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Joyce Kennedy, doctor and writer on classical music who collaborated with her husband, a veteran Telegraph critic – obituary
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Piper was killed by a staffie owned by Robert Dalton.
A Staffie which killed a tiny Papillon as children walked past on their way to school in Dunfermline has been spared a death sentence.
Owner Robert Dalton has been warned the “powerfully-built” pet must be kept leashed and muzzled from now on to prevent another attack.
He was also ordered to pay compensation to the Papillon’s owner, Joy Kennedy who had tried in vain to fight off Dalton’s dog.
Piper the papillon.
Dunfermline Sheriff Court heard on Wednesday Dalton, who was not present in court, is willing to comply with the order.
La historia real detrás de Cruella de Vil, protagonista del estreno del momento en cines
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Why the devilish origins of Cruella are too dark for Disney
Dodie Smith’s original puppy-napper is irredeemably wicked – so why does this blockbuster backstory turn her into a pitiable orphan?
Sympathy for the devil: Emma Stone in Cruella
Credit: Disney
What turned grifting young fashion designer Cruella de Vil into a demented doggie-dispatcher? That is the question director Craig Gillespie’s new film Cruella sets out to answer. In recent years we’ve had cinematic origin stories for Hannibal Lecter, The Joker, and Maleficent (the witch in Sleeping Beauty). Now Hollywood is finally ready to tackle the wickedest fictional villain of all – if you measure wickedness according to the adorability of the villain’s proposed victims, that is.
Joyce Kennedy was an actress of modest renown, who died in 1943, aged just 44, entirely unaware that an off-colour remark she had once made to a friend would inspire one of children s literature s greatest villains. He would make a nice fur coat, she blithely observed of a Dalmatian puppy called Pongo, unwittingly planting the seed that would grow into the monstrous Cruella de Vil.
Pongo s smitten (and offended) owner was the playwright Dodie Smith, who more than 20 years later, having never forgotten Joyce s remark, wrote her first children s book, One Hundred and One Dalmatians.
Puppy love: As the new Cruella remake proves dalmatians haven t had their day Brian Viner looks back at the history of the well-loved children s novel written by Dodie Smith (pictured)
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