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1-8 of 8
- Actress
- Director
- Writer
Frances Ann O'Connor is a British-Australian actress and director. She is known for her roles in the films Mansfield Park (1999), Bedazzled (2000), A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001), The Importance of Being Earnest (2002), and Timeline (2003). O'Connor has won an AACTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role for her performance in Blessed (2009), and earned Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Miniseries or Television Film nominations for her performances in Madame Bovary (2000) and The Missing (2014).- Mark Bazeley was born on 30 September 1970 in Wantage, Oxfordshire, England, UK. He is an actor, known for The Queen (2006), The Bourne Ultimatum (2007) and The Damned United (2009). He has been married to Victoria Hamilton since 22 January 2008.
- Following the US Primetime screening of 'Casanova', Toby took on the male lead in the multi award winning BBC drama Shalom Salaam which gained him his first MIP-TV Best Actor nomination for Drama. He went on to enjoy the success of a UK TV Advert for Yorkie Chocolate and was voted the most eligible UK bachelor by The Today Newspaper. Toby made use of his dual nationality (UK & US) in a steady stream of regular TV & Theatre roles on both sides of the Atlantic, before taking a temporary detour in 2000 to run Construction & Energy businesses in Western USA. In 2015 Toby returned to London and his primary passion of Acting.
- Art Department
- Set Decorator
Bill Hargreaves was born in July 1954 in Wantage, Berkshire, England, UK. He was a set decorator, known for Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi (1983), About a Boy (2002) and Legend (1985). He died on 19 March 2024 in Bracknell, Berkshire, England, UK.- Lester Piggott was born in Wantage to a family that could trace its roots as jockeys and trainers back to the 18th century. The Piggotts were a Cheshire farming family who in the 1870s ran the Crown Inn in Nantwich for at least 40 years. Lester's grandfather Ernest (Ernie) Piggott (1878-1967) owned a racehorse stable at The Old Manor in Letcombe Regis and his father (Ernest) Keith Piggott (1904-1993) another at South Bank in Lambourn, where Lester lived until 1954. Ernie Piggott rode three Grand National winners, in 1912, 1918 and 1919 and was married to a sister of the jockeys Mornington Cannon and Kempton Cannon, who both rode winners of the Derby, in 1899 and 1904 respectively. He was also three-times British jump racing Champion Jockey (in 1910, 1913 and 1915). Keith Piggott was a successful National Hunt jockey and trainer, winning the Champion Hurdle as a jockey in 1939 and the Grand National as a trainer in 1963 with Ayala, becoming the British jump racing Champion Trainer of the 1962-63 season. Lester Piggott was the cousin, through his mother Lilian Iris Rickaby, of two other jockeys, Bill and Fred Rickaby. Fred Rickaby was British flat racing Champion Apprentice in 1931 and 1932.
Piggott was married to Susan Armstrong. They married at St. Mark's church, North Audley Street, London in 1960. Her father, Sam Armstrong, and her brother, Robert Armstrong, were both racehorse trainers. They have two daughters, Maureen, an ex-eventer (married to Derby-winning trainer William Haggas) and Tracy (a sports presenter on Irish television station RTÉ). He also has a son, Jamie, from a relationship with Anna Ludlow. His house is named after a famous racehorse from history - Florizel.
Piggott began racing horses from his father's stable when he was 10 years old and won his first race in 1948, aged 12 years, on a horse called "The Chase" at Haydock Park. A teenage sensation, he rode his first winner of the Epsom Derby on Never Say Die in 1954 aged 18 years and went on to win eight more, on Crepello (1957), St. Paddy (1960), Sir Ivor (1968), Nijinsky (1970), Roberto (1972), Empery (1976), The Minstrel (1977) and Teenoso (1983). He was stable jockey to Noel Murless and later to Vincent O'Brien and had a glittering career of unparalleled success. Known as the "housewives' favorite", Piggott had legions of followers and did much to expand the popularity of horse racing beyond its narrow, class-based origins.
Famously tall for a jockey (5 ft 8 in/1.73 m), hence his nickname of "The Long Fellow", Lester Piggott struggled to keep his weight down and for most of his career rode at little more than 8 stone (112 lb/51 kg). He pioneered a new style of race-riding that was subsequently widely adopted by colleagues at home and abroad and enabled him to become Champion Jockey eleven times.
In 1980 his relationship with the Sangster-O'Brien combination came to an end and he was appointed as stable jockey to Noel Murless' son-in-law Henry Cecil, the British flat racing Champion Trainer, at Murless's old stables, Warren Place. He was again champion jockey in 1981 and 1982. However, as the result of a dispute in late 1983 as to whether he had reneged on an agreement to ride Daniel Wildenstein's All Along, Piggott's ride in the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe went instead to Walter Swinburn, with Wildenstein refusing to allow him to ride any more of his horses. It was costly for Piggott, as All Along won the Arc and a string of other international races in an autumn campaign that ended with her being named US Horse of the Year. Further, as Wildenstein was one of Cecil's principal owners, this placed a strain on the relationship, and in 1984 Cecil and Piggott split, with Steve Cauthen taking over at Warren Place. - Hugh Johns was born on 6 September 1922 in Wantage, Oxfordshire, England, UK. He was an actor, known for A Sharp Intake of Breath (1977), Match of the Week (1962) and The Big Match (1968). He was married to Joan Olive Hatcher. He died on 27 June 2007 in Radyr, Cardiff, Wales, UK.
- Nick Boyle was born on 17 February 1993 in Wantage, New Jersey, USA.
- Gareth Clarke was born on 28 October 1968 in Wantage, Oxfordshire, England, UK. He is an actor, known for 12 in a Box (2007), Doctors (2000) and Gecko (2007).