go till you are a woman …” (2006), Glasgow Roller Girls (2007), daughters of Australia forenamed Sally and Kerry safely paddled (2007) across the Australia-New Zealand border named the Tasman Sea, a New Zealand cyclist from Whakatāne, Bay of Plenty in New Zealand named Sarah Walker cycled (2007) in Victoria, Canada, the Greenlandic Self-Government Referendum (2008), an American harpsichordist named Elizabeth Farr made (2008) a recording, the City of Cairns (1885-2008) and the Shire of Douglas (1880-2008) was merged (2008) into the Cairns Region (2008) in Far North Queensland, Australia, an Englishwoman who moved from England to New Zealand named Celia Wade-Brown assumed office (2010) as Mayor of Wellington (1842), Dublin Roller Girls (2011), a voice from Wellington between the Cook Strait and the Rimutaka Range in New Zealand named Julia Deans who once sang: “… ashes to ashes … hitting an all-time low … my mother says, my mother says, my mother says …” sang: “… to see you here with Lydia - - she`s oh so … I won`t hold it against her …” (2000) in Auckland, a Scotswoman from a place where the Princess of May sails to the Isle of May sang “Flower of Scotland” (2011), a footbridge in Auckland, New Zealand named Jacobs Ladder Bridge (2012) which stands between Westhaven Marina where there are many berths and Saint Marys Bay where the Auckland Harbour Bridge (1959) was opened, an Englishwoman named Imogen Cairns from Bristol, England mastered (2012) the somersault and the Bars in London, England, Walking With Our Sisters (2012) which was initiated by a Canadian painter named Christi Marlene Belcourt, Woman of Words (2013) in Midland Park on Lambton Quay in Wellington, New Zealand by a New Zealand engraver named Virginia King, Maple Ridge (1874) in British Columbia, Canada was granted (2014) city status by its residents, an Australian Gymnast who mastered (2010) the floor named Lauren Mitchell, performed (2014) in Glasgow, Scotland, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes (2014) in the Republic of France where there is a bridge (1897) over the Sianne River, a Canadian wife and mother from West Dublin in Nova Scotia, Canada named Bernadette Jordan assumed office (2015) as MP for South Shore-St. Margarets (1968), an Australian lawyer and Senator for Queensland named Larissa Joy Waters who moved from Canada to Australia assumed office (2015) as Deputy Leader, The Honourable Speaker of the House of Representatives (1900) in Australia said: “Division required.” (2016) and The Honourable Members started moving, an Australian mother named Julia Helen Lolatgis Banks assumed office (2016) as MP for Chisholm (1949), an English-Welsh-Irish actress forenamed Alice and middle named Sophia became thirty-four and mothered a daughter forenamed Carey, an Australian sister and teacher, The Honourable named Linda Jean Burney from Whitton (1851) in NSW, Australia assumed office (2016) as MP for Barton and The Right Honourable Lady, the First Minister of Scotland called for a Second Referendum on Scottish Independence (2016).
This reverence from the early 1970s which is set in England in the 20th century where KM attended (1895-1898) the Karori Normal School (1857) in Karori (1840), 1898-1899 attended the Wellington GirlsˈCollege (1883), sailed (1903) to London, England, 1903-1906 attended Queen`s College London (1848) and said: “… than to feel oneself but the flower, the perfume, the treasure which is the object of no desire.”, is impelled and reinforced by its cogent narrative structure, substantial character development, rhythmic continuity and majestic acting performance by English actress Vanessa Redgrave. An informal narrative feature.
