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User:Roman Spinner/C (name disambiguation)

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Antonio Castillo, Anthony Castillo or Tony Castillo may refer to:

Creative arts personalities

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  • Antonio del Castillo y Saavedra (1616–1668), Spanish Baroque painter, sculptor, and poet; native of Córdoba, where he created frescoes and oil paintings, including those in church of Santa Marina
  • Antonio Castillo Lastrucci (1882–1967), Spanish Andalusian religious sculptor based in Seville; produced more than 450 works; disciple of Antonio Susillo; honored in 1963 with Civil Order of Alfonso X, the Wise
  • Antonio Martínez del Castillo (1894–1962), Spanish film director who, using professional name Florián Rey, became his country's most successful filmmaker during 1920s and 1930s; career lasted into 1950s
  • Antonio Castillo (costume designer) (1908–1984), Spanish wardrobe supervisor who was nominated for 1959 Tony Award (Goldilocks) and, in 1972, won Academy Award for Best Costume Design (also BAFTA nomination) for Nicholas and Alexandra
  • Tony "Gorilla Tek" Castillo (born 1976), American Rap & Hip Hop, R&B and Dance record producer and composer also known as G-Tek; brainchild of Drum Majorz production company; films scores (Bloodline, The Next Hit); numerous production credits

Political figures

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  • Antonio Cánovas del Castillo (1828–1897), Spanish historian who served six terms as prime minister (1874–81, 1884–85, 1890–92, 1895–97); supported restoration of Bourbon monarchy; assassinated by anarchist
  • Antonio Nava Castillo (born 1905), Mexican polo player and political figure who competed in Berlin's 1936 Summer Olympics, where his team won bronze medal; during 1965–66 served as 28th governor of his native state of Puebla
  • Marco Antonio Adame Castillo (born 1960), Mexican physician and administrator who served in 57th Federal Legislature (1997–2000), Senate (2000–2006) and as National Action Party (PAN) governor of his native state of Morelos from 2006 to 2012

Sports competitors

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Baseball players

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  • Esteban Manuel Antonio Castillo Cabrera (born April 1957), Dominican Republic-born American Major League Baseball third baseman known as Manny Castillo; 236 career games with Kansas City Royals in 1980 and Seattle Mariners in 1982–83
  • Tony Castillo (catcher) (born June 1957), American baseball catcher who played in five Major League games for San Diego Padres during 1978 season; returned to minors in 1979 and played six seasons at Triple-A level
  • Tony Castillo (pitcher) (born 1963), Venezuela-born American Major League Baseball relief pitcher who played for Toronto Blue Jays (1988–89, 1993–96), Atlanta Braves (1989–91), New York Mets (1991) and Chicago White Sox (1996–98)
  • Frank Anthony Castillo (1969–2013), American Major League Baseball starting pitcher who played for Chicago Cubs (1991–97), Colorado Rockies (1997), Detroit Tigers (1998), Toronto Blue Jays (2000), Boston Red Sox (2001–02, 2004), and Florida Marlins (2005)
  • Luis Antonio Castillo (born 1975), Dominican Republic-born American Major League Baseball second baseman; three-time All-Star and Gold Glove; won 2003 World Series with Florida Marlins (1996–2005); Minnesota Twins (2006–07), New York Mets (2007–10)

Footballers

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  • José Antonio Castillo (born 1970), Spanish footballer who played as midfielder for Málaga CF (1988–90), CD Málaga (1990–92), Real Valladolid (1992–94), G.D. Chaves (1994–95), UD Almería (1995–96), CA Marbella (1996–97) and Motril CF (1997–98)
  • Fernando Antonio Castillo Flores (born 1984), Honduran footballer who has been playing as attacking midfielder for C.D. Olimpia (2002–06), C.D. Motagua (2007–09), C.D. Marathón (2009–11) and C.D. Victoria (since 2011) in Honduran National League
  • Kevin Antonio Joel Gislain Mirallas y Castillo (born 1987), Belgian footballer of Spanish descent who has been playing for Belgium national team since 2003; also with Lille (2004–08), Saint-Étienne (2008–10), Olympiacos (2010–12) and Everton (since 2012)
  • Antonio Salazar Castillo (born 1989), Mexican footballer who has been playing as striker for C.D. Guadalajara since 2007; loaned to Jaguares de Chiapas (2010–11 and 2012); Altamira and Zacatepec in Ascenso MX (2013)

Fictional characters

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  • Antonio Castillo, main protagonist portrayed by Demetrio González in 1959 Mexican musical comedy-drama film Dos Corazones y un Cielo

See also

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May Clarke or Mae Clarke may refer to:

