Bathsheba Doran
Gender: Female
Sexuality: Lesbian
DOB: N/A
Ethnicity: White - British
Occupation: Playwright, screenwriter
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Bathsheba Doran
Gender: Female
Sexuality: Lesbian
DOB: N/A
Ethnicity: White - British
Occupation: Playwright, screenwriter

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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A woman cannot be herself in modern society with laws made by men, & with prosecutors & judges who assess female conduct from a male standpoint
Henrik Ibsen
Happy Supposed Birthday and Actual Death Day to William Shakespeare! William Shakespeare was baptized on April 26, 1564. Although his birthday is unknown, it is celebrated on April 23rd.
The pictures below are selections from several different Shakespeare books published through the 18th and early 20th centuries. Because our benefactor enjoyed researching Shakespeare, we have around one thousand individual Shakespeare titles.
“What is straight? A line can be straight, or a street, but the human heart, oh, no, it's curved like a road through mountains.”
On May 30 poet and choreographer Harmony Holiday performs an intergenerational meditation on Black style, gesture, and solidarity in Eric N. Mack's textile painting installation Lemme walk across the room. Free and open to the public.
Posted by Ashely James Photos by Danielle Eliska Lyle

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The writers life
On January 3rd 1888 O H Mavor, known as James Bridie, the physician and prolific playwright, was born.
Born in Glasgow,Osborne Henry Mavor, He took his pen-name from his paternal grandfather's first name and his grandmother's maiden name, Mavor studied medicine at the University and graduated in 1913. He threw himself into the social life of Gilmorehill, notably as a contributor to Glasgow University Magazine and as a member of the University Union. Mavor was the man who started the "Daft Friday" event at the university which is still a traditional part of the University Union and features a night of entertainment from performers, some of whom went on to make their name in the entertainment industry, like Billy Connolly and Gerry Rafferty, who, as The Humblebums appeared in 1968.
Bridie served in the First World War in the Royal Army Medical Corps and his later career included spells as a general practitioner, a consulting physician at the Victoria Infirmary and Professor of Medicine at the Anderson College of Medicine, before his increasing success as a dramatist led to his embracing that career full-time.. He was one of the leading British playwrights of his generation, the founder of the Citizens' Theatre, Glasgow, in 1943, and the first chairman of the Scottish Committee of the Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts established in 1942, (subsequently the Scottish Committee of the Arts Council of Great Britain). He was instrumental in the establishment of the College of Dramatic Art in 1950, now part of the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama in Glasgow.
Mavor wrote over 40 plays in his lifetime. His first play, 'The Sunlight Sonata', presented by the Scottish National Players, directed by Tyrone Guthrie in 1928, followed by 'The Switchback' (1929), and 'What It Is To Be Young' (1929). 'The Anatomist', produced in 1930, and based on the lives of nineteenth century vivisectionist Dr Robert Knox, and the body-snatchers Burke and Hare, was his first major success. This success continued throughout the 1930s and 40s with, amongst others, 'Jonah and the Whale, 'Mary Read' with Flora Robson and Robert Donat,'Susannah and the Elders', 'The King of Nowhere' with Laurence Olivier, 'Mr Bolfry' (1943) with Alastair Sim,, 'The Forrigan Reel' , 'Dr Angelus' , 'Daphne Laureola' with Edith Evans and Peter Finch and 'Mr Gillie' and 'The Queen's Comedy'.
In 1939 he was awarded an honorary LL.D from Glasgow University, and received his CBE in 1946. He died in Edinburgh in 1951. In 1955 Glasgow University Union purchased a bronze head of Mavor/Bridie by Benno Schotz. The Bridie Dinner, introduced that year, became a feature of Daft Friday at the Union.
Ian McKellen brings “glamour and star power” to the role of The Earl of Southampton. Catch him in All Is True At Cinemas Friday