Clytie Jessop is a British actress, notable for her association with cinematographer and film director Freddie Francis.Feeling some affinity with Clytie (being rather a long-shot actor myself and knowing that my son-in-law is also that way inclined) I went on to find the Jessop coat-of-arms, a decent-looking coat, I think, with good colours (though the stars seem a little brutalist):
Her first screen role was as the ghost of Miss Jessel in The Innocents (1961), based on Henry James's The Turn of the Screw. She appeared only in long shot. Francis had been cinematographer for The Innocents; he later directed Jessop in two minor horror roles for Hammer and Amicus, respectively: Nightmare (1964) and Torture Garden (1967).
However, imagine my joy on discovering that a slip of the typing finger had led me to a section on fingering techniques in tai-chi. A noble art form, for which I have the highest regard, it betrays here a somewhat analist approach to fingering, I believe, and I'm certain that it is an approach that will endear itself to my filthy son-in-law on his birthday:
I leave it to you to discern whether the author is right in suggesting that the names are indeed easy to learn but the techniques difficult to apply. In any case, I should appreciate a demonstration of "shoot goose palm" but perhaps not 'sticky finger' over the Easter festivities.
Nuff said.