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RIP Ken Berry

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Ken Berry of 'F Troop,''Mama's Family' Dead at 85

Extra TV
December 1, 2018

Ken Berry, a TV and theater actor best remembered as one of the stars of the series "F Troop" and "Mama's Family," has died at 85.

Berry's death on Saturday was announced on social media by his former wife, comic actress Jackie Joseph.

The Illinois-born performer was discovered as a dancer as a teen, shortly before he served in the U.S. Army. While there, he won a dance competition that led to his TV debut. He spent the rest of his time in the military as a part of Special Services, entertaining the troops. A second talent competition resulted in an appearance on Ed Sullivan's "Toast of the Town," exposure that won him a contract with Universal.

He performed in Las Vegas and as part of "The Billy Barnes Revue," which wound up on Broadway and was where he met his future wife, Joseph.

Berry became a frequent television presence; he was a regular on "The Ann Sothern Show" (1960-1961), "Ensign O'Toole" (1962-1963), "Dr. Kildare" (1961-1964), "F Troop" (1965-1967), "The Andy Griffith Show" (1968), "Mayberry, R.F.D." (1968-1971), and was the star of an episode of "The Brady Bunch" called "Kelly's Kids" (1974), which was a proposed spin-off that did not develop.

Berry had a long association and friendship with Carol Burnett, on whose variety show he appeared 19 times between 1968-1978. He played Vinton Harper in the show's iconic "The Family" sketches, which became the long-running series "Mama's Family," on which he appeared from 1983-1990.

He also acted in the popular Disney films: "Herbie Rides Again" (1974) and "The Cat from Outer Space" (1978).

Berry's last on-screen work was almost 20 years ago, in the short-lived series "Maggie Winters" (1999).

He was preceded in death by his son with Joseph, John, who passed away in 2016 after a battle with brain cancer. He is survived by their daughter together, Jennifer.


BERRY, Ken (Kenneth Ronald Berry)
Born: 11/3/1933, Moline, Illinois, USA
Died: 12/1/2018, U.S.A.

Ken Berry’s westerns – actor:
Rawhide (TV) – 1965 (Lt. Tendall)
F Troop (TV) – 1965-1967 (Capt. Wilton Parmenter)
Guardian of the Wilderness – 1976 (Zachary Moore)
The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams (TV) – 1977 (Will Boker)
Little House on the Prairie (TV) – 1979 (London)

RIP Aikra Miyazaki

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Scriptwriter, Director Akira Miyazaki Passes Away at 84
Wrote for many World Masterpiece Theater anime

Animation News Network
By Rafael Antonio Pineda
11/27/2018

Screenwriter and director Akira Miyazaki passed away on Sunday due to bile duct cancer. He was 84. A funeral service will be held on Thursday, November 29 with his eldest daughter Momoko as chief mourner.

Miyazaki wrote the scripts for six films in the long-running Otoko wa Tsurai yo (Being a Man is Tough) film series, and made his directorial debut with the 1971 film Naite Tamaru ka (As if I'd Cry). He wrote scripts for numerous anime, including Raccoon Rascal, The Perrine Story, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Kaitō Lupin - 813 no Nazo, Yuki, The Wizard of Oz, Lucy-May of the Southern Rainbow, Katry, the Cow Girl, Little Women, Botchan, Like the Clouds, Like the Wind, and Happy Moomin Family.


MIYAZAKI, Akira
Born: 10/27/1934, Arakawa, Tokyo, Japan
Died: 11/25/2018, Saitama, Japan

Akira Miyazaki’s western –
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (TV) - 1980

RIP Geoff Murphy

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Acclaimed Kiwi film director Geoff Murphy dies

New Zealand Herald
December 4, 2018

Acclaimed Kiwi film director Geoff Murphy has died.

Murphy, 80, was a leading figure in the fledgling New Zealand film industry in the 1970s - directing classic films including 1981's Goodbye Pork Pie, Utu and The Quiet Earth.

His career later took him to Hollywood, where he directed blockbusters including Young Guns II and the Steven Seagal train thriller Under Siege 2. Murphy also worked as a second unit director on Dante's Peak (directed by fellow Kiwi Roger Donaldson) and on Sir Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings.

The NZ Film Commission said it was "very saddened" to confirm Murphy had died yesterday.

In 2014 Murphy was made an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to film. He had previously been honoured as one of New Zealand's 20 greatest living artists when named an Arts Icon by the Arts Foundation.

Murphy was noted for his skill at action, knockabout comedy, and melding genres. He spent a decade directing in Hollywood before returning home, NZonscreen says in its biography of him.

He was married to filmmaker Merata Mita until her death in May 2010.

Murphy has also been a scriptwriter, special effects technician, schoolteacher and trumpet player.

He was a founding member of the hippy musical and theatrical co-operative Blerta, which toured New Zealand and Australia performing multi-media shows in the early 1970s.

Several Blerta members followed Murphy into film work - including the band's drummer Bruno Lawrence, who starred in Utu and The Quiet Earth.

Wellington filmmaker and friend Gaylene Preston said Murphy was a pioneer

"He took everybody with him. In those days there was very little in the way of equipment in New Zealand. It was Geoff who helped everyone else make their films."

His best works were Goodbye Pork Pie and Utu, Preston said.

"I think it is hard to understand what a terrific, cultural earthquake Pork Pie was. A film New Zealanders went to the movies, to see their own country and their own work.

"The film Utu was a great piece of world cinema.

"He is a towering figure and we have lost a great voice. Go well, Geoff."


MURPHY, Geoff (Geoffrey Peter Murphy)
Born:6/13/1938, Wellington, New Zealand
Died: 12/3/2018, New Zealand

Geoff Murphy’s westerns – director:
Wild Man – 1977
Young Guns II – 1990
The Last Outlaw (TV) – 1993
The Magnificent Seven (TV) - 1998

RIP John DF Black

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'Star Trek' Writer-Producer John DF Black Dies at 85

STAR TREK DISCOVERY
December 5, 2018
John DF Black, a writer, producer, and story editor on Star Trek: The Original Series has passed away. He was 85.

The official Star Trek website reports that Black passed away of natural causes in California on November 29th. The news was confirmed by Black’s wife, Mary Black, and revealed by Black’s publisher, Jacobs/Brown Press.

Black has one solo Star Trek writing credit to his name. He wrote the teleplay for “The Nake Time,” a season one episode that was key in establishing the character of Spock as played by Leonard Nimoy. The episode earned Black a Hugo Award nomination.

Using the pseudonym Ralph Willis, Black returned to Star Trek to write the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode “Justice” in the show’s first season. He also received a “story by” credit for Next Generation’s “The Naked Now,” a spiritual sequel to “The Naked Time.”

“The Naked Now” was the fourth episode of Star Trek: The Original Series to air and is memorable for being the first time that the Vulcan nerve pinch appeared on screen (Spock’s signature maneuver was first filmed in the episode “The Enemy Within,” but the episodes aired out of order, with “The Enemy Within” premiering the week after “The Naked Time”).

The plot of “The Naked Time” saw the crew of the USS Enterprise infected with a contagion that stripped them of their inhibitions, leading to chaos throughout the ship. “The Naked Now,” based on an unfinished teleplay by Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry, was only the second episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. It follows up on The Original Series episode with the crew of the USS Enterprise-D contracting an affliction that is very similar to the one that James Kirk’s crew encountered 100 years earlier.

Black provided commentary on the 50 Years of Star Trek and Star Trek: Inside the Roddenberry Vault home media releases.

Outside of the Star Trek realm, Black’s writing credits include work on The Unearthly, Lawman, Mr. Novak, Laredo, the Cathy Lee Crosby Wonder Woman pilot (which he also co-produced), The Fugitive, Mary Tyler Moore, Shaft, The Carey Treatment, Man from Atlantis, Charlie's Angels, The Clone Master and Murder, She Wrote. He also directed an episode of Charlie's Angels.

In 1972, Black won an Edgar Award from the Writers Guild of America for Best Television Feature or Miniseries Teleplay for his script for the television movie Thief.

