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John Doyle (Born 1953) is an Australian actor and comedian.
John Jeremy Doyle AC QC (LLB, BCL) (born 1945), Australian jurist, is the current Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia, which is the highest ranking court in the Australian State of South Australia.
Doyle was educated at Saint Ignatius College, South Australia and graduated in law from the University of Adelaide in 1966. In 1967, he was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship and completed studies in law at Oxford University in 1969 and was admitted to the Bar in 1970.
Before being elevated to the position of Chief Justice in 1995, Doyle served for many years as the Solicitor General for South Australia where he was highly regarded for his skills as an advocate, particularly in complex Constitutional cases. He was a founding member of Hanson Chambers and, immediately prior to his move to the independent bar, was a Partner at prominent Adelaide law firm, Kelly & Co.
He is also a fervent supporter of the Norwood Football Club in the South Australian National Football League.
Chief Justice Doyle was also appointed as an Acting Judge of the Supreme Court of the Northern Territory in 2000 to hear an appeal concerning the appointment of the then Northern Territory Chief Magistrate Hugh Bradley.
John Doyle (born April 16, 1966) is a retired U.S. soccer defender who played professionally in both the U.S. and Europe. He earned fifty-three caps with the U.S. national team between 1987 and 1994 including three games with the U.S. team at the 1988 Summer Olympics. He is currently the general manager of the San Jose Earthquakes of Major League Soccer .
John Doyle (born 1957) is one of the two television critics (along with Andrew Ryan) with Canada's The Globe and Mail newspaper. Doyle also covers major football events for the paper.
He was born in Nenagh, County Tipperary in Ireland. As a teenager he moved to Dublin before immigrating to Canada in the 1980s. A writer he has written a number of books about his early life in deeply conservative rural Ireland. He was first hired by the Globe to write for Broadcast Week, the paper's weekly television listings, as a columnist. In 1997 he moved to the newspaper itself, which unlike Broadcast Week is published across the country. In 2000 he was appointed the Globe's daily television critic.
Well known for his wit and irony in 2004 Doyle would make a discovery that would bring him to international renown. In April 2004 Doyle penned a column titled "Who's afraid of the big bad Fox? Certainly not us blank">http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/LAC/20040419/DOYLE19/TPEntertainment/TopStories" mocking _FOX News. To Doyle's surprise the column was posted on many conservative newsgroups and forums, such as Free Republic, and he was bombarded by hate mail. This mail was filled with enough examples of stupidity and ridiculousness that it provided material for several more columns such as "Fox News. Not here yet, but already hilarious http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/LAC/20040421/DOYLE21/TPColumnists/." These columns drew more angry e-mails from south of the border providing fodder for even more columns. Doyle has continued penning such columns as "Hell looks an awful lot like the Republican conventionhttp://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20040902.wxdoyle0902/BNStory/Entertainment/" as popular with his Canadian readership as they are loathed by American conservatives.
In 2005, Doyle published a memoir: A Great Feast of Light: Growing Up Irish in the Television Age.
John Doyle is a professional announcer whose voice was used by, amongst others, the National Institute of Standards and Technology on their radio clock WWV. He was also a "time and temperature" voice for the Audichron Company.
He was also a veteran weathercaster for several metro Atlanta television stations, including WSB-TV 2, WAGA TV 5, and WGCL-TV 46. His career started at WSB AM 750 in Atlanta.
Doyle is now retired from broadcasting. In addition to periodic voice jobs, he works part time as a court bailiff in Gwinnett County, Georgia.
John Doyle (born 12 February, 1930 in Holycross, County Tipperary), is a former Irish sportsperson. He played hurling with his local Holycross-Ballycahill club from the 1940s until the 1970s and was a member of the Tipperary senior inter-county team from 1949 until 1967. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest hurlers in the history of the game and is one of only a handful of players to have won All-Ireland medals in three separate decades.
Doyle’s status as one of the all-time greats is self-evident. His haul of eight senior All-Ireland medals is a record which he jointly holds with Christy Ring. Doyle was also the first hurler to win ten Munster Championship titles, a record which was later equalled by Jimmy Barry-Murphy. His tally of ten National Hurling League medals is a record which has never been equalled.
Doyle has also been the recipient of many awards and honours off the field. In 1964 his hurling prowess earned him the prestigious Texaco Hurler of the Year award. He was later honoured in 1984 when he was named, by popular opinion, in the right corner-forward position on the GAA Hurling Team of the Century. He was named in the left corner-forward position on the GAA Hurling Team of the Millennium in 1999.
John Doyle (born July 31, 1977 in Rockhampton, Queensland) is a former Rugby League player who played for the North Queensland Cowboys then theSydney Roosters in the National Rugby League competition.
Position: Hooker Height: 184 cm Weight: 95 kg Rep Honours: 3 games Qld 2001-02 Junior Clubs: Yeppoon Seagulls FG debut: North Queensland v Hunter Mariners, Breakers Stadium, 22/03/97 (Rd 4)
After retiring from football to live in Queensland, he signed a 1-year deal at the end of the 2005 season after his Ricky Stuart contacted him to play with the Sydney Roosters in the National Rugby League. He recently resigned for another year with the Sydney Roosters, however in late Feb. (2007) during training camp he has decided to retire due to on going knee problems.
John Doyle has been artistic director at several regional theatres in the United Kingdom, where he has staged more than 200 professional productions during a 30+ year career.
