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RIP Daniel Anker

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Daniel Anker Dead: Oscar-Nominated Filmmaker Dies At 50


 

Associated Press


By Staff


4/23/2014


 


ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — An Oscar-nominated filmmaker who directed and produced a documentary detailing a 1925 sled dog run in Alaska to deliver life-saving serum has died.


 


Daniel Anker died Monday at age 50. His wife, Donna Santman, says her husband died of pneumonia, a complication of his lymphoma.


 


Anker's film, "Icebound," details the five-day run to Nome following a deadly diphtheria breakout. The film opened the Anchorage International Film Festival in December.


 


Santman says her husband most recently was working on a documentary about late director Sidney Lumet.


 


Anker was nominated for an Academy Award in 2001 for another documentary, "Scottsboro: An American Tragedy."


 


The New York filmmaker is survived by his wife of 12 years and their two children.


 


A funeral is scheduled for Thursday at the Plaza Jewish Community Chapel in Manhattan.


 


 


ANKER, Daniel


Born: 1964


Died: 4/21/2014, Manhattan, New York, U.S.A.


 


Daniel Anker’s western – producer:


La fanciulla del West - 1992


RIP Jorge Arvizu

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Actor Jorge Arvizu, 'El Tata', has passed away

 


Voice Benito Bozzo and Cucho for 'Cat and the Gang' was hospitalized after suffering a heart attack


 


MEXICO CITY, March 18 -. Mexican actor Jorge Arvizu, 'El Tata', died early on Tuesday, at age 81 due to heart failure.


 


Weeks ago he was rushed to hospital for the same condition, but showed improvement, said Pedro Romo, his close friend, after leaving the hospital, reports the website of the station to which he belonged.


 


International Talent


 


Jorge Arvizu was born in Celaya, July 23, 1932, and became a voice actor, film and television in Mexico, according to the Wikipedia site.


 


He is known as "El Tata"; name of one of his characters in a television series.


 


He distinguished himself for his work from the 1950s and 1960s, performing all kinds of voices in cartoons and television series, as well as being comedic actor, producer and writer for theater, television and film.


 


His talent is recognized in Latin American countries, where their work is known, mainly in the field of dubbing.


 


Jorge Arvizu nicknamed "El Tata" won in the late 1970s, when he appeared with a regular character in The Handmaid Well Maid, where he played an elderly neighbor of the protagonist, María Victoria, I returning to it later in the Carbine Ambrose and the My Guest program.


 


First figure dubbing mainly on Mexican television, did the voices of Mighty Mouse and The Magpies chattering and Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes series, Warner Brothers (presented in some countries like animated Fantasies yesterday and today), with characters like Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck, and, Popeye the Sailor, King Features. In addition to impersonate Pepe Trueno and Huckleberry Hound in versions 1961 and 1962.


 


But its great success, which is recognized internationally, was to interpret the voice of Fred Flintstone on The Flintstones and the legendary Don Adams, in his character of Maxwell Smart, Agent 86 El Super.


 


Also among his many voices of animated characters are Canito in Canuto and Canito, Woody Woodpecker, Felix the Cat, Mr. Magoo and characters of the series Top Cat and his gang, as Benito Bozzo and Cucho, alongside actors such as deceased Victor Alcocer and Julio Lucena.


 


Also took her voice starring in dozens of other cartoons made ​​by Hanna-Barbera including The Jetsons, Magilla Gorilla, Fantastic 4 (as the evil Doctor Doom), The Banana Split Show of Scooby-Doo, Wheelie astute and Jabberjaw or the voices of George Harrison and Ringo Starr in the Beatles cartoon series, made ​​by Al Brodax.


 


Voiced television series such as The Superagente 86, Maxwell Smart, Uncle Lucas in Los Locos Adams and the voice of robot in Lost in Space: he played in the Batman series of the sixties the villain known as the Penguin .


 


The innumerable details


 


In the early eighties he lent his voice for toy 2-XL Missing brand Prestige, a robot that "spoke" of different topics like sports, monsters, myths and legends, through rounds eight tracks where the robot was multiple choice questions and the player must respond correctly; Depending on the response the robot, congratulating the player was sad or supplemented with additional information response, all with a unique sense of humor.


 


Moreover he has worked in Mexican films production as Question of Honor (1993) and The Angels of Death (1995), in addition to writing and participating in dozens of plays.


 


He was also responsible for interpreting in various Mexican historic productions Francisco I. Madero, and in the soap opera The Constitution, with Maria Felix and in the film "Emiliano Zapata" starring Antonio Aguilar.


 


Belonging to a generation of players graduate XEW station radio, led by Julio Lucena (Don Gato, Barney Rubble), David Reynoso (Don Gato Several characters, especially the Official Matute and Sergeant), Victor Alcocer (Official Matute Herman Munster), Quintin Bulnes (Crazy Shooting or QuickDraw McGraw) Sergio Bustamante (Captain Healey on I Dream of Jeannie), José María Iglesias ("Mouse") and Santiago Gil, among others.


 


He had a starring role in the sitcom "The privilege of sending" (2005), where he developed several characters.


 


In recent 2007 dates has participated in the Mexican dubbing Japanese anime "Digimon 02" (2000) where she played Hawkmon and Aquilamon though he had done before in 1977 at the Triton Sea (Umi no Toriton) anime as narrator, in the animated Cartoon Network Dexter's Laboratory (doing the voice of an Irish leprechaun) series, The Powerpuff Girls (2001) (interpreting the voice of an old villain named Mastermind) and the Disney Pixar film, Cars voicing "Ramon" and Ratatouille as Hateful Chef Skinner.


 


In 2008, his brother Rubén Arvizu, the adapter of the original series and the new movie translator, reached an agreement with Warner Brothers, so George Maxwell Smart doubled again in the movie "Super Agent 86".


 


This was a great joy to his Latin American fans who longed for the return of "El Tata" with one of his most beloved characters. Copies of this film films were dubbed and not subtitled mostly to the Latin American market; was so important for the public to return to play Arvizu Smart, that some of the posters of the film included a special headband specifying that the tape had "with the original voice of Tata Arvizu".


 


In 2010 the producer Fernando de Fuentes confirmed partipación Jorge Arvizu and original voice in the dubbing of the new Warner Brothers movie "Top Cat" (Cat and the gang), a project that developed a production company in Mexico.


 


His work as a painter and musician is unknown, making pictures on request, in addition to forming a jazz group having its first presentation in March 2011, in Nathan Center with musical direction by Rodrigo Escamilla. The May 29, 2011 was presented with its own set "Tata Jazz" in the center Nathan.


 


The inexhaustible resume


 


The phrase that identifies it refers to a Mexican sweet bread. In an episode of My Guest, Tata and the girl played by Usi Velasco jostling for the same bread, which is a cocol, the problem is solved MaríaVictoria swatting at Tata and saying


 


"Let your cocol the girl" what the Tata said.


