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Marriner S
Marriner is both a surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include: Surname: Ricky Marriner (born 1984), Soldier British Army * Andre Marriner (born 1971), English professional football referee who officiates in the Premier League *Andrew Marriner (born 1954), British classical clarinettist * Chelsea Marriner, dog handler and trainer from New Zealand * Craig Marriner (born 1974), New Zealand novelist *Sir Neville Marriner (1924–2016), English conductor and violinist *Steve Marriner, Canadian multi-instrumentalist Given name: *Marriner Stoddard Eccles (1890–1977), U.S. banker, economist and member and chairman of the Federal Reserve * Marriner W. Merrill (1832–1906), Canadian-born member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints * Edmund Marriner Gill (1820–1894), English landscape painter who favoured waterfalls See also * Mount Marriner, a mountain in the Antarctic *Mariner (other) A mariner is a sail ...
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Andre Marriner
Andre Marriner (born 1 January 1971)
confirmation: official website.
is an professional football referee based in

Andrew Marriner
Andrew Marriner (born 25 February 1954MARRINER, Andrew Stephen
''Who's Who 2015'', A & C Black, 2015; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014
) is a British solo, chamber and orchestral clarinettist. He became principal of the in 1986 following the footsteps of the late Jack Brymer. During his orchestral career he has maintained his place on the worldwide solo concert platform alongside an active role in the field of chamber music.


Career

Andrew Marriner, son of Sir

Chelsea Marriner
Chelsea Marriner is a dog handler and trainer from New Zealand. Marriner was born and raised in Rotorua, in the North Island of New Zealand. When she was 7 she started competing in agility events and at 10 was a winner in the SPCA Animal Ark Young Animal Carer of the Year. In May 2010, aged 18, she represented New Zealand at the World Agility Championships in Britain, winning a gold medal in the individual jumping event with a dog borrowed from a local owner. In 2018 she was selected for the Paw Blacks team to represent New Zealand at the Australian Agility Nationals in Melbourne, Australia. Marriner also performs with her team of dogs at public events in New Zealand, such as the National Agricultural Fieldays and A & P Shows. In 2008 and 2012 she performed with her dogs on ''New Zealand's Got Talent ''New Zealand's Got Talent'' was a New Zealand reality television show which premiered in 2008. The show was based on the ''Got Talent'' series. The show featured singers, dance ...
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Craig Marriner
Craig Marriner (born 1974) is a novelist from Rotorua, New Zealand. He is best known for his award-winning first novel ''Stonedogs'' (2001). Early life Marriner was born in Rotorua and had what he describes as a "strictly working-class background"; his father was a forestry worker until he was made redundant. Marriner left high school before completing his final year, describing himself as being "on the edge of the rails by then". He moved to the remote town of Mount Magnet, Western Australia with the intention of getting a mining job, and worked doing geological sampling. He subsequently spend four years working in Europe. Career Marriner's debut novel ''Stonedogs'' (2001) won the Deutz Medal for Fiction, the Fiction Prize and the NZSA Hubert Church Best First Book Award for Fiction at the 2002 Montana New Zealand Book Awards. In 2003 the film rights were sold to Australian production company Mushroom Pictures, although as of 2021 no film has been made. In 2004 he was the recip ...
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Neville Marriner
Sir Neville Marriner, (15 April 1924 – 2 October 2016) was an English violinist and "one of the world's greatest conductors". Gramophone lists Marriner as one of the 50 greatest conductors and another compilation ranks Marriner #14 of the 18 "Greatest and Most Famous Conductors of All Time". He founded the Academy of St Martin in the Fields, and his partnership with them is the most recorded of any orchestra and conductor. Early life Marriner was born in Lincoln, England, the son of Herbert Marriner, a carpenter, and his wife Ethel (née Roberts). He was educated at Lincoln School (then a grammar school), where he played in a jazz band with the composer Steve Race. He initially learned the violin as well as the piano from his father, and later studied the violin with Frederick Mountney. In 1939, he went to the Royal College of Music in London, getting the opportunity to play among the second violins of the London Symphony Orchestra, then conducted by Henry Wood, because ...
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Steve Marriner
Steve Marriner, (born 1984 in Ottawa, Ontario) is a Canadian multi-instrumentalist, singer, songwriter and record producer based in Toronto, Ontario. He first garnered attention in the Ottawa blues scene in his early teens as a prodigy blues harp (harmonica) player. He also plays baritone guitar, electric guitar, piano, Hammond organ, upright bass and electric bass. Since 2008, he has been the frontman, singer, one of two guitarists and harmonica player for the Canadian rock'n'roll-blues group MonkeyJunk. The band's album ''To Behold'' won the 2012 Juno Award for Blues Album of the Year.Local artists among winners in Junos pre-show gala
. CTV News. Retrieved April 3, 2012.