Trained at the University of Georgia in the United States, for the past 10 years Doyle has been associate director of the Watermill Theatre, a 216-seat performance space in the English countryside of Berkshire. There he has become known for his unusual approach to musical theatre which features casts who are both actors and musicians, accompanying one another while simultaneously playing roles.
His 2004 staging of Stephen Sondheim's Sweeney Todd moved from the Watermill to the West End of London in 2005 (first to Trafalgar Studios and then the Ambassadors Theatre). In November 2005 he re-mounted Sweeney on Broadway, with Michael Cerveris playing the "demon barber" and Patti LuPone as his pie-baking accomplice, Mrs. Lovett.
For Doyle's next project, he moved to the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park to reinvent Sondheim's Company with a cast led by Raúl Esparza — again with actors who sing, dance and provide their own musical accompaniment (known in England as actor/muso). This production moved to the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on Broadway with previews beginning October 30, 2006 and opening officially on November 29, 2006. In 2007, it won the Tony, Drama Desk, Outer Critic's Circle and Drama League Awards for Best Revival of a Musical. Doyle also staged an actor/muso version of Mack and Mabel staring David Soul and Janie Dee in London's West End.
John Doyle (b. 1971 in Dublin, Ireland) is an Irish musician and songwriter. For four years he served as acoustic guitarist with the Irish/American band Solas; he is now an active solo artist. He has written many traditional-style songs and has collaborated with the likes of Kate Rusby, Susan McKeown, Karan Casey and Heidi Talbot.
Doyle also has producing credits on several albums including Heidi Talbot's debut solo release Distant Future, renowned American fiddle player Liz Carroll's Lake Effect, and his father Sean Doyle's CD, The Light and the Half Light.
Doyle is a highly accomplished guitarist with a trademark style for backing up other musicians. A left handed player, his style involves the use of bass string damping with the heel of the left hand combined with a constant, metronome-like strumming pattern and nimble movement up and down the neck with the right hand to incorporate bass lines and chordal variations. Combined with other dynamic techniques such as string choking with the right hand, the resulting sound is full and highly rythmical.
Doyle plays guitar in many different tunings, but is perhaps best known for using the 'Dropped D' tuning (DADGBE) for backing up other musicians.
John Doyle, (abt. 1828 - August 1892) was an Irishman who served in the Eighth King's Royal Irish Hussars (a light cavalry unit) as a Private soldier during the Crimean War and the Indian Rebellion of 1857.
Doyle was born at Birr, Ireland, about 1828 and died at Liverpool, England in August, 1892.
Doyle enlisted in the British Cavalry at Newbridge, Ireland in 1850. His brother, Patrick, had signed up as an infantryman and died when his transport, HMS Birkenhead struck a reef off Cape Agulhas, S.A.
He rode in the Charge of the Light Brigade at Balaklava. Survived lightly wounded, uncaptured.
Fought at four major Crimean War battles: Alma, Balaklava, Inkerman, and Sebastopol.
Member of the Balaclava Commemoration Society.
Published a memoir of his service titled "A Descriptive Account of the Famous Charge of the Light Brigade at Balaclava" in Manchester, 1877.
Johnny Doyle is a Gaelic football player for Kildare. He plays his club football for Allenwood and was awarded Kildare footballer of the year in 2004 and 2005. He won the Kildare Senior Football Championship with Allenwood in 2004. Doyle and Allenwoods form continued in 2006 with a Kildare championship final appearance against Moorefield. John has won one Leinster Senior Football Championship medal with Kildare in 2000 and a Kildare U21 county title. He has also won one Agricultural Colleges All-Ireland. Doyle's talents are very versatile and he has won an All-Ireland Cross Country Athletic College medal and won several boxing medals.blank">http://www.hoganstand.com/Kildare/ArticleForm.aspx?ID=47852 Doyle is the cousin of _Kildare county player Ken Doyle.
John Aloysius Doyle (born in 1858 in Halifax, Nova Scotia - December 24, 1915 in Providence, Rhode Island) is a former major league pitcher.
Doyle pitched in 3 games for the St. Louis Brown Stockings in 1882 and lost all 3 of them.
John Doyle is a professor at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). He is known for Control Theory and how it applies to the internet or even to bacteria.
John Doyle (1797 Dublin - 1868-01-02) was an artist and notable Victorian illustrator, producing political caricatures for The Times between 1829 and 1851. He was born into an upper class, but not wealthy,Roman Catholic family and moved to London in 1821 where he exhibited his portraits at the Royal Academy, but not selling enough he changed to lithography for which he was famous. He always signed his work as "H.B." and was only known as such by most people at the time. He was the father of Charles Doyle (father of Arthur Conan Doyle), Richard Doyle (illustrator) (1824-1883), Henry Edward Doyle (1822-1892) and James Doyle (1827-1892).
Born in Toronto, Canada in 1950, John Doyle is a prominent Toronto painter. A 1974 graduate of Fine Arts at York University, he has had solo and group shows in galleries across Canada. Doyle has traveled extensively throughout Canada, capturing the Canadian landscape, from one coast to the other, in paint. He works predominantly in acrylic on canvas, applying paint in an expressive style. Moving, over the course of his career, from subtle to vibrant in his use of colour, his most recent work is notable for its audacious use of colour and bold brush strokes.






