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RIP Damiano Damiani

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Director, writer, screenwriter and actor Damiano Damiani died today March 7, 2013 in Rome at his home from respiratory failure. This was confirmed by his daughter Sybil.

Born in Pordenone July 23, 1922, Damiano Damiani had a long career in the cinema. He established himself as a leader of the civil-political trend especially for his films such as 'Il giorno della civetta' ('The Day of the Owl'), based on the novel by Leonardo Sciascia, with Claudia Cardinale and Franco Nero

Among his most famous films is 'Arturo's Island' (from the novel by Elsa Morante), 'L’isola di Arturo', 'Io ho paura'  with Gian Maria Volonte. He directed the feature film debut of Ornella Muti, in 1970’s  in ‘'La moglie più bella'’.

His name is also linked to the TV drama ' 'La Piovra' (1984), in which he recounts the intertwining of politics and the mafia around the figure of Commissioner Corrado Cattani, played by Michele Placido. He was also an actor in films, including ' 'Il delitto Matteotti' by Florestano Vancini.

For many years he has been retired. In 2002 he released his latest film, ' 'Assassini dei giorni di festa', which tells of how a group of starving Italian actors, choose to play the part of relatives to the funerals of people unknown to them, in attempt to steal something.

Damiani was involved in two classic films of the Spaghetti western genre: “A Bullet for the General” (1966), with Gian Maria Volonte, Klaus Kinski and Lou Castel and “The Genius” (1975) with Terence Hill and Patrick McGoohan


DAMIANI, Damiano
Born: 7/23/1922, Pasiano, Pordenone, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Udine, Italy
Died: 3/7/2013, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Damiano Damiani’s westerns – director, screenwriter, actor, himself:
A Bullet for the General – 1966 (Journalist) [director, screenwriter]
The Genius - 1975 [director, screenwriter]
Denn sie kennen kein Erbarmen - Der Italowestern (TV) - 2005 [himself]


RIP Robert E. Relyea

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Veteran producer Robert Relyea, whose career spanned more than 40 years, died Tuesday at age 82. Born in Santa Monica, CA, Relyea started as an entry level crew member with MGM in 1955, eventually moving on to become President of Production for MGM/UA in 1997. He served as second unit or assistant director on films including Jailhouse Rock, Oklahoma!, The High Cost Of Living and The Alamo, but it was through his long association with actor Steve McQueen that he made his biggest mark on Hollywood history. Relyea served as Assistant Director on Never So Few and The Magnificent Seven, and as Associate Producer for The Great Escape. In 1966 Relyea joined McQueen’s Solar Productions as an executive producer, going on to produce McQueen’s classic Bullitt, as well as The Reivers, Le Mans and Adam At Six A.M. After leaving Solar, Relyea became an independent producer, with credits including Arnold Schwarzenegger’s The Last Action Hero. He also served in executive positions at Lorimar and Paramount, and as head of the California Film Commission under former Governor Pete Wilson.

RELYEA, Robert E.
Born: 5/3/1930, Santa Monica, California, U.S.A.
Died: 3/5/2013, U.S.A.

Robert E. Relyea's westerns - assistant director, producer:
Oklahoma - 1955 [assistant director]
Gun Glory - 1957 [assistant director]
The Alamo - 1960 [assistant director]
The Magnificent Seven - 1960 [assistant director]
Gun Glory - 1957 [assistant director]
The Hallelujah Trail - 1965 [producer]
 
 

RIP Micky Moore

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Micky Moore dies at 98; director and early Hollywood actor

Moore acted in silents as a boy and then for decades worked as a second-unit director, contributing to such works as 'Patton' and three 'Indiana Jones' movies.



By Valerie J. Nelson, Los Angeles Times
March 10, 2013, 5:39 p.m.


Micky Moore and Hollywood grew up together.

He was a toddler in 1916 when he began his career as a child actor in silent films and sat on the laps of such leading ladies as Mary Pickford and Gloria Swanson. As a 5-year-old he worked with legendary director Cecil B. DeMille, who would mentor Moore as he transitioned to directing in adulthood.

