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RIP Pierre Jalbert

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January 9, 1925 - January 22, 2014 Pierre Jalbert, Captain of the 1948 Canadian Olympic Ski Team, actor, film editor and ADR specialist, passed away at age 89 in Los Angeles on January 22nd, following complications from a recent heart attack. A native of Quebec City, he moved to Los Angeles in 1952, and became a film and dialogue editor at Universal and MGM. Credits include Blackboard Jungle, Bad Day at Black Rock, Ben Hur, Mutiny on the Bounty, An American in Paris, Tea and Sympathy, Something of Value. In 1961, the agent of Pierre's wife Joy recommended he audition for the role of a French-speaking WWII GI in the TV drama, "Combat!" Pierre played the role of "Caje" from 1962-1967. He was also featured in The Richard Petty Story, Ski Bum, Ski Lift to Death and Airport '79. Pierre then returned to the cutting room and ADR booth at Paramount, and worked on Concorde, Bloodline, Grease, The Godfather (including the famous baptism intercut sequence at the end of the movie), and the miniseries Shogun - where he was nominated for an Emmy for sound editing. Pierre excelled in home remodeling, masonry, and artistic crafts, and enjoyed French history, Eastern philosophy, fine wine and good conversation. Pierre is survived by his loving wife of 53 years, former actress and ballerina Joy Lee. Memorial service details are pending.



JALBERT, Pierre Paul

Born: 1/9/1925, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada


Died: 1/22/2014, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.


 


Pierre Jalbert’s westerns – actor:


Bad Day at Black Rock – 1955


Custer (TV) – 1967 (Auguste Grule)


The Virginian (TV) – 1968 (Jules)



RIP Eric Lawson

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Los Angeles Times

January 26, 2014


 


1941 - 2014 Eric Lawson, former actor and Marlboro Man, has died. He was 72 years old. Eric was a working actor whose career spanned multiple decades but was cut short due to an accident sustained while filming the movie "The Shooter." His last years were spent in retirement with family and friends. He died of respiratory failure due to COPD at his home in San Luis Obispo. Born in Glendale, CA during a blackout, Eric spent his childhood in desert locales as his father worked in the gold mines. At an early age, he began working in tunnel construction and moved to selling real estate before his acting career took off. His credits include "Gymkata,""The Son of the Morning Star,""King Cobra,""Tall Tales" and various television shows and commercials. He was particularly proud of an NBC interview he gave regarding the negative effects of cigarette smoking. Never one to sit idly by, Eric was an avid professional photographer and enjoyed camping and metal detecting. He leaves behind a rich family legacy and is survived by his wife, Susan Lawson; his children Scott Lawson, Sheri (John) Mendon, Don (Heather) Lawson, Erica (Werner) Walian, Chanda (Sean) Brown and Corey Lawson; eighteen grandchildren and eleven great grandchildren. He is also survived by his brothers Monte (Anita) Lawson and Mike (Mary) Lawson; and many nieces and nephews. Sister in law Cheryl (Jason) Jennings and grandson Todd Mendon preceded him in death. Services will be held 2pm on Friday, January 31st at the chapel for The Church On The Way, 14344 Sherman Way, Van Nuys, CA..


 


 


LAWSON, Eric (Eric Layton Lawson)


Born: 1941, Glendale, California, U.S.A.


Died: 2014, San Luis Obispo, California, U.S.A.


 


Eric Lawson’s westerns – actor:


The Last Ride of the Dalton Gang (TV) – 1979 (Willie Powers)


Guns of Paradise (TV) – 1989 (Roy)


Son of the Morning Star (TV) – 1991 (Fred Gerard)


The Adventures of Brisco County Jr. (TV) – 1993 (outlaw)


Bonanza: Under Attack (TV) – 1995 (Morgan)


Walker, Texas Ranger (TV) – 1995 (Vic Landry)


Tall Tale – 1995 (sheriff)


The Shooter – 1997 (Paul)


The Magnificent Seven (TV) – 1998 (Sergeant Darcy)


RIP Pete Seeger

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Pete Seeger dies at 94; balladeer was America's conscience

 


An advocate for peace and civil rights, Pete Seeger helped spark the folk music revival with his five-string banjo and songs calling for justice.


 


Los Angeles Times


By Claudia Luther


January 27, 2014, 11:53 p.m.


 


Pete Seeger, the iconoclastic American singer, songwriter and social activist who did battle with injustice in America armed with a banjo, a guitar and the transformative power of song, has died. He was 94.


 


Seeger died Monday at New York Presbyterian Hospital, his grandson Kitama Cahill-Jackson told the Associated Press.


 


A veteran of the labor, peace and civil rights movements, Seeger remained relevant as an activist into his 90s. He was equally musician and revolutionary, playing a major role in the folk music revival that began in the late 1950s while helping to craft the soundtrack of 1960s protests through such songs as "We Shall Overcome,""Where Have All the Flowers Gone" and "Turn! Turn! Turn!"


 


"At some point, Pete Seeger decided he'd be a walking, singing reminder of all of America's history," Bruce Springsteen said at the all-star Madison Square Garden concert marking Seeger's 90th birthday in 2009.


 


"He'd be a living archive of America's music and conscience, a testament to the power of song and culture to nudge history along, to push American events towards a more humane and justified ends," said Springsteen, who had performed Woody Guthrie's "This Land Is Your Land" with Seeger at the Lincoln Memorial concert marking President Obama's 2008 inauguration.



Gifted at connecting with audiences, Seeger called his ability to inspire regular folks to sing along his "cultural guerrilla tactic.""There's no such thing as a wrong note as long as you're singing it," he told the 15,000-strong crowd at his birthday celebration.


 


Seeger's life of music and political activism could be summed up in "The Hammer Song," the enduring anthem he wrote more than 60 years ago with his good friend Lee Hays to support the
progressive political movement in the U.S.:

 


If I had a hammer


 


I'd hammer in the morning


 


I'd hammer in the evening


 


All over this land/ I'd hammer out danger


 


I'd hammer out a warning


 


I'd hammer out love between my brothers and my sisters


 


All over this land.


