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  1. Leslie Burr-Howard (born October 1, 1956) is an American equestrian and an Olympic champion in showjumping. She won team gold at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics and team silver at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics , as well as team silver at the 1999 Winnipeg Pan American Games .

  2. The Scarlet Pimpernel is a 1934 British adventure film directed by Harold Young and starring Leslie Howard, Merle Oberon, and Raymond Massey.Based on the 1905 play by Baroness Orczy and Montagu Barstow and the classic 1905 adventure novel by Orczy, the film is about an eighteenth-century English aristocrat (Howard) who leads a double life, passing himself off as an effete aristocrat while ...

  3. A documentary film Leslie Howard: The Man Who Gave A Damn (2016), which includes commentary on the ill-fated flight, was narrated by Derek Partridge, who at the age of seven gave up his seat on BOAC Flight 777 for Leslie Howard and Alfred T. Chenhalls and later in life, became a television and screen actor.

  4. Feb 11, 2016 · Leslie Howard: The Man Who Gave a Damn: Directed by Thomas Hamilton. With Derek Partridge, Leslie Ruth Howard, Norman Spencer, Matthew Sweet. Intimate and compelling documentary on the life and career of Leslie Howard (1893-1943)

  5. Öccse Arthur Howard (wd) (született Arthur John Steiner, 1910–1995) brit színész lett, akárcsak az ő fia, Leslie Howard unokaöccse, Alan Howard (1937–2015) is. Egyetemi tanulmányai után a bankszakmában kívánt elhelyezkedni, de az első világháború kitörése megakadályozta ebben. A harctérről 1917 -ben sebesülten ...

  6. Leslie Howard Steiner (født 3. april 1893 i London, død 1. juni 1943 i Biscayabugten) var en britisk skuespiller og filminstruktør, kendt for sin følsomme scenefremstilling af Shakespeare -skikkelser som Hamlet og Romeo . Han filmdebuterede i 1917 i The Happy Warrior, og opnåede stor popularitet i The Scarlet Pimpernel ( Den røde ...

  7. Leslie Howard Gordon. Leslie Howard Gordon (7 October 1891 – 1950) was a British screenwriter and actor of the silent and early sound film eras. He also directed three films in the 1930s including The Double Event (1934). [4] He worked as a screenwriter for Stoll Pictures in the early 1920s, when the company was the largest studio in the country.

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