Black is survived by his wife Mary, who worked as his executive secretary on Star Trek: The Original Series, as well as his two sons.


BLACK, John  DF (John Donald Francis Black)
Born: 12/30/1932, U.S.A.
Died: 11/29/2018, California, U.S.A

John DF Black’s westerns – writer:
Lawman (TV) – 1961, 1962
Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) - 1962
The Virginian (TV) – 1963, 1970
Laredo (TV) – 1965, 1966
Gunfight in Abilene - 1967
Cimarron Strip (TV) – 1967
Three Guns for Texas - 1968
The High Chaparral (TV) - 1969

RIP Charles Lester Kinsolving

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Longtime WCBM-AM conservative talk radio host Les Kinsolving dies at 90

The Baltimore Sun
By Colin Campbell
December 5, 2018

Charles Lester “Les” Kinsolving, a retired WCBM-AM conservative talk radio personality who hosted the show “Uninhibited Radio” for 28 years, has died at 90, the station announced Tuesday.

Kinsolving, whose bright red blazer and outrageous talk show earned him national renown, was a “throwback to radio yesteryear [who] tries to shock, outrage and prod the world around him with his commentary,” according to a 1998 Baltimore Sun profile.

“From the loud red jacket to his blustery delivery,” The Sun reported, “Kinsolving guarantees a scene every time he walks into the room.”

The radio station did not give a cause of his death. A message left Wednesday at his Northern Virginia home was not returned.

Kinsolving had a heart attack at his Virginia home and underwent triple bypass surgery at Fairfax Hospital in Falls Church, Va., in January 2005, but returned to the air until a few months ago.

Sean Casey, who hosts the conservative “Sean and Frank in the Morning” program with Frank Luber on WCBM, called Kinsolving “a fearless reporter/broadcaster who confronted the Jim Jones cult, was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize and covered the White House in his signature red jacket.”

On Kinsolving’s show, Casey said in a statement, “no sacred cows went unmilked.”

Casey said he hired Kinsolving at the station in 1990 at the urging of Tom Marr. Kinsolving was a “true patriot and a great American” whose retirement followed a decline in health, Casey said.

“It is so ironic that Les would pass the same week that [George H.W. Bush] left us, a [president] that he covered, and just days away from the annual Army-Navy game that he loved and would attend almost every year when health permitted,” Casey said in his statement. “Rest in peace, ‘my dear friend.’”


KINSOLVING, Charles Lester
Born: 12/18/1927, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 12/4/2018, Vienna, Virginia, U.S.A.

Charles Lester Kinsolving’s westerns – actor:
Gettysburg – 1993 (Brigadier General William Barksdale)
Gods and Generals – 2003 (General William Barksdale)

RIP John Board

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The Globe and Mail
December 6, 2018

JOHN ANTHONY BOARD - born, October 22, 1934, John Anthony Board passed away December 2, 2018. John was a pillar in the Canadian Film Industry who collaborated as an Assistant Director, Producer and Mentor with the best and brightest film makers in Canada. His unique perspective, incisive intellect and boundless energy helped shape not only the projects he worked on, but how they were made. John is survived by his brothers, Stefan and Henry; his sons, Jason and Simon; and grandchildren, Rachel, Joanna, Alex, Sebastian and Sascha. A memorial service will be held on Sunday, December 9 at 10 a.m. at the Mount Pleasant Funeral Centre, 375 Mount Pleasant Road (east gate entrance).

BOARD, John (John Anthony Board)
Born: 10/22/1934, Canada
Died: 12/2/2018, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

John Board’s western – producer, assistant director:
The Grey Fox - 1982

RIP Tim Rossovich

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Former USC and Eagles Defensive End Tim Rossovich Dies at 72

Minute Media Top 2018
By Mike Luciano
December 7, 2018

​The ​NFL and ​college football families lost another tremendous ambassador today as former ​Eagles defensive end Tim Rossovich passes away after an extended illness.

He was 72 years old.

Rossovich was born on March 14, 1946 in Palo Alto, Calif. Rossovich was picked 14th overall in the 1968 NFL Draft by the Eagles after being honored as an All American at USC.

Rossovich was known as a relentless, angry pass rusher who had tremendous strength off the edge. Rossovich made his only Pro Bowl in 1969. He also played for the Chargers and Oilers, as well as the short lived World Football League's Philadelphia Bell.

He was the subject of a 30 minute NFL Films movie, with the voice of the legendary John Facenda included.

Rossovich had a successful career after football, becoming an actor who appeared in 15 films.

He was the prototypical late 60s/early 70s pass rusher. Strong, smart, and hardworking, he was an excellent player in Trojan crimson and Eagle Green. He will be missed.


ROSSOVICH, Tim (Timothy John Rossovich)
Born: 3/14/1946, Palo Alto, California, U.S.A.
Died: 12/7/2018, Grass Valley, California, U.S.A.

Tim Rossovich’s western – actor:
The Long Riders – 1980 (Charlie Pitts)

RIP Sondra Locke

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Oscar Nominee Sondra Locke Dies at 74

Variety
By Dave McNary
December 13, 2018

Actress and director Sondra Locke, who received a supporting actress Oscar nomination in her first movie role for “The Heart is a Lonely Hunter,” died Nov. 3 at 74. The Los Angeles County Public Health Department confirmed her death.

She died due to breast and bone cancer, according to Radar Online, which reported that she was laid to rest at Pierce Brothers Westwood Village Memorial Park & Mortuary.

Locke had a contentious relationship of more than a decade with Clint Eastwood, who first cast her in “The Outlaw Josey Wales.”

Locke was born in 1944 as Sandra Louise Smith and raised in Shelbyville, Tenn. She changed her named to Sondra in her early 20s and won a nationwide talent search in 1967 for the part of teenager Mick Kelly in the movie adaptation of Carson McCullers’ novel “The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter.” Locke starred opposite Alan Arkin, who was nominated for a Best Actor Oscar. She also received Golden Globe nominations for Best Supporting Actress and Most Promising Newcomer.

Locke then starred in “Cover Me Babe,” “Willard,” “A Reflection of Fear,” and “The Second Coming of Suzanne” and took TV roles in “The F.B.I.,” “Cannon,” “Barnaby Jones,” “Kung Fu,” “A Feast of Blood” and “Gondola.” She started working with Eastwood in “The Outlaw Josey Wales” in 1976, followed by “The Gauntlet,” “Every Which Way But Loose,” “Any Which Way You Can,” “Bronco Billy” and “Sudden Impact,” in which she murders the men who had raped her and her sister.

Turning to directing, she helmed 1986’s “Ratboy,” 1990’s “Impulse,” 1995’s TV movie “Death in Small Doses” and the independent film “Do Me a Favor,” starring Rosanna Arquette.

She sued Eastwood for palimony in 1989 and for fraud in 1995 and brought a separate action against Warner Bros. for allegedly conspiring with Eastwood to sabotage her directorial career. She settled the three cases out of court.

Locke underwent a double mastectomy in 1990. Her autobiography “The Good, the Bad, and the Very Ugly – A Hollywood Journey,” was published in 1997.

Locke starred recently with Keith Carradine in Alan Rudolph’s drama “Ray Meets Helen.”

She is survived by her husband Gordon Anderson.


LOCKE, Sondra (Sandra Louise Anderson)
Born: 5/28/1944, Shelbyville, Tennessee, U.S.
Died: 11/3/2018, Hollywood, California, U.S.A.

Sondra Locke’s westerns – actress:
Kung Fu (TV) – 1974 (Gwyneth Jenkins)
The Outlaw Josey Wales – 1976 (Laura Lee)
The Shadow of Chikara - 1977 (Drusilla Wilcox)
Bronco Billy – 1980 (Antoinette Lily)

RIP Charles Weldon

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Charles Weldon had a life that was bigger than life

DCPA News Center
By John Moore
December 9, 2018

The accidental actor went from a cotton field to the No. 1 song in America to a long life on the road and on stages including the Denver Center

Where do you even start to recount the life of actor, director and producer Charles Weldon?

