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  1. Lavinia della Rovere (1558–1632), Prinzessin von Urbino; Lavinia Schulz (1896–1924), deutsche expressionistische Schauspielerin und Maskentänzerin; Lavinia Veiongo (1879–1902), von 1899 bis 1902 Queen consort (Königin) von Tonga; Lavinia Warren (* 1841 oder 1842; † 1919), US-amerikanische Schauspielerin

  2. Charles Dauvois (French, active 1860s). Charles Sherwood Stratton (1838-1883), General Tom Thumb, was an American dwarf performer. P. T. Barnum, a distant relative, taught the boy how to sing, dance, mime, and impersonate famous people. Barnum took young Stratton on a tour of Europe, making him an international celebrity.

  3. 10. Feb. 2020 · On February 10, 1863, at Grace Episcopal Church in New York City, Charles Stratton of Bridgeport married Lavinia Warren of Middleboro, Massachusetts. The cover of Harper’s Weekly showed Mr. Stratton in a formal morning coat with tails and the new Mrs. Stratton in a full-skirted gown with a deep flounce of lace, lace sleeves, and a floor-length lace veil.

  4. Mercy Lavinia Warren Bump (* 31. Oktober 1841 oder 1842 in Middleborough; † 25. November 1919 ebenda) war eine US-amerikanische Schauspielerin. Lavinia Warren. Lavinia Warrens erste Hochzeit.

  5. Encuentre lavinia warren la fotografía, imagen, vector, ilustración o imagen a 360 grados perfectos. Disponible tanto para licencias RF como para las licencias RM.

  6. Lavinia Warren (1841-1919) wrote a series of five autobiographical articles for the New York Tribune Sunday Magazine that appeared between September and December, 1906. They illustrate her clear and distinct voice and her deft writing style. She also borrows from newspaper accounts and from Barnum's various autobiographies. In the first of the articles, presented here, she relates her family ...

  7. Lavinia Warren. Actress: The Lilliputians' Courtship. Lavinia Warren was born on 31 October 1841 in Middleboro, Massachusetts, USA. She was an actress, known for The Lilliputians' Courtship (1915), Mutual Weekly, No. 45 (1915) and Pathé News, No. 89 (1915).