Liz O'Neill (camogie)
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Liz O'Neill (camogie)
Elizabeth O'Neill may refer to: * Elizabeth O'Neill (official) (died 2007), official at the Public Affairs department of the Australian Embassy in Jakarta, killed in a plane crash * Elizabeth O'Neill (actress) Elizabeth O'Neill (179129 October 1872), also Eliza, was an Irish actress. Biography Born in Drogheda, she was the daughter of an actor and stage manager. Her first appearance on the stage was made at the Crow Street Theatre in 1811 as the Widow ... (1791–1872), Irish actress * Liz O'Neill (camogie) {{hndis, Oneill, Elizabeth ...
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Elizabeth O'Neill (official)
Elizabeth Josephine "Liz" O'Neill (19 March 19697 March 2007) was an Australian public servant and diplomat. She was Counsellor (Public Affairs) for the Public Affairs section of the Australian Embassy in Jakarta at the time of her death. in service of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. She was killed on 7 March 2007 in the crash of Garuda Indonesia Flight 200 in Yogyakarta, Indonesia Indonesia, officially the Republic of Indonesia, is a country in Southeast Asia and Oceania between the Indian and Pacific oceans. It consists of over 17,000 islands, including Sumatra, Java, Sulawesi, and parts of Borneo and New Guine .... The Elizabeth O'Neill Journalism Award is given annually in her honour. Honours O'Neill was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia in October 2003 for her service as a member of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Bali crisis taskforce through liaison with the media following the bombings which occurred in Bali on 12 O ...
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Elizabeth O'Neill (actress)
Elizabeth O'Neill (179129 October 1872), also Eliza, was an Irish actress. Biography Born in Drogheda, she was the daughter of an actor and stage manager. Her first appearance on the stage was made at the Crow Street Theatre in 1811 as the Widow Cheerly in Andrew Cherry's ''The Soldier's Daughter'', and after several years in Ireland she came to London and made an immediate success as Juliet Capulet, Juliet at Covent Garden in 1814. For five years she was the favorite of London town in comedy as well as tragedy, but in the latter she particularly excelled, being frequently compared, not to her disadvantage, with the great Sarah Siddons. In 1819 she married William Wrixon Becher of Ballygiblin CastleGrant's Old and New Edinburgh vol.2 p.347 , an Irish M.P., who was to be created a Wrixon-Becher baronets, baronet in 1831. After her marriage, she never returned to the stage. Selected roles *Adelaide in ''Adelaide (play), Adelaide'' by Richard Sheil (1814) * Adelgitha in ''Adelgith ...
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