W. P. Kellino
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W. P. Kellino
William Philip Gislingham (c. 1874 in London, England – 31 December 1957, in London, Middlesex, England) was a British music hall musician and acrobat (part of the Famous Kellinos) and, using the name W. P. Kellino, film director. He founded Twickenham Studios. He was the father of the cinematographer Roy Kellino. Selected filmography * ''The Green Terror'' (1919) * '' Alf's Button'' (1920) * ''The Fordington Twins'' (1920) * ''The Fall of a Saint'' (1920) * '' Saved from the Sea'' (1920) * '' The Autumn of Pride'' (1921) * '' Rob Roy'' (1922) * '' Young Lochinvar'' (1923) * ''The Mating of Marcus'' (1926) * '' Sailors Don't Care'' (1928) * '' Smashing Through'' (1929) * ''Alf's Carpet'' (1929) * '' Alf's Button'' (1930) * ''Who Killed Doc Robin?'' (1931) * ''The Poisoned Diamond'' (1934) * ''Royal Cavalcade'' (1935) * ''Lend Me Your Wife'' (1935) * ''Pay Box Adventure'' (1936) * ''Hot News ''Hot News'' is a 1928 American silent comedy film produced and distributed by Pa ...
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W P Kellino
W, or w, is the twenty-third and fourth-to-last letter of the Latin alphabet, used in the modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide. It represents a consonant, but in some languages it represents a vowel. Its name in English is ''double-u'',Pronounced in formal situations, but colloquially often , , or , with a silent ''l''. plural ''double-ues''. History The classical Latin alphabet, from which the modern European alphabets derived, did not have the "W' character. The "W" sounds were represented by the Latin letter " V" (at the time, not yet distinct from " U"). The sounds (spelled ) and (spelled ) of Classical Latin developed into a bilabial fricative between vowels in Early Medieval Latin. Therefore, no longer adequately represented the labial-velar approximant sound of Germanic phonology. The Germanic phoneme was therefore written as or ( and becoming distinct only by the Early Modern period) by ...
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