Pieface may refer to: Pie Face, an Australian company that sells take-away pies, sandwiches, coffee, soft drinks and other snack products Pie-Face, a...
Thomas "Pieface" Kalmaku is a fictional character, a supporting character associated with Green Lantern in comic books published by DC Comics. He was...
Frankie Boyle and Ross Noble. According to an official MySpace page for PieFace Records (the fictitious music label mentioned throughout the series), Barratt...
friends. Then there is Pieface (real name Kevin Peter Shepherd), whose favourite food is pies. Dennis, Gnasher, Curly and Pieface were collectively called...
Phil Burrows Short film 2018 Clean As You Like Jock Short film 2020 Dennis & Gnasher: Unleashed! On the Big Screen Peter "Pieface" Shepherd Voice role...
alternative comedy scene in the early 1980s, firstly under the alias Gillian Pieface and later as The Joan Collins Fan Club. He wore heavy glam make-up and...
21 years ago (2003) Key people Nilan Jayasuriya, CEO Products Coffee, pies and soft drinks Owner United Petroleum (2017–present) Website www.pieface.com.au...
the head chef. 8 "Pieface" "The Hangout" Dan Fybel and Rich Rinaldi Laura Perkins Brittain August 5, 2005 (2005-08-05) 108 "Pieface": Maggie is determined...
Senator Harrington Byrd. Happy Kalmaku. An amalgamation of DC's Thomas "Pieface" Kalmaku and Marvel's Harold Joseph "Happy" Hogan. Stewart Rhodes. An amalgamation...
mad and calls her "Pizzaface". Even though Ramona meant it as a play on "Pieface", Beezus thinks this is about her acne, and refuses to help Ramona after...
March 8, 2020 (2020-03-08) Temple Hill Entertainment Civic Center Media Pieface Inc. MRC Television HBO Entertainment HBO A Teacher November 10, 2020 (2020-11-10)...
later stories introduce a fourth subset of Drones Club members known as "Piefaces". Many of the Drones Club stories begin with these nondescript members...
Guardians include Krona, Appa Ali Apsa, Ganthet, Sayd, and Scar. Thomas “Pieface” Kalmaku Green Lantern (vol. 2) #2 (October 1960) A former mechanic for...
early comics, The Funny Wonder/Wonder was satirical in nature. Freddy Pieface and Slim Jim (1890s) The Comical Capers of Constable Cuddlecook (1930s)...