As the motion picture industry moved from silent pictures to sound and into the digital era, Moore would contribute to more than 200 movies over nine decades. He experienced so much Hollywood history firsthand that he was moved to preserve it in a memoir published when he was 95. He called it "My Magic Carpet of Films."

When Moore finally retired from the business, in his late 80s, he was regarded as a leading second-unit director for his work on such films as "Patton," "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" and the first three "Indiana Jones" movies.

Moore died March 4 at his longtime home in Malibu of congestive heart failure, his family announced. He was 98.

"He was amazing because the pictures he was second-unit director on, such as 'Patton' and 'Indiana Jones' have the highest reputation for their action. And who did the action scenes?" film historian Kevin Brownlow asked rhetorically in an interview with The Times.

The answer is, of course, Moore.

Over three decades he made nearly 40 films as a second-unit director shooting action and background footage while the primary director was engaged elsewhere. Hewing to another director's vision didn't bother Moore, known for bringing kindness and gentleness to his Hollywood sets. Besides, he said, the top directors had the confidence to take his advice.

"If you are good, you shouldn't even be aware that a second-unit director has been involved," Moore said in 2009 in the Malibu Times. "I just did the best I could possibly do on each shot, so they kept asking me to make more movies."

When filmmakers George Lucas and Steven Spielberg needed a second-unit director for "Raiders of the Lost Ark" (1981), Moore was their first choice, and a perfect one, Lucas later recalled.

"Micky Moore was exceptional.... He was confident behind the camera and knew when to speak up to make things better," Lucas wrote in a foreword to Moore's 2009 book.

After Moore suggested that the truck-chase scene he would direct in "Raiders" could be improved by moving it from an empty desert to narrow tree-lined streets to give it context, the change was made. The results, Lucas wrote of the now-iconic scene, "speak for themselves."

Spielberg wrote in another foreword to Moore's book: "He saw around the corners of my imagination and made significant contributions. For this and for his friendship, I shall always be grateful."

He was born Dennis Michael Sheffield in October 1914 in Vancouver, Canada, one of four children of Thomas Sheffield, a shipbuilder from Britain, and Norah Moore, an actress from Dublin.

After his family arrived in Santa Barbara by boat in 1915, they lived near a branch of the American Film Manufacturing Co., known as the Flying "A" Studio. When a neighbor suggested that brother Patrick, then almost 4, audition there, 18-month-old Micky — with his mop of curls and expressive eyes — was soon employed as well.

To further their careers, the family moved to Los Angeles in 1916, and Micky Moore was making $200 a week in 1920. His mother wanted the boys to use her last name professionally.

Patrick appeared in dozens of silent pictures, including the 1923 version of "The Ten Commandments," and later worked at Paramount Studios in music and sound editing. He died at 91 in 2004.

Their father maintained a lifelong affinity for the water. He was a founder of the original Santa Monica Lifeguard Service in 1916 and helped pioneer the American Red Cross safety program on the West Coast.

Young Micky soon joined the new Lasky studio, known as the Famous Players-Lasky Corp., where he spent much of his childhood. He often played the son in the dozens of silent films he made until the late 1920s.


MOORE, Michael D. (aka Micky Moore) (Dennis Michael Sheffield)
Born: 10/14/1914, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Died: 3/4/2013, Malibu, California, U.S.A.

Michael D. Moore’s westerns – actor, assistant director, second unit director:
Out of the Dust – 1920 (Evans' Grandchild)
The Man from Red Gulch – 1925 (Little Jimmie Falloner)
The Lady from Hell – 1926 (Billy Boy)
No Man's Gold – 1926 (Jimmi Rogers)
Good As Gold – 1927 (Buck Brady as a child)
California (1947) [assistant director]
Unconquered (1947) [assistant director]
The Paleface – 1948 [assistant director]
Streets of Laredo – 1949 [assistant director]
Fancy Pants – 1950 [assistant director]
The Furies – 1950 [assistant director]
Pardners – 1956 [assistant director]
Gunfight at the O.K. Corral - 1957 [assistant director]
The Tin Star - 1957 [assistant director]
Last Train from Gun Hill - 1959 [assistant director]
The Sons of Katie Elder - 1965 [assistant director]
An Eye for an Eye - 1966 [director]
The Fastest Guitar Alive - 1967 [director]
Bonanza (TV) - 1967 [director]
Hondo (TV) – 1967 [director]
Buckskin – 1968 [director]
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid - 1969 [second unit director]
Rooster Cogburn - 1975 [second unit director]
The Missouri Breaks - 1976 [second unit director]
The Return of a Man Called Horse - 1976 [second unit director]
The Electric Horseman - 1979 [assistant director]
Zorro: The Gay Blade - 1981 [second unit director]