Distinctly and subtly directed by English filmmaker Alan Cooke, this quietly paced and somewhat fictional tale which is narrated mostly from the main character`s point of view, draws a literary portrayal of a woman of independence who once wrote: “… to become a direct human being.” (1927). While notable for its atmospheric milieu depictions, this dialog-driven and narrative-driven story was made eight centuries after the birth of an Englishman, Bishop of Albano (1149-1154) and Pope (1154-1159) named Adrian IV (c.1100-1159), the Isle of May Priory (1150s) on the Isle of May in Scotland where a human being named Adrian of May (9th century) may have lived, a town named Jena in Germany was mentioned (1182), seven centuries after a Frenchwoman, Her Ladyship the Duchess of Brittany (1166-1201) and Countess of Richmond (1166-1201) named Constance (1166-1201) mothered an Englishwoman named Eleanor, Fair Maid of Brittany (c. 1184-1241) and called the Pearl of Brittany who was heiress to Aquitaine which became (2016) part of Aquitaine-Limousin-Poitou-Charentes in France, was imprisoned (1202) at the Corfe Castle (11th century) in England, a market town named Ayr (1205) in Scotland, a town named Prestwick in South Ayrshire, Scotland where there is a mercat cross (12th century) was granted (1214) status as Royal burgh, a town named Augusta (1232) in Sicily, Syracuse in Italy, the twelve Eleanor crosses (1291-1294) in England, four centuries after a Scottish clársach named the Lamont Harp or the Caledonian Harp (15th century), the Yeomen Warders of Her Majesty`s Royal Palace and Fortress of the Tower of London (1485) who cares for the individually named ravens of the Tower whose wings are clipped, an Italian father and brother arrived (1497) at the Island of Newfoundland, three centuries after a city gate in Vilnius in Lithuania named Gate of Dawn (1522) where there is a painting named “Our Lady of the Gate of Dawn” (16th century), a Canada-Greenland border named the Davis Strait was explored (1585-1587) by an Englishman, two centuries after Acadia (1604-1713) in Canada, an English ship named Discovery (17th century), an English ship named Sarah Constant (1607-1615), a port settlement named Québec City (1608) in Canada, a British Overseas Colony named Newfoundland Colony (1610-1907), an English sailor discovered (1610) the Hudson Bay in Canada, a place in Nunavut, Canada named Devon Islands where there is a headland named Cape Vera was sighted (1616), a Scottish Master Mason to the Crown (1631-1636), Trois-Riviéres (1634) in Québec, Canada, Lord Chief Justice of the King`s Bench (1756-1788) and 1st Earl of Mansfield (1843) named William Murray (1705-1793) assumed office (1783-1783) as Lord Speaker, a protected area named the Isle of May Lighthouse (1635) in Scotland, daughters of France called the King`s Daughters (1663-1673) who moved to New France (1534-1765) in a country of ten provinces and three territories named Canada, the Edict of Fontainebleau (1685) in the French Republic, King and Queen`s County (1691) in Virginia in the United States, Sault Ste. Marie (1668) which was granted (1912) city status in Ontario, Canada on St. Marys River where there is a waterway named Ste. Marie Canal (1895), a century after a marriage (1722) at Notre Dame Basilica (1888) in Montréal, Canada, the Spanish Steps (1725) in Rome, Italy, King and Queen`s Court House (c. 1750) in Virginia, United States and Prospect (1754) in Halifax (1996), Nova Scotia, Canada.
Made a century after a Scottish gentlewoman named Joanna Baille (1762-1851) from a village where a Scotswoman forenamed Marion lived, who intended her plays for the stage and not for the closet moved (1769) to Hamilton, South Lanarkshire in Scotland and then moved (1772) to Glasgow, Scotland where she attended a boarding school and visited the theatre, New Glasgow (1776) in Canada, the Evacuation (1783) of the United Empire Loyalists (1789) from New York, United States to Canada, eleven English ships named the First Fleet (1787), Fort Vermilion (1788) on the Peace River in Northern Alberta, Canada, the dechristianization of France during the French Revolution (1789-1801), a Scottish-Canadian tacksman named Sir Alexander Mackenzie (1764-1820) from the Isle of Lewis in the Western Isles of Scotland started (1789) his journey in a canoe from the Mackenzie River which runs to the Arctic Ocean, a life named Pigeon was described (1790) by an Englishman, the Constitutional Act (1791) in Ontario, Canada, Upper Canada and Lower Canada or The Canadas (1791-1841), Thornhill (1794) in Ontario, Canada, a Scottish businessman named James McGill (1744-1813) who