 


 


ARVIZU, Jorge (Jorge Isaac Arvizu Martinez)


Born: 7/23/1932, Celaya, Guanajuato, Mexico


Died: 3/18/2014, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico


 


Jorge Arvizu’s westerns – actor:


Chico Ramos - 1971


They Call Me Marcado – 1971


Pistolero del diablo – 1971


Los Indomables – 1972


La gran Aventura del Zorro - 1976


RIP William Brayne

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The Guardian

By Werner Schmitz


Tuesday 22 April 2014


 


My friend William Brayne, who has died aged 78 after suffering from cancer, made his name as a documentary film cameraman and as a director of action-packed television drama. Bill's reputation of being able to "bring them in on time" and his eye for action caught the attention of Raymond Menmuir, producer of The Professionals, in 1978. In collaboration with the stunt arranger Peter Brayham, Bill staged numerous car chases, explosions and fistfights involving the characters of Bodie and Doyle.


 


Throughout the 1980s, Bill directed popular programmes such as Dempsey and Makepeace, C.A.T.S. Eyes, with Jill Gascoine as one of the team of female detectives, and Lovejoy. He also helped bring out the quirky humour of Bulman, the eccentric detective of the title played by Don Henderson, written by Murray Smith.


 


Bill was born in Vancouver, Canada, where his father owned a hardware store. After a stint in the army, in the mid-50s he found work at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, where he became involved with the various aspects of film-making. He met and married Ellen Finck in the late 50s.


 


His big break came when he was recruited as a cameraman on Allan King's Warrendale (1967), a film which used "direct cinema" techniques to chronicle life at a home for emotionally disturbed children. The work cemented King's reputation as Canada's foremost documentary film-maker and also caught the attention of the American director Frederick Wiseman, who asked Bill to join forces with him. Subsequently the pair worked on nine of Wiseman's in-depth investigations of American institutions, including Law and Order (1969) and Basic Training (1971).


 


Britain became Bill's second base when King set up a studio in London. AKA – Allan King Associates – could be hired by TV companies around the globe for current affairs stories and documentaries. Bill's second career as a television director came about by accident. He claimed that the producers of the TV show Special Branch wanted Bill Bain on their team and dialed a wrong number.


 


In the early 90s, Bill's career completed a full circle when King offered him directing assignments in Canada. In his retirement, he enjoyed travelling, golf and watching baseball.


 


Ellen died in 2007. Bill is survived by his sister, Diana.


 


 


BRAYNE, William


Born: 1936, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada


Died: 4/?/2014


 


William Brayne’s western – director:


Lonesome Dove: The Series (TV) - 1995

RIP Antonio Pica

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Heartthrob Spanish actor Antonio Pica dies

 


The Jerez player participated with supporting roles in over 70 films in genres such as ' western ' or terror also starred in numerous television commercials


 


Diariodejerez.es


By J.D. Jerez


4/27/2014


 


Yesterday morning Antonio Pica Serrano died April 26th  at the age of 82. Pica participated in more than 70 films throughout his life, mainly in secondary roles, and was well known for his television commercials. His last work was the short film 'The Cockroach ' by Manuel Ruiz, a small film in the ‘western’ field, a genre in which the actor Jerez worked fluently and who wanted to work selflessly for "stoking the desires students of this art thundered," as it says in the end credits of this film.


 


As recounted in an interview last year when he was awarded the prize of honor Asecan (Film Writers Association of Andalucía) in last year's edition, Pica came to making movies by accident. He worked as a technician on oil rigs and resided in Madrid when one day came in the famous Café Gijón, "the bar of the actors", and one of the principals of the Moro Studios offered him the chance to do a test.


 


From there began a long career in which he combined with western advertising and terror. He worked in some Hollywood blockbusters like 'The Fall of the Roman Empire' (1964) or 'The Man Who Killed Billy the Kid” (1966).


 


José Luis Jiménez , anywhere 'People from Jerez' stresses that Pica had a "factions and markedly Anglo presence, combined with his elegant manners and a natural photogenic face," which made ​​it to be continuously required for many advertising agencies, a task that he combined with his appearances in film productions. Thus, he worked for brands such as Veteran, Founder, Iberia or LM plus the English Court.


 


His filmography is full of supporting roles in both Spanish and American productions. He worked for Anthony Mann, Fernando Merino, Jesus Franco, José María Forqué or Julio Buchs, among others. However, his film credits were quite lavish in the sixties and seventies where he primarily was assigned roles of the villain. "It will be my face sieso" he said in the interview I had.


 


As explained Jimenez, Antonio Pica’s  movie career went away coinciding with the decline of American blockbusters . The Jerez returned to work as a diver on oil rigs, work will be done somewhere between Spain and the North Sea. However, in 1985 he had a short-lived return to cinema with Italian Cucho Tessari. Now retired, early last decade, he returned to films participating in various shorts.


 


Atonio Pica married to four times and had five children. For more than one year, and because of his
health problems, lived in the residence La Torre El Puerto de Santa María.

 


PICA, Antonio (Antonio de la Santísima Trinidad Pica Serrano)


Born: 3/21/1931, Jerez de la Frontera, Cádiz, Andalucía Spain


Died: 4/26/2014, El Puerto de Santa María, Andalucia, Spain


 


Antonio Pica’s westerns – actor:


Weeping for a Bandit – 1963


A Fistful of Dollars - 1964 (Baxter henchman)


Django Kill - 1966 (Tembler henchman)


Bandidos - 1967 (Sam)


A Few Bullets More - 1967 (John Tunstill)


Ringo: The Lone Rider – 1968 (sheriff)


Tierra Brava - 1968


A Bullet for Sandoval - 1969 (Sam Paul)


Death on High Mountain - 1969


Two Crosses at Danger Pass – 1967 (Doc)


Spaghetti Western – 1974 (Foster)


Eh? Who’s Afraid of Zorro! - 1975 (Major de Colignac)


The Cockroach – 2012 (Anselmo ‘Cockroach’ Galera)


Cuando Éramos Pistoleros – 2012 [himself]

RIP Micheline Dax

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Micheline Dax has died


Le Parisien
By Staff
April 28, 2014

 

Micheline Dax actress, who has made a successful career in theater and film, primarily in comedies, died Sunday in Paris.


 


The curtain falls on one of the queens of French comedy. The actress Micheline Dax, just disappeared. She was 90 years old. It is her agent Jean- Pierre Noël, who announced the sad news to AFP Monday, April 28.


 


Emblematic figure of the cinema with a filmography to rival starlets , but also television personality and theater , the soprano had participated in a tour with the great Charles Aznavour and is the first part of Edith Piaf.


 


Married to actor Jacques Bodoin since the 1960s, Michelle Dax leaves behind a daughter , Veronique Bodoin, actress and TV host. Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters, she also made ​​a chevalier of the Légion d'honneur in 2012.


 


Micheline Etevenon born March 3, 1924, Micheline Dax, who began her great career after the famous Simon course, had also lent her voice to Miss Piggy, the famous slut Muppet Show and Ursula in The Little Mermaid, Calamity Jane Lucky Luke in or Maa sheep in Babe: Pig became a shepherd. Very popular on television in the 1970s and 1980s, she was a regular guest on game shows including "Les Jeux de 20 Heures" and "l'Académie des neuf".


 


Friday, April 25, two days before her death, the comedy "Un Beau Salaud", she created in 1987 with Jean- Jacques Dax was still being played on the boards of the Forge of Barsac, Gironde. A great lady has left us.


