Sydney author found Hollywood audience
THE controversy over a scene from the TV series You Can’t See ’Round Corners only sparked more interest in a work inspired by a Jon Cleary novel.
THE controversy over a scene from the TV series You Can’t See ’Round Corners only sparked more interest in a work inspired by a Jon Cleary novel.
When dictators take power
“Good-bye, little one, and may you grow up into a brave soldier in India’s service,” Jawaharlal Nehru wrote from his prison cell, in a 13th birthday greeting to his only daughter Indira.
In the history of missed opportunities, descendants of 17th century Dutch florists who invested more in tulip bulbs than a Rembrandt portrait might count their losses.
JUST like his bestsellers, publisher Allen Lane’s story of how he dreamed up the publishing phenomenon of Penguin paperbacks is a grand tale.
NEWLY-QUALIFIED doctor George Merz was still helping out in a World War I field hospital just hours before he took off on his final mission as a pioneer fighter pilot.
THE death of Bobbi Kristina Brown adds another sad chapter to one of Hollywood’s darkest stories but Whitney Houston’s is not the first celebrity family haunted by tragedy.
Long before Australia was obsessed with MasterChef and its rivals, it was a Belgian-born chef who introduced Australians to food on television.
When most people hear the name Cromwell they think of Oliver, the English soldier and politician, But before Oliver another Cromwell had a major impact on British history — Thomas Cromwell, adviser to King Henry VIII.
AS protest songs go, You’re The Voice, which became a huge hit for John Farnham, had an inauspicious start.
FOR his claim in 1584 that there could be life on other planets, Dominican priest Giordano Bruno was burned at the stake as a heretic.
WHILE shark attacks have risen to 15 per year in the past decade, the incidence of shark attacks and deaths was dramatically higher in the 1920s and ’30s.
The German connection that has left Queen Elizabeth less than amused by 80-year-old images showing her making a playful Nazi salute has been a source of embarrassment to English royals for a century.
HE’S been in jail for 45 years but New York author Daniel Simone now claims Charles Manson didn’t order the murders of Sharon Tate, her unborn son and four others on “the day the Sixties died”.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/today-in-history/page/103