moved from Scotland to Canada lived (18th century) in Notre-Dame Street (1672) in Canada, Ward Islands was observed (1802) by an Australian, a port city named Newcastle (1804) in NSW in Australia, an Australian observed (1810) the Campbell Islands in New Zealand, the birth of a daughter of Australia named Anne Flinders (1812-1892), Perth (1816) in Lanark County, Ontario in Canada which is named after a Scottish market town, Cornwallis Island in Northern Canada which is separated by the Wellington Channel from Devon Island was visited (1819) by an Englishman from Bath, Somerset, England, Albany (1826) in Western Australia which was named by a Scotsman surnamed Stirling, a life named the Northwestern Wolf was described (1829) by a Scotsman surnamed Richardson, a life named Agathis Australis was described (1829) by a Scotsman who moved from Scotland to England, Augusta (1830) in Western Australia where the Blackwood River emerges into Flinders Bay, an inland city named Wagga Wagga in New South Wales in Australia was sightseen (1829), Camera Obscura and the World of Illusions (1835) in Castlehill, the Royal Mile, Edinburgh in Scotland by a woman middle named Theresa, seven women voted in Ontario, Canada, Queenscliff (1836) in Victoria, Australia, Queen`s and Lord Treasurer Remembrancer (1836) in Scotland, the Flag of Nova Scotia (1838), the birth of a daughter of Canada named Eliza Jane Creighton (1840-1929), Okiata was capital city (1840-1841) of New Zealand, Auckland (1840) in New Zealand, Auckland was capital city (1841-1865) of New Zealand, a Scottish ship named Duchess of Argyle sailed (1841) from the Scottish Lowlands to a city named Auckland on the North Island of New Zealand, Kingston (1673) on the Great Lakes in Ontario, Canada was (1841) named the capital of the Province of Canada, the birth (1843) of an Irishwoman forenamed Sarah in County Kerry, Munster in Ireland, a Welshwoman named Augusta Hall Waddington, Lady Llanover (1802-1896) and called Gwenynen Gwent from a county named Monmouthshire (1535) in Wales who advocated for the Welsh Triple Harp (17th century), started advocating for the Welsh Collegiate Institution (1847) in Llandovery, Carmarthenshire in Wales, Niagara Falls Suspension Bridge (1848-1897) over the Niagara River which flows from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario, a waterway which runs through the Canadian Arctic Archipelago named the Wellington Channel was sightseen (1851) by a Scotsman from Aberdeen, Scotland forenamed William, Fort William First Nation (1853) on the end of Lake Superior in the Thunder Bay District (1871) in Ontario, Canada, a town named Aurora (1854) in Ontario, Canada, Ararat (1857) in Victoria, Australia, a mining town named Mary Kathleen (1860s-1982) between Mount Isa (1923) and Cloncurry (1967) in Queensland, Australia and a series of natural springs in Australia was named (1861-1862) Daly Waters.
Made a century after the Katherine River in Northern Territory in Australia was named (1862) by a Scotsman from Dysart, Fife, Scotland named John McDouall Stuart (1815-1866), the Diamantina River which rises in the Swords Range in Queensland, Australia was named (1866) for an Australian Lady, a town named Roma (1867) in Queensland, Australia, Scottish gentlemen made Queen`s Park Football Club (1867) in Glasgow, Scotland, Parliament of Canada (1867), Prime Minister of Canada (1867), Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Ontario (1867), New Brunswick (1867) in Canada, the Canadian Confederation (1867) where British colonies were united into a Dominion of Canada and the country was divided into four provinces, five Alberta women respectively forenamed Henrietta, Louise, Nellie, Irene and Emily who were called the Valiant Five asked: “Does the word Persons in Section 24 of the British North America Act (1867) include female persons? an Australian noblewoman from the United States of the Ionian Islands (1815-1864) in the United Kingdom who was born in Greece named Diamantina di Roma, Lady Bowen (1832/33-1893) went (1868) to New Zealand, an Ulster Scot surnamed Bracken who moved from Ireland to Australia and who wrote the national anthem of New Zealand (1876), moved (1869) from Australia to New Zealand, Darwin (1869) on the Timor Sea in Northern Territory, Australia, the Aboriginal Protection Act (1869) in Australia, Sûreté du Québec (1870) in Canada, Indian Rights for Indian Women (1872) in Alberta, Canada, Prince Edward Island (1873) in Canada, a daughter of New Zealand named Ada Pike Wells (1863-1933) moved (1873) from England to New Zealand, less than a century after St Kilda (1875) in Dunedin (1848) in New Zealand, Fort Calgary (1875) in Canada, a Canadian physician named Emily Howard Stowe (1831-1903) made the Toronto Women`s Literary Club (1876) in Canada which was renamed (1883) the Toronto Women`s Suffrage Association, the Indian Act (1876) in Canada, an Englishman named Sir Leslie Stephen (1832-1904) married (1878) an Englishwoman named Julia Stephen (1846-1895), Mary Ann Shadd Cary House (1881) in Washington, D.C. in the United States, the Victorian Women`s Suffrage Society (1884-1908) in Melbourne, Australia and an Englishwoman from Bristol in England who is the sister of a Alice and a Lucy named Clara Weekes (1852-1937) who moved from England to Australia, advocated for women in the Victorian Lady Teachers Association (1884-1917), a man from New Zealand named Harold Beauchamp (1858-1938) and a woman from Australia named Annie Burnell Dyer (1863-1918) were married (1884) at a Cathedral Church in Wellington, Acts of Parliament in Australia named Half-Caste Act (1886), the Electoral division of Flinders (1887-1992) in Queensland in Australia. Ladykirk and Norham Bridge (1887) in the Anglo-Scottish border, British Gymnastics (1888) and an only daughter and Scotswoman surnamed Macmillan attended (1888) St Leonard and St Katherine School (1877) in St Andrews, Scotland.
Made less than a century after the Canada (Ontario Boundary) Act (1889) which confirmed Ontario`s right to Northwestern Ontario, a portrait named “Lily Hanbury” (1890s), the Manitoba Schools Question (1890-1896) in Canada where French was abolished as an official language, a Scotswoman and Headmistress from Aberdeen named Dame Louisa Innes Lumsden (1840-1935) introduced Women`s Lacrosse (1890) in St Andrews in Scotland, the St. Clair River (1891) under the St. Clair River in Canada, the women of Canada where (1894) playing ice hockey at the McGill University (1821) in Montréal, Canada, a territory named Yukon (1898) in Canada, Territory of Hawaii (1898-1959) in the United States, a Canadian ship named Gwendoline (1893-1897) was (1898) salvaged, a portrait named “Hilda Louise Hanbury” (1900), Queen of Australia (1901), the Australian Senate (1901), the Australian House of Representatives (1901), seven American women made the Coloured Women`s Club of Montréal (1902) in Canada, the Commonwealth Franchise Act (1902) which made Australia the first country to allow women, only Australian and New Zealand Māori, to stand for Parliament, a daughter of Canada forenamed Ann and middle named Augusta (1857-1943) was appointed President (1903) of the Dominion Women`s Enfranchisement Association (1889), a Canada-United States border town named Fort Frances (1903) in Ontario, Canada, the Shire of Diamantina (1903) in Queensland, Australia, a daughter of Canada middle named Cora was appointed President of the Canadian Women`s Press Club (1904), a town named Ladysmith (1904) in British Columbia (1871), Canada, a phrase named Ad Mare Usque Ad Mare was used (1905) on the head of the ceremonial mace of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan (1905) in Canada, the Walker Theatre (1907) in Smith Street, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, the Icelandic Women`s Suffrage Society (1908) in Winnipeg (1738) in Canada, a Bermudian vestrywoman named Gladys Carlyon de Courcy Misick Morrell (1888-1969) who has a brother named John and a sister named Rachel obtained (1911) a university degree in England and was hindered from attending law school, the opening (1912) of the Political Equality League (1912-1916) in Manitoba, Canada where a daughter of Canada from Woodstock (1851) in Canada named Winona Margaret Dixon Flett (1884-1922) who has a sister forenamed Lynn was an executive, a daughter of Iceland named Margret Jonsdottir Benedictsson (1866-1956) was the first President, Middlesex Guildhall (1913) in Parliament Square (1968) in the United Kingdom, a village named Fraser (1914) in Canada, the women of a prairie named Manitoba (1870) in Canada, a place settled by Germans in Nelson, New Zealand which is located between Richmond (1842), named (1854) after the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames (1965), Wakefield (1843) was named (1914) Hope, Katherine who wrote: “The American Woman sat where she always sat against the glass wall.” (1920) and who journeyed with the Cook Strait Ferry from Wellington to Picton near the head of the Queen Charlotte Sound in New Zealand, met (1916) an Englishwoman forenamed Adeline who published (1918) her short story, Middleton (1916) in Central West Queensland in Australia and Saskatchewan and Alberta women were granted Women`s Suffrage (1916).
