Latest news with #EmilyBrown
Yahoo
30-07-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Getting To Know PWHL Seattle Newcomers Emily Brown and Jenna Buglioni
During the PWHL Seattle media tour, I had the chance to sit down with veteran defender Emily Brown and the first PWHL Seattle draft pick, Jenna Buglioni, to get to know them better. Brown spent the 2024-25 season with the Boston Fleet before being selected in the 2025 Expansion Draft, while Buglioni is making her professional debut this fall.
Yahoo
27-07-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Getting To Know PWHL Seattle Newcomers Emily Brown and Jenna Buglioni
During the PWHL Seattle media tour, I had the chance to sit down with veteran defender Emily Brown and the first PWHL Seattle draft pick, Jenna Buglioni, to get to know them better. Brown spent the 2024-25 season with the Boston Fleet before being selected in the 2025 Expansion Draft, while Buglioni is making her professional debut this fall.


Daily Mail
30-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Regé-Jean Page makes a rare public appearance with girlfriend Emily Brown as the couple enjoy a romantic date at Rome's famous Pierluigi restaurant
Regé-Jean Page made a rare public appearance with his girlfriend Emily Brown as they stepped out for a romantic dinner date in Rome. The actor, 37, rose to fame on the first season of Netflix 's Bridgerton and most recently appeared in Black Bag alongside Cate Blanchett and Michael Fassbender. Taking some time away from work last week, Page - whose name has been thrown in the ring on multiple occasions as a possibility for the next James Bond - jetted off to Italy with his girlfriend. The pair were seen laughing with the waiter as they enjoyed a meal at the famous Pierluigi restaurant in Rome on Saturday. Appearing engaged in a serious chat over dinner, the couple soon sported beaming grins as they ordered their meal. It is the first time the couple have been spotted out in public since they attended the dunhill Pre-BAFTA Filmmakers Dinner held at dunhill Bourdon House in Mayfair, London, in February 2024. Page and Brown were first seen together in public back in February 2021 outside the London home they share together and have gone from strength to strength since. It had been reported that the pair bought the home back in February 2020, a few months after filming for Bridgerton series one had finished. Although they have been seen on numerous red carpet events since they were first romantically linked, including the GQ awards, the pair keep their relationship under wraps for the most part. Emily works as a freelance copywriter with commissions from firms including Nike, Converse and Uber. Before her relationship with Page, Emily dated Jack Badu, a football coach who would accompany her to Dulwich Hamlet games. Colleagues on the networking site LinkedIn describe her as 'witty' and 'great fun to be around'. Another rather enviously wrote of her: 'Even after a massive party, she seems to skip about the world like a bunny who's never even heard the word hangover.' Famous for playing Simon Bassett in the first season of Bridgerton, Page left the show after just one series. Born in London to a Zimbabwean nurse and an English preacher, Page, the youngest of four siblings, spent much of his young life growing up more than 5,000 miles away in southern Africa. Page later made a return to London for secondary school and it was in North London where he would find his passion for acting - attending the Jigsaw Saturday School in Enfield for around 10 years. Acting, however, wasn't his first choice of careers. And the heartthrob star may never have graced our screens with his good-looks had he followed his initial career choice, as a sound engineer. 'It was already a compromise. It was halfway between science for my mum and an art for me,' he told Interview Magazine in 2016. Music was obviously an early passion for the future star, who sang and played drums in a punk band which he formed with one of his three siblings, brother Tose Page - with whom he still performs as part of the musical duo TUNYA. Though his dress sense was somewhat different to the regency era clothing in which he would burst into super-stardom. According to Interview Magazine, Page dyed his hair blue, green and purple during his punk days. Acting, at the time, was merely hobby for Page. Like so many others, he starred in his school's nativity, playing the Little Drummer Boy. But it was at his Enfield Saturday school where he began fine-tuning his skills. It was during this time Page gained extra roles - once playing an ambulance thief in the long-running medical series Casualty. Page's first professional job was in the History Boys in Sheffield's Crucible Theatre and he later landed roles in the likes of Fresh Meat and Waterloo Road. His breakthrough came across the pond in the US, where he now spends much of his time. He played Chicken George in the History Channel big budget 2016 miniseries Roots - based on a book following the story of an 18th-century African who becomes enslaved and transported to North America. Page's performance in the show, a remake on a 1977 series of the same name, earned him critical acclaim. It also helped him land a spot in US Crime series For the People, based on the writing of hit screenwriter and author Shonda Rhimes - the mind behind Bridgerton.

