12:38, Jun 17 2021
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Damaris Hayman was known for her brief but memorable role in Doctor Who in the 1970s.
Damaris Hayman, who has died aged 91, was one of those instantly recognisable comedy actresses who took walk-on and bit parts in numerous films and television series; she became something of a cult figure among
Doctor Who aficionados for her role as Olive Hawthorne, the White Witch of Devil’s End in
The Daemons (1971), a five-parter, starring Jon Pertwee as the Time Lord, that is now regarded as a classic. After learning her craft in rep, she made her film début aged 25 in an uncredited role as a sixth former in
Damaris Hayman, reliable supporting actress cherished by Doctor Who fans for her role in The Daemons – obituary
telegraph.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from telegraph.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Liverpool myths some people can t help believing from pyramid tomb to the real history of Scouse
From Hitler s supposed time in the city to a Reds star s Everton tattoo , some tall tales about our city just won t go away
Is there really a timeslip on Bold Street? (Image: Andrew Teebay)
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One of a kind Liver Bird brooch going up for auction for hundreds of pounds
Brooch with special links to the city is set be auctioned next month
Updated
A brooch with remarkable links to Liverpool history has been discovered by Wilson 55 Auctions.
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19 Feb 2021, 12:40
IMMORTALISED…Housing association Salix Homes is paying its respects to Salford hero Canon Peter Green by naming its latest apartment block in the city’s Trinity district after the writer and social justice campaigner who died in 1961. During the First World War and until the 1950s, Green wrote a weekly column in the
Manchester
Guardian under the pen name ‘Artifex’, which is exactly what Salix has called its 108-unit affordable housing development under construction at present. The 11-storey building is part of the £22.5m Canon Green Campus redevelopment in Trinity – already named after Green, who was a rector at the nearby St Philips Church and wrote about pacifism and compassion, social injustice and women’s suffrage.
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