 


Popularized by Peter, Paul and Mary in the 1960s, the song embodied the heart of Seeger: his musicality, his activism, his optimism and his lifelong belief that songs could and should be used to build a sense of community to make the world a better place.


 


"I'd really rather put songs on people's lips than in their ears," he said.


 


Seeger inspired a generation of folk singers and musicians that included the Kingston Trio and Joan Baez, who once said: "We all owe our careers to Pete Seeger."


 
As a member of two influential folk groups, the Almanac Singers and the Weavers, Seeger wrote or co-wrote "We Shall Overcome," the anthem of the civil rights movement based on an early 20th century gospel song; "Where Have All the Flowers Gone," which became an anti-Vietnam War protest song; and another political anthem, "Turn! Turn! Turn!," which turned to a passage from the Bible — "to everything there is a season"— for the lyrics.




SEEGER, Pete (Peter Seeger)
Born: 5/3/1919, Patterson, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 1/27/2014, New York City, New York, U.S.A.

Pete Seeger's western - composer:
Gavilan- 1968

RIP Gordon Hessler

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Director Gordon Hessler Dead at 83 – Worked with Vincent Price and Ray Harryhausen

 


By Tom Stockman


January 27, 2014


 


Gordon Hessler passed away in his sleep January 19th at the age of 83. An underrated horror director, Hessler cut his teeth on the Hitchcock Presents TV show then helmed several genuinely creepy and atmospheric British films. He worked with Vincent Price three times, all with scripts by Christopher Wicking; SCREAM & SCREAM AGAIN (1970) was an outrageous sci-fi/horror hybrid that presented a berserk view of swinging 60′s London (and also starred Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee). CRY OF THE BANSHEE (1970) was gritty and mean-spirited featuring Price as a sadistic monarch with an intense hatred of witchcraft and a sardonic sense of macabre. THE OBLONG BOX (1969 – co-starring Chris Lee) was a dark and moody tale of voodoo, body snatching, medical experiments, brotherly betrayal, and being buried alive.


 


Hessler’s MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE was like a Vincent Price movie without Price (it starred Herbert Lom and Jason Robards). It mixed Poe with Phantom of the Opera and was an interesting take on Paris’ historic Grand Guignol theater. One of his last films, GIRL IN A SWING (1988) was an effective, low-key ghost story worth seeking out. Hessler directed Ray Harryhausen’s GOLDEN VOYAGE OF SINBAD in 1973, a film that’s always lived in the shadow of 7th VOYAGE as an inferior sequel but has aged well. It’s a terrific fantasy film worthy of big screen reassessment (and was recently released on Blu-ray by Twilight Time). No one could mistake his KISS MEETS THE PHANTOM OF THE PARK for a good movie, but the 1978 TV movie plays like a live-action Scooby-Doo episode and has a huge cult following. He also directed two martial arts films in the late ‘80s starring Sho Kusugi, the best known actor/martial artist during the 1980s ninja cinema craze: PRAY FOR DEATH (1985), and RAGE OF HONOR (1987). RIP Mr. Hessler.


 


 


HESSLER, Gordon


Born: 12/12/1930, Berlin, Berlin, Germany


Died: 1/19/2014, London, England, U.K.


 


Gordon Hessler’s western – director:


Kung Fu (TV) - 1975


RIP John Cacavas

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Composer John Cacavas Dies at 83

 


Soundtrack.Net


By Jason Kirby


JANUARY 29, 2014


 


 


John Cacavas, composer of films such as Airport 1975, Airport '77, Horror Express, and the TV series Kojak, passed away yesterday. In addition to composing, Cacavas also served as a conductor with the London Symphony Orchestra and the Beverly Hills Pops. He was also an author whose works included his autobiography, Do-Re-Mi: My Life in Music, and a novel titled A Song for Lynbidium. He was nominated twice for an Emmy.


 


John Cacavas divided his time between his homes in Beverly Hills and London. He is survived by his wife, Bonnie, and their three children.


 


 


CACAVAS, John
Born: 8/13/1930, Aberdeen, South Dakota, U.S.A.


Died: 1/28/2014


 


John Cacavas’ western – composer:


California Gold Rush (TV) - 1981


RIP Aiche Nana

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Aiche Nana has died , her striptease shocked Italy


 

In 1958 dolce vita improvised a striptease at a restaurant, immortalized by Secchiaroli


 


ROME – She died last night at Aurelia Hospital in Rome, the actress and dancer of the belly dance Aiche Nana from complications of a disease from which she suffered for a long time.


 


Turkish, although in the biographies is a native of Beirut, would have turned 78 in February. She was best known for the noise that was made ​, in the years of the dolce vita, her impromptu striptease in a mondanissimo restaurant in Trastevere, Rugantino, attended by Italian and foreign celebrities of the time and immortalized by a service of the king of the paparazzi Tazio Secchiaroli.


 


Italy was in black and white and that episode of 1958, which saw her stay with simple lace panties wearing after a long sinuous dance, was much discussed as to make it famous enough to deserve a mention in the film “Dolce Vita” by Federico Fellini .


 


But it also had a trial in court for indecent exposure. Moreover, the same story brought back to a battle in court against the consummate fiction Life by paparazzi, who in 2008 went back on stage for the episode that Channel 5 had marked her life, directed by Pier Francesco Pingitore. The director was later acquitted little more than a month ago by the Court of Anzio originates from defamation of character.


 


Gives news of his death her lawyer Joseph Torticollis, which emphasizes that ''pain due to legal defeat has contributed to the worsening of her condition.''


 


 


NANA, Aiche (Kiash Nanah)


Born: 2/?/1936, Beirut, Lebanon


Died: 1/29/2014, Rome, Lazio, Italy


 


Aiche Nana’s westerns – actress:


The Sheriff Won’t Shoot – 1965 (Desiree Vermont)


Thompson 1880 – 1966 (Fanny)


Gun Shy Piluk - 1968 (Daisy Sugar Candy)

RIP Christopher Jones

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'Ryan's Daughter' Star Christopher Jones Dies at 72

 


He also starred in “The Looking Glass War” and TV’s “The Legend of Jesse James” before leaving Hollywood after the murder of Sharon Tate at the peak of his brief career in the '60s.


