
Matthew Stewart
Articles
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Sep 20, 2024 |
yahoo.com | Matthew Stewart
Considering each of the hundreds of times costars have competed directly against one another at the Primetime Emmys, the very first case involved two men – Lloyd Nolan and Barry Sullivan – who both played lead roles in what would presently be considered a TV movie: the 1956 “Ford Star Jubilee” presentation of “The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial.” Over the subsequent seven decades, 20 more pairs and a single quartet of lead male limited series or telefilm cast mates have battled it out, resulting...
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Sep 11, 2024 |
goldderby.com | Matthew Stewart
With Critics Choice, Golden Globe, and SAG Awards under his belt, “The Bear” star Jeremy Allen White predictably finished first in the 2023 Best Comedy Actor Emmy race, which involved two-time winners Bill Hader (“Barry”) and Jason Sudeikis (“Ted Lasso”). Since he is now the only former acting champion in the same category’s 2024 lineup and has once again achieved the same three precursor wins, he should have even less trouble clinching a second TV academy prize.
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Mar 26, 2024 |
audible.com | Matthew Stewart |Manisha Sinha |Alan Taylor |James Marcus
How a band of antislavery leaders recovered the radical philosophical inspirations of the first American Revolution to defeat the slaveholders' oligarchy in the Civil War. In their struggle against the slaveholding oligarchy of their time, America's antislavery leaders found their way back to the rationalist, secularist, and essentially atheist inspiration for the first American Revolution.
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Mar 22, 2024 |
rcn.org.uk | Matthew Stewart
This was my first Joint Reps Conference to attend even though I have been a steward and an active member for over five years. Even though I have attended Congress many times I still felt very nervous about attending this event on my own and only knowing a few other people attending. I know it may seem strange but when I go to Congress, a much bigger event, it’s with branch colleagues and seems less daunting.
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Nov 17, 2023 |
yorkshiretimes.co.uk | Isabel Galleymore |Abeer Ameer |Matthew Stewart |Rachel Bower
If ever you were to doubt the educational potential of poetry, then Isabel Galleymore’s astonishing poem reveals, in acrobatic metaphors and linguistic circumlocution, as much about creatures that shuffle ungainly about the sea bed as you could ever learn from an aridly moribund textbook on marine biology.
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