HUGH CORDER

HUGH CORDER

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Hugh Jackman thumbnail

Hugh Jackman

Hugh Michael Jackman (born 12 October 1968) is an Australian and British actor, singer, and producer. Beginning in theatre and television, Jackman landed his breakthrough role as Wolverine in the X-Men film franchise and the Marvel Cinematic Universe from X-Men (2000) to Deadpool & Wolverine (2024). Prominent on both screen and stage, he has received various accolades, including a Primetime Emmy Award, a Grammy Award and two Tony Awards, along with nominations for an Academy Award and a British Academy Film Award. Jackman was appointed a Companion of the Order of Australia in 2019. Jackman has headlined films in various genres, including the romantic comedy Kate & Leopold (2001), the action-horror Van Helsing (2004), the drama The Prestige (2006), the period romance Australia (2008), the science fiction Real Steel (2011), the musical Les Misérables (2012), the thriller Prisoners (2013), the musical The Greatest Showman (2017), the political drama The Front Runner (2018), and the crime drama Bad Education (2019). For his role as Jean Valjean in Les Misérables, he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor and won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor, and for The Greatest Showman soundtrack, Jackman received a Grammy Award for Best Compilation Soundtrack. He also provided voice roles in the animated films Flushed Away, Happy Feet (both 2006), Rise of the Guardians (2012) and Missing Link (2019). Jackman is also known for his early theatre roles in the original Australian productions of Beauty and the Beast as Gaston in 1995 and Sunset Boulevard as Joe Gillis in 1996. He earned a Laurence Olivier Award nomination for his performance as Curly McLain in the West End revival of Oklahoma! in 1998. In 2002, he made his American stage debut in a concert of Carousel as Billy Bigelow at Carnegie Hall. On Broadway, he won the 2004 Tony Award and Drama Desk Award for Best Actor in a Musical for his role of Peter Allen in The Boy from Oz. From 2021 to 2023, Jackman starred as con man Harold Hill in the Broadway revival of the musical The Music Man, earning another Tony Award nomination. A four-time host of the Tony Awards, he won an Emmy Award for hosting the 2005 ceremony. He also hosted the 81st Academy Awards in 2009.

In connection with: Hugh Jackman

Hugh

Jackman

Title combos: Hugh Jackman

Description combos: he Olivier 1968 the and The both in Beauty

John Hlophe thumbnail

John Hlophe

Mandlakayise John Hlophe (born 19 May 1959) is a South African jurist and politician, currently serving as the Deputy President of uMkhonto weSizwe and the Leader of the Opposition of South Africa. He was the Judge President of the Western Cape Division of the High Court of South Africa from May 2000 until March 2024, when he was impeached. He was the first South African judge to be impeached under the post-apartheid Constitution. Born in Stanger, KwaZulu-Natal, Hlophe began his career as a successful legal academic with a specialty in administrative law. He taught at the University of Natal from 1988 to 1990 and at the University of Transkei from 1990 to 1994. After joining the Cape High Court bench in January 1995, he rose quickly through the judicial ranks, becoming Deputy Judge President in May 1999 and Judge President in 2000. He was shortlisted for elevation to the Constitutional Court in 2009. Known as a vocal proponent of demographic transformation in the South African judiciary, he was a divisive figure in Western Cape legal society. In 2005, he accused various colleagues of racism in a report that was leaked to the press and widely circulated. While his supporters heralded him as a future Chief Justice, he became increasingly embroiled in controversy, and he was the subject of numerous complaints to the Judicial Service Commission, including one from the Cape Bar Council, one from Deputy Judge President Patricia Goliath, and one from the judges of the Constitutional Court. In the latter regard, in 2008, two judges of the Constitutional Court accused Hlophe of having attempted improperly to influence their judgment in matters involving President Jacob Zuma. After a prolonged legal battle, the Judicial Service Commission found him guilty of gross misconduct in August 2021, and the National Assembly of South Africa resolved to impeach him on 21 February 2024.

In connection with: John Hlophe

John

Hlophe

Title combos: John Hlophe

Description combos: 1990 post his ranks May society to in widely

List of Rhodes Scholars

This is a list of Rhodes Scholars, covering notable people who have received a Rhodes Scholarship to the University of Oxford since its 1902 founding, sorted by the year the scholarship started and student surname. All names are verified using the Rhodes Scholar Database. This is not an exhaustive list of all Rhodes Scholars.