 


The Hollywood Reporter



By Mike Barnes


January 31,2014, 9:47 p.m. PST

 


Christopher Jones, an heir apparent to James Dean who starred in such films as The Looking Glass War and Ryan’s Daughter before quitting show business at the height of his brief but dazzling career, has died. He was 72.


 


Jones, who also toplined the Samuel Z. Arkoff cult classic Wild in the Streets (1968) and played the title character in the ABC series The Legend of Jesse James, died Friday at Los Alamitos (Calif.) Medical Center of complications from cancer, Paule McKenna told The Hollywood Reporter. McKenna had four children with Jones.


 


In Ryan’s Daughter (1970), directed by famed British helmer David Lean, Jones played Randolph Doryan, a dashing but shell-shocked British officer who has an affair with a married Irish woman (Sarah Miles) during World War I. He and Miles have a memorable lovemaking scene in the woods.


 


In 2007, Jones told a British newspaper that he was having a real-life affair during the filming of the movie with Sharon Tate, the actress and wife of director Roman Polanski. When she was brutally murdered by members of Charles Manson’s gang in Los Angeles in August 1969, Jones was devastated and gave up acting, McKenna said.


 


Quentin Tarantino offered Jones the part of Zed in Pulp Fiction (1994) but he refused, and Peter Greene got the job. Jones’ next and final screen appearance would come in the comedic crime movie Mad Dog Time (1996), directed by Larry Bishop, son of comic actor Joey Bishop.


 


“He had excitement. He was a movie star,” Tarantino said in a 1999 episode of E! True Hollywood Story. “He looked like James Dean, but Chris Jones didn’t take himself seriously like James Dean. He was a big comer -- and with the right person handling and directing, he could still be as big as anybody.”


 
Jones grew up an orphan in Jackson, Tenn. He tried out for the Actors Studio in New York and appeared on Broadway in The Night of the Iguana in 1961. Later, he married Susan Strasberg, the daughter of Actors Studio founder Lee Strasberg.


 


Jones came to Hollywood and landed a gig as the notorious outlaw in The Legend of Jesse James, but the Western, facing steep competition on Monday nights from The Lucy Show on CBS and Dr. Kildaire on NBC, lasted just one season, airing from September 1965 to May 1966.


 


After he and Susan Strasberg appeared in Chubasco (1967), Jones played Max Frost, the malevolent rock star who becomes president, in American International Pictures’ Wild in the Streets. The satire also starred Shelley Winters and, in one of his first film, Richard Pryor.


 


In Frank Pierson’s The Looking Glass War (1969), adapted from the spy novel by John le Carre, Jones portrays a civilian who is recruited by British intelligence to go behind the Iron Curtain on a mission.


 


Jones also starred in Three in the Attic (1968) as a man who gets his comeuppance from three girls who discover he’s been three-timing them.


 


He most recently had a career as an artist and sculptor; his oil painting of legendary actor Rudolph Valentino was displayed at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery.


 


In addition to McKenna, survivors include his children Seagen, Calin, Tauer, Delon, Jeremy, Christopher and Jennifer.


JONES, Christopher (William Frank Jones)
Born: 8/18/1941, Jackson, Tennessee, U.S.A.
Died: 1/31/2014, Los Alamitos, California, U.S.A.

Christopher Jones' western - actor:
Th Legend of Jesse James (TV) - 1965-1966 (Jesse James)

RIP Philip Seymour Hoffman

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Actor Philip Seymour Hoffman dies at 46
 
USA Today

By Carly Mallenbaum and Alison Maxwell


February 2, 2014


 


Academy Award-winning actor Philip Seymour Hoffman has died at age 46, multiple media outlets reported citing law enforcement officials.


 


In late May, Hoffman finished a 10-day stint in a rehab program for a drug problem that included snorting heroin.


 


The actor had struggled with substance abuse in the past, but had been clean for 23 years.


 


Hoffman has three children — Cooper, 10; Tallulah 7, and Willa, 5 — with costume designer Mimi O'Donnell.


 


Hoffman won the best actor Oscar award for Capote in 2006. He was nominated for supporting actor Oscars for his roles in The Master, Doubt and Charlie Wilson's War.


 


He most recently starred as Plutarch Heavensbee in the summer blockbuster The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. He will reprise the role in The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part I, set for a November release. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part II is currently filming.


 


Hoffman received wide acclaim for his stage work as well.


 


On Broadway, he earned Tony nominations acting in revivals of the classics True West, Long Day's Journey Into Night and Death of A Salesman. Salesman teamed him with director Mike Nichols, with whom Hoffman had worked earlier in an acclaimed Public Theater Shakespeare in the Park staging of The Seagull, alongside Meryl Streep and Natalie Portman.


 


He was a member of New York's LAByrinth Theater Company, whose other members include Ethan Hawke, Bobby Cannavale and acclaimed playwright Stephen Adly Guirgis. Hoffman worked as a director as well, earning Drama Desk Award nominations for his direction of Guirgis's Jesus Hopped the 'A' Train and Our Lady of 121st Street.


 


 


HOFFMAN, Philip Seymour


Born: 7/23/1967, Fairport, New York, U.S.A.


Died: 2/2/2014, Manhattan, New York, U.S.A.


 


Philip Seymour Hoffman's wester - actor:


Cold Mountain - 2003 (Reverend Veasey)



RIP John Ragin

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John S. Ragin was a veteran television and occasional film actor who, in 1993, appeared as Doctor Christopher on Star Trek: The Next Generation in the sixth season episode "Suspicions". He is best known for his portrayal of another physician, Dr. Robert Asten, on the hit series Quincy, M.E., co-starring with Robert Ito and Garry Walberg.

 


Ragin had previously worked with Garry Walberg in a 1967 episode of The Invaders which featured Seymour Cassel. Ragin appeared in a second episode of the series that same year, this time with Lawrence Montaigne and Alfred Ryder co-starring. Ragin and Walberg would again appear together in a 1971 episode of Robert Foxworth's series Storefront Lawyers (on which Ragin had previously that same year with Meg Foster and John Rubinstein) and again in the 1977 TV movie The Amazing Howard Hughes (also featuring Barry Atwater and Ray Buktenica).