 


 


DAX, Micheline (Micheline Josette Renée Etevenon)


Born: 3/3/1924 in Paris, Île de France, France


Died: 4/27/2004, Île-de-France, France


 


Micheline Dax’s western – voice actress:


Lucky Luke (TV) – 1984 [French voice of Calamity Jane]


RIP Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.

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Actor Efrem Zimbalist Jr. Dies at 95

 


He was the embodiment of a federal agent on “The F.B.I.” after playing a private eye on another popular ABC series, “77 Sunset Strip.”



The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes, Duane Byrge

5/2/2014


 


Efrem Zimbalist Jr., the suave leading man who starred on ABC for 15 straight seasons on 77 Sunset Strip and then The F.B.I., died Friday at his ranch in Solvang, Calif., his children announced. He was 95.


 


Zimbalist was a household name from 1958 through 1974 for his performances as dapper private eye Stuart Bailey on Friday night staple 77 Sunset Strip, which lasted six seasons, and as Inspector Lewis Erskine on The F.B.I., which ran for nine.


 


A close friend of then-FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover, Zimbalist ended many Quinn Martin productions on Sunday nights with a description of a fugitive wanted by the feds, exhorting viewers to be on the lookout. One of the more prominent names from this segment was James Earl Ray, assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.


 


“Efrem’s character embodied fidelity, bravery and integrity. So much so that he inspired a generation of future FBI employees, many of whom pursued a career in the bureau because they watched The F.B.I. series as they grew up,” FBI director Robert Mueller said when he presented an honorary Special Agent badge to Zimbalist in 2009. “In those days, he may well have been the bureau’s best and most effective recruiter!”


 


The son of renowned artists -- soprano Alma Gluck and violinist Efrem Zimbalist -- he was the father of actress Stephanie Zimbalist, who survives him. As the sly, silver-haired mentor of Pierce Brosnan’s title character on Remington Steele, he appeared on the 1982-87 NBC series with his daughter on a handful of episodes.


 


In a career that spanned roughly 60 years, Zimbalist provided the voices of Alfred the Butler on several Batman animated series, the villain Doc Octopus on a Spider-Man cartoon and King Arthur on The Legend of Prince Valiant. He had recurring roles on Maverick in the 1950s, Hotel in the ’80s and Zorro in the ’90s.


 


In Wait Until Dark (1967), he played the photographer husband of the blind Audrey Hepburn.


 


The son of renowned artists -- soprano Alma Gluck and violinist Efrem Zimbalist -- he was the father of actress Stephanie Zimbalist, who survives him. As the sly, silver-haired mentor of Pierce Brosnan’s title character on Remington Steele, he appeared on the 1982-87 NBC series with his daughter on a handful of episodes.


 


Born in New York City on November 30, 1918. His father was a friend of poet Edna St. Vincent Millay, and young Zimbalist received violin lessons from the father of Jascha Heifetz.


 


Later, he studied at the Yale Drama School and the Neighborhood Playhouse, then served in World War II and earned a Purple Heart.


 


Zimbalist began his career as an NBC page but soon found work in the theater and was cast in the 1945 Broadway production of The Rugged Path, which starred Spencer Tracy and was directed by Garson Kanin. Zimbalist’s rich baritone and striking manner won notice, and he landed plum roles in Henry VIII in 1946 and Hedda Gabler in 1948.


 


Restless waiting for roles, Zimbalist ventured into producing. He brought opera to Broadway, mounting such productions as The Medium, The Telephone and The Consul, which won a Pulitzer Prize.


 


Zimbalist made an impressive movie debut in 1949, co-starring in Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s House of Strangers, which starred Edward G. Robinson as a tight-fisted family patriarch. But he experienced personal tragedy the following year: his wife Emily died of cancer, and he gave up acting.


 


During the subsequent five years, Zimbalist worked at the Curtis School of Music for his father. In 1954, he took a lead in a daytime soap opera, and, ready to act in the movies again, signed a seven-year contract with Warner Bros. (Later, he would be invited to play tennis at studio head Jack Warner’s Beverly Hills home every weekend.)


 


Zimbalist was cast in Band of Angels (1957) with Clark Gable; in the Barrymore family drama Too Much, Too Soon (1958) with Errol Flynn and Dorothy Malone; and in Mervyn LeRoy’s Home Before Dark (1958) with Jean Simmons; he called the latter his favorite film experience.


 


While he was winning popularity and acclaim for these roles, Zimbalist also was starting out in the Warner Bros. TV series 77 Sunset Strip, which was created by Roy Huggins (The Fugitive). It centered on a swinging '60s Hollywood detective agency run by Bailey and his partner Jeff Spencer (Roger Smith).


 


The stylish agency, located at the fictional address 77 Sunset Strip, was, naturally, right next door to a nightclub, which lent to appearances by curvaceous guest stars. Zimbalist parked his sports car in the club’s driveway that was manned by the cool attendant Kookie (Edd Byrnes), a dashing ladies’ man who caused women to clamor, “Kookie, Kookie, lend me your comb,” which became a song and a national catchphrase.


 


Zimbalist took film roles during the series’ hiatus. In 1961, he starred with Angie Dickinson in the courtroom thriller A Fever in the Blood and in the then-notorious The Chapman Report (1962), where he starred as the head of a medical research clinic that studied the sex habits of suburban women.


 


Zimbalist appeared on all 241 episodes of The F.B.I., whose storylines came from actual cases. The bureau had casting control over the show. After the series ended, he participated in charity events that helped raise money for families of agents killed in the line of duty and lent his voice to narrate FBI recruiting videos.


 


Like other stars known for a dignified persona, Zimbalist was good-humored about spoofing his career. He followed in the footsteps of such colleagues as Leslie Nielsen and Robert Stack, parodying his image in Jim Abrahams’ Top Gun spoof Hot Shots! (1991), which starred Charlie Sheen.


 


His autobiography, My Dinner of Herbs, was published in 2004 and recounted his varied career, from the glitzy Sunset Strip to the power corridors of Washington.


 


In addition to his daughter Stephanie, survivors include his son Efrem Zimbalist III.


 


“A devout Christian, he actively enjoyed his life to the last day, showering love on his extended family, playing golf and visiting with close friends,” his children said in a statement. “We will miss him dearly.”


 


 


ZIMBALIST, Jr., Efrem


Born: 11/30/1918, New York City, New York, U.S.A.


Died: 5/2/2014, Solvang, California, U.S.A.


 


Efrem Zimbalist, Jr’s, westerns – actor:


Maverick (TV) – 1957, 1958 (Dandy Jim Buckley)


Sugarfoot (TV) – 1958 (Kerrigan the Great)


Bronco (TV) – 1961 (Edwin Booth)


Rawhide (TV) – 1965 (Jim McKeever)


The Reward – 1965 (Frank Bryant)


The Avenging – 1982 (Jacob Anderson)


The New Zorro (TV) – 1990-1991 (Don Alejandro de la Vega)


RIP Erdo Vatan

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CINEMA artist 'Erdo Vatan' died at 79 district of Balıkesir BURHANİYE died from pancreatic cancer at his home

 


Born Erdogan Vatansever in 1936, he starred in numerous films in Turkey. He died at his home two months after being treated in Ankara Gazi University Hospital where he underwent treatment for 5 days before returning home to Burhanilye.