Made less than a century after a city in New South Wales, Australia named Griffith (1916), a daughter of Canada from Sarnia, Canada named Roberta Catherine MacAdams (1880-1959) who was accepted by the RCAMC (1904-1968) was elected (1917-1921) MLA for Alberta. the women of Ontario were granted Women`s Suffrage (1917), High Commission of Australia (1918) in London, England, an act of painting in Cornwall, England named “Portrait of Katherine Mansfield” (1918) by an American sculptor named Anne Estelle Rice (1877-1959), Cairns (1876) between the Coral Sea and the Great Dividing Range in Far North Queensland in Australia was proclaimed (1923) a city, Katherine (1926) in Australia, Central Australia (1927-1931) and The Residency (1927) in Alice Springs (1872), Northern Territory (1911), O`Connor (1928) in Canberra, Australia, the Divorce Act (Ontario) (1930) in Canada, stairways named the Mayflower Steps (1934) in Plymouth, Devon, England, a border crossing named Thousand Island Bridge (1937) over St. Lawrence River which unites Hill Island in Ontario, Canada with Wellesley Island in New York in the United States, Dreamtime (1938) by a son of Australia, Blue Water Bridge (1938) across the St. Clair River in Ontario, Canada, a Scotswoman from Glasgow, Scotland who moved to New Zealand and returned from New Zealand to Glasgow, Scotland named Catherine Sword Campbell Stewart (1881-1943) assumed office (1938-1943) as MP for Wellington West (1938-1946), a claimed dependent territory which is named after an Englishwoman middle named Charlotte Mary, named Queen Maud Land (1939) in Antarctica, Plan Kathleen (1940-1941) in Ireland, a Canadian schoolteacher named Agnes Campbell Macphail (1890-1954) assumed office (1943-1945) as MPP for York East (1867-1996) in Ontario, Canada, a daughter of Australia named Dame Dorothy Margaret Tangney (1911-1985) was elected (1943-1968) Senator for Western Australia, an Irishwoman named Constantia Elizabeth Maxwell (1886-1962) was appointed (1945-1951) Lecky Professor (1913) in Ireland, Dixon Street Flats (1944) in Wellington, New Zealand, Letters Patent (1947) in Canada, Newfoundland and Labrador (1949) in Canada, a term named Atlantic Canada (1949), Inuit women were granted (1951) Women`s Suffrage, islands between Nunavut (1999) and Northern Territories (1870) in Northern Canada which were sighted in 1616 were renamed the Queen Elizabeth Islands (1953), the Royal New Zealand Ballet (1953) in Wellington, New Zealand, First Nations were granted (1954) the right to vote in Ontario in Canada, Elizabeth (1955) in Adelaide, Australia, a city named Cannon Beach (1956) in the United States where an American who has sisters named Ann, Lucy, Elizabeth and Frances named William Clark (1770-1838) from Caroline County (1728) which is named after a Princess of Wales and Queen consort of Great Britain and Ireland (1727-1827) in Virginia, United States journeyed (1805), Lewis and Clark National and State Parks (1958) in Pacific County (1851) in the United States, First Nations women were granted (1961) Women`s Suffrage, the Shire of Leonora (1961) in Perth, Western Australia where there is a place between Leinster (1976), Wiluna (1898) named Kathleen (1900), Rwanda (1962), LaViolette Bridge (1967) in Canada, Royal Commission on the Status of Women (1967) in Canada where a Canadian Senator (1978-1983) forenamed Florence who moved from the United States to Canada was chair, a residential area in Canberra, Australia named Aranda was published (1967), a park named La Ronde (1967) in chemin Macdonald, Île Sainte-Hélène, Montréal, Québec in Canada on an island in North American, an American author middle named Virginia participated in the Boston Marathon (1897) and reached (1967) the finish line, a United Kingdom spaceship named Ariel 3 (1967-1969) and the Divorce Act (1968) in Canada.
