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Born | 11 August 1937 Thakeham, Sussex, England | |
---|---|---|
Died | 3 July 2011 (aged 73) | |
Nationality | British | |
Occupation | Actress | |
Years active | 1955–2011 | |
Spouse(s) | Jeremy Brett (m. 1958; div. 1962) | |
|
Anna Raymond MasseyCBE (11 August 1937 – 3 July 2011)[2][3] was an English actress.[4] She won a BAFTA Award for the role of Edith Hope in the 1986 TV adaptation of Anita Brookner's novel Hotel du Lac,[5] a role that one of her co-stars, Julia McKenzie, has said 'could have been written for her.'[6]
Early life[edit]
Massey was born in Thakeham, Sussex, England, the daughter of British actress Adrianne Allen and Canadian-born Hollywood actor Raymond Massey.[7] Her brother Daniel Massey was also an actor. She was the niece of Vincent Massey, a Governor General of Canada, and her godfather was film director John Ford.[8]
Career[edit]
Although she had no formal training at either drama school or in repertory, Anna Massey made her first appearance on stage in May 1955 at the age of 17, at the Theatre Royal, Brighton, as Jane in The Reluctant Debutante, subsequently making her first London appearance in the same play at the Cambridge Theatre in May 1955 'and was suddenly famous'.[9] She then left the cast in London to repeat her performance in New York in October 1956.[10] In the 1990s she appeared with Alan Bennett in a dramatised reading of T.S. Eliot's and Virginia Woolf's letters, in a production at the Charleston Festival devised by Patrick Garland.
Several of her early film roles were in mystery thrillers. She made her cinema debut in the Scotland Yard film Gideon's Day (1958) as Sally, daughter of Jack Hawkins's Detective Inspector. The director was her godfather John Ford.[9] She played a potential murder victim in Michael Powell's cult thriller Peeping Tom (1960) and appeared in Otto Preminger's Bunny Lake Is Missing (1965). In 1972 she played the role of the barmaid Babs in Alfred Hitchcock's penultimate film Frenzy. In the documentary on the film's DVD release, Massey mentioned that she originally auditioned for the much smaller role of the secretary Monica, a part for which Jean Marsh was cast. She also noted that her character's nude scenes in Frenzy were performed by body doubles. She appeared alongside her brother Daniel—they played siblings—in the horror film The Vault of Horror (1973).
Massey continued to make occasional film and stage appearances, but worked more frequently in television. She made her first small-screen appearance as Jacqueline in Green of the Year in October 1955,[10] and thereafter featured in dramas such as The Pallisers (1974), the 1978 adaptation of Rebecca (in which she starred with her ex-husband Jeremy Brett), The Mayor of Casterbridge (1978), The Cherry Orchard (1980), and Anna Karenina (1985). She had roles in the British comedy series The Darling Buds of May (1991)[11] and The Robinsons (2005). She also appeared in a number of mysteries and thrillers on television, including episodes of Inspector Morse, The Inspector Alleyn Mysteries, Midsomer Murders, Strange, Lewis, and Agatha Christie's Poirot.
With Imelda Staunton, she co-devised and starred as Josephine Daunt in Daunt and Dervish on BBC radio. She was the narrator of This Sceptred Isle on BBC Radio 4, a history of Britain from Roman times which ran for more than 300 fifteen-minute episodes. In 2009, she also appeared in a new radio version of The Killing of Sister George.[9]
In 1987, Massey was awarded the BAFTA Award for Best Actress for her role in Hotel du Lac[12] after acquiring the TV rights two years earlier, only a few weeks before the novel won the Booker Prize.[6] She also appeared as Mrs. D'Urberville in the 2008 BBC adaptation of Tess of the D'Urbervilles, an older version of May and as Rosie in An Angel For May, and in the 2004 BBC version of Our Mutual Friend.[8]
Acting style[edit]
One of Massey's assets as an actress was her 'extraordinary voice.. it was so listenable.'[6] Although Massey's parts were varied, her 'cut-glass English accent conveyed a cold and repressed character on screen'.[13] Michael Billington of The Guardian characterised her work as being informed by 'stillness', such as in the National Theatre's production of Harold Pinter's A Kind of Alaska.[14]
She was known for a high level of preparation and effort, with one producer saying that she had a practice of using five different coloured pens on scripts to mark out 'breaths and pauses' and the development of a scene; for example, 'if a phrase early in a paragraph was going to be picked up again later, she would highlight those two bits in the same colour, so that it would remind her that that first phrase was referring to something later.'[6]
Personal life[edit]
In the New Year's Honours List published on 31 December 2004, she was created a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for services to drama.[15]