 


Educated at Unversal Studios.


 


Considered as the center of world cinema he trained at Universal Studios, with Mickey Rooney and attend lectures given by Alfred Hitchcock before returning home to Turkey, he continued his studies in the field of cinema and television. Not only a screenwriter, but also a jazz and country music artist he opened in Ayvalik a theater and acting workshops for actors who began training for the future. At the Municipal Youth Centre for young people, giving lessons in elocution and drama, film and television community.


 


Not COMPLETING THE LAST MOVIE


 


Erdo Vatan's last film Havran, Inonu from the village Khalil's life that he wrote describing his close friend, Cultural History Researcher Erdogan Gazioğlu, "Erdogan brother, a hard worker. Discomfort at all though he is not idle, the nonstop script was written. Havranl Halil's script met with grandchildren go to write, did extensive research. was getting ready to make his movie. However, life was not long enough. We were very upset. God bless," he said.


 


 


VATAN, Erdo (Erdogan Vatansever)


Born: 1936, Turkey


Died: 4/30/2014 Ayvalik, Balikesir, Turkey


 


Erdo Vatan’s western – actor:


Yedi belalilar - 1970


RIP Billy Lenhart

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Billy Lenhart (1930) one half of a reoccurring child comedy team at Universal called Butch and Buddy passed away in Lakeside, California on February 19, 2013. They were usually little brats, shooting slingshots at people and such, and pretending in front of others that they were little angels. Born as William Joseph Lenhart on December 14, 1930, Billy, as Butch, was called on to play the bass while Buddy, usually Kenneth Brown, played accordion. They appeared as the sons of an exasperated Billy Gilbert in THE UNDER-PUP (1939) and it’s pseudo-sequel A LITTLE BIT OF HEAVEN. In the second film, most of the stars from PUP other than Virginia reenacted their roles under different names because Universal didn’t want to pay royalties to the author of THE UNDER-PUP for the second film. It’s sort of like the difference between THE SAINT and THE FALCON…there isn’t any. Billy continued to make films until 1945 and most of them, including his final Columbia film, were with Brown as the team of Butch and Buddy.

 


 


LENHART, Billy (William Joseph Lenhart)


Born: 12/14/1930, Edmond, Oklahoma, U.S.A.


Died: 2/19/1930, Leakeside, California, U.S.A.


 


Billy Lenhart’s westerns – actor:


Melody of the Plains – 1937 (Billy Langley)


Two-Gun Troubador – 1939 (Fred Dean as a boy)


Ridin’ the Trail – 1940 (Butch)


Man from Montana – 1941 (Butch)


A Lady Takes a Chance – 1943 (Butch)


Rough Rindin’ Justice – 1945 (Butch)    



RIP Naura Hayden

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RIP Naura Hayden

 


SF Site


By Steven H. Silver


In memoriam 2013


 


Actress Naura Hayden (b.1932, as Norah Hayden) died on August 10. Hayden starred in the film The Angry Red Planet and also appeared in Son of Sinbad. She also used the name Nora Hayden and modeled under the name Helene Hayden. Hayden published several non-genre novels as well.


 


HAYDEN, Naura (Norah Hayden)


Born: 9/29/1932, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.


Died: 8/10/2013, New York City, New York, U.S.A.


 


Nora Hayden’s westerns – actress:


The Great Jesse James Raid – 1953 (redhead)


Bonanza (TV) – 1961 (Big Red)


Gunsmoke (TV) – 1962 (Bessie)


RIP William Olvis

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William Olvis, Film and Television Composer, Dies at 56


 

Variety


By Carmel Dagan


May 9, 2014


 


William Patrick Olvis, whose musical compositions underscored over 19 movies and numerous television shows, died of throat cancer May 6 at his home in Malibu. He was 56.


 


Olvis, whose father William Edward Olvis was a renowned opera singer, won several awards in his own field, including four from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. Olvis began his professional career in 1988 composing the score for telepic “Evil in Clear River.”


 


Among Olvis’ credits was the 1993 film “Red Rock West.” Olvis tailored a rich, textured score that enhanced the tone of the genre-bending film that had elements of a Western, a film noir and a black comedy.


 


For television, Olvis composed the music for 31 episodes of the television show “Life Goes On” from 1989-93, and he composed the theme and 116 episodes of “Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman.” In a one-minute theme, Olvis conveyed the tone that would come to define the entire series.


 


Olvis also composed for the movies “Steal Big Steal Little,” “Separate Lives,” “A Part of the Family,” “The Woman Who Loved Elvis,” “The Comrades of Summer,” “In Sickness and in Health,” “Empire City,” “29th Street,” “To Save a Child,” “Fourth Story,” “Teach 109,” “The Secret Life of Archie’s Wife,” “El Diablo,” “Framed,” “Kill Me Again,” “Babycakes,” “Finish Line,” and “Evil in Clear River,” as well as for the television show “Gabriel’s Fire.”


 


Olvis is survived by a brother and two sisters as well as former wife Cathleen Young, who was his music agent and partner.


 


 


OLVIS, William (William Patrick Olvis)


Born: 1958, Portland, Oregon, U.S.A.
Died: 5/6/2014, Malibu, California, U.S.A.


 


William Olvis’ westerns – composer:


El Daiblo – 1990


Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (TV) – 1993-1997

RIP Nancy Malone

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Nancy Malone, Pioneering TV Producer-Director, Studio Exec, Dies at 78


Variety

By Carmel Dagan


5/9/2014


 


 


Nancy Malone, a ground-breaking and Emmy-winning director-producer, Emmy-nominated actress and the first woman VP at a major studio, died May 8 at City of Hope in Duarte, Calif., as the result of pneumonia that arose from complications of leukemia. She was 78.


 


Shortly after producing her first TV movie, “Winner Take All,” starring Shirley Jones, for NBC, Malone joined 20th Century Fox’s TV department as director of TV development. Soon she was named vice president of television, becoming the first woman VP at a major studio. During her time at Fox, Malone co-founded Women in Film.


 


Malone was an actress for decades, appearing extensively on TV and on stage, before moving behind the camera and into the executive suite and continued acting even after doing so, including a supporting role in the 1973 Burt Reynolds starrer “The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing.”


 


She joined Tomorrow Entertainment as a story analyst in 1971 and established Lilac Productions in 1975 to produce TV films.


 


Her producing credits include “Sherlock Holmes in New York,” with Roger Moore and John Huston; “Like Mom,” “Like Me,” with Linda Lavin; “The Great Pretender,” with Billy Dee Williams; “I Married a Monster”; and The Violation of Sarah McDavid,” with Patty Duke. She developed and produced a one-hour comedy for CBS, “Husbands, Wives and Lovers.” “The Nurses” pilot followed, as well as a season of “The Bionic Woman.”


 


Malone won an Emmy for co-producing “Bob Hope: The First 90 Years.”