He worked in a California cotton field until he was 17 – and a year later sang on the No. 1 hit song in America. He appeared on “The Dick Clark Show” and toured with James Brown and Fats Domino. He made his Broadway debut at 19 – less than a year after he took up acting – in a 1969 musical that starred none other than Muhammad Ali. In the 1970s, he was a self-described flower child who partied with Richard Pryor. Over the years he worked with Denzel Washington, James Earl Jones, Cicely Tyson and Alfre Woodard. Out of economic necessity, he had two long stints as a cross-country truck driver, tales from which became the basis for the DCPA Theatre Company’s world-premiere Mama Hated Diesels in 2010.

Charles Weldon Weldon never went to college. He liked to say “I studied life … at the College of Life.” The man known as much for his laugh as his long list of professional credits died of lung cancer on Friday night in New York. He was 78.

“He had a commitment to the arts, and he was adored by many for his hard work as an actor,” Lisa Mapps-Weldon, his daughter-in-law, said Saturday in announcing Weldon’s death. “The only way to describe his life is, ‘Well done.’ ”

Weldon, who called himself “the accidental actor” because all he wanted to be was a cabinet-maker, appeared in 12 DCPA Theatre Company productions over 20 years. He won the Colorado Theatre Guild’s 2006 Henry Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor for his work in Gem of the Ocean.

“Charles was an indispensable part of the maturation of the Denver Center Theatre Company,” former Artistic Director Donovan Marley said. “As he did with so many others, Charles changed my life. I cherish him as an artist and as a dear friend.”

When the Denver Center’s Israel Hicks made history as the first director to complete the entire August Wilson canon for one theatre company in 2009, Weldon had been in six of the 10 plays. Weldon often proclaimed Hicks, who died in 2010, to be the best theatre director in America. “You can get somebody who generally knows the plays,” Weldon said. “But you really want to get someone in the trenches who can get his actors to deliver what the words truly mean. That’s what Israel does with August Wilson.”

And Hicks loved Weldon right back, longtime Denver Center Stage Manager Lyle Raper said. “What a team.”

Marley said it stuns him to think that both Hicks and are now gone. “They changed Denver— especially Denver theater — forever,” he said.

Weldon eventually completed the Wilson cycle himself at various theatres across the country. When he finally got to meet Wilson, called by many “The Black Shakespeare,” Weldon said he told him: “Thank you for my house.”


WELDON, Charles
Born: 6/1/1940, Wetumka, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
Died: 12/7/2018, New York, U.S.A.

Charles Weldon’s western – actor:
Rooster Cogburn – 1975 (baliff)

RIP Rodney Kageyama

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Rodney Kageyama, actor and beloved Little Tokyo icon, dies at 77

Los Angeles Times
By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde
December 13, 2018

Performing the Ondo dance during Little Tokyo’s Nisei Week with Rodney Kageyama was not the best idea if you wanted your moves to be precise.

During the graceful and traditional dance performed during the annual festival celebrating Japanese American culture and history in downtown Los Angeles, Kageyama offered his own interpretation, moving this way and that, throwing off everyone’s choreography and making participants burst out laughing.

The Little Tokyo icon danced to his own beat, always, said Jan Perry, general manager of Los Angeles’ Economic and Workforce Development Department.

Kageyama died in his sleep early Sunday after a long struggle with numerous health issues, including HIV, according to his husband, Ken White. He was 77.

Over the last several decades, the actor and activist was a regular at events such as Nisei Week. He was Little Tokyo’s emcee of choice for community gatherings, and in the coming weeks, he had planned to continue the tradition of acting as Shogun Santa — the neighborhood’s Japanese Santa Claus. He also volunteered regularly at the Japanese American National Museum.

Kageyama also was a trailblazer for Asian Americans in Hollywood, acting in the “Gung Ho” film and television series and in the second and fourth editions of the “Karate Kid” franchise.

Before acting, Kageyama was into arts and crafts, and he worked on sets and costume design in college. But after a teacher asked him to fill in for another student during a play, Kageyama never looked back.

“He said, ‘Can you do these two lines?’” Kageyama said in a 2016 interview with Ken Fong for the “Asian America” podcast. “I go, ‘I’m not an actor.’ But I went in, did it, got the applause. ... It was like, I want it all! To hell with arts and crafts, I want to be an actor!”

Kageyama was an original member of the Asian American Theater Company and attended the American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco before moving to Los Angeles in 1979, when he joined East West Players as an actor and director. His acting career didn’t bring him long-lasting and glamorous fame, but it supported him financially and he earned his moment of glory.

San Francisco in the 1970s was an exciting time for Asian Americans in entertainment, and Kageyama was part of building those early stories and roles in theater, film and TV, said Amy Hill, a friend and actress who worked on “50 First Dates” and “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.” It was a time when actors were building the foundation for the wild successes of films such as “The Joy Luck Club and “Crazy Rich Asians.”

“Sketch comedy was a thing I didn’t even know existed,” Hill said. “He introduced me to Asian American theater.”

Hill remembers meeting Kageyama her first day at the theater company. He was directing the show and played the part — wearing a beret and scarf and flamboyantly bossing people around.

“He was a tiny little Napoleonic father figure,” she said, laughing at the memory. “Tiny and bossy!”

Navigating Hollywood wasn’t easy in the 1980s, Kageyama recalled in his interview with Fong, calling it a “white people industry” and “racist.” But he spoke of adding depth to the stereotypical roles he was asked to do.

“What else could we do? That’s all there was,” he told Fong. “If it wasn’t for us, you would not be here.”

Kageyama spoke publicly about his struggles as a young gay man, but they did not keep him from being unabashedly and fiercely himself. He met White in a San Francisco bar in 1979, and they moved to Los Angeles together soon after. They married when California legalized same-sex unions in 2013.

The two were polar opposites, said White, a self-described introvert who said he was in awe of Kageyama’s ability to maintain hundreds of close friendships.

“He courted me,” White said. “On my birthday, he took me out to dinner at a restaurant along the Embarcadero. He had a gift. He was a perfect date.”

Kageyama’s persona defied the odds, said Ellen Endo, a Little Tokyo Community Council board member.

“He was rather short,” she said. “He didn't have all the ‘actor attributes’ that we think of today.”

And while Japanese culture emphasized reserved politeness, Kageyama was anything but.

White recalled his husband lecturing him about how he should give Japanese guests a chance to say, “No,” three times before they say, “Yes.” But Kageyama wasn’t like that, White said. He wasn’t afraid to ask for help or to barge into a room, loudly and cheerfully.

In his later years, Kageyama began slowing down. He lived with HIV for decades, taking a daily regimen of pills, and suffered from a kidney illness. He was on dialysis for several years before his death and walked with a cane after he had both hips replaced.

Recognizing this physical shift in his life, Kageyama made a deliberate attempt to become a part of the Little Tokyo community in the 1990s, publicizing himself as an emcee and entertainer at events around the city, White said. Kageyama’s only family at the time were his grandparents, and he grew more and more attached to the extended family he created in Little Tokyo.

And despite being in and out of hospitals, Kageyama always seemed to bounce back.

“He kept going. It was crazy to watch him,” Hill said.

Illnesses and age would soon catch up to him, though, and in Facebook posts, Kageyama began documenting his health experiences with a new sense of mortality, Endo said. He was baptized a few years ago in the Centenary United Methodist Church and choked up during a speech at a reception afterward.

In a phone call a week before his death, Kageyama told Endo: “I’m on my last legs.”

“He asked me if people thought that,” Endo said.

Ultimately, though, he’d be pleased to know his Little Tokyo family was behind him, Hill said.

“He loved the attention.”

Kageyama is survived by his husband. A public memorial is scheduled for Jan. 12 at the Nishi Hongwanji Buddhist Temple in Los Angeles.


