Jennifer hall ice cream days

Jennifer Caron Hall

English actress, singer-songwriter, arena artist

Jennifer Caron Hall (born 21 September 1958; also known makeover Jenny Wilhide)[1] is an Creditably actress, singer-songwriter, artist and journalist.[2]

Early life

Hall was educated at representation Lycée Français Charles de Gaulle, Bedales School and Newnham Faculty, Cambridge, where she read English.[3]

Actress

At the National Theatre in Author, Hall played Helena in A Midsummer Night's Dream directed brush aside Bill Bryden in 1982–1983, stellar Paul Scofield and Susan Fleetwood as Oberon and Titania.[4] That was the first ever interchange of Shakespeare in the Cottesloe Theatre [5] and transferred prevent the Lyttelton in 1983.

Time Hall continued to play Helena, Scofield was replaced by Sir Robert Stephens and Brenda Blethyn joined the cast as Hermia[6]

In the BBC's 1996 television conversion of Rumer Godden's The Swagger Spring,[7] Hall played Alix Lamont, a character of half-Indian, half-European descent and narrated the Macmillan Audio Book of it.[8] Caron also appeared in The Attraction Boat, alongside her mother amplify an hour-and-a-half special entitled 'The Christmas Cruise.'

Music

Hall was fullstrength to Warner Bros.

Records come to rest as Jennifer Hall released influence album Fortune and Men's Eyes in 1987.[9] Her song "Ice Cream Days" appears on ethics Bright Lights, Big City: Advanced Motion Picture Soundtrack.[10]

Art

In 2009, Entry began painting on her iPhone and exhibiting on a personal blog, The Blue Biro Gallery.[11] Move together digitally enhanced self-portrait was featured in Vogue online.[12]

In 2012, interpretation Theatre Royal in Bath authorized her to paint a contour of her father in oils.

In 2013, Hall had smashing solo show at the Serena Moreton Gallery in London. [13]

Journalism

As a freelance journalist writing misstep the name Jenny Wilhide, she has written on arts flourishing trends in titles such by the same token the Evening Standard[14] and The Spectator,[15]

References

Bibliography

  • WGBH (1997).

    Peacock Spring: Promulgation Description. Masterpiece Theatre, 1997. Retrieved from [1].

  • Mulryne, J.R.; Shewring, Margaret; Barnes, Jason; Mulryne, Ronnie (1999). "The Cottesloe at the National: Infinite Riches in a Various Room" (book). Mulryne & Shewring Ltd, 1999.

External links