Boston Globe
30-06-2025
- Sport
- Boston Globe
Fleet roster reset: Where Boston's roster stands after shakeup from free agency and the PWHL Draft
Teams then had an opportunity to rebuild their rosters through free agency and The free agent signing period opened June 16 and is ongoing. Signing will pause Friday at 2 p.m. and resume July 8 at 9 a.m. Advertisement Here's a look at the Fleet's departures and acquisitions during the tumultuous expansion period, plus projected lineups heading into next season: The departures The loss of Knight to Seattle was the shot heard 'round the league, but the Fleet quietly lost a few other stars. Five defenders from the 2024-25 roster — Sydney Bard (Vancouver), Emily Brown (Seattle), Emma Greco (Vancouver), Jess DiGirolamo (Montreal), and Sidney Morin (Minnesota) — are headed elsewhere. The expansion teams poached Bard and Brown during the exclusive signing period, while Greco, DiGirolamo, and Morin were on expiring contracts and signed in free agency. Advertisement Forward Hannah Bilka signed with Seattle after a standout rookie year in which she netted five goals and added six assists in 16 games. She'll be joined in Seattle by forward Lexie Adzija, who spent the past season and a half with Boston as a physical two-way player. It's also worth noting that the Fleet are on the hunt for a new coach. The Fleet will be without Hilary Knight (left) Emily Brown (bottom right), and Jess DiGirolamo (top right) next season. Ken McGagh for The Boston Globe The acquisitions The Fleet recouped their losses by signing six players thus far in free agency: three forwards, two defenders, and a goalie. Boston announced its first two signings, forwards Chloe Aurard and Liz Schepers, on June 18. Aurard, who inked a one-year deal with the Fleet, spent the past two seasons with New York and will reunite in Boston with Müller, her former Northeastern linemate. Aurard had two goals and two assists in 27 games with the last-place Sirens last season. Schepers, who scored the winner for Minnesota in Game 5 of the past two Walter Cup Finals, signed a two-year deal in Boston. Schepers had two goals and four assists in 27 games last season. Rounding out the forward group is Laura Kluge, who signed a one-year deal June 20. Kluge joined Toronto on a training camp invite in 2024 but didn't sign a contract with the Sceptres until February. The Fleet also added defenders Rylind MacKinnon (Toronto) and Zoe Boyd (Ottawa), and goaltender Abbey Levy (New York), all on one-year contracts. At the end of her three-year stint at Boston College, Levy held the program records for save percentage (.940) and saves per game (31.96). Advertisement Boston also made six selections in the PWHL draft, Related : Other draft picks include forwards Ella Huber (Minnesota), Olivia Mobley (Minnesota Duluth), and Abby Newhook (Boston College); defender Riley Brengman (Ohio State); and goaltender Amanda Thiele (Ohio State). The Fleet selected defender Haley Winn in the first round of the PWHL draft. Tony Avelar/Associated Press The players sticking around Free agents Susanna Tapani, Theresa Schafzahl, and Jill Saulnier — all forwards who were on expiring contracts — signed one-year extensions to stay with the Fleet. The question marks Six players from last season's roster remain unsigned: Emma Söderberg, Klara Peslarova, Loren Gabel, Amanda Pelkey, Jillian Dempsey, and Kelly Babstock. Söderberg and Peslarova, both goaltenders, will not return to the PWHL this season and intend to sign with teams in the Swedish league, a team source told the Globe. Dempsey and Babstock spent most of last season on reserve contracts and made nine appearances each in game action. Gabel appeared in 20 games (2 goals, 1 assist), while Pelkey had 5 points (3 goals, 2 assist) in 25 appearances. Projected lines Forwards Chloe Aurard-Alina Müller-Hanna Brandt Jamie Lee Rattray-Susanna Tapani-Shay Maloney Jill Saulnier-Ella Huber*-Olivia Mobley* Theresa Schafzahl-Liz Schepers-Laura Kluge Abby Newhook*-Sophie Shirley Defenders Megan Keller-Haley Winn* Zoe Boyd-Daniela Pejsova Rylind MacKinnon-Riley Brengman* Hadley Hartmetz Goaltenders Aerin Frankel Abbey Levy Amanda Thiele* *Denotes rookie Emma Healy can be reached at


BBC News
05-06-2025
- BBC News
Barnard Castle residents ignore Appleby Fair parking ban
Residents say they are "dumbfounded" that temporary parking restrictions have been imposed on their street yet the past 15 years, Durham County Council has put the ban in place to stop people on their way to Cumbria's Appleby Fair parking outside homes on Bridgegate in Barnard temporary prohibition order states it is to "minimise a danger to the public caused by indiscriminate parking", with residents being asked to leave their vehicles in a car park 10 minutes' walk appealing to the council every year, residents say they are not being listened too, so are "taking a stand" and ignoring the restrictions. Mark Carter, who lives on Bridgegate, said: "The letter says there's no waiting at any time. It's things like when we do our weekly shopping, it's impossible. "And people coming home late at night and having to walk back in the dark. For some of the older residents, that'll be quite frightening." Mr Carter explained Bridgegate residents had asked the council for temporary permits in previous years with no success, so he and others had decided to ignore the cones which were put up along both sides of the road."I don't agree with it," he said. "Even if they do give us fines, we're not going to pay them because we should have a right to park outside our own homes."Fellow resident Emily Brown has a four-year-old daughter and is also ignoring the restrictions this year. "They've offered us permits to park at the top of town but that's no good when you've got a little girl who doesn't want to walk to the car, then trying to navigate back through the traffic to get to school," she Brown added it had been "a long time" since travellers had tried to park in town and said the council should "stop discriminating against the travelling community".Dave Lewin, Durham County Council's strategic traffic manager, said: "We continue to work closely with partners, businesses, residents and members of the Gypsy, Roma, Traveller communities to provide a smooth transition through Barnard Castle."We welcome and value any relevant feedback from residents and road users and such feedback will be included in future discussions and considerations." Follow BBC Tees on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.