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Barbara Woodhouse : ウィキペディア英語版
Barbara Woodhouse

Barbara Kathleen Vera Woodhouse (née Blackburn, 9 May 1910 Rathfarnham, Ireland – 9 July 1988, Buckinghamshire, England), was a British dog trainer, author, horse trainer and television personality. Her 1980 television series ''Training Dogs the Woodhouse Way'' made her into a household name in the UK. Among her catch-phrases were "walkies" and "sit!", the latter parodied in the 1983 James Bond film ''Octopussy''. She was also known for her "no bad dogs" philosophy.〔( Crazy for Critters )''In 1996, I interviewed Brian Kilcommons, dog trainer to the stars and the American protege of the late British trainer Barbara Woodhouse, known for her "no bad dogs" philosophy and "Walkies!" rallying cry.''〕
==Life==
Barbara Woodhouse was born 9 May 1910 in Rathfarnham, Ireland to an Irish family and grew up in Dublin. When her schoolmaster father died in 1919, her mother moved the family to Headington in Oxford, Woodhouse attended Headington School there. She was later the only female student at the Harper Adams Agricultural College in Shropshire.
After returning to Oxford to start ''Headington Riding school and Boarding Kennels'', she married her first husband Allan George Hill in August 1934 and then moved with him to spent more than three years in Argentina training horses. The marriage ended in divorce and she returned to Headington.
In the 1930s, Woodhouse became a dog breeder and ran kennels until about 1960. She first appeared on TV as a contestant on ''What's My Line'' where the panelists failed to identify her occupation. She also appeared on CBS ''60 Minutes''. Her 1980 BBC series made her into a television personality and she appeared regularly on British TV up until her death in 1988.
She married Dr. Michael Woodhouse in 1940 and moved to Wiltshire. They had three children, Pamela, Patrick and Judith. She died on 9 July 1988 following a stroke, aged 78.
Her many books included her autobiography ''Talking to Animals'' and ''No Bad Dogs''.

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