Massey published an autobiography in 2006, Telling Some Tales, in which she revealed a difficult early life and discussed her failed marriage (1958–1962) to actor Jeremy Brett, discussing his struggle with bipolar disorder. Brett and Massey divorced on 22 November 1962 after she claimed he left her for a man.[16][17] The couple had one son, writer and illustrator David Huggins (b. 1959).[18] At an August 1988 dinner party held at the home of their mutual friend, Joy Whitby,[7] she met Russian-born metallurgist Uri Andres, who had been based at Imperial College, London since 1975.[19] The couple were married from November 1988 until her death in 2011.[14]
Massey was quoted as saying, 'Theatre eats up too much of your family life. I have a grandson and a husband and I'd rather I was able to be a granny and a wife.'[20]
She died from cancer on 3 July 2011, aged 73.[5][8]
Selected TV and filmography[edit]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1958 | Gideon's Day | Sally Gideon | |
1960 | Peeping Tom | Helen Stephens | |
1963 | The Trip to Biarritz | Marjorie Robertson | |
1965 | Bunny Lake Is Missing | Elvira Smollett | |
1969 | David Copperfield | Jane Murdstone | |
1969 | De Sade | Renée de Montreuil | |
1970 | The Looking Glass War | Avery's Wife | |
1970 | Wicked Women | Christiana Edmunds | TV episode |
1972 | Frenzy | Babs Milligan | |
1973 | The Vault of Horror | Donna Rogers | (segment 1 'Midnight Mess') |
1973 | A Doll's House | Kristine Linde | |
1974 | The Pallisers | Laura Kennedy | TV miniseries |
1978 | The Mayor of Casterbridge | Lucetta Templeman | |
1979 | Rebecca | Mrs. Danvers | TV miniseries |
1979 | A Little Romance | Ms. Seigel | |
1980 | Sweet William | Edna McClusky | |
1982 | Five Days One Summer | Jennifer Pierce | |
1982 | I Remember Nelson | Lady Frances Nelson | |
1983 | Mansfield Park | Mrs. Norris | TV series |
1984 | Another Country | Imogen Bennett | |
1984 | Journey into the Shadows: Portrait of Gwen John | Gwen John | TV film |
1984 | The Little Drummer Girl | Chairlady | |
1984 | The Chain | Betty | |
1985 | Sacred Hearts | Sister Thomas | |
1986 | Hotel du Lac | Edith Hope | BAFTA award-winning TV role |
1986 | Foreign Body | Miss Furze | |
1987 | A Hazard of Hearts | Eudora, Serena's Maid | |
1988 | La couleur du vent | Norma | |
1988 | Tears in the Rain | Emily | |
1989 | The Tall Guy | Mary | |
1989 | A Tale of Two Cities | Miss Pross | |
1989 | Around the World in 80 Days | Queen Victoria | |
1990 | Mountains of the Moon | Mrs. Arundell | |
1990 | Killing Dad or How to Love Your Mother | Edith | |
1991 | Impromptu | George Sand's mother | |
1992 | Inspector Morse | Lady Emily Balcombe | TV series, 'Happy Families' |
1992 | Emily's Ghost | Miss Rabstock | |
1992 | The Darling Buds of May | Mam’selle Antoinette Dupont, a French hotelier | |
1995 | The Grotesque | Mrs. Giblet | |
1995 | Angels & Insects | Miss Mead | |
1995 | Haunted | Nanny Tess Webb | |
1996 | Sweet Angel Mine | Mother | |
1997 | Driftwood | Mother | |
1997 | The Slab Boys | Miss Elsie Walkinshaw | |
1997 | Deja Vu | Fern Stoner | |
1998 | Midsomer Murders | Honoria Lyddiard | Episode 'Written in Blood' |
1999 | Captain Jack | Phoebe Pickles | |
1999 | Mad Cows | Dwina Phelps | |
2000 | Room to Rent | Sarah – A healer | |
2001 | Dark Blue World | English teacher | |
2002 | The Importance of Being Earnest | Miss Prism | |
2002 | Possession | Lady Bailey | |
2004 | The Machinist | Mrs Shrike | |
2004 | Agatha Christie: A Life in Pictures | Agatha Christie | |
2004 | He Knew He Was Right | Miss Stanbury | TV film |
2004 | Belonging | Herself | TV film |
2005 | Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont | Mrs Arbuthnot | |
2005 | The Worst Week of My Life | Aunt Yvonne | |
2006 | The Gigolos | Edwina | |
2007 | Fairy Stories by The Brothers Grimm | Narrator | Audiobook |
2007 | Lewis | Professor Margaret Gold | |
2007 | Oliver Twist | Mrs Bedwin | TV miniseries |
2008 | Doctor Who – The Girl Who Never Was | Miss Pollard | 8th Doctor audio drama |
2008 | The Oxford Murders | Mrs. Julia Eagleton | |
2008 | Affinity | Miss Haxby | TV film |
2008 | Tess of the D'Urbervilles | Mrs D'Urberville | TV miniseries |
2009 | Midsomer Murders | Brenda Packard | Episode 'Secrets & Spies' |
2010 | The Clocks | Miss Pebmarsh | |
2011 | Act of Memory | Older Maria | short, (final film role) |
Books[edit]
- Massey, Anna (2006). Telling Some Tales. London: Hutchinson. ISBN0-09-179645-8.
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'Anna Massey'. The Film Programme. 17 August 2007. BBC Radio 4. Retrieved 18 January 2014.
- ^'Anna Massey dies at 73'. The Guardian. 4 July 2011. Retrieved 4 July 2011.
- ^The Sunday Times Magazine, The Sunday Times, 18 December 2011, page 64
- ^Maitland, Peter (23 November 1956). 'Anna Massey Recalls Sudden Leap to Stardom on Stage'. Saskatoon Star-Phoenix. p. 10. Retrieved 25 April 2011.
- ^ abAssociated Press (6 July 2011). 'Anna Massey, TV and Film Actress, Dies at 73'. The New York Times.
- ^ abcdPresented by John Wilson (8 July 2011). 'BBC Radio 4, 'Last Word''. Last Word. BBC. Radio 4.