KAGEYAMA, Rodney
Born: 11/1/1941, San Mateo, California, U.S.A.
Died: 12/9/2018, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Rodney Kageyama’s western – actor:
Little House on the Prairie (TV) – 1982 (Agishi)

RIP Jim Petersmith

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Courier Journal
12/14/2018

Louisville - James Robert Petersmith, 64, died Thursday December 13, 2018 at Regis Woods Care Center in Louisville, KY.

Jim was born April 14, 1954 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa to Robert & Mary Ellen Petersmith. He is survived by his sons Mike (Ashton) and Dan (Ashton), and grandchildren Dean and Georgia. He is also survived by his brother John, sisters Margie Ridler, Kate Modzelewski, and Celee Philipp.

Jim was full of kindness, goodwill, and love for all people. No one was a stranger to Jim. There wasn't a mean or judgemental bone in his body. He will be greatly missed by his family and friends.

Jim played roles as a father, professor, banker, truck driver, pit boss, bartender, Johnny Appleseed, evil scientist, demented ghost, gunslinger, Klingon, and cult leader. He was an actor above all, and because of such, we can never truly know if he is now dead, or simply playing dead.

Either way, a celebration of life will be held on Sunday December 16th, between 3:00 and 6:00 P.M. at 501 Romara Place, Louisville Kentucky. A Petersmith family Mass will take place at Immaculate Conception Church in Cedar Rapids, Iowa at 5:30 P.M on December 29, 2018. A special thanks to his friend Dan Hagan, his sister Margie, and the loving staff at Regis Woods for their care and attention during his final years. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to Hosparus Health of Louisville (hosparushealth.org).


PETERSMITH, Jim (James Petersmith)
Born: 4/14/1954, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, U.S.A.
Died: 12/13/2018, Louisville, Knetucky, U.S.A.

Jim Petersmith’s western – actor:
Gunslingers – 2002 (Dean)

RIP Gerrick Winston

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Gerrick Winston
January 27th, 1970 - Monday, December 10th, 2018

Choice Memorial
December 14, 2018

With deepest sadness we share the sudden passing of Gerrick Dwayne Winston on December 10, 2018, at the age of 48. He is survived by his loving wife of 22 years, Karin, and their children, Katherine and Timothy. He will be sorely missed by his family in the United States: mother Gloria Fester (James); father George Elrod (Vanessa); brothers Maurice Hall (Judy), Marqus Hall, Darius Hall; sisters Zinnita Hall, Maurissa Fisher (Mack), Natalie Hall, Ashley Elrod, and many extended family members. He was also very close to many members of Karin’s family and will be sorely missed by them as well.

He was born in Chicago, IL and lived there until joining the Air Force. He was stationed in Michigan and served in the Persian Gulf as a crew chief. He moved to Orlando, FL to pursue diving and there he met the love of his life and his best friend. They later moved to Nashville, where he established his own diving club, then was “dragged to Canada” so that she could pursue her own education. There they built a beautiful life together with their children in whatever city they found themselves. They lived in Edmonton, Calgary, and London and Gerrick never failed to make friends everywhere they went. He was so proud to become a Canadian citizen on Canada Day, 2017.

He developed a passion for acting and film-making, which grew over time and became his life’s work. He was dedicated to increasing opportunities for minorities and bringing hope and light to a dark world. He was well loved by his colleagues for his hard work, sense of humour, and genuine love of people. He loved to tinker and build new gear for film-making. He took a million pictures of sunsets and sunrises (and selfies) and taught us all the wonder of magic hour.

He was active in his church as a quirky, outside-the-box teacher for the grade school kids and as the universally accepted baby whisperer. He met routinely with small groups of men, youth, leadership, and really anyone who would talk to him. He loved going for coffee and for breakfast even though he was not an early bird. He was musical with a great voice, strong rhythm, and an aptitude for the djembe.

He was also an avid weekend warrior, loving hikes and bike riding, tennis games and basketball, although his photos of dodgeball live eternally and he would never have passed up an opportunity to play football. He loved “da Bears”. His competitive nature extended to board games and card games, especially Dutch Blitz (even though he rarely won at that last one!). He was always a kid at heart and every piece of gear that he had either had to be “Gerrick-proofed” or replaced.
His faith was really about loving people to Jesus. He never hesitated to feed the hungry, befriend the lonely, or share the good news. The last thing in his calendar was family devotions. We know that today he is with Jesus in paradise.

A Celebration of Gerrick's Life will be held at Centre Street Church (3900-2nd Street NE - main sanctuary lower level) on Monday, December 17, 2018 at 1:00 pm.

In lieu of flowers, please take someone out for coffee or lunch, enjoy the sunset, seek the truth, and hug your loved ones. He would have wanted you to live life to the fullest every day.

To view and share photos, condolences and stories of Gerrick please visit www.choicememorial.com. Arrangements entrusted to the care of Choice Memorial Cremation & Funeral Services (403) 277-7343.


WINSTON, Gerrick (Gerrick Dwayne Winston)
Born: 1/27/1970, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A
Died: 12/10/2018, Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Gerrick Winston’s westerns, stuntmn, actor:
Hell on Wheels (TV) – 2012, 2013 (Freedman)
Klondike (TV) – 2014 (mill worker)
Diablo – 2015 [stunts]
Dead Again in Tombstone – 2017 (cowboy boss)
Wynona Earp – 2018 (fire chief)

RIP Penny Marshall

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Penny Marshall, ‘Laverne & Shirley’ Star, Director, Dies at 75

Variety
By Carmel Dagan
December 18, 2018

Penny Marshall, who starred alongside Cindy Williams in the hit ABC comedy “Laverne & Shirley” and then became a successful director, died on Monday night at her Hollywood Hills home due to complications from diabetes, Variety has confirmed. She was 75.

Marshall was the first woman to direct a film that grossed more than $100 million, the first woman to direct two films that grossed more than $100 million, and she was only the second woman director to see her film Oscar nominated for best picture.

“Laverne & Shirley” ran from 1976-1983 and proved an enormous success for ABC. It was the No. 3 show on television in 1975-76, No. 2 in 1976-77, and No. 1 in 1977-78 and 1978-79, spawning ancillary revenue in the form of merchandising, a record album and an animated series based on the show.

Marshall began her directing career by helming several episodes of “Laverne & Shirley.” With little experience, she replaced Howard Zieff as director on her feature directorial debut, the Whoopi Goldberg vehicle “Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” which for a comedy grossed a respectable $30 million in 1986. Far more successful, however, was Marshall’s second outing, the 1988 sentimental comedy “Big,” which sported a subtle, delightful, Oscar-nominated performance from Tom Hanks — and grossed $151 million worldwide, reportedly becoming the first film directed by a woman to gross $100 million.

Her third film, the critically acclaimed “Awakenings,” starring Robin Williams and Robert De Niro and based on the Oliver Sacks book, grossed $52 million but drew three Oscar nominations — including best picture and best actor for De Niro. The film was only the second directed by a woman that was nominated for best picture (Randa Haines’ “Children of a Lesser God” was the first, in 1986). Roger Ebert said: “Because this movie is not a tearjerker but an intelligent examination of a bizarre human condition, it’s up to De Niro to make Leonard not an object of sympathy, but a person who helps us wonder about our own tenuous grasp on the world around us.”

“A League of Their Own,” set in the world of women’s baseball, which existed temporarily during World War II, and starring Hanks, Geena Davis, Madonna and Rosie O’Donnell, grossed $132 million worldwide, including about $25 million overseas — very impressive for a movie about women’s baseball, not exactly a worldwide endeavor. The movie was selected in 2012 for inclusion in the National Film Registry, and it spawned a briefed television adaptation.

Marshall’s run of extraordinary success ended with her next film, the critically derided “Renaissance Man,” which starred Danny DeVito as a reluctant instructor in the U.S. Army. The New York Times’ Janet Maslin began her review by declaring, “If you’re looking for a learning experience, ‘Renaissance Man’ is ready to teach you what the words simile, metaphor, oxymoron and formula mean.”