Made less than a century after Yvelines (1968) in Versailles, Île-de-France (1976) in France where there is a palace named the Queen`s Hamlet (1783), Caithness Glass (1961) in Wick, Caithness, Scotland was granted (1968) a Royal Warrant by the Queen Mother, the Mohawk Institute Residential School (1828-1969) was closed, the Mitchell College of Advanced Education (1970) in Bathurst (1814), New South Wales, Australia, a Canadian Honourable Lady named Thérèse MacDonald (1896-1981) assumed office (1970-1971) as Senator for Mille Isles, Québec, Canada, an Australian actress named Anne-Louise Lambert was blessed (1970) with a sister named Sarah, Young Point Provincial Park (1971) on the north shore of Sturgeon Lake in Alberta (1905) in Canada, Ontario, Native Women`s Association (1971) in Canada, Calgary House (1823) in the Isle of Mull in Scotland was (1971) designated, a place named Queensland (1973) in Calgary (1875) in Alberta, Canada, Kings Highway (1974) in Australia, Queen Elizabeth II Court (1976) in a city named Regina (1882) and nicknamed The Queen City in Canada, Queen of the Solomon Islands (1978), LˈAux Meadows in Canada was (1979) designated, Norfolk Islands (1979) between Australia, New Zealand and a special collectivity of France (1999) named New Caledonia which was observed (1774) by an Englishman forenamed James who married (1762) an Englishwoman forenamed Elizabeth, twenty-eight Aboriginal women walked the Indian Women`s March (1979) from Québec to Ottawa, Canada, a Canadian ballerina middle named Adrianne from Ontario enrolled (1979) at Erinvale School of Dance (1979) in Meadowvale, Canada where the Aquitaine River flows, Lakefield National Park (1979) in the Shire of Cook (1919) in Far North Queensland, Australia which stretches from Princess Charlotte Bay (1815) to a town named Laura, “O Canada” (1980), St Clair (1981) in New South Wales, Australia, Agnes Macphail Elementary School (1981) in Scarborough (1796-1998), Ontario in Canada, the National Theatre School (1951) in Berlin, Germany was granted (1981) university status, City of Wagga Wagga (1981) in Australia, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II brought the Constitution Act (1982) in Canada into effect with a signature and the Patriation of Canada (1982), a New Zealand pianist named Sharon Lea O`Neill from a settlement named Nelson (1841) which was made a city by royal charter (1858) on the South Island in New Zealand sang: “… eyes cold steel blue … avenue … Maxine …” (1983), a Northern Irish stage and television actress named Bríd Brennan acted in a narrative feature named “Maeve” (1983), the Division of Gilmore, the Division of Lyons and the Division of Goldstein (1984) in Australia, a Māori-Welsh-New Zealand actress from the Bay of Islands in Northland, New Zealand named Rena Owen who qualified as a nurse in Auckland and portrayed (1977) Bloody Mary, started acting (1984) in London, England, “Advance Fair Australia” (1984), Bill C-31 to Amend the Indian Act passed into law (1985) in Canada, Katherine Mansfield Birthplace in Thornedon, Wellington in New Zealand was (1986) designated, the Divorce Act (1986) in Canada, a statue named “African Woman and Child” (1986) in Edinburgh, Scotland by a Catholic Scotswoman named Anne Ross Davidson (1937-2008), the Otago Girlsˈ High School (1871) where a New Zealand-Jewish businesswoman named Ethel Rebecca Benjamin (1875-1943) from Dunedin in the South Island of New Zealand who was admitted (1897) as a barrister and solicitor was educated (1883-1892), was listed (1987) as a Category I Historic Place, the Flag of Québec (1987) in Canada, the Electoral Division of Katherine (1987) in Northern Territory, Australia and the University of Greenland (1987).