- ^ ab'Anna Massey: Obituaries'. The Daily Telegraph. London. 5 July 2011. p. 27. Archived from the original on 12 July 2011. Retrieved 7 July 2011.
- ^ abcBBC News: 'Actress Anna Massey dies at the age of 73'
- ^ abc'Anna Massey (Obituary)'. The Times. London. 5 July 2011. p. 49.
- ^ abWho's Who in the Theatre, 17th edition, Gale 1981 ISBN0-8103-0235-7
- ^Taylor, Alan F. (2002). Folkestone Past and Present. Somerset: Breedon Books. pp. 22–24. ISBN1859832962.
- ^'BAFTA Awards Search'. awards.bafta.org. 2013. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
- ^Bergen, Ronald (4 July 2011), 'Anna Massey obituary', The Guardian
- ^ abBillington, Michael (4 July 2011), 'Anna Massey obituary', The Guardian
- ^BBC NEWS: 'Anna Massey collects CBE'
- ^Massey, Anna (2006). Telling Some Tales. London: Hutchinson. ISBN0-09-179645-8.
- ^Davies, David Stuart (2006). Dancing in the Moonlight: Jeremy Brett. London: MDF The BiPolar Organisation.
- ^David Huggins 'At Christmas I dreaded playing charades', The Guardian, 17 November 2001
- ^Sue Fox 'How we met: Uri Andres and Anna Massey', The Independent, 7 March 1993
- ^'IMDB entry for Anna Massey'. Retrieved 21 December 2011.
External links[edit]
- Anna Massey on IMDb
- Anna Massey at the BFI's Screenonline
- Anna Massey at AllMovie
- Anna Massey at Find a Grave
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anna_Massey&oldid=903415988'
Born | Anna Morpurgo 21 June 1937 |
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Died | 27 September 2014 |
Nationality | Italy |
Education | University of Rome La Sapienza |
Occupation | Professor of Comparative Philology |
Employer | Somerville College, University of Oxford |
Known for | Studies of Indo-European, Greek, and Anatolian linguistics; Linear B; history of linguistics |
Anna Elbina Morpurgo Davies, DBE,FSA,FBA (21 June 1937 – 27 September 2014) was an Italian philologist who specialised in comparative Indo-European linguistics. She spent her career at Oxford University, where she was the Professor of Comparative Philology and Fellow of Somerville College.
- 3Publications
- 3.2Selected articles
Early life and education[edit]
Anna Elbina Morpurgo was born in Milan, the fourth child of a Jewish family. Her grandfather Guido Castelnuovo was a mathematician; her father, Augusto Morpurgo,[1] was dismissed in 1938 under the Fascistracial laws and died the following year after trying to find a way to take his family to Argentina. She and her mother moved to Rome, where they survived with false papers and in hiding.[2]
After the war, she earned her doctorate in classics from the University of Rome[3] with a thesis on Linear B; she published the first lexicon of the language.[1]
Academic career[edit]
In 1961 she became a post-doctoral fellow at Harvard University's Center for Hellenic Studies in Rome,[3] where she formed a deep interest in theoretical linguistics; she was later to help establish a chair in the subject at Oxford University.[1] She moved to Oxford in 1962,[1] became a lecturer in Classical Philology in 1964, and spent the remainder of her career there with the exception of visiting professorships at the University of Pennsylvania, Yale University and the University of California at Berkeley and guest lecturing at the University of Cincinnati, Stanford University and Harvard University.[3][4]
In 1966 Morpurgo Davies became a fellow of St Hilda's College; in 1971 she was appointed to the Chair in Comparative Philology and became a fellow of Somerville. In 2003 this became the Diebold Chair.[2] She was also a Delegate of the Oxford University Press from 1992 to 2004, when she retired.[2]
Publications[edit]
Morpurgo Davies published in many areas of Indo-European grammar. She was particularly known as an expert in the Anatolian languages, and was one of the decipherers of Luwian hieroglyphs.[1][2] She was also known for her work on Mycenaean Greek and on the development of linguistics in the nineteenth century;[1][5] in 1996 she published an Italian-language history of the latter, La linguistica dell'Ottocento,[3] and in 1998 she was responsible for the volume on that century in the LongmanHistory of Linguistics, where a reviewer found she set aside the overall editorial aim of tracing the development of linguistic thought in favour of presenting a history of the development of Indo-European linguistics in Europe and the United States.[6]
In 2005 a reviewer at The Times referred to her 'trend-setting work in onomastics, Greek dialectology, Mycenaean lexicography, Anatolian languages, writing systems, history of scholarship and social history'.[7] Jorja smith the one high contrast remix m4a download.
Books[edit]
- 1963: Mycenaeae Graecitatis Lexicon. Roma: Edizioni dell'Ateneo.
- 1966 – 1974-5: (& all. (eds.)). Studies in Mycenaean Inscriptions and Dialect, vols. 12-20. London: Institute of Classical Studies.
- 1973: (with J.D. Hawkins & G. Neumann). Hittite Hieroglyphs and Luwian: New Evidence for the Connection. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck und Ruprecht.
- 1976: (with W. Meid, eds.). Studies in Greek, Italic and Indo-European Linguistics, offered to L.R. Palmer. Innsbruck: Innsbruck Institut für Sprachwissenschaft.
- 1985: (with Y. Duhoux, eds.). Linear B. A 1984 Survey. Louvain-la-Neuve: Cabay (reprinted: Louvain 1988: Peeters).