 


During the 1980s Malone completed the American Film Institute’s Directing Workshop for Women and began her directing career. Her first full-length film, “There Were Times, Dear,” starring Shirley Jones and Len Cariou, appeared on PBS and was among the first films to center on Alzheimer’s disease.



It was accompanied by a NIMH outreach program. This film was used as a fundraiser by various Alzheimer’s support chapters around the country.

 


Malone’s first assignment as a director of episodic television was episode 100 of “Dynasty,” after which she became a staff director at Aaron Spelling Productions. She directed multiple episodes of “Hotel,” “Melrose Place,” “Dynasty,” and “Beverly Hills, 90210″ and went on to direct “Knots Landing,” “Sisters,” “Cagney & Lacey,” “Star Trek Voyager,” “Touched by an Angel,” “Dawson’s Creek,” “Judging Amy,” “Starman,” “The Guardian,” “Resurrection Blvd.” and a “Bob Hope Christmas Special.”


 


She recently co-produced and directed a live event at Ellis Island honoring Bob Hope and starring Michael Feinstein, and Malone co-produced and directed 2011′s “The NY Pops Tribute to Bob Hope at Carnegie Hall.”


 


Malone also directed for the theater, including “All the Way Home,” “Howie the Rookie” and “Big Maggie,” starring Tyne Daly. For L..A Theatre Works she directed “Agnes of God,” “Prelude to a Kiss” and “The Country Girl”; for the Ford Theatre in Los Angeles she directed “Long Day’s Journey Into Night.”


 


Malone also taught acting and directing, and she conducted master classes at: UCLA, Piscator Institute of New York, Pasadena’s Art Center College of Design, National University of Ireland, Galway; the Stella Adler Academy; Women in Film; and the American Film Institute, among other places. In the spring of 2013, Nancy taught a master class at the Steinhardt School at NYU.


 


In 2010, at the request of the Performing Arts Section of the UCLA Library: Special Collections, she organized and presented her papers and memorabilia to that facility for permanent research and record keeping.


 


She served as chair of the WIF Foundation and established the Crystal Award, the Dorothy Arzner Award, the Norma Zarky Award and the Founders Award. The Nancy Malone Directors Award was named after her for her contributions to the Film Finishing Fund.


 


Born in Queens Village, Long Island, N.Y., Malone began her career at age 7 as a model for ads ranging from Kellogg’s Cereal to Ford cars and Macy’s. At 10 she was chosen for the cover of Life magazine’s 10th anniversary issue, “The Typical American Girl.”


 


She was signed by William Morris and began her acting career in a show broadcast live on the DuMont TV Network and appeared in one of TV’s first soap operas, “The First Hundred Years.”


 


Malone joined the Actors Studio and studied with Stella Adler as well as David Craig and Milton Katselas and studied ballet with Nora Kaye.


 


At 15 she made her Broadway debut as the title character in “Time Out for Ginger,” co-starring Melvyn Douglas. After the Broadway run, she toured the U.S. in the play for a year. When she returned to New York, Charles Laughton chose her to play Jenny Hill in a production of Shaw’s “Major Barbara,” followed by “The Seven Year Itch,” “A Place for Polly” (a pre-Broadway tryout); “Requiem for a Heavyweight,” “The Chalk Garden” with Judith Anderson, “A Touch of the Poet” with Helen Hayes, and “The Trial of the Catonsville Nine.”


 


Along with her work in theater, she also starred in the television series “Naked City,” for which she received an Emmy nomination for best actress; played Clara Varner in TV series “The Long Hot Summer”; and appeared in “The Killing of Randy Webster “and “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.” She guested on “Bonanza,” “The Fugitive,” “The Partridge Family,” “Big Valley,” “The Rockford Files,” “Outer Limits,” “Run for Your Life,” “Dr. Kildare,” “The Andy Griffith Show,” “Hawaii Five-O,” “The Twilight Zone” and “Lou Grant,” among other shows.


 


Malone is survived by her colleague and longtime friend, Linda Hope.


 


 


MALONE, Nancy


Born: 3/19/1935, Queen’s Village, Long Island, New York, U.S.A.


Died: 5/8/2014, Duarte, California, U.S.A.


 


Nancy Malone’s westerns – actress:


Bonanza (TV) – 1967 (Katherine Rowan)


Hondo (TV) – 1967 (Mary Davis)


The Big Valley (TV) – 1969 (Marcy Howard)


The Outcasts (TV) – 1969 (Mavis)


Then Man Who Loved Cat Dancing – 1973 (Sudie)


RIP Paul Wurtzel

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Paul Wurtzel, Assistant Director on Quinn Martin TV Dramas, Dies at 92

 


 


The Hollywood Reporter


By Mike Burns


5/6/2014


 


The son of Fox producer Sol Wurtzel, he worked on such shows as "The F.B.I.,""The Fugitive" and "Barnaby Jones."


 


Paul Wurtzel, an assistant director who worked for famed TV producer Quinn Martin on such series as The F.B.I., The Fugitive and Barnaby Jones, has died. He was 92.


 


Wurtzel died April 18 of natural causes at his Hollywood Hills home of 49 years, his grandniece, Sharon Leib, told The Hollywood Reporter.


 


His father was 20th Century Fox producer Sol Wurtzel, who produced the Shirley Temple classic Bright Eyes (1934), gave Marilyn Monroe her first onscreen role in Dangerous Years (1947) and discovered actor-turned-director John Ford, who delivered the eulogy at Wurtzel's funeral in April 1958.


 


Paul Wurtzel grew up in the Hollywood film colony and in the 1930s began working on the Fox Western lot on the corner of Sunset Boulevard and Western Avenue during summer breaks from Beverly Hills High School.


 


After two years at UCLA, Wurtzel abandoned his studies and went to work for his father at Fox. He started his career in 1942 as second assistant director on the Laurel & Hardy movie A Haunting We Will Go.


 


When his father launched the independent company Sol M. Wurtzel Productions, Wurtzel worked exclusively with him from 1946-49 and advanced to become an assistant director on dozens of B-movies through 1958.


 


Wurtzel migrated to television, starting as assistant director in 1957 on NBC's adaptation of The Thin Man, starring Peter Lawford and Phyllis Kirk as the famed detective couple Nick & Nora.


 


He worked as an AD on such other shows as Fibber McGee and Molly; The New Breed; I'm Dickens, He's Fenster, starring Marty Ingles and John Astin; and three more dramas from Martin: 12 O'Clock High, The Invaders and The Streets of San Francisco.


 


Wurtzel served as a production manager on the 1980s version of The Twilight Zone before retiring in 1987.


 


An assistant director on 60 of the 240 episodes of The F.B.I., Wurtzel recently visited Efrem Zimbalist Jr., the star of the ABC series, at his ranch in Solvang, Calif. The actor died May 2 at age 95.


 


In addition to Sharon and her husband Richard, survivors include others grandnieces Amanda and Dina; grandnephew Rick and his wife Rosa; great-grandnieces Hannah, Joelle and Lilyanne; and great-grandnephews Samuel and Diego.


 


A service will be held at 11 a.m. on June 1 at Hillside Memorial Park and Mortuary in Los Angeles. Donations in Wurtzel's honor may be made to the Los Angeles Mission or the Southern


Poverty Law Center.