Made less than a century after a Canadian member of Her Majesty`s Privy Council for Canada named Ethel Dorothy Blondin-Andrew assumed office (1988-2006) as MP, the Australian Bicentenary (1988), Parliament House (1922) in Wellington, New Zealand by a Scottish architect surnamed Campbell who lived in Dunedin, New Zealand was (1989) designated, a borough (2002) in Le-Plateau-Mont-Royal was named (1990) for a French nurse named Jeanne Mance (1606-1673) who has a mother named Catherine and who arrived (1642) on the Island of Montreal with Frenchwomen from the Society of Our Lady of Montreal (1639-1653) who colonized Canada, the Division of Riverina (1992) in NSW, Australia, a major geographical area named Murray-Darling basin (1993) in Australia, the Electoral division of Giles (1993) in South Australia which is named for an Englishman from Bristol, England who moved from England to Australia, a Canadian lawyer and MLA (1986-1988) for British Columbia, The Right Honourable named Avril Pædra Cook Douglas Campbell assumed office (1993-1993) as Prime Minister of Canada, a village named Swords in Leinster, Ireland became (1994) a county town, the Shire of Mitchell (1994) in Victoria, Australia, an Australian report named Bringing Them Home (1995-1997) considering the Aboriginal Australians and the Torres Strait Islander, Fort Good Hope in Canada became (1995) a charter community, the closing of Gordon Indian Residential School (1850s-1996), Blue Lake in NSW, Australia was recognised (1996) as a wetland, a daughter of America named Erin Jessica Cahill was selected (1996) by the Barton and Williams School of Dance (1989), a Scotswoman from Glasgow, Scotland surnamed Reilly sang: “Taking on waters sailing a restless sea from a … in far off territory … you`re searching for sanctuary … get to France Mary, Queen of Chance will they find … new romance … bind you … I see a …” (1996), the Maynooth University (1997) in County Kildare in Ireland, an Australian Wiradjuri elder named Jenny Munro stood (1998) as an independent in the Division of Sydney (1968), a United Kingdom individual sailing ship named Kathleen & May (1900) was (1998) restored, a place in New Zealand where there is a town named Oban which is named after a town between Helensburgh in the Highlands and Islands and Fort William in the Scottish Highlands named Oban was named (1998) Stewart Island/Rakiura, Ministry for Culture and Heritage (1999) in New Zealand, an Irishwoman named Marian Harkin stood (1999) as an independent for the Connacht-Ulster constituency (1979-2004), City of Toronto (1998), a Canadian viceroy, The Right Honourable named Adrienne Louise Poy Clarkson was sworn in (1999-2005) as Governor General of Canada, a daughter of Canada from Edmonton (1795) on the North Saskatchewan River in Alberta in Canada named Patricia Duncan assumed office (2000-2002) as Premier of the Yukon (1978), a village named London (1826) in Ontario, Canada where there is a river named the Thames River was (2000) designated, the Flag of Ottawa (2000), a UK submarine named HMCS Windsor (1992) was acquired (2001) by Canada and a Scottish advocate who was admitted (1980) named Anne Mather Smith, Lady Smith was appointed (2001) Senator of the College of Justice in Scotland. the revival (2002) of a national and noble historical instrument of Ireland and the Scottish Highlands and Islands known as the wire-strung harp, the Gaelic harp, the early clarsach and the early Irish harp by an Irishwoman and a plaque to Mary, Queen of Scots (2002) on The Shore in Leith, Scotland and an Australian QC from Perth in Western Australia named Diana Bryant was appointed (2004) Chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia (1976).