She returned with some gusto with “The Preacher’s Wife,” starring Denzel Washington and Whitney Houston in a remake of a 1940s Christmas classic. The Times’ Stephen Holden was happy to declare, “The movie is a shrewdly conceived update of the 1947 comic heart-warmer ‘The Bishop’s Wife'”; after enumerating a few misgivings, he finished by saying, “All these these loose ends don’t keep ‘The Preacher’s Wife’ from producing a mild feel-good glow.” The film made $48 million.

After five years, Marshall returned with her final film, 2001’s “Riding in Cars With Boys,” starring Drew Barrymore, which drew so-so reviews and about $35 million worldwide. Peter Rainer in New York magazine said, “Beverly is supposed to be a bad girl running with the wrong crowd, but most of the time she seems to be right out of a serioso episode of ‘Laverne & Shirley.'”

More recently she had directed two episodes of the ABC sitcom “According to Jim” in 2009; the 2010 TV movie “Women Without Men,” in which she also starred along with Lorraine Bracco, Dyan Cannon and Roseanne Barr; and two episodes of Showtime’s “United States of Tara” in 2010 and 2011.

Marshall also produced a number of films, including many of her directing projects as well as Ron Howard’s “Cinderella Man,” starring Russell Crowe, and Nora Ephron’s disastrous feature adaptation of “Bewitched,” both in 2005.

But it all started, really, with “Laverne & Shirley.”

The show, which premiered in January 1976, scored in the ratings immediately, and everyone began to figure out how to generate ancillary revenue. Within months of the series’ debut, Marshall and Williams were asked to record an album, “Laverne & Shirley Sing”; they sang one song from the album, a cover of the Crystals’ hit “Da Do Ron Ron,” on a float during the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade that November.

An animated series, “Laverne & Shirley in the Army,” ran in ABC’s Saturday morning lineup in 1981, with Marshall and Williams voicing the characters; after 13 episodes, an animated Fonzie (voiced by Henry Winkler) and his dog were added, and the product was wedded to the animated version of “Mork & Mindy” to create “The Mork & Mindy/Laverne & Shirley/Fonz Hour.”

The show inspired a line of tie-in merchandise, including Laverne, Shirley, Lenny, and Squiggy dolls, a board game, puzzles, and a great deal more.

Marshall and Williams also made crossover appearances — back on “Happy Days,” where they’d started; on the 1978 pilot of “Mork & Mindy” together with Winkler’s Fonzie; and on the brief Garry Marshall-created show “Blansky’s Beauties” in 1977.

Meanwhile, “Laverne & Shirley” itself evolved; the first five seasons were set in Milwaukee, with the two leads employed in a brewery; the sixth season relocated the characters to Burbank, Calif.; and then, in the eighth and final season, Cindy Williams and her husband feuded with Paramount, the producers and Penny Marshall when Williams became pregnant, resulting in her abrupt departure from the show, although no one agrees exactly who was to blame. Marshall and Williams did not speak to each other for several years but eventually reconciled.

Carole Penny Marshall was born in the Bronx. Her mother taught tap dancing, while her father directed industrial films.

She attended the University of New Mexico for 2½ years. While there, Marshall got pregnant at 19, and soon thereafter married the father, a football player.

Marshall made her screen debut in 1968 with small roles in Richard Rush’s “The Savage Seven” and Jerry Paris’ “How Sweet It Is!,” on which her brother Garry was a writer. She also had small roles in Paris’ 1970 film “The Grasshopper,” but she found much more work on television, guesting on series including “That Girl,” “Love, American Style” and “The Bob Newhart Show.”

From 1972-74 she recurred on “The Odd Couple,” a show developed for TV by brother Garry, as Myrna, the schlumpy secretary employed by Jack Klugman’s Oscar Madison. (Marshall reprised the role for the 1993 reunion movie, “The Odd Couple: Together Again”).

She was a series regular on the critically acclaimed but short-lived CBS sitcom “Paul Sand in Friends and Lovers,” in which she played Janice, who frequently mocked her brother-in-law, played by Sand, for his romantic failures.

In 1975 she guested on “Mary Tyler Moore” but, more importantly, on “Happy Days,” where Marshall’s Laverne De Fazio and Cindy Williams’ Shirley Feeney first appeared on an episode where Fonzie chooses two girls from his little black book for a double date with Ron Howard’s Richie. (“Happy Days” was, like “The Odd Couple,” co-created by Penny’s helpful brother Garry Marshall); letters to the show revealed that viewers liked the Laverne and Shirley characters, and when Garry Marshall was asked by then ABC programming exec Fred Silverman to come up with an idea for another sitcom with which to build a Tuesday night comedy block, he devised “Laverne & Shirley.”

According to Marley Brant’s book “Happier Days: Paramount Television’s Classic Sitcoms, 1974-84,” Marshall and Williams had met on the set of the film “The Christian Licorice Store” in the late 1960s. Later “the two young women were hired as writers for a bicentennial spoof of American history that Francis Ford Coppola’s company was doing. The girls liked each other and became friends.”

Despite the helping hand of her brother Garry, who was offering to cast her in her own show, Penny Marshall was initially reluctant to take on “Laverne & Shirley.” But she did, and Williams, deciding it would be fun to work with her friend, agreed as well.

The chant of “Schlemiel! Schlimazel! Hasenpfeffer Incorporated!” that preceded Cyndi Grecco’s theme song “Making Our Dreams Come True” in the series’ opening montage was drawn from a song Penny Marshall and her friends used to sing on the way to school.

Garry Marshall created, produced, directed, and wrote for the series. Penny starred, and she directed a few episodes. Their sister Ronny Hallin was the casting director, and their father, Anthony Marshall, was also a producer.

The various feuds related to the show were settled over the years, and “Good Morning America” hosted a reunion of the cast in 2012.

In a Yahoo blog post, Kimberly Potts wrote: “Penny Marshall and Cindy Williams reunited (and proved they’ve still got some serious physical comedy skills) for a 2013 episode of the Nickelodeon series ‘Sam & Cat,’ in which they played the warring creators of a 1970s TV series called ‘Salmon Cat.’ ‘Sam & Cat’ stars Jennette McCurdy and Ariana Grande re-created the iconic ‘L&S’ show opening for the episode.”

Marshall’s candid autobiography “My Mother Was Nuts” was published in 2012.

Marshall was apparently diagnosed with lung and brain cancer came in 2009, but then she appeared to make a complete recovery.

Marshall was twice married, the first time to Michael Henry from 1961-63, the second time to actor-director Rob Reiner from 1971-79. Both marriages ended in divorce.

She is survived by a daughter by Henry who was adopted by Reiner, actress Tracy Reiner and sister Ronny Hallin, a TV director.


MARSHALL, Penny (Carole Penny Marshall)
Born: 10/15/1943, Bronx, New York City, U.S.A.
Died: 11/17/2018, Hollywood Hills, California, U.S.A.

Penny Marshall’s western – actress:
Evil Roy Slade (TV) – 1972 (bank teller)

RIP Peter Masterson

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Actor-director Peter Masterson dead at 84

Texas native took 'Best Little Whorehouse' to Broadway

Houston Chronicle
By Diane Cowen
December 19, 2018

Texas native Carlos Bee "Peter" Masterson, an actor, writer, producer and director, died Dec. 18 at his home in Kinderhook, N.Y., after a fall. The 84-year-old had been diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease in 2004.

Masterson, a relative of Houston philanthropists Carroll and Harris Masterson III, was born at St. Joseph's Hospital in Houston and was raised in Angleton, where his father, Carlos Bee Masterson, was the district attorney. He is a graduate of Rice University, where he studied history.

A private funeral service will be at 11 a.m. Jan. 6 at the Raymond E. Bond Funeral Home in Valatie, N.Y., and the Masterson family is making plans for a public memorial service later in New York City. Donations may be made in his name to The Actor's Studio.

Masterson is survived by his wife of 58 years, Carlin Glynn Masterson, their three children, Peter Carlos Bee Masterson, Alexandra Masterson and Mary Stuart Masterson, and six grandchildren.