 


 


WURTZEL, Paul


Born: 6/10/1921, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.


Died: 4/18/2014, Hollywood Hills, California, U.S.A.


 


Paul Wurtzel’s westerns – assistant director, production coordinator:


Tucson – 1949 [Assistant Director]


Three Young Texans – 1954 [Assistant Director]


The Broken Star – 1956 [Assistant Director]


Outlaws Sons – 1957 [Production Coordinator]


War Drums – 1957 [Assistant Director]


Tomahawk Trail – 1957 [Assistant Director]


The Dalton Girls – 1957 [Assistant Director]


Revolt at Fort Laramie – 1957 [Assistant Director]


Fort Bowie – 1958 [Assistant Director]

RIP Leslie Carlson

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Leslie "Les" Carlson


 

The Daily Republic


By Staff


5/9/2014


 


Leslie "Les" M. Carlson (81) passed away at his home in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on May 2, 2014, under hospice care.


 


Les was born Feb. 24, 1933 in Mitchell, S.D. He attended Mitchell High and excelled in track, breaking several state records. His senior year at MHS he played the lead in the senior class play -- often claiming that was when the acting bug hit him.


 


He attended the University of South Dakota until he joined the Air Force and was sent to Korea. When returning, he continued his studies at USD, receiving a BFA and an MA. He spent his summers at the Black Hills Playhouse. fine tuning his acting ability.



Upon graduation he headed for New York City, where his career began. He became a successful character actor, appearing in movies, television and stage. His works are listed in his biography on the website IMB.com.


 


He moved to Toronto, Canada in the 60's where he met his wife. His career flourished and he continued to act until his health declined in 2013.


 


He is survived by his wife Joan (Warren), 2 sons Ben and Ned, both of Toronto, Canada, a sister Judy (Carlson) McDonald of Mitchell, S.D.


 


He was preceded in death by his parents Dorothy Hershman Carlson and Darrell Carlson.


 


 


CARLSON, Leslie (Leslie M. Carlson)


Born: 2/24/1933, Mitchell, South Dakota, U.S.A.


Died: 5/3/2014, Toronto, Ontario, Canada


 


Leslie Carlson’s western – actor:


Bordertown (TV) – 1990 (Bogue Harper)


RIP Judi Meredith

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RIP Judi Meredith

 


Las Vegas Review-Journal


By Staff


May 10, 2014


 


Judi Meredith Nelson, 77, of Las Vegas, passed away April 30, 2014. She was born Judith Claire Boutin, Oct. 13, 1936, to Herbert Boutin and Janice M. Starr of Portland, Ore. Judi graduated from St. Mary's Academy in Portland. She was happily married to Gary Nelson for 51 years. They lived together in Encino, Calif. until 1998, then resided in both Chicago and Palm Beach, Fla., until finally settling in Las Vegas in 2002. At 15, Judi was a professional ice skater in the Ice Follies until 1951 when she suffered a serious skiing accident which ended her skating career. Soon after, George Burns "discovered" her at the Pasadena Playhouse and asked her to join the cast of the Burns and Allen Show. Judi went on to co-star and star in numerous television shows and films, many of which were memorable such as "Summer Love,""Jack the Giant Killer,""The Night Walker,""Queen of Blood,""Gunsmoke,""Have Gun Will Travel,""Wagon Train,""Bonanza" and "Hawaii Five-O," to name a few. It was on Hotel de Paree where she met a then-young assistant director named Gary Nelson. Not long after, Judi agreed to star on the TV show "Have Gun Will Travel" for free if Gary would be allowed to direct. Once married, her new husband proclaimed that "there would be only one professional in the house," thus slowly supplanting Judi's acting career with his directing career. Judi was an avid photographer and enjoyed yearly trips to a ranch in the Big Horn Mountains of Wyoming with Gary and their two sons, Garrett and Blue. She also enjoyed a life-long passion for her rose garden and always supported her husband on film and television locations around the world. When not filming, they spent their time cruising on their yacht throughout the Caribbean. Judi is survived by her husband, Gary; and her two sons, Garrett Nelson of Las Vegas and Blue Nelson of Los Angeles; and her sister, Randa DeLorge of LaPine, Ore. Celebration of Judi's life will be private. Donations may be made in Judi's name to St. Joseph Husband of Mary Roman Catholic Church, Las Vegas.


 


 


MEREDITH, Judi (Judith Clare Boutin)


Born: 10/13/1936, Portland, Oregon, U.S.A.


Died: 4/30/2014, Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.A.


 


Judi Meredith’s westerns – actress:


The Adventures of Jim Bowie (TV) – 1956 (Esmee Labaillaire)


Wild Heritage – 1958 (Callie Bascomb)


Money, Women and Guns – 1958 (Sally Gunston)


The Restless Gun (TV) – 1958 (Lettie Belknap)


Hotel de Paree (TV) 1959-1960 (Monique Devereaux)


Cimarron City (TV) – 1959 (Martha Fenton)


Tales of Wells Fargo (TV) – 1959 (Terry Tate)


Yancy Derringer (TV) – 1959 (Charlotte Dubois)


Wagon Train (TV) – 1959, 1963, 1964 (Ellen Emerson, Judy Ludlow, Beth Mitchell)


Laramie (TV) – 1960 (Marcie Benson)


Riverboat (TV) – 1960 (Louise Harrison)


The Tall Man (TV) – 1961 (Matti Arnold)


Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) – 1961, 1962, 1963 (Sally, Monica Reagan, Gina August)


Gunsmoke (TV) – 1962 (Lily Baskin)


Bonanza (TV) – 1962, 1967 (Lotty Hawkins, Linda Roberts)


The Raiders – 1963 (Martha ‘Calamity Jane’ Canary


Rawhide (TV) – 1965 (Kate Wentworth)


The Virginian (TV) – 1966 (Ruth)


Death Valley Days (TV) – 1967 (Jenny Davis)


Something Big – 1971 (Carrie Standall)


RIP Tony Genaro

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'Tremors' Actor Tony Genaro Dies at 72

 


The Hollywood Reporter


By Mike Barnes


5/13/2014


 


He also appeared in such films as “The Milagro Beanfield War,” “Heart and Souls,” “The Craft” and “World Trade Center.”


 


Tony Genaro, a veteran character actor who is perhaps best known for playing the cattle rancher Miguel in the Kevin Bacon cult classic Tremors and its second sequel, has died. He was 72.


 


Genaro died May 7 of natural causes at his Hollywood home, his daughter Zhanara told The Hollywood Reporter.


 


A native of Gallup, N.M., Genaro’s first big break came with a role as store owner Nick Real in Robert Redford’s American Southwest-set The Milagro Beanfield War (1988).


 


In the supernatural teen film The Craft (1996), Genaro played the bus driver who drops off the four girls (Robin Tunney, Fairuza Balk, Neve Campbell and Rachel True) outside Los Angeles and warns them to “watch out for those weirdos.”


 


“We are the weirdos, mister,” replies Balk’s character, Nancy.


 


Genaro also portrayed the father of Michael Pena’s Port Authority police officer character in Oliver Stone’s gripping World Trade Center (2006).