- 1996: La linguistica dell' Ottocento. Bologna: Il Mulino [Italian translation of an earlier version of the next title].
- 1998: Nineteenth-Century Linguistics, vol. 4 of G. Lepschy (ed.) History of Linguistics. London: Longman.
- 2008-14: (with Y. Duhoux, eds.). A Companion to Linear B. Mycenaean Greek Texts and their World, vol. 1 (2008), vol. 2 (2011), vol. 3 (2014). Louvain: Peeters.
Selected articles[edit]
Linear B and Mycenaean Greek[edit]
- 1958: ‘Damar in Miceneo’. La Parola del Passato [PdP], 322-24.
- 1960 b: ‘Il genitivo miceneo e il sincretismo dei casi’. Rendiconti dell' Accademia dei Lincei 15, 33-61.
- 1961: ‘L'esito delle nasali sonanti in miceneo’. Rendiconti dell' Accademia dei Lincei, 15, 321-36.
- 1966: ‘An instrumental-ablative in Mycenaean?’. In Proceedings of the Cambridge Colloquium on Mycenaean Studies (L.R. Palmer & J. Chadwick, eds.), 191-202. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- 1968 c: ‘The treatment of r and l in Mycenaean and Arcado-Cyprian’. In Atti e Memorie del Primo Congresso Internazionale di Micenologia, 791-814. Roma: Edizioni dell’Ateneo.
- 1968 d: ‘Fabbri e schiavi a Pilo’. La Parola del Passato, 220-22.
- 1972: ‘Greek and Indo-European semiconsonants: Mycenaean u and w’. In Acta Mycenaea, vol. 2 (M.S. Ruipérez, ed.), 80-121. Salamanca: Universidad de Salamanca.
- 1979 c: ‘Terminology of power and terminology of work in Greek and Linear B’. In Colloquium Mycenaeum (E. Risch & H. Mühlestein, eds.), 87-108. Neuchatel: Neuchâtel, Faculté des Lettres.
- 1983: ‘Mycenaean and Greek prepositions: o-pi, e-pi etc.’. In Res Mycenaeae. Akten des VII. Int. Mykenologischen Colloquiums (A. Heubeck & G. Neumann, eds.), 287-310. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.
- 1985: ‘Mycenaean and Greek language’. In Linear B: a 1984 Survey (A. Morpurgo Davies & Y. Duhoux, eds.), 75-125. Louvain-la-Neuve: Cabay.
- 1986 a: ‘Forms of writing in the ancient Mediterranean world’. In The Written Word. Literacy in Transition (G. Baumann, ed.), 55-77. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- 1986 c: ‘The linguistic evidence: is there any?’. In The end of the Early Bronze Age in the Aegean (G. Cadogan, ed.), 93-123. Leiden: Brill.
- 1999 b: ‘The Morphology of personal Names in Mycenaean and Greek: Some observations’. In Floreant Studia Mycenaea. Akten des X. internationalen mykenologischen Colloquiums in Salzburg von 1-5 Mai 1995 (S. Deger-Jalkotzy, S. Hiller & O. Panagl, eds.), 389-405. Vienna: Oesterreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften.
- 2006 a: ‘Linguistic evidence from the Thebes Texts in Linear B (handout)’. In Die neuen Linear B-Texte aus Theben (S. Deger-Jalkotzy & O. Panagl, eds.), 119-24. Wien: Verlag der Oesterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.
- 1992 f: ‘Mycenaean, Arcadian, Cyprian and some questions of method in dialectology’. In Mykenaika (Suppl. XXV to Bulletin de correspondance hellénique) (J.P. Olivier, ed.), 415-32. Athens - Paris: Ecole française d’Athènes.
- 2012 a: (& J.-P. Olivier). ‘Syllabic Scripts and Languages in the Second and First Millennia BC’. In Parallel Lives: Ancient Island Societies in Crete and Cyprus (G. Cadogan et all., eds.), BSA Studies 20, 105-18. London: BSA.
- 2012 c: ‘Open problems in Mycenaean phonology and the Input of morphology’. In Etudes mycéniennes 2010. Actes du XIIIe colloque international sur les textes égéens (Carlier, P. et all., eds.), 511-22. Pisa - Roma: Serra Editore.
Linear A and 'Minoan'[edit]
- 1969 b: ‘The structure of the Minoan language’. Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies [BICS], London, 16, 161-62.
- 1971 c: (& G. Cadogan). ‘A Linear A tablet from Pyrgos, Myrtos, Crete’. Kadmos 10, 105-09.
- 1977: (& G. Cadogan). ‘A second Linear A tablet from Pyrgos’. Kadmos 16, 7-9.
Archaic and classical Greek linguistics[edit]
- 1960 a: ‘Kτίλος (Pind. Pyth. II 17)’. Rivista di Cultura Classica e Medioevale [RCCM] 2, 30-40.
- 1960 c: ‘Il genitivo maschile in -ας’. Glotta 39, 93-111.
- 1964 a: ‘'Doric' features in the language of Hesiod’. Glotta 42, 138-65.
- 1964 b: ‘SEG XI 1112 e il sincretismo dei casi in arcade-cipriota’. La Parola del Passato, 346-54.
- 1965: ‘A note on Thessalian’. Glotta 43, 235-51.