His acting credits included "That Championship Season,""The Poison Tree,""The Great White Hope," and "The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald" Broadway plays as well as a starring role as Walter Eberhart in "The Stepford Wives" and a supporting role in "The Exorcist" movies.

He was best known for co-writing and co-directing "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas" Broadway musical, for which he was nominated for two Tony Awards, and for directing "The Trip to Bountiful" film, adapted from his cousin Horton Foote's play. That movie earned actress Geraldine Page a Best Actress Academy Award.


MASTERSON, Peter (Carlos Bee Masterson Jr.)
Born: 6/1/1934, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.
Died: 12/18/2018, Kinderhook, New York, U.S.A.

Peter Materson’s westerns – actor, director:
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1966 (Jimmy)
Blood Red – 1989 [director]

RIP Donald Moffat

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Donald Moffat, 87, a Top Actor Who Thrived in Second Billings, Dies

The New York Times
By Robert D. McFadden
December 20, 2018

Donald Moffat, the character actor who nailed Falstaff’s paradoxes at the New York Shakespeare Festival, a grizzled Larry Slade in Eugene O’Neill’s “The Iceman Cometh” on Broadway and a sinister president in the film “Clear and Present Danger,” died on Thursday in Sleepy Hollow, N.Y. He was 87.

His daughter Lynn Moffat said the cause was complications of a recent stroke.

It might have surprised many Moffat fans to learn that this stage, screen and television actor was a naturalized, thoroughly Americanized Englishman who in the early 1950s had been a player with the Old Vic theater company, the London crucible of many of Britain’s most ambitious performing arts.

Mr. Moffat (pronounced MAHF-at) had long ago lost all traces of his British accent. And in a career of nearly a half-century, he amassed virtually all of his remarkable 220 credits in the United States — roles in some 80 stage plays (he directed 10 more), about 70 Hollywood and television movies and at least 60 television productions, including series, mini-series and anthologies.

Moving to America as a 26-year-old actor was the realization of a dream for Mr. Moffat, his daughter Lynn recalled in a telephone interview.

“One reason he was anxious to leave England was the class system,” she said. “He hated it. And he loved Americans.

“He met many American G.I.s in Totnes, in Devonshire, where he lived as a boy. It was in the American sector for the D-Day invasions. He also met many Americans after the war at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts, where he studied, including his first wife, Anne Murray.”

American critics called Mr. Moffat a consummate pro who could play any supporting role from Shakespeare, O’Neill, Ibsen, Beckett, Pinter or Shaw, as well as the lawyers, doctors, husbands and tough guys who are the stock in trade of movies and television — characters that make the stars shine and place the accomplishments of the ensemble above personal glory.

Mr. Moffat was rarely accorded top billing. But when he played Falstaff, Shakespeare’s bravest coward, wisest fool and most ignoble knight, in Joseph Papp’s 1987 production of “Henry IV, Part 1” at the Delacorte Theater in Central Park, he was the indisputable star. Mainly a comic figure, Falstaff, a sidekick to Prince Hal, the future King Henry V, embodies a depth more common to major Shakespeare characters.

“He is the con artist extraordinaire and the liar par excellence,” Mr. Moffat told The New York Times before going on. “He has no income, but he lives fairly well, entirely by his wits. He gets trapped into being exposed, but he always finds his way out — so on to another level. There are all kinds of variations on that theme throughout the play.”

Reviewing the production for The Times, Mel Gussow hailed Mr. Moffat’s “rich, full portrait,” adding: “His Falstaff seems himself like a character actor: a man of many parts. He is a self-dramatizer, easily able to switch from barroom roisterer to battlefield campaigner (and coward), while always retaining a comic sense of equilibrium and an affectionate regard for Hal, who will, of course, in the subsequent play, abandon him.”

Mr. Moffat also appeared at the Delacorte in 1989 in the title role of Shakespeare’s “Titus Andronicus,” and in 1992 as Touchstone, the fool who outwits one and all, in “As You Like It.”

With his long face and bushy eyebrows, Mr. Moffat was a familiar figure to audiences, even to fans who could not quite remember his name. He was almost never out of work — especially in the 1970s and ′80s, his peak years, when he sometimes packed into his annual schedule four movies, several plays in New York or regional theaters and a half-dozen television programs.

Mr. Moffat won an Obie for his 1983 portrayal of an artist’s aging father in an Off Broadway production of Tina Howe’s “Painting Churches.” He received two Tony Award nominations for best actor in 1967 for his portrayals of Lamberto Laudisi in Pirandello’s “Right You Are (if You Think You Are)” and of Hjalmar Ekdal, presiding over a household of lies, in Henrik Ibsen’s “The Wild Duck.”

He was also nominated for Drama Desk Awards as an abusive husband and father in Joanna McClellan Glass’s “Play Memory,” on Broadway in 1984, and as Larry Slade, the grubby fellow drinker of the saloon philosopher Hickey (Jason Robards Jr.) in a well-received 1985 Broadway revival of O’Neill’s “The Iceman Cometh.”

On television, Mr. Moffat appeared as Dr. Marcus Polk in the ABC soap opera “One Life to Live” (1968-69), as Rem the android in the CBS science-fiction series “Logan’s Run” (1977-78) and as the Rev. Lars Lundstrom in “The New Land,” the 1974 ABC drama series about Swedish immigrants. He was also seen in episodes of “Mannix,” “Ironside,” “Gunsmoke” and “The Defenders.”

Among Mr. Moffat’s better-known film roles were as Garry, the station commander, in John Carpenter’s “The Thing” (1982), about an extraterrestrial monster that terrorizes researchers in Antarctica; as Lyndon B. Johnson in Philip Kaufman’s “The Right Stuff” (1983), about America’s first astronauts; and as an arrogant corporate lawyer in Costa-Gavras’s “Music Box” (1989), about a Hungarian immigrant accused of having been a fascist war criminal.

His motion picture credits also included “Rachel, Rachel” (1968), “The Trial of the Catonsville Nine” (1972), “The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid” (1972), “Showdown” (1973), “Earthquake” (1974) and “Winter Kills” (1979).

Perhaps his most memorable film role was as the corrupt president — with perfect pitch to make the hero look good — in “Clear and Present Danger” (1994), the Harrison Ford vehicle based on the Tom Clancy novel. When the C.I.A. agent Jack Ryan (Mr. Ford) bursts into the Oval Office and threatens to expose a plot involving President Bennett (Mr. Moffat), outrage crackles across the desk.

The president: “How dare you come in here and lecture me!”

Ryan: “How dare you, sir.”

The president: “How dare you come into this office and bark at me like some little junkyard dog? I am the president of the United States!”

Donald Moffat was born in Plymouth, England, on Dec. 26, 1930, the only child of Walter and Kathleen (Smith) Moffat. His parents ran a boardinghouse in Totnes, in western England. He attended the local King Edward VI School, performed national service with the Royal Artillery from 1949 to 1951 and studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London until 1954.

That year he married Anne Ellsperman, an actress known professionally as Anne Murray. The marriage ended in divorce. In 1970 he married the actress Gwen Arner. Mr. Moffat died in hospice care at Kendal on Hudson, a retirement community in Sleepy Hollow.

Besides his wife and his daughter Lynn, he is survived by another daughter, Catherine Railton, from his second marriage; two children from his first marriage, Kathleen, known as Wendy, and Gabriel Moffat; 10 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Mr. Moffat also had a home in Hermosa Beach, Calif.

Mr. Moffat made his London debut at the Old Vic in 1954, playing the First Murderer in “Macbeth.” The next year he appeared there in several Shakespeare plays: as Sir Stephen Scroop in “Richard II,” as Earl of Douglas in “Henry IV, Part 1” and as the Earl of Warwick in “Henry IV, Part 2.” He made his film debut as an uncredited lookout aboard the H. M. S. Ajax in “The Pursuit of the Graf Spee” (1956).