 


In 1968, Ragin appeared in an episode of The Wild Wild West with John Abbott. From 1966 through 1968, Ragin appeared on four episodes of Felony Squad, working with the likes of Robert DoQui, Vince Howard, Mark Lenard, Alan Oppenheimer, Alfred Ryder, Vic Tayback, and Jason Wingreen. He went on to appear with TOS star Leonard Nimoy in two 1970 episodes of Mission: Impossible, including one with Kor actor John Colicos. In 1987, he appeared on Murder, She Wrote, in an episode with future Star Trek: Voyager star Kate Mulgrew, as well as Vince Howard and Robert Walker, Jr.


 


Other television series on which Ragin has appeared include Gomery Pyle, U.S.M.C., The F.B.I. (working with Stephen Brooks, Meg Foster, Gary Lockwood, Hal Lynch, and Robert Walker, Jr.), Get Smart, The Bold Ones: The Lawyers (two episodes, including one with Steve Ihnat and Sandra Smith), Ironside (three episodes, including one with Bill Quinn and another with Ed Begley, Jr., James Gregory, and Vince Howard), Night Gallery (in an episode with William Windom), Alias Smith and Jones (with Logan Ramsey), Cool Million (with Joseph Ruskin), Barnaby Jones (with Lee Meriwether, Bill Erwin, Bill Quinn, and William Smithers), Mannix (with Fritz Weaver), The Magician (with Biff Elliot, Mark Lenard, Ian Wolfe, and Anthony Zerbe), Cannon (with Alfred Ryder), McCloud (starring Diana Muldaur, in an episode with Michael Ansara and Jeff Corey), Harry O (starring Anthony Zerbe), Jigsaw John (in an episode with Michael Ansara and Lee Delano), City of Angels (with Darleen Carr), Emerald Point N.A.S. (with Bruce Gray), and Riptide (with Kim Darby and Ken Olandt).


 


Ragin has also been seen in such television movies as 1969's The Whole World Is Watching and The Lonely Profession (both featuring Kermit Murdock, with the former starring Steve Ihnat), 1971's The Forgotten Man (with Percy Rodriguez), and 1974's Killer Bees (starring Edward Laurence Albert). The same year, Ragin and TOS guest actress Jan Shutan played Walter and Ruth Cramer in the television movie Senior Year. This movie spawned a short-lived series, Sons and Daughters later that year in which Ragin and Shutan reprised their characters.


 


During the 1990-91 television season, Ragin was a regular on the soap opera Santa Barbara, during which time Nicholas Coster, Henry Darrow, and Louise Sorel were a part of that show's cast. In addition, Ragin has had roles in the feature films The Parallax View (1974, with Kenneth Mars and Anthony Zerbe), Earthquake (also released in 1974 and co-starring George Murdock), and Moving Violation (1976, co-starring Stephen McHattie, Dick Miller, and Jason Wingreen). His last appearance was on Next Generation.


 


 


RAGIN, John (John Stanley Ragin)


Born: 5/5/1929, Irvington, New Jersey, U.S.A.


Died: 4/14/2013, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.


 


John Ragin’s westerns – actor:


Laredo (TV) – 1966 (Karl)


The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1968 (Reverend Hastings)


Bearcats (TV) – 1971


Alias Smith and Jones (TV) – 1971 (Edward Fielding)


RIP Richard Bull

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Character Actor Richard Bull, ‘Little House On The Prairie’s’ Nels Oleson has died at the age of 89, Highlight Hollywood News.

 


Highlight Hollywood has confirmed the death of character actor Richard Bull, best known as Nels on the hit 1970s drama “Little House on The Prairie.”  He was 89.  Richard Bull was an American film actor, stage actor and television actor. He is best known for his performance as Nels Oleson, the kindly proprietor of Oleson’s Mercantile and the long suffering husband and father. 


 


Actress and children’s advocate Alison Arngrim confirmed the news. “Today we lost my TV “Pa,” the wonderful Richard Bull. In real life, he was just as kind, intelligent, thoughtful and reasonable as you’d expect  Nels Oleson to be. Tonight my husband and I are sitting down to watch  an obscure TV show that Richard and his wife Barbara both worked on  called (“Nichols”), also starring James Garner. Richard said it was one the best shows he ever did.”


 


Bull also starred in “Normal” (2003) and “The Thomas Crown Affair” (1968). He has been married to his beautiful wife Barbara Collentine since April 13, 1948.



 

BULL, Richard


Born: 6/26/1924, Zion, Illinois, U.S.A.


Died: 2/3/2014, Calabasas, California, U.S.A.


 


Richard Bull’s westerns – actor:


Shotgun Slade (TV) – 1960 (doctor)


The Virginian (TV) – 1962 (Doc Spence)


Gunsmoke (TV) – 1962, 1972 (Nort, Deems)


Destry (TV) – 1964 (bartender)


Iron Horse (TV) – 1966 (Abel Spender)


Hour of the Gun – 1967 (Thomas Fitch)


The Stalking Moon – 1968 (doctor)


Here Come the Brides (TV) – 1969 (Carver)


Bonanza (TV) – 1969, 1972 (Jess Hill, Mr. Gowdman)


Death Valley Days (TV) – 1970 (Black Bull)


Lawman – 1971 (Dusaine)


Man and Boy – 1971 (Thornhill)


Ulzana’s Raid – 1972 (Ginsford)


High Plains Drifter – 1973 (Asa Goodwin)


Little House on the Prairie (TV) – 1974-1983 (Nels Olesen)


Little House on the Prairie: Look Back at Yesterday (TV) – 1983 (Nels Olesen)


Little House on the Prairie: The Last Farewill (TV) – 1984 (Nels Olesen)


Little House on the Prairie: Bless All the Dear Children (TV) – 1984 (Nels Olesen)


Guns of Paradise (TV) – 1989 (Judge Hollister)

RIP Ma Wu

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Veteran actor WU Ma passed away from lung cancer this morning in Hong Kong, according to local media reports. He was 71 years old.