- 1968 a: ‘Thessalian patronymic adjectives’. Glotta 46, 85-106.
- 1968 b: ‘Article and demonstrative: a note’. Glotta 46, 76-85.
- 1968 e: ‘Gender and the development of the Greek declensions’. Transactions of the Philological Society [TPhS] 67.1, 12-36.
- 1969 a: ‘Epigraphical -φι’. Glotta 47, 46-54.
- 1970 a: (& L.H. Jeffery). ‘Ποινικαστάς and ποινικάζεν. BM 1969, 4-2.1. A new archaic inscription from Crete’. Kadmos 9, 118-54.
- 1970 b: ‘Cretan δριωτον’. Classical Review [CR] 20, 280-82.
- 1971 a: (& L.H. Jeffery). ‘An archaic Greek inscription from Crete’. The British Museum Quarterly 36, 24-29.
- 1971 b: (& B. Levick). ‘Κοπτοπώλης’. Classical Review 21, 162-66.
- 1976: ‘The -εσσι datives, Aeolic- -ss- and the Lesbian poets’. In Studies L.R. Palmer (A. Morpurgo Davies & W. Meid, eds.), 181-197. Innsbruck: Innsbruck Institut für Sprachwissenschaft.
- 1978 a: ‘Thessalian εἴντεσσι and the participle of the verb 'to be'’. In Etrennes de Septantaine. Travaux offerts à M. Lejeune, 157-66. Paris: Klincksieck.
- 1987 b: ‘Folk-linguistics and the Greek word’. In Festschrift H.M. Hoenigswald (G. Cardona & N. Zide, eds.), 263-80 Tübingen: Narr.
- 1993 a: ‘Geography, history and dialect: the case of Oropos’. In Dialectologica Graeca. Actas del II Coloquio Internacional de Dialectologia Griega (E. Crespo, J.L. García Ramón & A. Striano, eds.), 261-79. Madrid: Universidad Autónoma de Madrid.
- 1997: ‘Particles in Greek epigraphical texts: the case of Arcadian’. In New Approaches to Greek Particles. Proceedings of the Colloquium held in Amsterdam, Jan. 4-6, 1996, to honour C.J. Ruijgh on the occasion of his retirement (A. Rijksbaron, ed.), 49-73. Amsterdam: Gieben.
- 1999 a [but 2000]: ‘Contatti interdialettali: il formulario epigrafico’. In KATA DIALEKTON. Atti del III Colloquio Internazionale di Dialettologia Greca (A.C. Cassio, ed.) = A.I.O.N. 19 (1997), 7-33. Napoli: Istituto Universitario Orientale.
- 2000: ‘Greek personal names and linguistic continuity’. In Greek Personal Names: Their Value as Evidence (S. Hornblower & E. Matthews, eds.), 15-39. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- 2001: ‘Après Michel Lejeune: L’anthroponymie et l’histoire de la langue grecque’. In Comptes-rendus de l’Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, no. 1, 157-73. Paris.
- 2006 b: ‘Onomastics, diffusion and word formation: Greek Άριστογείτων and Άριστόγειτος’. In Studi Linguistici in onore di Roberto Gusmani (R. Bombi et all., eds.), 1241-56. Alessandria: Edizioni dell’Orso.
- 2012 d: ‘Phonetic laws, language diffusion, and drift: the loss of sibilants in the Greek dialects of the first millennium BC’. In Laws and Rules in Indo-European (P. Probert & A. Willi, eds.), 102-21. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Anatolian languages[edit]
- 1975 a: ‘Negation and disjunction in Anatolian and elsewhere’. Anatolian Studies 25, 157-68.
- 1978 d: (& J.D. Hawkins) a. ‘Il sistema grafico del luvio geroglifico’. In Annali della Scuola Normale di Pisa, 755-82.
- 1978 e: (& J.D. Hawkins) b. ‘On the problems of Karatepe: the Hieroglyphic text’. Anatolian Studies 28, 103-19.
- 1979 d: ‘The Luwian languages and the Hittite hi-conjugation’. In Festschrift Oswald Szemerényi (B. Brogyanyi, ed.), 577-610. Amsterdam: Benjamins.
- 1979 e: (& J.D. Hawkins). ‘The hieroglyphic inscription of Bohca’. In Studia mediterranea Piero Meriggi dicata (O. Carruba, ed.), 387-406. Pavia: Centro Ricerche Egeo-Anatoliche, Aurora Edizioni.
- 1980 a: ‘The personal endings of the Hieroglyphic Luwian verb’. Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung[KZ] 94, 86-108.
- 1980 b: ‘Analogy and the an-datives of Hieroglyphic Luwian’. Anatolian Studies 30, 123-37.
- 1982: (& J.D. Hawkins). ‘Buying and selling in Hieroglyphic Luwian’. In Serta Indogermanica. Festschrift G. Neumann (J. Tischler, ed.), 91-105. Innsbruck: Innsbruck Institut für Sprachwissenschaft.
- 1982/3: ‘Dentals, rhotacism and Verbal endings in the Luwian languages’. Zeitschriftfürvergleichende Sprachforschung [KZ] 96: 245-70.
- 1986 d: ‘Fighting, ploughing and the Karkamiš kings’. In o-o-pe-ro-si. Festschrift Ernst Risch (A. Etter, ed.), 129-45. Berlin: de Gruyter.
