Cyril Joseph Fallon (1887 – 20 April 1948) was an Australian politician.
He was born in Surry Hills to tailor John Fallon and Katherine, née Macken. Educated at St Joseph's College and the University of Sydney (BA 1908, MB 1913), he became a medical practitioner in Randwick, and also lectured in classics. In 1916 he married Mildred Mary Hunt, with whom he had five children. He spent three years as a medical examiner for the Department of Education, and was a member of the Australian Industrial Christian Fellowship Council in 1923. In 1922 he was elected to the New South Wales Legislative Assembly as one of the members for Eastern Suburbs, representing the sectarian Catholic Democratic Party. By 1925 the party had collapsed and Fallon contested the election as an "Independent Catholic", but was defeated. He died at Darlinghurst in 1948.
Fallon may refer to:
Fallon is an Irish surname and refers to the clan name Ó Fallamháin or Ó Fallúin. "Fallon" is also an Irish non-gender specific first name and means "leader" or "granddaughter/grandson of a rich king." Notable people with the surname include:
Fallon (born on March 12, 1967) is an American pornographic actress (starting in 1985) known as the first to perform ejaculating orgasms on film.
Fallon began working for the Mitchell brothers at their San Francisco strip club, the O'Farrell Theatre, in the mid-1980s. She would perform a stage act where she would seemingly orgasm and squirt fluid from her vagina. This earned her the nickname "Squirt." She is mentioned in David McCumber's book about the Mitchell brothers, X-Rated, which claims that she actually would use water and hold it in her vagina with her strong PC muscles.
Fallon soon began starring in the Mitchells' pornographic movies, notably Let Me Tell Ya 'bout Black Chicks (1985) and the sequel to Behind the Green Door. She became best known for her Rainwoman and The Squirt series of movies, which featured her squirting orgasms. She performed in straight, lesbian and interracial scenes.
Fallon first retired from porn in the mid-1990s after appearing in more than 200 films. She came back to the industry in 2002, featured in a series of "mature woman" videos, despite the fact she was only in her mid-30s at the time.
Cyril (also Cyrillus or Cyryl) is a masculine given name. It is derived from the Greek name Κύριλλος (Kyrillos) meaning "Lordly, Masterful" which in turn derives from Greek κυριος (Kyrios) "Lord". There are various variant forms of the Cyril name such as Cyrill, Cyrille, Kirill, Kiryl, Kirillos, Kyrylo, Kiril, Kiro and Kyrill.
It may also refer to:
Patriarch Cyril (Bulgarian: Патриарх Кирил, secular name Konstantin Markov Konstantinov, Bulgarian: Константин Марков Константинов, born Kosta Paçu; January 3, 1901 – March 7, 1971), was the first Patriarch of the restored Bulgarian Patriarchate.
Born in Sofia, Bulgaria to an Albanian family, he adopted his religious name of Cyril in the St. Nedelya Church on December 30, 1923 and became Metropolitan of Plovdiv in 1938.
On May 10, 1953 Cyril was elected Patriarch of Bulgaria, holding the position until his death.
Cyril was buried in the main church of the Bachkovo Monastery, 89 kilometres from Sofia.
Cyril's historical role in the Bulgarian popular resistance to the Holocaust is recounted in the oratorio "A Melancholy Beauty," composed by Georgi Andreev with libretto by Scott Cairns and Aryeh Finklestein, first performed in June 2011 in Washington, D.C. The text describes "Metropolitan Kyril" in 1943 confronting the captors of Bulgarian Jews slated to be deported. Kyril first pledges to go with the deportees in solidarity and then tells the guards he will block the train with his own body. The guards reply that they have just received new orders to release the Jews.
Cyril is the first solo album by Dutch singer-songwriter Cyril Havermans. It was recorded in 1973 after Havermans left Dutch progressive rock band Focus. The parting was amicable and came about partly as a result of Havermans' desire to include more vocal content (Focus are primarily an instrumental band). His erstwhile band-mates contribute much instrumentation to the album.
The songs are, for the most part, short acoustic guitar driven numbers and bear little resemblance to Focus material (Havermans did not write for the band). The lyrics are in English, apart from the traditional song "The Humpbacked Flute Player".
All tracks composed by Cyril Havermans except where noted