Elizabeth "Jane" Shore (née Lambert; c. 1445 – c. 1527) was one of the many mistresses of King Edward IV of England. She became the best known to history...
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Jane Shore (c. 1445 – c. 1527) was the mistress of Edward IV of England. Jane Shore may also refer to: Jane Shore (poet), American poet and professor...
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Jane Shore is a 1714 historical tragedy by the British writer Nicholas Rowe. It was his penultimate play, and was inspired by the life of Jane Shore the...
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Jane Shore is an American poet. She graduated from Goddard College, and moved from Vermont to the Iowa Writers' Workshop. She graduated from Radcliffe...
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The Woeful Lamentation of Jane Shore is an English broadside ballad from the 17th century. It tells the story of Jane Shore, a mistress of King Edward...
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Jane Shore is a 1915 British silent historical film directed by Bert Haldane and F. Martin Thornton and starring Blanche Forsythe, Roy Travers and Robert...
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also in Michael Winterbottom's The Look of Love. In 2013 she starred as Jane Shore in the period drama The White Queen, and in 2014 she appeared as Stacey...
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dragon". Edward IV had many mistresses, the best known of them being Jane Shore, and he did not have a reputation for fidelity. His marriage to the widowed...
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standoffishness more come-hitherable." Brown's success in film continued as Jane Shore in Laurence Olivier's Richard III (1955) and opposite Kirk Douglas in...
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happily, though maybe not entirely honestly, ever after. American poet Jane Shore published a poem, "The Princess and the Pea", in the January 1973 issue...
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daughter of Thomas Waite (or Wayte), of Southampton. The most famous was Jane Shore, later compelled by Richard III to perform public penance at Paul's Cross;...
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Richard III of England Leo Bill as Sir Reginald Bray Emily Berrington as Jane Shore, Edward IV's mistress Ashley Charles as Thomas Grey, the eldest son of...
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tragedies led to the production of The Tragedy of Jane Shore. In this renowned tragedy, Smithson was cast as Shore, the role in which she moved her audience to...
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Howard, 1st Duke of Norfolk, Margaret Beaufort (Henry VII's mother), or Jane Shore (Edward IV's mistress). The Beaufort theory was supported by Philippa...
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D.C. Norman met poet Jane Shore in 1981, and they married in 1984.[citation needed] They have a daughter, Emma. Norman and Shore lived in Cambridge, New...
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Folk etymology holds that the place was originally named "Shore's Ditch", after Jane Shore, the mistress of Edward IV, who is supposed to have died or...
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and Aribert, and a Christian woman named Ethelinda, who is martyred. Jane Shore, professedly an imitation of Shakespeare's style, was played at Drury...
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between Emilia and Harriet) and The History of Fanny Meadows — followed by Jane Shore to her Friend: A Poetic Epistle the following year. After her death in...
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nature. Edward IV had numerous documented mistresses, they included: Jane Shore (also known as Elizabeth) Elizabeth Lucy (or Elizabeth Waite), with whom...
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others of having conspired against him with the Woodvilles and accusing Jane Shore, lover to both Hastings and Thomas Grey, of acting as a go-between. According...
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Cummins died on stage while playing the part of Dumont in The Tragedy of Jane Shore by Nicholas Rowe, at the Leeds Theatre in Hunslet. He died of "ossification...
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Procter of Cowling Hall owned a portrait of Will Sommers and another of Jane Shore. Today, entertainers sometimes perform as 'Will' in Renaissance-themed...
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other side of the River Thames. Legend has it that Edward's mistress, Jane Shore, intervened on the school's behalf. She was able to save a good part of...
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1812 at Drury Lane and went on to play Norval in Douglas and Hastings in Jane Shore amongst his many roles there. He was a Drury Lane regular until his death...
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is "a bonny fine maid of a noble degree" said to excel both Helen and Jane Shore in beauty. Separated from her lover, she dresses as a page "and ranged...
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Francis Kirkman in his 1661 play list. The central character in the play is Jane Shore, the king's mistress. The historical events of the reign of Edward IV...
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stories for children and young adults Jane S. Shaw, American free-market environmentalist, editor and journalist Jane Shore (disambiguation) This disambiguation...
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Cole, William. The Unfortunate Royal Mistresses, Rosamond Clifford, and Jane Shore, Concubines to King Henry the Second, and Edward the Fourth, London, 1825...
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scores for The Lord of the Rings Jane Shore (1445–1527), one of the many mistresses of King Edward IV of England Jemima Shore, a fictional journalist featured...
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was Jane Shore; Grey's wife was the wealthy heiress Cecily Bonville, 7th Baroness Harington, who also happened to be Hastings' stepdaughter. Shore was...
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