- 1986 e: (& J.D. Hawkins). ‘Studies in Hieroglyphic Luwian’. In Kanišuwar. A tribute to Hans G. Güterbock (H.A. Hoffner & G. Beckman, eds.), 69-81. Chicago: Oriental Institute.
- 1987 a: (& J.D. Hawkins). ‘The late Hieroglyphic Luwian corpus: some new lexical recognitions’. Hethitica 8, 267-95.
- 1993 b: (& J.D. Hawkins). ‘Running and relatives in Luwian’. Kadmos 32, 50-60.
- 1998 a: (& J.D.Hawkins). ‘Of donkeys, mules and Tarkondemos’. In Mír curad. Studies in honor of Calvert Watkins (J. Jasanoff, H.C. Melchert & L. Oliver, eds.), 243-60. Innsbruck: Innsbruck Institut für Sprachwissenschaft.
- 1998 b: ‘Sessanta anni (o cento) di linguistica anatolica’. In Il Geroglifico Anatolico. Atti del Colloquio e della tavola rotonda Napoli-Procida, 5-9 giugno 1995 (M. Marazzi, ed.), 219-57. Napoli: Istituto Universitario Orientale.
- 2010: (& J.D. Hawkins). ‘More negatives and disjunctives in Hieroglyphic Luwian’. In Ex Anatolia Lux. Anatolian and Indo-European Studies in honor of H. Craig Melchert (R. Kim et all., eds.), 98-128. Ann Arbor - New York: Beech Stave Press.
- 2011: ‘Philology and Linguistics: when data meet theory. Two case studies: I. The case of Hieroglyphic Luwian’. Transactions of the Philological Society 109, 207-12.
History of linguistics[edit]
- 1975 b: ‘Language classification in the nineteenth century’. In Current Trends in Linguistics, vol. 13 (T. Sebeok, ed.), 607-716. The Hague: Mouton.
- 1975 c: (& J.D. Hawkins). ‘Hieroglyphic Hittite: Some new readings and their consequences’. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society [JRAS] 1975 (2), 121-33.
- 1978 b: ‘Analogy, segmentation and the early Neogrammarians’. Transactions of the Philological Society, 36-60.
- 1994 a: ‘Early and late Indo-European from Bopp to Brugmann’. In Früh-, Mittel-, Spätindogermanisch, Akten der IX Fachtagung der Indogermanischen Gesellschaft (G.E. Dunkel, G. Meyer, S. Scarlata, C. Seidl, eds.), 245-65: Wiesbaden: Reichert.
- 1994 b: ‘La linguistica dell'Ottocento’. In Storia della Linguistica, vol. 3, (G. Lepschy, ed.), 11-400. Bologna: Il Mulino (translation from English by F. Nassi).
- 1986 b: ‘Karl Brugmann and late nineteenth-century linguistics’. In Studies in the History of Western Linguistics in Honour of R.H. Robins (Th. Bynon & F.R. Palmer, eds.), 150-71. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- 1987 c: ‘'Organic' and 'organism' in Franz Bopp’. In Biological Metaphor and Cladistic Classification -6-
- 2004: ‘Saussure and Indo-European linguistics’. In The Cambridge Companion to Saussure (C. Sanders, ed.), 9-29. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- 2009 a: ‘Razza e razzismo: continuità ed equivoci nella linguistica dell’Ottocento’. In Lingue, ethnos e popolazioni: evidenze linguistiche, biologiche e culturali. Atti del convegno di Verona della Società Italiana di Glottologia (P. Cotticelli Kurras, G. Graffi, eds.), 55-82. Roma: Il Calamo.
- 2009 b: ‘Dynamic, organic, mechanical: the general significance of the debate about Indo-European Ablaut in the early nineteenth century. In La grammatica tra storia e teoria. Scritti in onore di Giorgio Graffi (P. Cotticelli Kurras & A. Tomaselli, eds.), 133-52. Alessandria: Edizioni dell’Orso.
Honours[edit]
Davies was made a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 1974 and of the British Academy in 1985. She was an honorary or corresponding member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Austrian Academy of Sciences, the Linguistic Society of America, the Academia Europaea, the American Philosophical Society, the French Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities, and the Italian Accademia dei Lincei. She became an honorary fellow of St Hilda's College in 1972 and was awarded honorary doctorates by the University of St Andrews and the University of Nancy.[2]
In 2001, she became an honorary Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire;[8] since she retained Italian nationality, she could only use the post-nominals DBE.[2]
In 2005 a festschrift was published in her honour, Indo-European Perspectives: Studies in Honour of Anna Morpurgo Davies.[5][7]
Personal life[edit]
She was married from 1962 to 1978 to the historian John K. Davies.[1][2]
References[edit]
- ^ abcdefgAndreas Willi, 'Anna Morpurgo Davies obituary', The Guardian, 9 October 2014.
- ^ abcdefgAnna Morpurgo Davies, 21 June 1937 - 27 September 2014Archived 11 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Somerville College, 28 September 2014, archived at the Wayback Machine, 15 October 2014.
- ^ abcdAdnkronos, 'Università: è morta Anna Morpurgo, filologa di Oxford', Sassari Notizie, 29 September 2014 ‹See Tfd›(in Italian)
- ^'Anna Morpurgo Davies | Faculty of Linguistics, Philology and Phonetics'. www.ling-phil.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 2019-04-26.
- ^ abFiona Marshall, 'Review: Historical Ling/Indo-European Langs: Penney (2004)', The Linguist List, 22 December 2005.