Mr. Moffat moved to the United States in 1956, settling first in Oregon, his first wife’s home state. He worked as a bartender and lumberjack but soon resolved to return to acting and stay in America. He made his Broadway debut as two characters in “Under Milk Wood” (1957), the Dylan Thomas comedy about the inhabitants of a fictional Welsh village.

His working pace, still brisk in the 1990s, tapered off into retirement a few years later. One of his last appearances was as an aging, penniless former President Ulysses S. Grant in an Off Broadway production of John Guare’s “A Few Stout Individuals” (2002). Ben Brantley, reviewing it for The Times, said Mr. Moffat “registers a touching quality of imperiousness brought to its knees.”


MOFFAT, Donald
Born: 12/26/1930, Plymouth, Devon, England, U.K.
Died: 12/20/2018, Sleepy Hollow, New York, U.S.A.

Donald Moffatr’s westerns – actor:
Here Come the Brides (TV) – 1969 (Marlowe)
The High Chaparral (TV) – 1970 (Henry Simmons)
Lancer (TV) – 1970 (Porter)
Bonanza (TV) – 1970, 1971 (Thatcher, Judge MacIntyre)
The Devil and Miss Sarah – 1971 (TV) - 1971
The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid – 1972 (Manning)
Showdown – 1973 (Art Williams)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1974 (Joseph Graham)
The New Land (TV) – 1974 (Reverend Lundstrum)
The Call of the Wild (TV) – 1976 (Simpson)
Little House on the Prairie (TV) – 1978 (Nathaniel Mears)
The Chisolms (TV) – 1980 (Enos)
Houston: The Legend of Texas (TV) 1986
Desperado (TV) – 1987 (Malloy)
Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (TV) 1997 (Walt Whitman)  

RIP Max Cisneros

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Riverside Funeral Home / Albuquerque, New Mexico

Max passed away surrounded by his loving family on Tuesday August 28, 2018.  He was preceded in death by his son Michael in 2015.  He is survived by his wife of 71 years, Elida Gutierrez Cisneros, four siblings Frank Cisneros, Robert and wife Carmen Cisneros, Vivian Lujan and Lupe Kraus.  His children: Max Cisneros Jr, Victoria Cannaday and husband Gary, Mark Cisneros and Donna.  Grand children Max Cisneros III and wife Emily, Alexandria Cisneros and Kenny, Jonathan Cisneros, Mara Cisneros and Chris, Alyssa Cisneros, Ayla Cisneros Wilder and Avery and Austin Cannaday.   Great Grandchildren, Andrew, Matthew, Rachel, Raquelle, Jonathan Mark, Josiah and Aria Rae.

Max was a jack of all trades and never faced a task that intimidated him.  After a year of living on his own and working in the California ship yards, he talked his mother, Soledad in to allowing him to enlist in the US Marine Corps in 1945.  His active service dates were 1945 to 1947 and 1950 to 1952. Making him a Veteran of WWII and The Korean War.  He was honorably discharged in 1952 as a cold weather instructor.

In 1954, he completed x-ray technician training at the Lovelace Clinic in Albuquerque.  While at Lovelace he and Elida were privileged to be a part of the x-ray team that conducted exams on the first 7 U.S. Astronauts: Grissom, Schirra, Glenn, Cooper, Carpenter, Shepard and Slayton.

In the early 1960’s he went to work for DePuy Medical Instruments, introducing the first artificial hip and knee replacements in the Southwest.

He subsequently attended SMU Perkins School of Theology.  Where he was ordained as a Deacon of the Methodist Church with charges in Bethel Methodist Church in Moriarty, Santa Fe Methodist, Wagon Mound Methodist and Trinity Methodist in Albuquerque. In 2007 he was named Layman of the Year for the Rio Grande Conference of the United Methodist Church.

As a member of the Screen Actors Guild of America (SAG), Max had speaking parts in such movies, Convoy starring Kris Kristofferson and Ali McGraw, Thomasina and Bushrod, Captain Vargas, The Take and Return of the Lone Ranger. He also worked as a location scout for the movie “My Name is Nobody”, David Bowie’s “The Man Who Fell to Earth” and Once Upon a Time in the West.

A prolific and multi-talented artist starting in the 1970’s and well in to the 2000’s, he worked in several mediums including: painting, pottery, jewelry, wood carvings and metal.

In the 1970’s Max served as Program Director for the Villa Hispana at the NM State Fair where he helped build it in to one of the premier attractions at the Fair.  In addition, he traveled the state recruiting NM Artists and promoting NM Arts and Crafts.

In the 1980’s Max served as an assistant to Albuquerque Mayor, David Rusk.  He started as a Community liaison (trouble shooter).  With subsequent assignments such as: Assistant to the Sunport Director, Public Information Officer for the Solid Waste Department.  During this time he worked on the transition of the Albuquerque Sunport to International status, headed the first certification for the Aviation Police, development of the Montessa Park and Cerro Colorado landfills and the fencing of irrigation ditches in Albuquerque’s South Valley.

From 1991 to 2008, Max dabbled as a boxing trainer and professional ring owner. He worked in various capacities with such notable local boxers as Bob Foster, Johnny Tapia, Danny Romero, Holly Holms and Tommy Cordova.

In 2005, Max founded the Desert Ministries in an effort prevent deaths and suffering along the U.S. Border with Mexico.  The program provided water, hygienic kits, first aid kits and blankets at remote locations along the border from Laredo, TX to Mexicali, CA.

In 2012 declining health forced him to turn over the ministry to other entities who continues the work today.

It is ironic that a man who helped pioneer joint replacements would suffer complications from knee replacement surgery leading to his declining health.

Max was an avid hunter, fisherman and outdoor enthusiast. He personified the motto “Semper Fi”, as he stuck by his family through good times and bad.

In lieu of flowers the family requests donations in his name to:  El Buen Samaritano UMC, 700 Granite NW Albuquerque, NM 87102 or to the NM Cancer Center Foundation, 4901 Lang Ave. NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109


CISNEROS, Max (Maximo Cisneros)
Born: 6/8/1927, Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A.
Died: 8/28/2018, Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A.

Max Cisneros’ westerns – actor:
Thomasina & Bushrod – 1974 (Kane)
The Legend of the Lone Ranger 1981 (Second Chief)

RIP Henning Palner

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Actor Henning Palner is dead - 86 years old

Fyens Stiftstidende
December 20, 2018

Henning Palner participated in the film "Komtessen" and acted during most of his career in the theater.

Actor Henning Palner died on Thursday at the age of 86 years.

This was announced by his grandson Morten Palner to Ekstra Bladet.

Throughout his career, Henning Palner acted as an actor in the theater and participated in a wide range of films.

Henning Palner participated in film successes such as "Komtessen" in 1961, "Vil du se min smukke navle" in 1978 and "Solkongen" in 2005. Also the television series "Huset på Christianshavn", "Gøngehøvdingen" and "Bryggeren".

He was admitted to the Royal Danish Theater School in 1956.

As a graduate, he traveled to the Aalborg Theater, where in Karen Marie Løwert's time as director he had roles in, among other things, the pieces "Gidslet" and "Miss Julie".

Since then he was associated with a host of other theaters, among them Scala, ABC Theater, Danish Theater, Grønnegårdsteater and Folketeatret.

At the age of 78, he contributed to Romeo and Julie's rehearsal "Et stykke om forelskelse i livets efterår", who had only elderly actors in the acting role.

In 2009 he was a voice of the older man Carl Frederiksen in the animation film "Op".

“He was the theater man. But he also had a career in film”, says Morten Palner to Ekstra Bladet.

“It's very humble. But it is nice to think that he has been relatively healthy and healthy in his mind to the last.

Henning Palner's distinct deep voice will also be known by the likes of audiobooks. Where he has spoken in over 200 titles, as well as having toured the country with talks about his life on the slanted boards.


