Examples of using Central school in English and their translations into Hebrew
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The Central School.
The Agricultural Central School.
Central School for Speech.
Dresden Central School.
Central School of Speech and Drama.
Leicester University Central School of Speech.
The county isencouraging residents to take shelter in the community's central school.
She trained as an actress at the Central School of Speech and Drama.
The Agricultural Central School in Schleissheim moved in 1852 to Weihenstephan and with it came Bavarian brewery students.
The seminar center is recognized by the Ministry of Education as a central school for Holocaust studies.
The certification course for caregiversis is provided by the MOSAS Central School for Social Workers and is intended to improve the quality of care of the residents by raising the caregivers' professional level.
After the First World War, the Second Polish Republic refurbished parts of Osowiec and used it to house Polish army units,including the Central School of Non-Commissioned Officers of the Border Protection Corps.[5].
McDonnell was born in Galway in Ireland. He attended the Central School of Speech and Drama in London, England, moving to the city in 1996.[1] Before breaking into film and television, McDonnell did a lot of theatre in Ireland and the United Kingdom.
Sapani was born in London, one of six children of immigrant Ghanaian parents. He was raised in Hackney, and first pursued his interest in acting at theWeekend Arts College in Kentish Town.[2] He trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama.
After training at the Guildhall School of Music& Drama and the Central School of Speech and Drama, Bloom made her debut on BBC radio programmes.
He was educated at Reading School and Leighton Park School(both in Reading, Berkshire) and during the Second World War served in the Royal Navy.Vernon trained as an actor at the Central School of Speech and Drama.[2].
Linden was born in Worthing to Marcus and Freida Fletcher, an architect and housewife.[2]She attended the Central School of Speech and Drama at the age of 17 on a scholarship.[2] Her classmates included Julie Christie and Vanessa and Lynn Redgrave.
He went on to train at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London, alongside James Nesbitt and Rufus Sewell, and graduated in 1988.[4] Tompkinson's acting career began straight out of drama school.[5][2] During his last year at the London School of Speech and Drama he won the 1987 Carleton Hobbs Bursary Award[6] and had roles in radio dramas.
Bevan was born in Shrewsbury, Shropshire. Her father was headmaster of a boys' school and mother is a midwife. She is the youngest of fourchildren.[citation needed] She attended Royal Central School of Speech and Drama and received a Master of Arts degree in classical acting.
Born in London, Williams trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama there, graduating in 1994. She has appeared in a number of British films, nearly always alongside her mother. Her picture appears in the opening credits of As Time Goes By(1992).
Sullivan was born in Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire. In 1982, he joined the National Youth Theatre, where he played Edmond in King Lear, and then joined the Old Vic Youth Theatre playing the title role inMacbeth. He studied at Central School of Speech and Drama from 1983 to 1986 and then in New York under Uta Hagen at HB Studio.
Too young to attend the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art,Robinson instead studied at the Central School of Speech and Drama. After leaving, he spent four years in repertory theatre[4] most notably at the West Yorkshire Playhouse in Leeds.
Roache was born in Manchester, England, the son of Coronation Street actor William Roache and actress Anna Cropper.[1] Roache was educated at Bishop Luffa School in Chichester, West Sussex and at Rydal School in Colwyn Bay in north Wales.He studied Acting at the Central School of Speech and Drama. He married Rosalind Bennett in Malvern, Worcestershire, in 2002.
Foster trained as an actor for two years at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London, arriving there aged 20. It was here he became friends with an actor called David Baron, better known as playwright Harold Pinter. Foster would much later appear on stage in three of Pinter's plays, The Basement and The Tea Party and A Slight Ache in 1987.
Born and brought up in Aberdeenshire,[5] Manson has a sister, Ailsa and a brother, James.[6] She attended Stage Coach, a Saturday drama school, before leaving homefor London at the age of seventeen.[6] She trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama, leaving early to film Pumpkinhead: Blood Feud in Romania.[5] She currently lives in north London.
In May 1930 Moscow created higher schools for basic and advanced training of secret agents; on June 4, 1930 the school was known as the Central School of OGPU. July 14, 1934, after the formation of the People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs,the former OGPU Central School was renamed the Central School of General Directorate for State Security(GUGB) of the NKVD.
Bellingham was born in Montreal to a single mother, Marjorie Hughes Bond(1917- 2012),[1] but was given up for adoption aged four months because she was born out of wedlock in a strict church-going family. Her adoptive parents were Donald and Ruth Bellingham, who lived in Aston Abbotts in Buckinghamshire, England.[1][2]Bellingham was educated at Aylesbury High School and trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama.[3].
John David Bennett(8 May 1928- 11 April 2005) was an English actor.[1] Born in Beckenham, Kent, he was educatedat Bradfield College in Berkshire, then trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama, followed by a wide repertory theatre experience including Bromley, Bristol Old Vic, Dundee, the Edinburgh Festival and Watford before going to London's West End.
Baladi 's father is a gynaecologist and obstetrician from Libya, and his mother was a midwife.[ 1] Baladi grew up with his brother Nick and three sisters Sara, Charlotte, and Bungie. He was educated at Stonyhurst College, where he was the first student to win the Charles Laughton Prize for his roles in Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat( as Pharaoh) and Amadeus(as Mozart). After school he went on to train as an actor at the Central School of Speech and Drama.[ 2].
He attended the John Lyon School in Harrow, Middlesex. While there he acted in school productions, eventually taking the lead in a school production of Hamlet that played at the Edinburgh Festival fringe in the mid 1980s. After reading English and Theatre Studies at the University of Warwick,he attended the Central School of Speech and Drama in London[1][2] where he won the 1992 Carleton Hobbs Award from BBC Radio Drama.[3].