- ^Michael MacKert, Review of History of Linguistics. Vol. III. Renaissance and Early Modern Linguistics by Giulio Lepschy; History of Linguistics. Vol. IV. Nineteenth-Century Linguistics by Giulio Lepschy; Anna Morpurgo Davies, Journal of Linguistics 35.3 (November 1999), pp. 630-34.
- ^ abMark Southern and Tom Palaima, 'Measure of our tongues over time', Review of Indo-European Perspectives: Studies in Honour of Anna Morpurgo Davies, Times Higher Education, 28 October 2005.
- ^Donald MacLeod, 'Honours for art, science - and student fees', Education, The Guardian, 29 December 2000.
Anna Tomaselli Obituary 1988 Pictures
External links[edit]
- 'Anna Morpurgo Davies, list of publications'(PDF). Faculty of Linguistics, Philology and Phonetics, Oxford.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anna_Morpurgo_Davies&oldid=899891820'
Sylvana Palma Windsor, The Countess of St. Andrews was born as Syvanna Palma Tomaselli on 28 May 1957 to Maximilian Tomaselli and Josiane Tomaselli {Source}. She was born in Canada, and spent her primary educational years there. She moved to England to continue her education. She received a BA from UBC and an MA from York University in Ontario, and another MA from Cantab. She was a Fellow at St. John's College, University of Cambridge in 2004 {Source}.She is a founding member of the European Centre for the Philosophy of Gender, Siegen, Germany {Source}. Currently, she is a Directorofs tudiens in History Part 1 and Social and Political Sciences at St. John's College, University of Cambridge{Source}
She has been married twice. The first time was to John Paul Jones in December 1977, which ended in divorce without issue in 1981. She married secondly to George, Earl of St. Andrews on 9 January 1988{Source}. Together, she and The Earl of St. Andrews have the following children{Source}:
- Edward Windsor, Lord Downpatrick (1988)
- The Lady Mariana-Charlotte Windsor (1992)
- The Lady Amelia Windsor (1995)
Due to her being brought up in the Catholic faith and not converting prior to marriage, her husband renounced his rights to the crown. Later on, in their teen years, Lord Downpatrick and The Lady Mariana-Charlotte Windsor also renounced their rights to the throne by converting to Catholicism. The Lady Amelia is currently the only one in succession, in 39th place. However, with the new succession rules in effect, because he just married a Catholic, rather than converting to Catholicism himself, he regained his place in succession in 38th place, followed by his youngest child {Source}.
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Connecticut Obituary and Death Notice Archive
Connecticut Obituary and Death Notice Archive - Page 76
Posted By: GenLookups
Date: Saturday, 28 September 2013, at 8:50 p.m.
Lena Verderosa Evaristo,
a longtime Stamford resident, died Friday, Sept. 8, 2000 at Smith House Health Care Center. She was 101.
She died of natural causes, according to her family.
Born May 19, 1899, in Switzerland, she was a daughter of the late Frederick and Assunta Fussella Verderosa.
Mrs. Evaristo was a Stamford resident for many years before moving to California, where she lived for 40 years. She had lived in Stamford since moving back 15 years ago.
She was a homemaker and worked at grocery and meat stores in Stamford and California operated by her late husband, Peter Evaristo.
She is survived by her daughter, Susanne DePreta of Stamford; two sons, Lawrence Evaristo of Encino, Calif., and Fred Evaristo of Atlanta; seven grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; and five great-great-grandchildren.
In addition to her husband, she was predeceased by a daughter, Theresa Rinaldi; a sister, Laura Sansone; and three brothers, Joseph Verderosa, Rocco Verderosa and Angelo Verderosa. Crusader kings 2 wiki.
Calling hours are 4 to 8 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 10, 2000 at Nicholas F. Cognetta Funeral Home , 104 Myrtle Ave., Stamford.
A procession will leave the funeral home at 8:50 a.m. Monday, Sept. 11, and proceed to Sacred Heart Church, 37 Schuyler Ave., Stamford, for a Mass of Christian burial at 9:30 a.m.
Burial will be private.
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to Smith House Health Care Center, 88 Rockrimmon Road, Stamford, CT 06903.
James R. Bechert of Burlington died Friday,
Sept. 8, 2000 at Bristol Hospital. He was 70.
He died of heart failure, according to his family.
Born July 5, 1930, in Stamford, he was a son of the late Fred J. and Emita Mitchell Bechert.
Mr. Bechert graduated from the University of Connecticut with a degree in agriculture in 1952 and lived in Burlington since 1958.
He served in the U.S. Navy.
He was president of Bechert Brothers Manufacturing Co. in Forestville prior to retiring.
He was a member of Franklin Lodge No. 56 AF & AM and Asbury Methodist Church in Forestville.
He is survived by his wife, Marilyn Deschene Bechert of Burlington; two daughters, Sally M. Robinson of Mansfield, Mass., and Emily J. Majors of Bristol; two sons, James F. Bechert of Harwinton and William F. Bechert of Unionville; two sisters, Nancy Bechert Cross of New Canaan and Beverly Bechert Lett of Waxhaw, N.C.; a brother, Thomas E. Bechert of Annapolis, Md.; and 12 grandchildren.
He was predeceased by two brothers, Fred J. Bechert Jr. and Robert C. Bechert; and a granddaughter.
There will be no calling hours.
