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settembre 27 settembre 28 settembre 29 settembre 30

Celebrities born on settembre 28

Movie celebrities, actresses, actors and film producers born on settembre 28
Akira Nakano
Born: set 28, 1938
Tokyo Prefecture, Japan
Age: 86
Screenwriter.
Jon Kralt
Born: set 28, 1975
Age: 49
Sirone Jones
Born: set 28, 1940
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Date of death: ott 21, 2009 (69)
Adri Gallemí
Born: set 28, 2005
Sabadell, Catalonia, Spai
Age: 19
Eliott Hirsbein
Born: set 28, 2007
France
Age: 17
Egon Hoegen
Born: set 28, 1928
Düsseldorf, Germany
Date of death: giu 01, 2018 (89)
Ciro D'Emilio
Born: set 28, 1986
Pompei, Napoli (Italy)
Age: 38
Cioma Schönhaus
Born: set 28, 1922
Berlin, Germany
Date of death: set 22, 2015 (92)
Anna Yntema
Born: set 28, 2001
Age: 23
Nynne Karen Nørlund
Born: set 28, 1969
Age: 55
Angella Issajenko
Born: set 28, 1958
Age: 66
Angella Taylor-Issajenko, CM is a Canadian coach and former sprinter. She won an Olympic silver medal in the 4 × 100 metres relay in Los Angeles 1984. At the Commonwealth Games she won seven medals, including the 100 metres title in Brisbane 1982 and the 200 metres in Edinburgh 1986.
Mandy Barnett
Born: set 28, 1975
Crossville, Tennessee, US
Age: 49
Maricarmen Marín
Born: set 28, 1982
Lima, Perú
Age: 42
Adriana Izquierdo
Born: set 28, 1983
Madrid, Spain
Age: 41
Ana Paola Mendoza
Born: set 28, 1999
Chihuahua, Mexico
Age: 25
Joe Barber
Born: set 28, 2003
Shipley, Yorkshire, Engla
Age: 21
Joe Barber is an actor known for Shardlake (2024) and Coma (2024)
James Stewart Welch Jr.
Born: set 28, 1974
Columbia, South Carolina
Age: 50
José Manuel Calderón
Born: set 28, 1981
Badajoz, Spain
Age: 43
Georges Clemenceau
Born: set 28, 1841
Mouilleron-en-Pareds, Fra
Date of death: nov 24, 1929 (88)
Georges Benjamin Clemenceau (/ˈklɛmənsoʊ/,[1] also US: /ˌklɛmənˈsoʊ, ˌkleɪmɒ̃ˈsoʊ/,[2][3] French: [ʒɔʁʒ bɛ̃ʒamɛ̃ klemɑ̃so];[a] 28 September 1841 – 24 November 1929) was a French statesman who served as Prime Minister of France from 1906 to 1909 and again from 1917 until 1920. A key figure of the Independent Radicals, he was a strong advocate of separation of church and state, amnesty of the Communards exiled to New Caledonia, as well as opposition to colonisation. Clemenceau, a physician turned journalist, played a central role in the politics of the Third Republic, most notably successfully leading France through the end of the First World War. After about 1,400,000 French soldiers were killed between the German invasion and Armistice, he demanded a total victory over the German Empire. Clemenceau stood for reparations, a transfer of colonies, strict rules to prevent a rearming process, as well as the restitution of Alsace–Lorraine, which had been annexed to Germany in 1871. He achieved these goals through the Treaty of Versailles signed at the Paris Peace Conference (1919–1920). Nicknamed Père la Victoire ("Father of Victory") or Le Tigre ("The Tiger"), he continued his harsh position against Germany in the 1920s, although not quite so much as President Raymond Poincaré or former Supreme Allied Commander Ferdinand Foch, who thought the treaty was too lenient on Germany, famously stating: "This is not peace. It is an armistice for twenty years." Clemenceau obtained mutual defence treaties with the United Kingdom and the United States, to unite against a possible future German aggression, but these never took effect.
Manu Leguineche
Born: set 28, 1941
Arrazua, Biscay, Basque C
Date of death: gen 22, 2014 (72)
Spanish writer and journalist, born in 1941 in Arrazua (Arratzu in Basque language), a small village in Biscay, Basque Country, Spain. Winner of the National Journalism Award in 1979, he is the author of a varied literary and essayistic production. His essays include Los topos (1977), El camino más corto (1978), El estado del golpe (1981), and La destrucción de Gandhi (1983); in narrative, La tribu (1980); and his plays include Sobre el volcán (1985) and La guerra de todos nosotros (1986). In 1998, he publishes the essay Yo te diré…, which recounts the last days of the Philippines as a Spanish possession, and Yo pondré la guerra, in which he pays tribute to his colleagues of the last century who covered the war in Cuba. In 1999, he pays tribute to the pleasures of country life with La felicidad de la tierra, a praise of the open horizon of rural life, after retiring to live in a stone house without electricity in a small town in Guadalajara. In September 2000 he presents The Land of Oz, a journey through the contradictions of Australia. The prestigious reporter and writer also ventured into the world of celluloid to direct in 2001 the documentary Innocent Truth, a forty-minute film on the tragedy of Afghan children exiled by the war. He returns to narrative reportage in 2002 to edit Gibraltar, la roca en el zapato de España and with the journalistic novel Madre Volga, in 2003. He passed away in 2014.