RIP Art Hansl

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Author and actor Art Hansl was educated in Europe as well as in the States at Taft School in Connecticut and Washington and Lee University in Virginia. His mother was a successful playwright in her early twenties, his father an executive at JP Morgan & Co. Born to privilege, his family's wealth had dissipated over the years and, after a single semester, he left law school at U.S.C. and veered away from the conventional life planned for him.

Until his death by cancer (March 6, 2013) at the age of 82, he set his own path, first joining the Marine Corps during the Korean War. Hostilities ended before he was ready to ship out and he completed his service in the military police at Camp Pendleton, California. After his brief experiment with law school, he headed to Mexico for a few weeks, and ended up staying for four years. With a background in languages, he picked up Spanish quickly and soon found his place among expatriates and locals, playboys and playgirls, in what he liked to call 'a sunny land for shady people'.

Plans to open a night club with questionable partners went awry as did other schemes and he left reluctantly to return to California. From there he traveled to Spain and, with the last of his funds, went to Rome. There he met and eventually married model and actress, Mary Arden, who introduced him to an agent who thought he had a future in motion pictures.

He appeared in films with Kirk Douglas and Ursula Andress, but soon he was making mostly B action films, James Bond rip-offs popular in the 60's that took him around Europe, behind the Iron Curtain and to North Africa. By the end of the decade the dolce vita was largely over for expatriate American actors and Hansl went back to Mexico to pursue his career there, playing heroes and heavies, making westerns, horror films, whatever came along. In the 1970's a change in  the Mexican government and tax laws sent him back to California where he finished his acting career with a stint in the daytime TV series, General Hospital.

Now divorced and re-married to a French beauty, Nicole Richardeau, his mother's genes kicked in and he switched to writing. Drawing from a life of considerable adventure, he produced five published novels and an autobiography. He passed away at his home in Montecito, California. Plans for services are pending.

HINTL, Arthur (aka Arthur Hansel)
Born: 1931, U.S.A.
Died: 3/6/2013, Montecito, California, U.S.A.

Arthur Hintl’s western – actor:
Eye for an Eye – 1971 (Sam Pittman)

RIP Malachi Throne

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Batman’s FALSEFACE, It Takes a Thief’s NOAH BAIN – the man of a thousand and one faces -- movie/TV vet MALACHI THRONE dead at age 84.

The sad news was announced on Facebook by “Justified” “and Supernatural” star Jim Beaver who wrote, “My good friend Malachi Throne died last night. One of the finest actors and finest people I've been fortunate enough to know.”

Born in 1928, Throne was a popular guest star on many TV series of the 1960s and 1970s, including "The Defenders", "Naked City", "Ben Casey" and "The Man From U.N.C.L.E", and most notably co-starring with ROBERT WAGNER in "It Takes a Thief" as Noah Bean.

One of Throne’s most bizarre roles was as the villain "False Face" in the ABC Batman (1966) series.

Throne worn a multitude of disguises to effect his evil schemes against Gotham and wore a semi-transparent mask when not in disguise. T

The mask rendered the thesp’s real face unrecognizable on the cathode ray tube.

The show's producers wrote the on-screen credit as "? as False Face", which denied Throne his screen redit in Part 1 of the Bat-cliffhanger but was revealed at the conclusion of the 2nd ep "Holy Rat Race."

He also guested on “Star Trek” and “ST: Next Gen", "The Big Valley", "The Rockford Files"and “The Outer Limits” among many others.

