But before that 14-year-old Brenda Clarkson, from Doncaster, fell in love with the place while waitressing in a nearby hotel. |
|
After putting out a couple of unspectacular albums, she spent much of the 1980s waitressing and working in a record store. |
|
One girl indentured in the early 1980s reported that her mother was tricked by Han procurers who had promised a waitressing job. |
|
I'm a full-time employee at a fairly public company here in Steinbach, and on my weekends, I enjoy waitressing at a local restaurant. |
|
It was a family affair, with their son, Oliver, helping Lew in the kitchen, and daughter, Vicky, waitressing. |
|
I have come along in the middle of the backward and forward discussion on waitressing and the hospitality industry in St Lucia. |
|
Since then, she's done everything from teaching sign language to waitressing, all while looking for another girl group or record deal. |
|
When he arrives at the nowheresville cafe where Jade is waitressing, our anti-heroine is intrigued. |
|
It afforded me a totally different lifestyle, going from baby-sitting and waitressing to travelling around the world singing songs. |
|
Myers, who had met Jones from her waitressing days, offered her a undefined role in his business and she leapt at the chance. |
|
She changed her employment from the Phone Guide to waitressing in order to shepherd Tyler to school and daycare. |
|
Other summer jobs included waitressing, a few summers in a jeweller's shop, and finally, a barperson. |
|
Most of these women believed they were coming to Britain for waitressing or service-industry jobs. |
|
It wasn't long before she decided to fly the nest and make her way to Paris, where her jobs included modelling, waitressing and learning to cook at the La Varenne school. |
|
Most people I know did laboring or fruit picking or waitressing. |
|
In some reported cases, women responded to false advertisements for domestic services, child care, modeling, or waitressing. |
|
Raised in Anstruther, where her parents run a hotel, she was used to mucking in and helping with the waitressing, cooking and cleaning, as required. |
|
If white actors are now willing to play black characters, diversity might as well pack its bags and go back to waitressing on Sunset Strip. |
|
In 1996, she got a Chalmer's Grant, which allowed her to stop waitressing and devote herself to music full time. |
|
But I found it too hard to concentrate on a fledgling career as I was in a difficult relationship at the time, so I ended up just drifting around waitressing. |
|
|
Regardless of whether she enjoyed the menial work of typing or selling or waitressing or clerking, she at least had freedom of movement to a degree. |
|
Typically, girls and women are lured into captivity by promises of jobs in child care, waitressing, fashion, or entertainment. |
|
Previously, I did waitressing, commercial art, some teaching. |
|
Maureen supported her growing family by waitressing part time and working behind the bar at the Old Swan pub, in Yardley. |
|
Why is Maci waitressing and Amber kvetching about paying the bills? |
|
Reminiscing about her pre-fame days, Lady Gaga said used to do waitressing and used drugs. |
|
He was offered the post of wine waiter and after a few weeks, he encouraged Eileen to apply for a waitressing job. |
|
After attending LaGuardia performing-arts school, where she studied acting, she decided she wanted to make it as a rapper, and got a job waitressing to fund her music. |
|
Her family recently established a new on-farm restaurant, Sgubor Teile, which Sara supports by cooking and waitressing when she can. |
|
The resulting paperback, 50 Ways to Find A Lover, is based on the blog and tells the tale of a waitressing actress who is persuaded to chronicle her search for a man. |
|
She moved to New York for a short time before moving to Boston where she worked at a local shipyard and was waitressing when she met her future husband. |
|
You could give up the waitressing, the hotel clerk, the dance teacher gig. |
|