 


His film résumé includes such films as La Bamba (1987); Ted & Venus (1991); Final Analysis (1992); Heart and Souls (1993) and Mighty Joe Young (1998), both directed by Tremors helmer Ron Underwood; Phenomenon (1996); The Mask of Zorro (1998); Anger Management (2003); and The Soloist (2009).


 


On television, he appeared on such shows as The Shield, CSI: Miami, Will & Grace and Walker, Texas Ranger, among many others.


 


In Tremors, his character escaped the first Graboid attack, but he’s killed by a creature when he’s knocked off a cliff in the straight-to-video sequel Tremors 3: Back to Perfection (2001).


 


Born Anthony Genaro Acosta as the oldest of four boys and one girl, he attended San Diego State University and worked as a licensed psychiatric technician at Patton State Hospital in Patton, Calif., for several years.


 


He was a member of the SAG/AFTRA and Actors Equity since 1970.


 


In addition to his daughter, survivors include his brothers Michael, Carlos and Larry, his sister DeAnna and his other children Christopher, Jesse, Brenden and Lauren.


 


 


GENARO, Tony (Anthony Genaro Acosta)


Born: 1942,  Gallup, New Mexico, U.S.A.


Died: 5/7/2014, Hollywood, California, U.S.A.


 


Tony Genaro’s westerns – actor:


Walker, Texas Ranger (TV) – 1994 (Bernardo Lopez)


Lone Justice – 1995


The Mask of Zorro – 1998 (watering station owner)



RIP Virginia Belmont

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RIP Virginia Belmont

 


Los Angeles Times


Staff


May 14, 2014


 


September 20, 1921 - May 6, 2014 Virginia E. Califano (Virginia Belmont) Virginia Califano, 92, passed away on May 6, 2014 at her home in Hollywood, CA. The daughter of Ernestine and Henry Schupp, she was born on September, 20, 1921, in New York City. She graduated from UCLA where she studied Italian. Virginia enjoyed a successful movie and stage career in the 1940s and 1950s in the heyday of Hollywood-made westerns and traveling roadshows. Her stage name was Virginia Belmont. She co-starred in westerns with Jimmy Wakely, Johnny Mack Brown, and William Boyd (Hopalong Cassidy). A beautiful woman, she traveled throughout the United States as one of Director Samuel Goldwyn's "Goldwyn Girls." In 1941, she married Hollywood restaurateur Albert Califano, a native-born Italian and later naturalized U.S. citizen. He was very instrumental in fostering her career in Hollywood. They subsequently moved to Rome, Italy, where Virginia starred in several popular Italian movies, and Albert was a correspondent for the "Hollywood Reporter." Fluent in Italian, she transitioned quickly into an expanded and successful acting career in Italy. Following her retirement in the late 50s, she joined United Airlines in Sales and Reservations. She was employed by United for 28 years. She and Albert traveled the world. She is survived by her sister, June Schaefer of Livermore, CA, her daughter-in-law Katharine Turner of San Jose, CA, and several nephews and nieces. She was pre-deceased by her husband, Albert, their two children, Diane and Robert, and her brother, George Schupp. She will be interred at Mt. Hope Cemetery in a family plot in San Diego, CA. –


 


 


BELMONT, Virginia (Virginia E. Califano)


Born: 9/10/1921, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.


Died: 5/6/2014, Hollywood, California, U.S.A.


 


Virginai Belmon’t westerns – actress:


Nevada – 1944 (dancer)


Black Arrow – 1944 (girl)


Girl Rush – 1944 (troupe member)


Silent Conflict – 1948 (Rene Richards)


Oklahoma Blues – 1948 (Judy Joyce)


Prairie Express – 1947 (Peggy Porter)


The Rangers Bride – 1948 (Sheila Carroll)


Overland Trails – 1948 (Marcia Brandon)


Courtin’ Trouble – 1958 (Carol Madison)


RIP Richard Wendley

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RIP Richard Wendley

 


Chico Enterprise-Record


By Staff


December 8, 2013


 



Richard Wendley, 93, died November 21, 2013, in Chico, CA after a brief illness. Richard was born in Rochester, NY on February 8, 1920. After serving as a sergeant in the Special Services of the U.S. Army during World War II, he worked as an actor in New York City, appearing in Broadway plays as well as live television. In the 1950s, he began writing for television, with episodes for The Web, Matinee Theatre, Kraft Television Theatre, and Philco-Goodyear Television Playhouse. In 1965, he moved with his family to California and continued writing for television, including episodes for Combat, Bonanza, The Virginian, and The Big Valley. Later in his career, he wrote dozens of shows for the Lutheran Television program This is the Life as well as three Lutheran Television specials. In 1977, Richard was nominated for an Emmy award by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences for outstanding individual achievement in writing. He returned to the stage in 1997 to perform the lead role of Scrooge in an Equity production of A Christmas Carol in Thousand Oaks, CA. In retirement, he worked as a volunteer at the Mary Health of the Sick skilled nursing facility in Newbury Park, CA. He is survived by his wife of 69 years, Vera; son and daughter-in-law, Mark and Jenna Wendley of Elk Grove, CA; daughter and son-in-law, Barbara and Marty Akimoto of Chico, CA; and four grandchildren, Emily and Ellen Akimoto and Annie and Eve Wendley.

 


 

 


WENDLEY, Richard


Born: 2/8/1920, Rochester, New York, U.S.A.


Died: 11/21/2013, Chico, California, U.S.A.


 


Richard Wendley’s westerns – screenwriter:


The Big Valley (TV) – 1965, 1968


The Virginian (TV) – 1967


Bonanza (TV) – 1967, 1968


RIP Rolf Boysen

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Theater legend: Rolf Boysen is dead

 


Soaar


By staff


May 16, 2014


 


The theater was his great love. Even in old age, Rolf Boysen was home on the boards, which meant the world to him. Rolf Boysen at the age of 94 in Munich died on Friday, as communicated to the Kammerspiele, whose ensemble he belonged to for years. "I find a man who has seen no theater yet, would have to despair," Boysen said once in an interview of the Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR). While his career defeated at first a very different path. Boysen – 1920 born and grew up in Hamburg – began a commercial education in Flensburg, Germany, before he decided on acting. "I have simply no relationship to this matter," he remembers his brief time as a businessman. "I have not understood really that. It has I don’t care even at all. "Very different acting: he had always been a drive of representation of, said Bandhara." At the beginning of the "fun and laughter" was – then seriously fun. "It bears responsibility, Yes, responsibility for what the author has written you have to try to find out what is at the core of the text, a role, “And like hardly another there were banks. He played ancient drama, Shakespeare, German classics and contemporary pieces. Television, Boysen was known by a wider audience in the main role of a staging of Wallenstein. His first engagement was Boysen 1946 in Dortmund, then his work across the Republic and even after Austria took him. Stations next to Munich and Hamburg were Kiel, Hanover, Berlin, Dusseldorf, Bochum and Vienna. Since 2001, he was a member of the ensemble at the Bavarian Staatsschauspiel. Always it succeeded him, to recognize the life of its own in its roles and to represent his characters credible, true and clear. "Humanity is the gloss, the banks looking for in all his roles, and with which he wants to revive his figures," wrote the "Suddeutsche Zeitung" to his 50-year stage anniversary. In his last years under Dieter Dorn at the Residenztheater, he read several great epics, including Homer’s "Iliad".


