Jane Arden (other)
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Jane Arden (other)
Jane Arden may refer to: * Jane Gardiner (1758–1840), née Arden, British schoolmistress and grammarian. * Jane Arden (director) (1927–1982), British director and actor * Jane Arden (actress) (fl. since 1980s), British actor * ''Jane Arden'' (comics), a daily newspaper comic strip which ran from 1927 to 1968 See also * Arden (name) Arden is a unisex given name and an English surname of locational origin. It is derived from three places thus called in the United Kingdom: in Yorkshire North Riding, Cheshire, or the Forest of Arden in Warwickshire. This last Arden family fro ...
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Jane Gardiner
Jane Arden Gardiner (1758–1840) was a British schoolmistress and grammarian, and one of the earliest friends of Mary Wollstonecraft. Early life Gardiner was the daughter of John Arden, a scholar and lecturer, who is best known as one of Mary Wollstonecraft’s early teachers. His interests centred on natural philosophy (science) and ''belles lettres'' (literature); he taught his daughter in moments of leisure. Gardiner herself was friends with Wollstonecraft: they lived near one another in Beverley for several years, and when the Wollstonecraft family moved away in 1774, the girls wrote letters to one another throughout their teens and early twenties. Career Gardiner began teaching early, leaving home in her mid-teens to take up a position as governess to the daughters of Lady Martin in north Norfolk. In 1780 she moved across England to the household of Lord Ilchester of Redlynch, Somerset. She was succeeded as governess to the Fox-Strangeways family by Agnes Porter, whos ...
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Jane Arden (director)
Jane Arden (born Norah Patricia Morris; 29 October 1927 – 20 December 1982) was a British film director, actress, singer/songwriter and poet, who gained note in the 1950s. Born in Pontypool, Monmouthshire, she studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. She started acting in the late 1940s and writing for stage and television in the 1950s. In the 1960s, she joined movements for feminism and anti-psychiatry. She wrote a screenplay for the film '' Separation'' (1967). In the late 1960s and 1970s, she wrote for experimental theatre, adapting one work as a self-directed film, ''The Other Side of the Underneath'' (1972). In 1978 she published a poetry book. Arden committed suicide in 1982. In 2009, her feature films '' Separation'' (1967), ''The Other Side of the Underneath'' (1972) and ''Anti-Clock'' (1979) were restored by the British Film Institute and released on DVD and Blu-ray. Her literary works are out of print. Early life and career Arden was born Norah Patricia Morris at ...
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Jane Arden (actress)
Jane Arden (born 1959) is an English actress and singer known for her performances in Shakespeare roles and musical theatre. Life and career Born in England, she moved to Hong Kong in 1960, at the age of one, and lived there for 25 years; there she became interested in theatre watching Derek Nimmo's Dinner Theatre.Finlay, Victoria"Jane Arden" South China Morning Post, 26 September 2010, accessed 19 October 2020 She returned to the UK to train for the theatre at the Theatre Arts School in Sussex.
Pro Arts Lab, , accessed 19 October 2020
Her first

Jane Arden (comics)
''Jane Arden'' was an internationally syndicated daily newspaper comic strip which ran from November 26, 1928 to January 20, 1968. The title character was the original "spunky girl reporter", actively seeking to infiltrate and expose criminal activity rather than just report on its consequences and served as a prototype for later characters such as ''Superman'' supporting character Lois Lane and fellow comic strip heroine Brenda Starr, Reporter. Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Mary McGrory credited ''Jane Arden'' with instilling her interest in journalism. ''Jane Arden'' was only moderately successful in the United States, but it was highly popular in Canada and Australia. The strip was widely reprinted in comic books and was also adapted into both a film and a radio series. Publication history ''Jane Arden'' was created by writer Monte Barrett and artist Frank Ellis for the Register and Tribune Syndicate. Barrett wrote the strip until his death in 1949, and his stories wer ...
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