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  1. Frank O'Connor (1903-1966) was an Irish author and translator, best known for his short stories and memoirs. He was also a poet, playwright, critic, biographer and travel writer, and a former member of the Irish Republican Army and the Abbey Theatre.

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    He is originally from Edinburgh, Scotland, where he was born and raised. Growing up Frankie was obsessed with playing games: Pong, 2600, Intellivision, Vectrex, ColecoVision, Sinclair Spectrum, Atari 800, Commodore 64 and so on, until Xbox 360 in the present day. He didn't have them all at the same time, upgrading when the next generation of system...

    Childhood Idol? 1. Frankie:Billy Idol, naturally. He's not just my idol, he's the world's idol. Rock! Do you have any pets? 1. Frankie:An enormous cat. Seriously, 22 pounds of rippling feline blubber. In fact, rippling is his only form of exercise. Anything else you'd like to tell us about yourself? 1. Frankie: I am foreign. Like Balky. Or maybe mo...

    Frankie was usually the only player on Bungie's team wearing full ReconArmor in their Humpday games.
    He appeared in a special episode of This Spartan Life in which he described some of the new features of Halo 3.
    His weapon of choice is the Covenant carbine.[citation needed]
    He was the arch enemy of Martin O'Donnell.[citation needed]
    "Nanomachines, magic, bullshit", Frank O'Connor at an interview.
    Frankie as part of the Superintendent viral campaign for Halo 3: ODST.
    For the Halo Graphic Novel Frankie did this take on Dutch Artist M. C. Escher'sfamous drawing.
    Frank O'Connor's cameo appearance in Episode 2 of Halo 4: Forward Unto Dawn.

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    1. A gallery of Mister Chief

    Frank O'Connor is a former Halo franchise director and writer who worked at Bungie and 343 Industries. He created Mister Chief, wrote several Halo novels and stories, and appeared in Halo 4: Forward Unto Dawn.

  2. Frank O’Connor was an Irish writer and critic who translated Gaelic works from the 9th to the 20th century. He also wrote short stories, novels, and plays, and was a director of the Abbey Theatre in Dublin.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • EARLY ON — Frank O'Connor was born Charles Frances O'Connor in Lorain, Ohio on Sept. 22, 1897. He was eight years Rand's senior. The couple met in 1926 in Hollywood while both were working on the 1927 film, "The King of Kings," directed by Cecil B. deMille.
    • HIS DEVOTION — O'Connor gave up his acting ambitions to support Rand's work. He worked, for a time, on a farm in Tarzana, California, where they both lived, to support them while she wrote and began to gain notice as a philosopher of great renown.
    • A PAINTER — O'Connor and Rand moved to New York and he began a career as a talented and rising painter. He was a member from 1955 to 1966 of the Art Students League of New York, according to his obituary in the New York Times.
    • CREATIVE MUSE — Rand credited O'Connor with being deeply influential in her career. "Every hero was modeled after him,” Rand said of her husband, with whom she was married for 50 years.
  3. Frank O’Connor (born Michael Francis O'Connor O'Donovan) (September 17, 1903 – March 10, 1966) was an Irish author of over 150 works, who was best known for his short stories and books of memoirs.

  4. Sep 5, 2011 · Frank O'Connor, an Irish short story writer and critic, talks about his craft, influences, and preferences in this 1957 interview. He discusses his imitative instinct, his love for lyric poetry, his admiration for Chekhov, and his views on the novel form.

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  6. Frank O'Connor (1897-1979) was an actor who appeared in Cecil B. deMille's The King of Kings (1927) and married Ayn Rand. He later became a painter and had some of his works on her book covers.

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