Career


Early years (1996–2007)

Marri ...
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Marriner Stoddard Eccles
Marriner Stoddard Eccles (September 9, 1890 – December 18, 1977) was an American economist and banker who served as the 7th chairman of the Federal Reserve from 1934 to 1948. After his term as chairman, Eccles continued to serve as a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors until 1951. Eccles was known during his lifetime chiefly as having been the Chairman of the Federal Reserve under President Franklin D. Roosevelt. He has been remembered for having anticipated and supporting the theories of John Maynard Keynes relative to "inadequate aggregate spending" in the economy which appeared during his tenure. Timberlake, Richard"The Tale of Another Chairman:... e legacy of W.M. Martin and Marriner Eccles, former Fed chairmen", ''The Region'' (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis magazine), June 1999. Retrieved March 29, 2012. As Eccles wrote in his memoir ''Beckoning Frontiers'' (1951): As mass production has to be accompanied by mass consumption, mass consumption, in tur ...
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Marriner W
Marriner is both a surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include: Surname: Ricky Marriner (born 1984), Soldier British Army *Andre Marriner (born 1971), English professional football referee who officiates in the Premier League *Andrew Marriner (born 1954), British classical clarinettist *Chelsea Marriner, dog handler and trainer from New Zealand *Craig Marriner (born 1974), New Zealand novelist *Sir Neville Marriner (1924–2016), English conductor and violinist *Steve Marriner, Canadian multi-instrumentalist Given name: *Marriner Stoddard Eccles (1890–1977), U.S. banker, economist and member and chairman of the Federal Reserve *Marriner W. Merrill (1832–1906), Canadian-born member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints * Edmund Marriner Gill (1820–1894), English landscape painter who favoured waterfalls See also * Mount Marriner, a mountain in the Antarctic *Mariner (other) A mariner is a sailor. ...
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Edmund Marriner Gill
Edmund Marriner Gill (1820–1894) was an English landscape painter favouring waterfalls. He was the son of portrait painter Edmund Ward Gill (1794–1854) and brother to painters William Ward Gill (1823–1894) and George Reynolds Gill (1827–1904). He was a student at the Royal Academy and produced watercolours and oils of the English, Welsh and Scottish countrysides, being much influenced by David Cox after meeting him in Birmingham in 1841. He exhibited at the Royal Academy between 1842 and 1886, and lived variously in London, Ludlow and Hereford Hereford () is a cathedral city, civil parish and the county town of Herefordshire, England. It lies on the River Wye, approximately east of the border with Wales, south-west of Worcester and north-west of Gloucester. With a population .... External links E M Gill(AskArt)On the Lledr, North Wales(oil on canvas, 1864 - V&A) 1820 births 1894 deaths 19th-century English painters English male painters Land ...
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Mount Marriner
Mount Marriner () is a mountain west-southwest of Mount Flett in the central Nye Mountains of Antarctica. It was plotted from air photos taken from Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions aircraft in 1956 and was named by the Antarctic Names Committee of Australia for A. Marriner, a radio officer at Wilkes Station Wilkes Station was an Antarctic research station established 29 January 1957 by the United States as one of seven U.S. stations established for the International Geophysical Year (IGY) program in Antarctica. It was taken over by Australia o ... in 1959. References Mountains of Enderby Land {{EnderbyLand-geo-stub ...
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