Malachi was an active member of the Theatre West company in Hollywood.

The cause of his death is not known yet.

THORNE, Malachi (Dieter Hermann Comès)
Born: 12/1/1928, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 3/13/2013,U.S.A.

Malache Throne’s westerns – actor.
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1963 (Jarvis)
Rawhide (TV) – 1965, 1966 (Joaquin Vallino, Baker)
Iron Horse (TV) – 1966 (Royal McClintock)
The Big Valley (TV) – 1965, 1966 (Charles Crown, Frank Colder, Father Andre)
Laredo (TV) – 1966 (Sean Finnegan)
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1967 (Kuprin)
The Virginian (TV) – 1967 (Doc Baldwin)
The High Chaparral (TV) – 1969, 1971 (Matar, Julio Armendaris)
Longarm (TV) – 1988 (Blalock)

RIP Rosemarie Fendel

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Age and fatigue were unknown to her: Until recently Rosemarie Fendel still played great character roles - as in Margarethe von Trotta's "The Sister". Even with her daughter Suzanne with Hans von Borsody they stood together in front of the camera. Now she has died at the age of 85.

Hamburg / Munich / Frankfurt - they had their last major appearance in the ZDF production "Adlon", a three part series, which traces the development of the traditional Berlin hotels. Rosemarie Fendel played it as a hotelier's daughter, who returned to Berlin in old age. Off screen, the actress says that was due to her elegant voice in recent years of which she was also popular as a radio drama spokeswoman, ‘The History of the Adlon Over the Last Century’.

An appropriate role for Fendel, who had a career of more than 50 years, as a German stage and film artist. Her acting debut was in 1946 at an intimate theater in Munich. After an engagement in Tübingen she played Gustaf in Dusseldorf Schauspielhaus. It was followed by appearances in Darmstadt, Munich and Frankfurt.

Later she worked as a voice actress, among other things, she was the German voice of Elizabeth Taylor, Annie Girardot and Jeanne Moreau.

Born on April 25, 1927 in Koblenz Fendel Metternich was an important actress in film and television during the 1960s and 1970s. Among her films were "Trotta" (1972), "Axis Jump" (1977) and "Death in a Car Wash" (1982). The films dominated both the serious and the comic trade. She appeared in "Ödipussi" (1988) and "Schtonk" (1992).

Until 1962 Fendel was married to the director, actor Hans von Borsody, from this marriage came her daughter Suzanne of Borsody, now 55 who is also an actress. About six years Fendel had interrupted her career after the birth of her child. Mother and daughter were now playing well together, such as in the ARD film "Human Mother" (2003).

Despite her age, the character actress was seen regularly in recent years in leading roles in front of the camera. With indestructible charm and unbroken representation she coined films like "Max Minsky and Me," "Late View", Margarethe von Trotta's "The Sister" and the Sat.1 spy thriller "In the End, the Hope."

As her management confirmed Rosemarie Fendel died on Wednesday after a short illness at her home in Frankfurt. She was 85 years old.

FENDEL, Rosemarie
Born: 4/25/1927, Metternich, Rheinland-Pfalz , Germany
Died: 3/13/2013, Frankfurt, Main, Germany]

Rosemarie Fendel’s westerns – voice actress:
River Pirates of the Mississippi – 1963 [German voice of Dorothee Parker]
Massacre at Marble City – 1964 [German voice of Dorothee Parker]
Viva Maria! – 1965 [German voice of Jeanne Moreau]
The Big Gundown – 1966 [German voice of Nieves Navarro]
Custer of the West – 1967 [German voice of Mary Ure]

RIP Rolf Schult

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Rolf Schult, the German voice of Robert Redford and Anthony Hopkins, died on Wednesday March 13, 2013 in Munich, Germany.

Rolf Schult was born on April 16, 1927 in Berlin, Germany. Schult was an actor and one of the biggets German dubbing voices. Along with Robert Redford and Anthony Hopkins, he also gave his voice to Patrick Stewart, Clint Eastwood, Marlon Brando, Gene Hackman, Donald Sutherland and many others.

