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・ Maggie Butt
・ Maggie Calloway
・ Maggie Campbell-Culver
・ Maggie Carey
・ Maggie Carlton
・ Maggie Carpenter
・ Maggie Cassella
・ Maggie Cassidy
・ Maggie Castle
・ Maggie Chapman
・ Maggie Chapman (music)
・ Maggie Cheung
・ Maggie Cheung Ho-yee
・ Maggie Chiang
・ Maggie Cline
Maggie Cogan
・ Maggie Collins
・ Maggie Cronin
・ Maggie Crotty
・ Maggie d'Abo
・ Maggie Daley Park
・ Maggie Daley Park ice skating ribbon
・ Maggie Davies
・ Maggie De Block
・ Maggie de Vries
・ Maggie Deahm
・ Maggie dela Riva
・ Maggie Dence
・ Maggie Diaz
・ Maggie Dixon


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Maggie Cogan : ウィキペディア英語版
Maggie Cogan

Maggie Cogan is a resident of New York City who became a minor celebrity in the early 1960s when she was the first female horse and carriage driver in Central Park, working for the Plaza Hotel. She appeared in a 1967 Universal newsreel with her horse and carriage, and in 1968, also appeared on quiz show What's My Line?, with contestants attempting to guess her occupation.〔
After leaving her career briefly in the 1960s, she resumed it in 1970, befriending Lisa Ryan, the daughter of actor Robert Ryan, who had also become a horse-and-carriage driver. By this point, she had had 2 unsuccessful marriages and given birth to two sons, both of whom she gave up when her life began to unravel. In 1977, while living with Ryan, Cogan began to show signs of mental illness and she was eventually committed to a mental hospital by her parents.〔
Eventually, she became homeless when she left her career for good. Director Michel Negroponte discovered her living in Central Park and made the documentary film Jupiter's Wife about her.
== Early life and career ==
Cogan was raised in a town near New York City, and in high school, she was an active student, participating in cheerleading and dance clubs. After graduating, she attended several colleges but never completed an undergraduate degree. At 19, she began a career with the Palace Hotel, becoming the first ever female Central Park carriage driver.〔 In 1968, when the city announced that horse-drawn carriages would have to carry meters like taxicabs, Cogan was quoted in the associated story in the New York Times, saying "Meters! It's ridiculous. In this country, they almost want to meter our minds. It'll be like Coney Island. Tawdry."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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