In connection with: List of Rhodes Scholars

List

of

Rhodes

Scholars

Title combos: List of Rhodes of List List Rhodes of Scholars

Description combos: Rhodes covering This and Rhodes its Rhodes founding an

South African Institute of Race Relations

The South African Institute of Race Relations (IRR) is a research and policy organisation in South Africa. The IRR was founded in 1929 to improve and report upon race relations in South Africa between the politically dominant white group and the black, coloured, and Indian populations,: 25 making the Institute "one of the oldest liberal institutions in the country". The Institute investigates socioeconomic conditions in South Africa, and aims to address issues such as poverty and inequality, and to promote economic growth through promoting a system of limited government, a market economy, private enterprise, freedom of speech, individual liberty, property rights, and the rule of law. The IRR tracks trends in every area of South Africa's development, ranging from business and the economy to crime, living conditions, and politics. Throughout most of its history of opposing segregation and Apartheid, it has been regarded as liberal.: 79, 84 In 1958, Gwendolen M. Carter wrote that "the Institute keeps close touch with non-European groups and over a long period of time has constituted itself as a spokesman for their interests.": 336 In more recent years the IRR and its work has also been variously labelled as right-wing (for instance by the academic Roger Southall and former Johannesburg mayor Herman Mashaba), conservative (in a New Frame editorial and by NEHAWU Western Cape secretary Luthando Nogcinisa), and reactionary (by former NUMSA spokesperson Irvin Jim), although it describes itself as adhering to classical liberalism. During the periods of segregation and Apartheid, the IRR mostly drew its support from urbanites, tending to be from United Party-dominated parliamentary wards, who had a more "liberal" view on South Africa's race question.: 71 Historian JP Brits argues that the IRR and its spiritual predecessor, the Joint Councils of Europeans and Africans, were the "most important extra-parliamentary organisations” to take an interest in the welfare of black South Africans. Both the Joint Councils and the IRR supported and had "native representatives" (whites chosen to represent blacks in Parliament) as their members and functionaries.: 47 The IRR, alongside the Liberal Party, the Progressive Party, the Black Sash, the Civil Rights League, and the National Union of South African Students, according to Timothy Hughes, formed "the core of the 'liberal establishment'" in South Africa from the 1950s.: 26 In 1996, the academic Hugh Corder, and later critic, described the IRR as an important “national asset.”: 133

In connection with: South African Institute of Race Relations

South

African

Institute

of

Race

Relations

Title combos: of Relations African Relations Race South African of Institute

Description combos: one Brits race former in the periods mayor to

University of Cape Town Faculty of Law thumbnail

University of Cape Town Faculty of Law

The University of Cape Town Faculty of Law is the oldest law school in South Africa. It was established in 1859 as a division of the South African College in the former Cape Colony. It currently enrols about 1,200 students in undergraduate and postgraduate programmes, the largest being the LLB. It is housed in the Wilfred and Jules Kramer Law Building on the university's Middle Campus in Rondebosch, Cape Town. The faculty comprises three academic departments – one each for public law, commercial law, and private law – and a number of research units. It also houses the postgraduate School for Advanced Legal Studies and the journal Acta Juridica. The faculty's staff and students were predominantly white under the apartheid-era Extension of University Education Act, but the faculty has participated in UCT's affirmative action measures since the end of apartheid. The faculty's alumni include a former Chief Justice of South Africa (Newton Ogilvie Thompson), four justices of the Constitutional Court of South Africa (John Didcott, Albie Sachs, Kate O'Regan, and Owen Rogers), and a justice of the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe (Bennie Goldin). Alumni have been particularly well-represented in the Cape Division of the High Court of South Africa and former Supreme Court of South Africa; several former Judges President of the division – including Theo van Wyk, George Munnik, Gerald Friedman, and Edwin King – studied law in the faculty. Alumni have also served as Judge President of the Land Claims Court (Fikile Bam), the Competition Appeal Court (Dennis Davis), and the Free State High Court (Cagney Musi). Other alumni are prominent figures in politics, academia, and legal practice.

In connection with: University of Cape Town Faculty of Law

University

of

Cape

Town

Faculty

of

Law

Title combos: University of University of Cape Law University of Cape

Description combos: of Cagney Newton State South Act Chief University has

Hugh Corder

Hugh Corder is an emeritus professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Cape Town. He served as UCT's youngest and longest-serving Chair of Public Law from 1987 to 2020.

In connection with: Hugh Corder

Hugh

Corder

Title combos: Hugh Corder

Description combos: of He University at 1987 at Law 1987 2020

Dan Corder thumbnail

Dan Corder

Daniel Corder (born 10 November 1993) is a South African television, radio, and Internet personality. He currently presents The Dan Corder Show for eNCA. He previously worked for Good Hope FM (2015–2024) and 5FM (2021–2024). He also has a political commentary YouTube channel and podcast titled The Issue with Dan Corder.

In connection with: Dan Corder

Dan

Corder

Title combos: Dan Corder

Description combos: eNCA 1993 He eNCA Daniel Issue titled podcast and

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