Made a century after towns named Port Union, Melrose, Little Catalina and Catalina were integrated into a town named Trinity Bay North (2005) in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, a Canadian-American and a Northern Irish voice sang: “I find a map and draw a straight line … stateliness … the distance … like an Island …” (2006), London Rollergirls (2006), a New Zealand mother, wife and songwriter from Wellington named Brooke Fraser Ligertwood sang: “… on a thousandth hill, I think of Albertine - - there in her eyes what I don`t see with my … Rwanda … I cannot let go till you are a woman …” (2006), Glasgow Roller Girls (2007), daughters of Australia forenamed Sally and Kerry safely paddled (2007) across the Australia-New Zealand border named the Tasman Sea, a New Zealand cyclist from Whakatāne, Bay of Plenty in New Zealand named Sarah Walker cycled (2007) in Victoria, Canada, the Greenlandic Self-Government Referendum (2008), an American harpsichordist named Elizabeth Farr made (2008) a recording, the City of Cairns (1885-2008) and the Shire of Douglas (1880-2008) was merged (2008) into the Cairns Region (2008) in Far North Queensland, Australia, an Englishwoman who moved from England to New Zealand named Celia Wade-Brown assumed office (2010) as Mayor of Wellington (1842), Dublin Roller Girls (2011), a voice from Wellington between the Cook Strait and the Rimutaka Range in New Zealand named Julia Deans who once sang: “… ashes to ashes … hitting an all-time low … my mother says, my mother says, my mother says …” sang: “… to see you here with Lydia - - she`s oh so … I won`t hold it against her …” (2000) in Auckland, a Scotswoman from a place where the Princess of May sails to the Isle of May sang “Flower of Scotland” (2011), a footbridge in Auckland, New Zealand named Jacobs Ladder Bridge (2012) which stands between Westhaven Marina where there are many berths and Saint Marys Bay where the Auckland Harbour Bridge (1959) was opened, an Englishwoman named Imogen Cairns from Bristol, England mastered (2012) the somersault and the Bars in London, England, Walking With Our Sisters (2012) which was initiated by a Canadian painter named Christi Marlene Belcourt, Woman of Words (2013) in Midland Park on Lambton Quay in Wellington, New Zealand by a New Zealand engraver named Virginia King, Maple Ridge (1874) in British Columbia, Canada was granted (2014) city status by its residents, an Australian Gymnast who mastered (2010) the floor named Lauren Mitchell, performed (2014) in Glasgow, Scotland, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes (2014) in the Republic of France where there is a bridge (1897) over the Sianne River, a Canadian wife and mother from West Dublin in Nova Scotia, Canada named Bernadette Jordan assumed office (2015) as MP for South Shore-St. Margarets (1968), an Australian lawyer and Senator for Queensland named Larissa Joy Waters who moved from Canada to Australia assumed office (2015) as Deputy Leader, The Honourable Speaker of the House of Representatives (1900) in Australia said: “Division required.” (2016) and The Honourable Members started moving, an Australian mother named Julia Helen Lolatgis Banks assumed office (2016) as MP for Chisholm (1949), an English-Welsh-Irish actress forenamed Alice and middle named Sophia became thirty-four and mothered a daughter forenamed Carey, an Australian sister and teacher, The Honourable named Linda Jean Burney from Whitton (1851) in NSW, Australia assumed office (2016) as MP for Barton and The Right Honourable Lady, the First Minister of Scotland called for a Second Referendum on Scottish Independence (2016).
This reverence from the early 1970s which is set in England in the 20th century where KM attended (1895-1898) the Karori Normal School (1857) in Karori (1840), 1898-1899 attended the Wellington GirlsˈCollege (1883), sailed (1903) to London, England, 1903-1906 attended Queen`s College London (1848) and said: “… than to feel oneself but the flower, the perfume, the treasure which is the object of no desire.”, is impelled and reinforced by its cogent narrative structure, substantial character development, rhythmic continuity and majestic acting performance by English actress Vanessa Redgrave. An informal narrative feature.
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Aristide Bruant
5.0 out of 5 stars
A brilliant feminist writer whose life was tragicly ended by illness ...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 25, 2016
Having just finished reading Katherine Mansfield's works in Kindle, I decided to get this to learn more about her. I have been fascinated by this writer since living briefly in Avon (adjacent Fontainebleau near Paris) where she last lived and is commemorated. A brilliant feminist writer whose life was tragicly ended by illness at a Young age.
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Hastings
5.0 out of 5 stars
Glorious, long awaited DVD
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 22, 2018
I remember watching this series as a teen and it always stayed with me. Beautiful, unusual stories interspersed within a biography of the author. Fine acting and beautiful music. Highly recommended
5 people found this helpful
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