PALNER, Henning
Born: 7/18/1932, Helsingør, Denmark
Died: 12/20/2018, Mindebog, Denmark

Henning Palner’s western – actor:
Wilde west (TV) – 1965 (Oscar Wilde)

RIP Lucho Gatica

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Mexican Film Bulletin
By David Wilt
December 2018

Singer Lucho Gatica died in Mexico City of  pneumonia on 13 November 2018; he was 90 years old. Luis Enrique Gatica Silva was born in Rancagua, Chile in August 1928.  He first became popular singing boleros in the early 1950s, and later in the decade moved to Mexico, where he lived for the rest of his life. 

In addition to his musical career, Gatica appeared in a number of motion pictures, sometimes as a musical star and other times in significant acting roles.  His films include A sablazo limpio (with
Viruta and Capulina), Viva la parranda, and Me casé con un cura. [Note: some sources erroneously indicate Gatica appeared in Dimensiones ocultas aka Don't Panic in
1986, but this is actually his son Luis, who was incorrectly billed as "Lucho Gatica."]

Lucho Gatica was married 3 times: first to actress Mapita Cortés (1960-1981, they had 5 children), then to Diane Lane Schmidt (1982-85, one child), and finally to Lesley Deeb (1986-2018, one child)


GATICA, Lucho (Luis Enrique Gatica Silva)
Born: 8/11/1928, Rancagua, Chile
Died: 11/13/2018, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico

Lucho Gatica’s western – actor:
Viva la parranda (1960)

RIP Marjorie Steele

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Film star and sculptor who became an Irish citizen

Obituary: Marjorie Steele-FitzGibbon’s third marriage led her to Ireland and discovery of her talent for sculpture

The Irish Times
December 22, 2018

Artist Dr Marjorie Steele-FitzGibbon, an American-born and naturalised Irish citizen, enjoyed success in three creative professions: Hollywood film star, stage actor, and artist in both painting and sculpture. She married three times and was the mother of four children and one step-child. Such a remarkable profile had at its root the drive that convinced her that “she could walk through walls”.

She was the second-eldest of four daughters of her second-generation Swedish immigrant mother, Ora, and salesman father, Jack Steele, whose mother was a native American. Her rise from humble origins living in “an honest-to-God log cabin” in Reno, Nevada, to Hollywood fame and marriage to a millionaire and subsequent marriages to an English actor of film and stage, and an Irish-American writer, is the stuff of romantic fiction. Yet her talents, striking beauty and sheer grit did not shield her from domestic tragedy, premature deaths and an inherited temperamental imbalance, all of which she faced with integrity and courage.
Confidence of youth

When she was 18 years old, Marjorie Steele, dressed in homemade yet elegant clothes, left her then home in a poor suburb of San Francisco with all that drive and confidence of youth and headed for Los Angeles. There her creativity found direction and opportunity: the Los Angeles County Museum of Art for painting, and the Actors Lab for stage-craft, where she won a scholarship.

She also took a part-time job as a cigarette girl in Ciro’s Nightclub on Sunset Strip where a regular patron, the multimillionaire film-producer playboy Huntington Hartford, was dazzled by her fresh beauty amid all the glitz. Much to the chagrin of his date, film actress Lana Turner, he bought all her cigarettes – although he didn’t even smoke. They married a year later, in 1949, she an impressionable 19-year-old – “she was mad for him” – he an older, more worldly-wise thirty-nine. The “Cinderella wedding” offered rich pickings to the paparazzi and provoked snide comments by the art critics as Marjorie rose from acclaimed stage-actress in Tennessee Williams’s New York production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1955) to movie star. When on tour with a mixed-race crew Marjorie challenged Actors’ Equity to change a racially biased law regarding separate accommodation by defying the ban herself.

The glamorous couple played host to Hollywood celebrities like Elizabeth Taylor and Natalie Wood, yet Marjorie confided that while they were “all very interesting, they were just people”. Influenced by his artist wife, “Hart” channelled his wealth into promoting the arts by establishing an arts colony near Pacific Palisades in Los Angeles.

Marjorie relocated her parents to an impressive ranch in the Santa Monica Mountains; yet, despite his dream come true, her father took his own life, an act which had repercussions for his family.

The marriage lasted seven years until Marjorie filed for divorce, when Huntington’s old, philandering ways resurfaced. They had two children, John and Catherine. The drug-related death of her daughter at 28 was a profound sorrow for Marjorie. She always acknowledged her love for “Hart” and her indebtedness to him for educating her and encouraging her creativity. They divorced in 1960.
Whirlwind romance

Through “the best divorce lawyer”, Marjorie met her second husband, the handsome actor of television and film fame, Dudley Sutton – the gay biker in Leatherboys (1964) – with whom she had a whirlwind romance. They married in 1961, entailing Marjorie’s renunciation of her considerable alimony. They had a son, Peter, with whom Marjorie later lived until being hospitalised in 2017. Marjorie, no longer acting, socialised with many of his famous theatrical colleagues such as Richard Harris, Peter O’Toole, John Hurt and the director Joan Littlewood.

Marjorie went for rehabilitation to an exclusive London health farm and there she met another housemate and fellow American, Constantine Fitzgibbon, the former husband of the food writer Theodora Fitzgibbon. Constantine’s brilliant mind captivated her. Summing up her previous romantic life, Marjorie described herself as “a self-destructive fool”.

Another divorce and marriage ensued. Marjorie was Constantine’s fourth and last wife and he her third husband. Constantine was a writer of Anglo-Irish extraction. They had a daughter, Oonagh. He also adopted Marjorie’s son, Peter. After a short spell in west Cork, the family lived in Killiney in south Co Dublin, and then in the city.
Sculpture

Honeymooning in Greece ,the stunning classical sculptures there were the catalyst that drew her into sculpture and prompted her to wonder why she had wasted so much time working in two dimensions. Thus began a prolific period of artistic renewal which her great friend Micheál Mac Liammóir, describing her many sculpted heads of Irish literati, said: “Ms Fitzgibbon was born to do what she had done; fill the room with uncannily living persons.”

She first exhibited at The Brown Thomas Gallery in Dublin in 1970 and soon cultivated a reputation as one of “the foremost exponents of traditional sculpture in Ireland achieving an authentic, formal likeness in the treatment of her subjects”. (Myles Campbell, Sculpture 1600-2000, 2014)

Her public works beloved of Dubliners include her iconic, larger-than-life-size statue of James Joyce in North Earl Street and a bust of the author in St Stephen’s Green facing Joyce’s alma mater, Newman House. Visitors to RTÉ are reminded of the charismatic presenter Eamon Andrews by her life-size statue in the foyer.

Dr Marjorie Steele-Fitzgibbon is survived by her daughter, Oonagh Brault, sons Jack and Peter Fitzgibbon, step-son Francis Fitzgibbon, grandchildren Hannagh and Niamh Jacobsen, and her ex-husband Dudley Sutton.


STEELE, Marjorie
Born: 8/27/1930, Reno, Nevada, U.S.A.
Died: 1/19/2018, Dublin, Ireland

Marjorie Steele’s westerns – actress:
Tough Assignment – 1959 (Margie Reilly)
Face to Face – 1952 (bride)

RIP Luigi Giuliani

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Italian actor and model Lugi Giuliani died in Rome, Italy on December 21st. He was 78. Born on July 18, 1940 in San Giuliano Terme, Tuscany, Italy, he appeared in fourteen films from 1961 to 1966 sometimes under the aliases of Jim Reed and Louis McJulian. He’s bet remember for his appearance with Sophia Loren in “Boccaccio ‘70”, After his film career ended he was employed by Giorgio Armani as a model and spokesperson. He appeared in two Euro-westerns: “The Golden Sheriff” (1966) (Arizona Roy) using the alias Luis McJulian and “The Ruthless Colt of the Gringo” 1966 (Sol Lester) using the alias Jim Reed.

GIULIANI, Luigi
Born:7/18/1940, San Giuliano Terme, Tuscany, Italy
Died: 12/21/2018, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Luigi Giuliani’ westerns – actor:
“The Golden Sheriff” (1966) (Arizona Roy) using the alias Luis McJulian
“The Ruthless Colt of the Gringo” 1966 (Sol Lester) using the alias Jim Reed.
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