  • May Herschel-Clarke (1850–1950), English poet whose anti-war poems, "Nothing to Report" and "The Mother", were written and published during World War I; "The Mother", in 1917, served as direct response to Rupert Brooke's renowned poem "The Soldier"
  • Mae Clarke (1897–1982), American film and television actress who was given leading roles during early 1930s; among her six titles in 1931 was Frankenstein, Waterloo Bridge and Public Enemy in which she is on receiving end of James Cagney's iconic grapefruit-in-face scene

See also

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  • May Clark (1889–1984), English film personality from pioneering years of silent cinema; in her adolescent and teenage years, between 1900 and 1910, appeared in about 20 short productions for Hepworth Studios; in 1903 portrayed Alice in earliest film version of Alice in Wonderland
  • Clarke (surname)



Glenn Cohen or Glen Cohen may refer to:

  • Glen Cohen (born 1954), Jamaican-born British runner who represented UK at 1976 and 1980 Olympic games; competed in 400 metres and 4 x 400 metres relay of 1976 and 1980 in the 400 metres; affiliated with WBAC and Wolverhampton; achieved personal best of 45.49 in 1978
  • I. Glenn Cohen (born 1978), Canadian academic specializing in health law and bioethics; author of numerous articles regarding issues such as medical tourism and reproductive technology; assistant professor at Harvard Law School where he is co-director of Petrie-Flom Center

See also

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Geoffrey Cox, Geoff Cox, Jeffrey Cox or Jeff Cox may refer to:

  • Geoffrey Cox (journalist) (1910–2008), New Zealand-born British newspaper and television journalist; employed by News Chronicle in 1935; covered Spanish Civil War and World War II; served in New Zealand Army and as diplomat; joined ITN in 1956 as news editor and became chief executive; founded News at Ten in 1967
  • Geoffrey Cox (Australian politician) (1914–1964), Liberal legislator who, following military duty in World War II (Distinguished Service Order; lieutenant colonel, brigadier in army reserve), represented electorate of Vaucluse in New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1957 until his suicide in November 1964
  • Geoff Cox (footballer) (born 1934), English winger who, in a 20-year career during 1950s and 60s, scored 65 goals in 296 Football League appearances for Birmingham City (1951–57) and Torquay United (1957–67) as well as Western League's Bridgewater Town starting in 1967; son Maurice also played professionally
  • Geoff Cox (born 1951), Australian musician and media personality; nicknamed Coxy; was drummer with Brian Cadd as well as Bootleg Family Band, Cycle, Avalanche and Little River Band; subsequently became light entertainment presenter on Seven Network and host of Coxy's Big Break
  • Jeffrey N. Cox (born 1954), American literary scholar and academic specializing in English and European Romantic literature as well as cultural theory and cultural studies; taught at Texas A&M University; in 1998, appointed Director of Center for Humanities and Arts at University of Colorado (Boulder)
  • Jeff Cox (born 1955), American Major League Baseball third base coach for Chicago White Sox; also serves as baserunning specialist for Detroit Tigers; previously coached Florida Marlins and Pittsburgh Pirates; during 1980 and 1981 seasons played as right-handed second baseman for Oakland Athletics
  • Geoffrey Cox (British politician) (born 1960), Conservative barrister (appointed Queen's Counsel in 2003) and Member of Parliament who has been representing English constituency of Torridge and West Devon since May 2005; member of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee
  • Jeffrey Cox (born 1971), American lawyer, legal administrator and military historian who served as Indiana Deputy Attorney General from 2001 to 2011; dismissed after suggesting that Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker use live ammunition against pro-union protesters involved in 2011 Wisconsin protests

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David Cunliffe may refer to:

  • David Cunliffe (producer and director) (born 1935), English television creative personality whose hundreds of credits, including both series episodes and TV movies, extend from 1962's Before My Time to 2006's The Shell Seekers; 1988 Emmy Award nomination for The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank
  • David Cunliffe-Lister, 2nd Earl of Swinton (1937–2006), English nobleman; North Yorkshire legislator from 1961 to 1977 and, upon inheriting title Earl of Swinton in 1972, served in House of Lords until 1999; Deputy Chief Whip from 1982 to 1986; government spokesman on agriculture and education from 1983 to 1986
  • Sir David Ellis Cunliffe, 9th Baronet (born 1957), English nobleman (Cunliffe baronets); succeeded to title 9th Baronet Cunliffe of Liverpool (created in 1759) in February 1969; business development manager in Norfolk; son of Sir Cyril Henley Cunliffe, 8th Baronet; married Linda Carol Bachelor in 1983
  • David Cunliffe (New Zealand politician) (born 1963), New Zealand Labour Party legislator who has represented Titirangi (1999–2002) and New Lynn since 2002; Minister of Health and Minister for Communications and Information Technology in 2007–08; party finance spokesman and front bench number 3 (2008–11)

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Edward or Ed Clark may refer to:

Businessmen

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Clergymen

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Diplomats and politicians

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Sportsmen

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Others

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See also

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