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Stephen Fry
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Stephen Fry is a British actor. He played Oscar Wilde in Wilde. Fans of British television will know him as the butler Jeeves in Jeeves & Wooster (Hugh Laurie, who now plays the title character in Fox's House, played Wooster). Years ago, Fry and Laurie had a comedy show called A Bit of Fry and Laurie. This book tells of Fry's early years, starting when he is still living at home and attend a school in his village.
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Stephen Fry as a child. Notice the gun with which to force his knowledge down other people's throats. Stephen Fry is a well-known life insurance salesman and actor who is best known for his roles in such historical documentaries as Blackadder and Murder, She Wrote. His stellar work in A Fish Formerly Known as Freddy won him universal acclaim and eternal fame in the north-west region of Uzbekistan, the people of which understood his gulping, goggle-eyed acting as a complex metaphor for the badly managed and poorly financed snake oil mines set up in the region by his erstwhile producer. When questioned whether this was indeed his motive he replied "Yes, yes, well, yes, I always had a very warm feeling for the poor little fishies." It is not known whether this was an extension of the metaphor, or merely an example of his trademark good-natured burbling.
Stephen Fry concludes his personal two-part documentary look into the alarming increase in the number of HIV infections around the world. Visiting San Francisco, Fry talks with author Armistead Maupin and meets physicians who were among the first to treat patients with the disease in the early 1980s. Later, in Africa, he visits a rural clinic and attempts to discover why life-saving drugs never reach those who need them. Worldwide, the stigma associated with HIV is pervasive, something many cite as a factor in widespread ignorance.
Stephen Fry Photo A true Renaissance man, Stephen Fry is not only a successful writer, actor and director but is ... known in his native Britain for his work with various charities. Born in London, England, he grew up in Norfolk. While attending Queens College in Cambridge, he became involved with a theater group called Footlights. He wrote revues for them and eventually the troupe, which included Robbie Coltrane and Emma Thompson, made their way on to television in their own sketch comedy programs such as Cambridge Footlights Revue, Alfresco and The Crystal Cube.
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latest issue In 2003 Stephen Fry was awarded Pipe Smoker of the Year by the The Pipesmokers' Council. Previous winners included Sir Harold Wilson, Peter Cushing, Sir Patrick Moore and Anthony Wedgewood-Benn. As it turned out, Mr Fry was the last person to receive the award, since in anticipation of projected anti-smoking laws, the rather pusillanimous Council decided to abolish the annual award entirely. At the Savoy Hotel in London, Gustav Temple put some questions to Mr. Fry on the position, both moral and political, of the pipe smoker in modern society.
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Stephen Fry In the United Kingdom, Stephen Fry is seen as a veritable renaissance man -- a successful actor, comedian, novelist, playwright, and columnist. Best known for his appearances on television and in films, he is tall and large, funny-faced, and openly gay. In America, Fry is best known as Jeeves from his 1990s sitcom version of P. G. Wodehouse's Jeeves and Wooster, which aired in America on PBS. He ... played Oscar Wilde in Wilde, and had small roles in Gosford Park and A Civil Action. Sharp-eyed viewers may remember his tiny part in A Fish Called Wanda.
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