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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Amanda_BlakeAmanda Blake - Wikipedia

    Amanda Blake (born Beverly Louise Neill, February 20, 1929 [1] – August 16, 1989) was an American actress best known for the role of the red-haired saloon proprietress "Miss Kitty Russell" on the western television series Gunsmoke.

  2. Miss Russell is the housekeeper of Roger Ackroyd, a wealthy widower who is suspected of murdering his stepdaughter's lover. She is also a friend of Mr. Porrott, a former colleague of Ackroyd, and a source of information for Dr. Sheppard, the narrator of the novel.

  3. Biografía. Su verdadero nombre era Elizabeth Marshall Holt, y nació en Hollywood, California, siendo sus padres el actor Jack Holt y su esposa, Margaret Woods. Ella y su hermano Tim se dedicarían a la interpretación.. Debutó en el cine usando su nombre teatral, "Jacqueline Holt", en un western de 1941 junto a Hopalong Cassidy, prosiguiendo los rodajes hasta hacer 47 películas en los ...

  4. In the novel The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, Miss Elizabeth Russell is Roger Ackroyd's housekeeper. She is described as a woman with "dark hair unstreaked with grey, and when she had a colour, the stern quality of her looks was not so apparent". According to Caroline Sheppard, she tried to marry...

  5. Miss Russell is Roger Ackroyd's housekeeper and lover, who has a son named Charles Kent. She is a suspect in the murder case because of her jealousy, greed and drug connections.

  6. Miss Kitty Russell is the owner of the Long Branch saloon in Dodge City. A running gag is that while she and Matt Dillon have feelings for one another, the only time they get together is an episode where they are just about to share a meal together, when she is called outside; she comes back to find that poor Matt, who is quite tired,-has ...

  7. It seems now that Mr. Ackroyd was murdered, not at a quarter to ten, but before. Between ten minutes to nine, when Dr. Sheppard left, and a quarter to ten.”. I saw the colour drain from the housekeeper’s face, leaving it dead white. She leaned forward, her figure swaying. “But Miss Ackroyd said⁠—Miss Ackroyd said⁠—”.