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Jennifer "Jenny (XJ-9)" Wakeman (voiced by Janice Kawaye) is the robot child of Nora Wakeman. She is the also the main protagonist and the "16-year-old robot" to which the title refers, a state-of-the-art gynoid automaton created by Dr. Noreen Wakeman five years prior to the series, though she was designed as age 16-year-old girl. Though XJ-9 was designed to be Earth's protector, armed to the ...
Aug 31, 2022 · To illustrate just how small a world the Vancouver film scene is: Jeff is married to Jenny Durance, sister of actress Erica Durance. Before Erica hit it big as Smallville ‘s Lois Lane she appeared on Stargate opposite Chris in the eighth-season episode “Affinity,” playing Teal’c’s neighbor and love interest Krista .
Jun 17, 2023 · Jenny Connor is a firm favourite among fans of Coronation Street, but it's hard to believe that her first appearance on the cobbles was actually more than 30 years ago.. Sally Ann Matthews, who ...
The wind making my hair feel sticky, the salty sea breeze, all of it felt just right. Like it had been waiting for me to get there.”. ~Jenny Han, The Summer I Turned Pretty, (Character: Isabel Conklin as the narrator), Chapter 1, Page 3. “For me, it was almost like winter didn’t count. Summer was what mattered.
I recently saw that Keanu Reeves will be the model for the priest in Summerville's church, and I was wondering which real life people inspire the characters. Since I'm not completely familiar with American pop-culture, I was wondering if you could help me out here. Up to now I have the following, although in some of them I may be wrong:
Feb 17, 2022 · Butterfly Sisters is the perfect escape for fans of Susan Wiggs, RaeAnne Thayne, and Susan Mallery. “When emerging into the world, a butterfly needs the struggle to push the fluid from its body into its wings.
- Jenny Hale
“Reading the 19th-century novel through a contemporary lens, writers Kate Bolick, Jenny Zhang, Carmen Maria Machado and Jane Smiley have, in March Sisters: On Life, Death, and Little Women produced essays that are fresh, layered and insightful. . . . The March sisters march on in this stimulating, discerning and engaging book.”