 


Wu – whose real name is Fong Hong-yuen — joined Shaw Brothers Studios in 1963 as a contract actor. In addition to acting, he also served as an assistant director on several films by CHANG Cheh.


 


He made his directorial debut in 1970 with Wrath of the Sword (1970) and spent most of the decade working as a director – including several productions credited as co-directed with Chang.


 


In the 1980's, Wu shifted his focus back to acting, becoming a familiar face to audiences in the modern classics Project A (1983), Mr. Vampire (1985) and Peking Opera Blues (1986).


 


His most famous role came in A Chinese Ghost Story (1987), playing a rapping, ghost-catching Taoist priest. Wu received one of his three Hong Kong Film Awards nominations for Best Supporting Actor in the role.


 


Wu remained a prolific character actor in recent years with supporting roles in 14 Blades (2010) (pictured), White Vengeance (2011), My Own Swordsman (2011) and I Love Hong Kong (2011).


 


His final role is believed to be in the forthcoming action film Fighting, starring LU Yi and Peter HO.


 


Over his nearly five decade-long career, Wu has directed 49 films and acted in over 240 films.


 


 


WU, Ma (Fong Hong-yuen)


Born: 8/18/1942, Tianjin, China


Died: 2/4/2014, Hong Kong, China


 


Ma Wu’s western – actor:


Shanghai Express – 1986 (imprisoned security officer)


RIP Ann Carter

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Ann Carter a former American child actress, who worked with dozens of film stars, compiling an "unimaginably distinguished résumé" despite an acting career which "lasted only slightly more than a decade" died 27th after a long battle with ovarian cancer. Ann’s daughter Carol Newton Brown informed Tim Lucas of Video WatchDog of her passing.  Ann is best known for her starring role as Amy Reed in the film “The Curse of the Cat People” (1944), and also acted alongside stars including Humphrey Bogart, Katharine Hepburn, Bing Crosby, Fredric March and Barbara Stanwyck among others. Ann contracted polio in her early teens which is what led to the end of her career in film. She eventually bounced back but it took several years.

 


She is survived by her husband Crosby Newton of more than 57 years, three children Carol, David and Gail and three grandchildren.


 


 


CARTER, Ann (Ann Lois Carter)


Born: 6/16/1936, Syracuse, New York, U.S.A.


Died: 1/27/2014, Tahoma, Washington, U.S.A.


 


Ann Carter’s westerns – actress:


Last of the Duanes – 1941 (Lucy Cannon)


The Virginian – 1946 (school girl)


RIP Nico Nicolaiewsky

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Death of actor and musician Nico Nicolaiewsky

 


Aged 56, was admitted to Windmills Hospital for treatment of leukemia



 

The actor, musician, songwriter and humorist Nico Nicolaiewsky died on Friday Febraury 7 at age 56. He suffered from leukemia and was admitted to the Hospital of Windmills, in Porto Alegre. According to the medical record, Nico passed away at 5:30, due to related complications Acute Myeloid Leukemia.


 


Known, among other works, the interpretation of the conductor in the show Pletskaya Tangos & Tragedies, in which he shared the stage with Hique Gomez, Nico was admitted for treatment in January. The summer season of the show at the Theatro São Pedro in Porto Alegre, was canceled due to the illness of the artist.


 


Besides ... Tangos, which was created in 1984 and is displayed in summer seasons in St. Peter uninterruptedly since 1987, Nicolaiewsky enjoyed a prolific musical career, which included participation from the legendary Musical Saracura, even in the 1970s, until a comic opera, the Seven Faces of Truth, released in 2002.


 


The musician lived for 10 years in Rio de Janeiro, where he studied with maestro Hans-Joachim Koellreuter. Beyond The Seven Faces ... recorded two solo albums, Nico Nicolaiewsky (1996 ), with waltzes and lyrical songs, some included in the soundtrack of the movie Amores


(Domingos Oliveira, 1997) and Where Is the Love ? (2007) , produced by John Ulhôa guitarist Pato Fu.


 


With Musical Saracura, which was responsible for the keyboards and vocals, released a self-titled LP in 1982. The band mixed influences from MPB Tropicalia, Rock Gaucho and regional music - along with composer Mario Barbará, made ​​a series of shows and got to participate in an edition of the California Native Song in Uruguayana.


 


The Saracura was also formed by Silvio Marques (guitar), Chaminé (bass and vocals) and Gatinha (who was later replaced on drums by Fernando Pezão, and establish partnerships with names like Zé Flávio and Leo Henkin.


 


Another record left by Nicolaiewsky, besides solo albums and disco with Saracura, is the DVD Tangos & Tragedies in Cathedral Square, released in 2007.


 


The "Sborniano" show also gave an animated feature film directed by Otto War and first presented at the Festival de Gramado 2013. The film, titled Until Sbornia Us Part, is being converted to 3D and should be released in theaters later in 2014. Will be the first 3D production of Rio Grande do Sul


 


Nico was married to actress Marcia Canto and leaves a daughter, Nina Nicolaiewsky, born in 1993.



 


NICOLAIEWSKY, Nico (Nelson Nicolaiewsky)


Born: 6/9/1957, Porto Alegre, Brazil


Died: 2/7/2014, Porto Alegre, Brazil

Nico Nicolaiewsky's western - actor:
Netto e o Domado de Cavalos - 2008 (Catarino)

RIP Leonora Amar

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Brazilian actress Leonira Amar died on February 2, 2014 in Rio de Janiero, Brazil of heart failure. She would have been 88 next month. Born on March 1, 1926 in Rio de Janiero and started her career at a very young age, on ‘Mayrink Veiga’,  Tupy, on Rio de Janeiro national radio. In 1943, she emigrated to the United States and started singing in nightclubs in Los Angeles, then went to México. Because of her beauty and talent she attracted the attention of producer Raul de Anda, who invited her to participate in films. She known for her appearances in such films as “El mago” (1949) and “Veneno” (1952) and “Captain Scarlett” (1953).

