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"M. grande may refer to: * Memecylon grande, a plant species endemic to Sri Lanka * Morum grande, a sea snail species See also * Grande (disambiguation) "
"Clint Crisher (born January 23, 1973) is an American pop singer and songwriter. He is believed to be the first American R&B; or pop singer to be openly gay from the beginning of his career.Randy Shulman (May 29, 2003). "The 2003 Pride Festival", metroweekly.com.Christopher Dyer (April 17, 1999). "Youth Pride Alliance" , youthpridedc.org. Biography Crisher was born on January 23, 1973 in Enterprise, Alabama to a Christian family. His mother, Brenda, was of French Canadian descent, and his father, Glen Peacock, is a first-generation Italian American. The Peacock family originated from London, England; his mother worked as a Las Vegas dancer. Crisher was raised in Jacksonville, Florida by his sister. Career After graduating from high school in Fernandina Beach, Florida, Crisher studied at Florida State College at Jacksonville. He transferred colleges and received his BA from Jacksonville University. Living in Washington, DC, Crisher began performing his own original music regularly in local D.C. clubs and events including the Velvet Nation party at Nation, Tracks, Millennium at the 9:30 Club, Ozone, The Capitol Ballroom,and Cobalt and in NYC nightclubs Metronome, Avalon, Splash, Webster Hall, Starlight, and Home. Crisher performed along major DJ's and club promoters saw him and started hiring him for larger performances. His career as a dance performance artist and club personality began in Washington, DC, continued in Miami at Crobar and eventually landed him in Los Angeles. Crisher performed on the main stage with the United States Capitol building in the background for the 1999 and 2003 Capital Pride annual LGBT pride festival in Washington, D.C. with over 150,000 attendees and also in July 2002 Crisher performed as part of the Billboard Dance Music Summit. Discography ;Albums * 1999: Perfect World * 2007: Terrific Distraction (Crisher Entertainment) * 2008: Spotlight "The Remixes" (Crisher Entertainment) 2007 #5 Billboard Breakout Hot Dance Club Play November 2007 * 2008: It Can Happen To You "The Remixes"(Crisher Entertainment) #38 week of December 8–14, 2008 on the zipDj TOP 40 Canada National Dance Charts included in industry publication Cashbox (magazine) * 2008: The Hot Boys World Volume 1 (Crisher Entertainment) * 2008: The Hot Boys World Volume 2 (Crisher Entertainment) * 2009: The Hot Boys World Volume 3 (Crisher Entertainment) * 2010: TraXXX 123 RemiXed (Crisher Entertainment) * 2010: The Hot Boys World Volume 4 (Crisher Entertainment) * 2011: The Hot Boys World Volume 5 (Crisher Entertainment) * 2011: Sticky Remixes (Crisher Entertainment) See also * Youth pride References External links Category:Living people Category:1973 births Category:People from Enterprise, Alabama Category:American dance musicians Category:American pop singers Category:American male singer-songwriters Category:American singer-songwriters Category:American tenors Category:LGBT musicians from the United States Category:LGBT singers from the United States Category:LGBT songwriters Category:Gay musicians Category:Jacksonville University alumni Category:Songwriters from Alabama Category:21st-century American singers Category:21st-century male singers "
"Ruth the Betrayer; or, The Female Spy, by Edward Ellis was the first fictional female detective story., Barry Ono Collections, shelfmark:C.140.c.41/Mic.C.12114: its primacy is demonstrated in a paper given by Judith Flanders in July 2010 to the Second Annual Conference of the Victorian Popular Fiction Association at Senate House, London, and published in the Times Literary Supplement of 18 June 2010, pp. 14-15 under the title "The Hanky-Panky Way: Creators of the first female detectives – a mystery solved". It was published as a penny dreadful in 52 parts in 1862-63 by John Dicks, and the British Library's single-volume compilation copy was acquired on 28 February 1863.British Library acquisition stamp It therefore predates Andrew Forrester's The Female Detective and W.S. Hayward's The Revelations of a Lady Detective, both of 1863/4. Flanders, 2011, and see also Edward Ellis, Ruth the Betrayer: or, The Female Spy (Valancourt, 2019), especially the introduction by Dagni Bredesen. Ruth Traill, the protagonist, is "a female detective – a sort of spy we use in the hanky-panky way when a man would be too clumsy".Edward Ellis, Ruth the Betrayer; or, The Female Spy (London, [John Dicks], 1863). The full work has been published in a single volume by Valancourt Books, in 2019, edited and with an introduction by Dagni Bredesen. See also *Barry Ono *List of female detective characters Footnotes Traill, Ruth Category:Fictional English people "