A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. tomorrow, Sept. 11, 2000 at Asbury United Methodist Church. The Rev. Woodrow Eddins will officiate.
Burial will be at 3 p.m. tomorrow at Centerville Cemetery in Hamden.
Funk Funeral Home, 35 Bellevue Ave., Bristol, is handling the arrangements.
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to Asbury United Methodist Church, Book of Remembrance Fund, 90 Church Ave., Forestville, CT 06010.
Emmanuel G. Chalikis
Emmanuel G. 'Chic' Chalikis Sr., a lifelong Stamford resident, died Saturday, Sept. 9, 2000 at Stamford Hospital. He was 76.
He died of cardiac arrest, according to his family.
Born April 30, 1924, in Stamford, he was a son of the late George and Theodosia Theofanakis Chalikis.
Mr. Chalikis served in the U.S. Navy veteran during World War II. As a member of the 4th Beach Battalion, he was injured in the 1944 invasion of Salerno, Italy. U.S. Rep. Chris Shays presented Mr. Chalikis with the purple heart on Sept. 3, 1995, during a ceremony held in conjunction with the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II.
Mr. Chalikis was a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. He also was a member of the Church of the Archangels.
He was a master mechanic and taught auto mechanics at J.M. Wright Technical School in Stamford.
He is survived by his wife, Julia Perniciaro Chalikis of Stamford; two daughters, Lou Ann Venezio and Julia Czamanski, both of Stamford; a son, Emmanuel G. Chalikis Jr. of Norwalk; two sisters, Helen Legato and Anna Ventsias, both of Stamford; two brothers, Constantine Chalikis and Alexander Chalikis, both of Stamford; and seven grandchildren.
He was predeceased by a sister, Eva Green.
Calling hours will be 4 to 8 p.m. tomorrow, Sept. 11, 2000 at Nicholas F. Cognetta Funeral Home, 104 Myrtle Ave., Stamford.
A prayer service will be held at the funeral home 7:30 p.m. tomorrow.
A procession will leave the funeral home at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 12, and proceed to Church of the Archangels, 1527 Bedford St., Stamford, for a service at 10:30 a.m.
Burial will follow in St. John's Cemetery in Darien.
John A. Ferraro
John Alfred Ferraro died Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2000 at Yale-New Haven Hospital.
The cause of death has not been determined, according to his family.
Born Sept. 6, 2000, in New Haven, he was the son of Daniel E. and Jennifer Lyn Ferraro of Greenwich.
Besides his parents, he is survived by his maternal grandparents, Anthony and Susan Heinlein Bologna of Greenwich and formerly of Stamford; his paternal grandparents, Robert and Lynda Rogari Ferraro of Greenwich; his maternal great-grandparents, Anthony and Theresa Bologna of Greenwich; and his paternal great-great-grandmother, Patricia Ferraro of Greenwich.
He was predeceased by his maternal great-grandparents, John and Helen Heinlein; his paternal great-great-grandparents, Alfred and Domenica Rogari; and his paternal great-great-grandfather, Frank Ferraro.
There will be no calling hours.
Funeral and burial will be private.
Nicholas F. Cognetta Funeral Home & Crematory, 104 Myrtle Ave., Stamford, is handling the arrangements.
Anna L. Long
Anna L. Long, a lifelong Stamford resident, died Friday, Sept. 8, 2000 at Stamford Hospital. She was 72.
She died of heart failure, according to her family.
Born Oct. 13, 1927, in Stamford, she was a daughter of the late John and Leona Guiles Gruner.
A seamstress, Mrs. Long worked for more than 25 years at Flossie Dress Co. in Stamford.
She is survived by her son, Richard Long of Stamford; her sister, Rose De Napoles of Stamford; and four grandchildren.
She was predeceased by her husband, David E. Long; and a brother, John G. Gruner.
Calling hours will be 4 to 8 p.m. Monday, Sept. 11, 2000 at Lacerenza Funeral Home, 8 Schuyler Ave., Stamford.
A Mass of Christian burial will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2000 at St. Mary's Church, 566 Elm St., Stamford.
Burial will follow in St. John's Cemetery in Darien.
Carmela Tomaselli
Carmela Garaffa Tomaselli, a lifelong Greenwich resident, died Friday, Sept. 8, 2000 at Greenwich Hospital. She was 67.
She died of bone cancer, according to her family.
Born April 23, 1933, in Greenwich, she was a daughter of the late Rocco and Caroline Santoro Infanti. She graduated from Greenwich High School and the Katharine Gibbs School.
Mrs. Tomaselli was a secretary for Pitney Bowes in Stamford.
She was a member of the former Greenwich Wives Club and the Piedmont Women's Auxiliary Club in Darien.
In addition to her daughter, she is survived by her husband, William 'Bill' Tomaselli of Cos Cob; a daughter, Carollynn Garaffa Brown of Stamford; two sisters, Marianne Makrinos of Cos Cob and Beverly Derby of Colorado Springs, Colo.; and three grandchildren.
She was predeceased by her first husband, Salvatore Garaffa, in 1965.
Calling hours will be 5 to 9 p.m. today at the Castiglione Funeral Home, 134 Hamilton Ave.
A Mass of Christian burial will be celebrated at 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Catherine of Siena Church in Riverside.
Burial will follow in St. Mary's Cemetery, North Street.
Memorial donations may be made to the Bendheim Cancer Center, 77 Lafayette Place.
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