 


 


AMAR, Leonora


Born: 3/1/1926, Rio de Janiero, Rio de Janiero, Brazil


Died: 2/2/2014, Rio de Janiero, Rio de Janiero, Brazil



Leonora Amar’s western – actress:

Bajo el cielo de Sonora – 1948 (Oralia)


RIP Jimmy Karath

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James Speros Karathanasis (aka Jimmy Karath) passed away peacefully on January 29, 2014, after his courageous battle with COPD. He was born on July 21, 1942 in Hyannis, MA. to Speros and Aurelia Karathanasis. Jimmy was a musical prodigy. He sang with the Mitchell Boys' Choir and at 16, was under contract to Colpix Records. His songs "Young and Impatient" and "Dreamer" can still be heard on the internet. Jimmy worked as an actor and had many film and TV credits. He was married to Effie Dirbokis, and their union produced his beautiful and beloved daughter Christina Aurelia. Jimmy had a generous, compassionate heart and boundless enthusiasm for life. He loved and was extremely proud of his family and his Greek heritage. He is survived by his daughters Sheri and Christina, his sisters Francie and Kym, his brother in laws John and Philippe, his nephews Jonathan and Eric, three grandchildren and three great grandchildren. He will be greatly missed by his family and many friends. And now he brings his beautiful voice to sing in a heavenly choir. Yassou, Zemakee mas!


 


KARATH, Jimmy (James Speros Karathanasis)


Born: 7/21/1942, Hyannis, Massachusetts, U.S.A.


Died: 1/29/2014, Ventura, California, U.S.A.


 


Jimmy Karath’s westerns – actor:


Fury (TV) – 1955 (Buck Wilson)


My Friend Flicka (TV) – 1956 (Paul)



RIP Shirley Temple

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Shirley Temple, former Hollywood child star, dies at 85

 



Reuters

By Eric M. Johnson


Tuesday February 11, 2014 9:25am EST


 


Shirley Temple Black, who lifted America's spirits as a bright-eyed, dimpled child movie star during the Great Depression and later became a U.S. diplomat, died late on Monday evening at the age of 85, her family said in a statement.


 


Temple Black, who lured millions to the movies in the 1930s, "peacefully passed away" at her Woodside, Calif., home from natural causes at 10:57 p.m. local time (0157 ET), surrounded by her family and caregivers, the statement said on Tuesday.


 


"We salute her for a life of remarkable achievements as an actor, as a diplomat, and most importantly as our beloved mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, and adored wife of fifty-five years," the statement said.


 


As actress Shirley Temple, she was precocious, bouncy and adorable with a head of curly hair, tap-dancing through songs like "On The Good Ship Lollipop." As Ambassador Shirley Temple Black, she was soft-spoken and earnest in postings in Czechoslovakia and Ghana, out to disprove concerns that her previous career made her a diplomatic lightweight.


 


"I have no trouble being taken seriously as a woman and a diplomat here," Black said after her appointment as U.S. ambassador to Ghana in 1974. "My only problems have been with Americans who, in the beginning, refused to believe I had grown up since my movies."


 


Black, born April 23, 1928, started her entertainment career in the early 1930s and was famous by age 6. She became a national institution and her raging popularity spawned look-alike dolls, dresses and dozens of other Shirley Temple novelties as she became one of the first stars to enjoy the fruits of the growing marketing mentality.


 


Shirley was 3 when her mother put her in dance school, where a talent scout spotted her and got her in "Baby Burlesk," a series of short movies with child actors spoofing adult movies.


 


Movie studio executives took notice. In 1934 she appeared in the film "Stand Up and Cheer!", and her song and dance number in "Baby Take a Bow" stole the show. Other movies in that year included "Little Miss Marker" and "Bright Eyes" - which featured her signature song "On the Good Ship Lollipop" - and in 1935 she received a special Oscar for her "outstanding contribution to screen entertainment."


 


She made some 40 feature movies, including "The Little Colonel,""Poor Little Rich Girl,""Heidi" and "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm," in 10 years, starring with big-name actors like Randolph Scott, Lionel Barrymore and Jimmy Durante.


 


Shirley was a superstar before the term was invented. She said she was about 8 when adoring crowds shouting their love for her made her realize she was famous.


 


"I wondered why," she recalled. "I asked my mother and she said, 'Because your films make them happy.'"


 


She was such a money-maker that her mother - who would always tell her "Sparkle, Shirley!" before she appeared before an audience - and studio officials shaved a year off her age to maintain her child image.


 


Her child career came to an end at age 12. She tried a few roles as a teenager - including opposite future president Ronald Reagan in "That Hagen Girl" - but retired from the screen in 1949 at age 21.


 


The Screen Actors Guild gave her its 2005 Life Achievement Award, and in her acceptance speech posted on the group's website, she said: "I have one piece of advice for those of you who want to receive the Lifetime Achievement Award: start early!"


 


Temple was only 17 in 1945 when she married for the first time to John Agar, who would eventually appear with her in two movies. Their five-year marriage produced a daughter.


 


In 1950 she wed Charles Black in a marriage that lasted until his death in 2005. She and Black had two children.


 


Black's interest in politics was sparked in the early '50s when her husband was called back into the Navy to work in Washington.


 


She did volunteer work for the Republican Party while attempting to make a comeback with two short-lived TV series, "Shirley Temple's Storybook" in 1959 and "The Shirley Temple Theater" a year later.


 


Seven years after that she ran unsuccessfully for Congress in California but stayed in politics, helping raise more than $2 million for Richard Nixon's re-election campaign.


 


She was later named to the United States' team to the United Nations and found that the her childhood popularity was an asset in her new career.


 


"Having been a film star can be very helpful on an international basis," Black once said. "Many people consider me an old friend."


 


Sometimes the public found it hard to accept her in diplomatic roles. But in 1989 she pointed out her 20 years in public service were more than the 19 she spent in Hollywood.


 


In 1974, Ford appointed Black ambassador to Ghana and two years later made her chief of protocol. For the next decade she trained newly appointment ambassadors at the request of the State Department.