 


 


BOYSEN, Rolf


Born: 3/31/1920, Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany


Died: 5/16/2014, Munich, Bavaria, Germany


 


Rolf Boysen’s westerns – voice actor:


Blood for a Silver Dollar – 1965 [German voice of Peter Cross]



 

RIP Barbara Knudson

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RIP Barbara Knudson

 


Las Vegas Review-Journal


By Staff


May 17, 2014


 


BARBARA KNUDSON HENRY Dec. 4, 1927-May 11, 2014 Television and film actress, Barbara Ann Knudson, a native Nevadan, born to prominent Las Vegans, K.O. and Beatrice Knudson, passed away of natural causes, at home, May 11, 2014. William Henry "Bill," her only child, was caring for her and was with her at the time of her passing. Barbara was high-spirited, fun and beautiful inside and out! She was a graduate of Las Vegas High School, where she was the lead majorette (leading the Helldorado parades at the time) head cheerleader and a participant in many high school plays. After high school, she joined the Las Vegas Little Theatre, which led her to the Birdcage Theatre's stock company at the Last Frontier Hotel. Here she met a "Hollywood import" actor by the name of Bill Henry, who invited her to a Pasadena Playhouse production where talent scouts spotted her and invited her to "test." She signed with Paramount Studios in 1950 and she and Bill were married in 1952 on Waikiki Beach with celebrities like John Ford and Jack Lemon in attendance. Her TV and film credits number in the 40's.. filmology and TV episodes include: Union Station (1950), Born Yesterday (on the road - lead opposite Lon Chaney ) Iron Man (1951), The Range Rider (1951), The Lady from Texas (1951), Meet Danny Wilson (1951), Son of Ali Baba (1952), Lux Video Theatre (TV 1953), Hopalong Cassidy (TV 1953) Death Valley Days (TV 1954) The Gene Autry Show (TV series - 1955) The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show (TV series - six episodes - 1954-55 ) Annie Oakley (TV 1956), Jane Wyman Fireside Theatre (1956), The Lone Ranger (TV series many episodes 1956) State Trooper (TV 1957), Sergeant Preston of the Yukon (TV 1957), Sky King and Highway Patrol (TV 1958) The Cry Baby Killer (1958 - Jack Nicholson's film debut - their pictures were in People magazine), Lassie (TV 1960), My Three Sons (TV 1965), Daniel Boone (TV 1966), Legend of the Northwest (1978). After returning to Las Vegas to live, she kept up her interest in the theatre arts by directing the Clark County Senior Pageants for several years. Her "ladies" still praise her direction, expertise and friendship to this day. She also attended the Lone Pine Western Film Festival in Lone Pine, Calif. for many years, where a variety of her films were shown, she was a guest panelist and got to enjoy her celebrity in westerns all over again. She and Clayton Moore (The Lone Ranger) were great friends and they had wonderful stories to tell about filming in Lone Pine. The photo above is from the Memphis Western Film Festival, where she was a guest artist signing a photo for a fan. Barbara loved a good story and a good "laugh" and she loved reminiscing with her "high school buddies" on their Classmate Reunion Committee. She was preceded in death by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. K.O. Knudson; her older sister, Lois Knudson Rodman-Mahood; nephew, Roger Rodman, all of Las Vegas; and her former husband, Bill Henry of southern California. She is survived by her loving son, Bill, and his wife, Elizabeth; and granddaughter, Allisa, of Las Vegas. She is also survived by her nephew, Gilbert "Duke" Rodman (Natalie); cousin, Odette O'Neill, all of Las Vegas; her "little sister," Karen Knudson Lyon of La Jolla, Calif.; and her nieces, Marcia Kirby, Jill Lackey, Kristy Lyon; and grandnieces and grandnephews of southern California. Private Celebrations of life will be held in southern California. If you wish to donate to the Theatre Arts Program at her father's school in her name, that would be greatly appreciated: K.O. Knudson Middle School, 2400 Atlantic St., Las Vegas, NV 89104.


 


 


KNUDSON, Barbara (Barbara Ann Knudson)


Born: 12/4/1927, Las Vegas Nevada, U.S.A.


Died: 5/11/2014, Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.A.


 


Barbara Knudson’s westerns – actress:


The Lady from Texas – 1951 (Mabel Guthrie)


The Ranger Rider – 1951 (Lettie)


Hopalong Cassidy (TV) – 1953 (Jennie Warren)


Death Valley Days (TV) – 1954


The Gene Autry Show (TV) – 1955 (‘Diamond’ Della Dix)


The Lone Ranger (TV) – 1956 (Miss Sarah Edwards, Mrs. Wilkins, Nancy Sommers)


Annie Oakley (TV) – 1956 (Flora Carney)


Tales of Wells Fargo (TV) – 1957 (Dixie Lane)


Sergeant Preston of the Yukon – 1957 (Laura Hope)


Fury (TV) – 1958 (Martha Mitchell)


Sky King (TV) – 1958 (Gloria Blane)


The Jayhawkers – 1959 (townswoman)


Wagon Train (TV) – 1962 (Dora)


Temple Houston (TV) – 1963


Daniel Boone (TV) – 1966 (Kate Tolliver)


RIP Gordon Willis

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RIP Gordon Willis

 


Variety


By Pat Saperstein


May 18, 2014


 


Influential cinematographer Gordon Willis, whose photography for “The Godfather” series and Woody Allen’s “Annie Hall” and “Manhattan” helped define the look of 1970s cinema, has died, according to his close associate Doug Hart’s Facebook page. He was 82.


 


Willis was known as the Prince of Darkness for his artful use of shadows, and was DP on seminal 1970s films including “Klute,” “The Paper Chase,” “The Parallax View” and “All the President’s Men.”


 


He received an honorary Academy award in 2009 at the first Governor’s Awards ceremony.


 


Among the other Woody Allen films he shot were “Interiors,” “Stardust Memories,” “Broadway Danny Rose,” “The Purple Rose of Cairo” and “Zelig,” for which he was Oscar-nommed. His other Oscar nomination was for “The Godfather III.”


 


Regarding his work on “The Godfather,” Variety wrote in 1997, “Among “The Godfather’s” many astonishments, the photography by Gordon Willis — a rich play with light and shadow — confirmed Willis’ genius but was especially striking as an extension of Francis Ford Coppola’s creative intelligence. “


 


Born in New York City, his father worked as a make-up artist at Warner Brothers, and though Willis was originally interested in lighting and stage design, he later turned to photography. While serving in the Air Force during the Korean War, he worked in the motion picture unit and then worked in advertising and documentaries. His first feature was “End of the Road” in 1970, and his last, Alan Pakula’s “The Devil’s Own” in 1997.


 


 


WILLIS, Gordon


Born: 5/28/1931, Queens, New York, U.S.A.


Died: 5/18/2014, North Falmouth, Massachusetts, U.S.A.

 


Gordon Willis’ westerns – cinematographer:


Bad Company – 1972


Comes a Horseman - 1978

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