 


In 1989, President George H.W. Bush made Black ambassador to Prague - a sensitive Eastern European post normally reserved for career diplomats. Black had been in Prague in 1968, representing a group fighting multiple sclerosis at a conference, when Soviet-bloc tanks entered to crush an era of liberalization known as the "Prague Spring."


 


President Gustav Husak did not seem daunted by the prospect of a U.S. ambassador who had witnessed the invasion. He told her that he had been a fan of "Shirleyka."


 


In 1972, Black was diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent a mastectomy. She publicly discussed her surgery to educate women about the disease.


 


Black is survived by her children, Susan, Charlie Jr., and Lori, her granddaughter Teresa and her great-granddaughters Lily and Emma, the family statement said. It said private funeral arrangements were pending.


 


 


TEMPLE, Shirley (Shirley Jane Temple-Black)


Born: 4/23/1928, Santa Monica, California, U.S.A.


Died: 2/10/2014, Woodside, California, U.S.A.


 


Shirley Temple’s westerns – actress:


The Pie Covered Wagon – 1932 (Shirley)


To the Last Man – 1933 (Mary Stanley)


Fort Apache – 1948 (Philadelphia Thursday)


RIP James Hannah

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Chicago Comic James Hannah — who wrote for Steve Harvey, Chris Rock — dies at 45


 


Chicago Sun-Times


By Maureen O’Donnell


February 10, 2014 9:08PM


 


Comic James Hannah, a local club favorite who went on to write for Steve Harvey and Chris Rock, has died, according to friends and family.


 


Mr. Hannah, 45, a  Lane Tech alum, collapsed at his Dallas-area home Monday, said his brother, Phillip.


 


He broke into the business with open-mic nights at Chicago’s Funny Firm. Mr. Hannah began opening for headliners like Harvey, who met him at Chicago’s All Jokes Aside comedy club, said Raymond Lambert, former owner of the club and producer of the movie “Phunny Business: A Black Comedy.”


 


“Even then, he was a very, very talented writer,” Lambert said. “I think I would classify it as observational. I think he had very good insight into human nature and observations and could be very brutal and very honest in that delivery, which sort of set him apart.”


 


Harvey liked what he heard and hired him to write for his WB sitcom, “The Steve Harvey Show,” for the six years it aired, according to Lambert and Phillip Hannah.


 


Mr. Hannah also appeared at Chicago’s Cotton Club on bills with headliner Bernie Mac, said comedian Godfrey Danchimah, another Lane Tech alum.


 


He wrote for TV’s “Meet the Browns,” “My Wife and Kids” and “Cedric the Entertainer Presents.” He appeared on “P. Diddy Presents the Bad Boys of Comedy” and BET’s “Comic View.” For Chris Rock, he wrote for the comedian’s “Bigger & Blacker” HBO special, his brother said. Mr. Hannah also weighed in on current events and issues in the African-American community in YouTube snippets he called TruthPaste.


 


Among the performers tweeting about his death Monday were comedian London Brown and Damon Wayans Jr., who appears on TV’s “New Girl.” Comic Deon Cole called him a mentor, friend and one of the “greatest writers.’’


 


“James taught me how to write,” Cole said. “He even wrote a few of my bits that I still do to this day. He was the greatest to ever do it, period.”


 


In a tribute on the Humor Mill website, Shawn Harris wrote that “every time he would see me do stand-up he would come up to me and help me ‘bump up’ my material . . . Which would make it even stronger . . . he was very witty, smart and clever . . . Gonna miss this dude.”


 


“He’ll be remembered as a very smart comedian. He wrote a lot. He did a lot of edgy material, spoke his mind. Sometimes he put his foot in his mouth, but he was unapologetic,” said Danchimah, who recalled Mr. Hannah doing stand-up in the halls of Lane Tech in the mid-1980s.


 


When comedians departed the stage, they might find a waiting Mr. Hannah, who offered to tweak and improve their jokes. Sometimes, it got on their nerves. But his fine-tuning often helped. “A lot of times, you would use it and it actually worked,” Danchimah said.


 


“James Hannah was a genius at writing,” said Mary Lindsey, owner of the Chicago club Jokes and Notes. “When he performed at All Jokes Aside he used to always say to me, ‘Mary Lindsey, they not gonna see me coming’ — meaning he was headed to LA to make something happen, and he did.”


 


After work in Los Angeles was affected by the writers’ strike, Mr. Hannah moved with his family to Dallas, where he was planning to write for a radio show, his brother said.


 


He grew up in the South Shore neighborhood. His early comedic influences included Eddie Murphy, Richard Pryor and Robin Harris, his brother said.


 


When he moved away, Mr. Hannah missed Harold’s Chicken and Garrett’s Popcorn, Phillip Hannah said.


 


In addition to his brother, he is survived by his wife, Crystal; his children, Christopher, Cameron and Chloe; his parents, Essamina Freeman and James Hannah, and his sisters, Leah Hannah and Charisma Griffin.


 


Services are expected to be held in both Dallas and Chicago, his brother said


 


 


HANNAH, James


Born: 1968, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.


Died: 2/10/2014, Dallas, Texas, U.S.A.


 


James Hannah’s western – stuntman:


From Dusk Till Dawn 3: The Hangman’s Daughter – 1999


RIP Eric Bercovici

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Eric Bercovici, Emmy-Winning Writer-Producer of Miniseries Including ‘Shogun,’ Dies at 80


 

Variety


By Carmel Dagan


February 12, 2014 | 05:46PM PT


 


 


Eric Bercovici, the writer-producer of TV movies and miniseries who shared an Emmy for the 1980 NBC epic “Shogun” with author James Clavell, died Sunday, February 9, at his home in Honolulu.
He was 80.

 


Jerry London, director of “Shogun,” said of Bercovici after learning of his death, “He supported me and fought all the battles behind the scenes while I was making the film. There will be not be another one like Eric.”


 


Bercovici also wrote with Clavell the 1988 NBC miniseries adaptation of the author’s “Noble House.” Separately he penned and produced the 1977 ABC miniseries “Washington: Behind Closed Doors.” For the bigscreen, Bercovici penned director John Boorman’s memorable 1968 film “Hell in the Pacific,” in which Lee Marvin and Toshiro Mifune played an American and Japanese soldier marooned on the same island during WWII.


 


Bercovici’s first screen credit was for co-writing, with his father Leonardo Bercovici, the 1961 film “Square of Violence,” directed by Leonardo Bercovici and starring Broderick Crawford. Other feature film credits include 1962′s “Conquered City,” starring David Niven; 1968 Western “Day of the Evil Gun,” starring Glenn Ford; Elvis Presley-Mary Tyler Moore vehicle “Change of Habit,” on which Bercovici was one of several writers; 1972 Western “The Culpepper Cattle Co.”; and 1975 Western “Take a Hard Ride.”


 


For TV he wrote for series ranging from “Love, American Style” to “I, Spy,” “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.,” “Mission: Impossible” and “Hawaii Five-O.”


 


During the 1970s and ’80s Bercovici also wrote a number of TV movies.


 


Bercovici is survived by his wife Chiho, whom he met while making “Shogun.”


 


 


BERCOVICI, Eric


Born: 2/27/1933, New York City, New York, U.S.A.


Died: 2/9/2014, Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.A.


 


Eric Bercovici’s westerns – screenwriter:


The Virginian (TV) – 1966


Day of the Evil Gun – 1968


The Outcasts (TV) - 1969


The Culpepper Cattle Co. - 1972


Take a Hard Ride – 1975


Cowboy (TV) - 1983


RIP Campbell Lane

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Cam was sent off with much love on January 30, 2014 in his 78th year with his best friend and soul mate, Diane his bride of 32 years, by his side.

 


He is lovingly remembered by his children, DeeDee, Geoff (Liz, Scythia), Tisha, and Randy (Anna, Katherine); his grandchildren, Raven, Devon, Hayden and Ethan; and his great granddaughter, Jade. He will also be deeply missed by his siblings, Deirdre, Heather, Peter and Chris and their families; his mother-in-law, Peggy Wood; sister-in-law, Laura Eldridge; brother- and sister-in-law Andy and Donna Wood; his special niece and nephew, Morgan and Ryan Wood; and many close friends, including those regulars at "The Buck."


 


Cam was known and well respected in the movie, commercial, and voiceover industry. He loved all sports and golf in particular, and was happy if he could help knock a few strokes off someone's game. Cam loved to spend time in the comfort of his home enjoying Diane's great cooking and his cuddly Siamese, Cleo.



 

CAMPBELL, Lane (Francis Lane Campbell)


Born: 1935, Canada


Died: 1/30/2014, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada


 


Lane Campbell’s westerns – actor:


Bordertown (TV) – 1989, 1990 (Jesse Heller, President James A. Garfield)


The Ranger, the Cook and a Hole in the Sky (TV) – 1995 (Biggest Hat)


Dead Man’s Gun (TV) – 1997, 1999 (Sheriff Frank Lampeer, pastor)


The Jack Bull (TV) – 1999 (Clay Williams)


Peacemakers (TV) – 2003 (Dick Crawford)


RIP Ralph Waite

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'The Waltons' Actor Ralph Waite Dead

 


The Hollywood Reporter


By Duane Byrge


5:51 PM PST 2/13/2014


 


He was nominated for an Emmy in 1978 for his portrayal of the middle-American paterfamilias.


 


 


Ralph Waite, who was beloved to TV viewers as the ultimate father figure, John Walton, on The Waltons, has died. He passed away at midday on Thursday at his home in South Palm Desert, Steve Gordon, the accountant for the Waite family, told The Hollywood Reporter.


 


He was nominated for an Emmy in 1978 for his portrayal of the middle-American paterfamilias. He starred on The Waltons for nine years and directed 15 episodes.


 


Waite's character as John Walton Sr., on The Waltons was ranked #3 in a TV Guide list of “50 Greatest TV Dads of All Time.” Prior to his role on The Waltons, Waite had been in only one other TV show, a “Nichols” episode.


 


Waite also performed in the vaunted mini-series Roots, for which he received a 1977 Emmy nomination.


 


More recently, he had a recurring role as Reverend Norman Balthus on HBO's Carnivale, a part befitting a man who once served as an ordained minister on Long Island.


 


Waite was the founder and director of the Los Angeles Actors Theatre, which he established in 1975. To get the company off the ground, Waite allocated $50,000 of his own money to produce and direct revivals of The Hairy Ape, and The Kitchen, in which he also performed.


 


LAAT won many critical awards, including the Margaret Harford Award given by the Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle for “its consistently high standards, its commitment to adventurous theater and to community involvement.”


 


Multi-faceted, Waite was also an ordained minister, a former social worker and a recovering alcoholic. He channeled that background into a film on the lives of people on L.A.'s skid row, On the Nickel, which he produced/directed/wrote/starred.


 


Under his own production banner, Ralph Waite Prods, he starred as a criminal lawyer in the 1983 TV series The Mississippi.


 


TV movies credits include the titular role in “The Secret Life of John Chapman,” “OHMS,” “Angel City” and “The Gentleman Bandit.”


 


Politically active, he twice ran unsuccessfully for a Congressional seat, including a run for the seat left vacant by the late Sonny Bono in 1998.


 


Ralph Waite was born June 22, 1928 in White Plains, New York and graduated from Bucknell University. He later studied for three years at Yale and earned a Bachelor of Divinity degree. At that juncture, he went on to have stints as a social worker for the Westchester County Department of Welfare, as well as publicity director and associate editor at Harper & Row.


WAITE, Ralph
Born: 6/22/1928, White Plains, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 2/13/2014, Palm Desert, California, U.S.A.

Ralph Waite's Westerns - actor:
Bonanza (TV) – 1970 (Hoby Miles)


Lawman – 1971 (Jack Dekker)


Nichols (TV) – 1971 (Sam Burton)


Chato’s Land – 1972 (Elias Hooker)


The Magnificent Seven Ride – 1972 (Jim Mackay)


Kid Blue – 1973 (Drummer)


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