In 2008 he was awarded the audience prize for dubbing "The Silhouette" for Lifetime Achievement award.

SCHULT, Rolf
Born: 4/16/1927, Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Died: 3/13/2013, Munich, Bavaria, Germany

Rolf Schult’s westerns – voice actor:
God Forgives... I Don’t - 1966 [German voice of Giancarlo Bastianoni]
Guns for San Sebastian - 1967 [German voice of Ivan Desny]
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly - 1966 [German voice of Luigi Pistilli]
Navajo Joe – 1966 [German voice of Pierre Cressoy]
The Ugly Ones – 1966 [German voice of Richard Wyler]
Ace High – 1967 [German voice of Kevin McCarthy]
Death Rides Alone – 1967 [German voice of Carlo Gaddi]
Seven Dollars to Kill – 1967 [German voice of Fred Warrel]
Cemetery Without Crosses – 1968 [German voice of Pierre Hatet]
Find a Place to Die – 1968 [German voice of Peter Lastrett]
God May Forgive You, Nor Me - 1968 [German voice of Jean Louis]
The Man Who Cried for Revenge– 1968 [German voice of Robert Hundar]
Today We Kill, Tomorrow We Die– 1968 [German voice of Tatsuya Nakadai]
Winnetou and Shatterhand in the Valley of Death – 1968 [German voice of Rik Battaglia]
Boot Hill – 1969 [German voice of Luciano Rossi #2]
El Condor - 1969 [German voice of Patrick O’Neal]
The 5-Man Army! - 1969 [German voice of Carlo Alighiero]
Sabata– 1969 [German voice of William Berger]
Cannon for Cordoba – 1970 [German voice of Don Gordon]
Companeros! – 1970 [German voice of Lorenzo Robledo]
Fistful of Lead - 1970 [German voice of Rick Boyd]
Have a Nice Funeral - 1970 [German voice of Antonio Staccioli]
Blindman – 1971 [German voice of Tony Anthony]
Catlow – 1971 [German voice of Yul Brynner]
Drummer of Vengeance – 1971 [German voice of Ty Hardin]
The Hunting Party– 1971 [German voice of Gene Hackman]
Long Live Death... Yours!– 1971 [German voice of Dan van Husen]
Valdez is Coming– 1971 [German voice of Jon Cypher]
They Call Me Providence– 1972 [German voice of Maurice Poli]

RIP Subas Herrero

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Champoy' actor Subas Herrero passes away at 69

By ANDREI MEDINA, GMA NewsMarch 15, 2013 2:34pm

Subas Herrero, an actor comedian best known for his role in the 80's TV hit “Champoy,” passed away on Friday morning, according to one of his best friends.

Veteran actor Noel Trinidad told GMA News Online in a phone interview on Friday that Herrero passed away at the age of 69.

“Kaninang umaga lang [siya pumanaw],” Trinidad said.

Herrero died of double pneumonia at a hospital in Rochester, New York, Trinidad said, quoting Herrero's wife.

“Siyempre malungkot. Parang kapatid ko na 'yan eh,” Trinidad replied when asked how he felt about the passing of his friend.

Trinidad said he and Herrero had a bond of brotherhood and that they have been together from their grade school to their college days in plays and glee clubs at the Ateneo de Manila University.

Herrero portrayed different roles from 1970 to 2000 with his last project being “Noriega: God's Favorite” wherein he played the role of Gabriel Arias.

But he was remembered most for his role in “Champoy” which aired from 1980 to 1986. The show also had veteran actors Trinidad, Gary Lising, Tessie Tomas and Cherie Gil in the cast.

There is no word yet on when Herrero's wake will take place and where he would be buried.

Herrero, whose birthday is on April 3, is survived by his wife, four daughters, and one son.

HERERO, Subas (Ricardo Wright Herrero)
Born: 4/3/1943, Manila, Philippines
Died: 3/15/2013, Rochester, New York, U.S.A.

Subas Herrero’s western – actor:
Cuadro de Jack - 1994


RIP Rick Porter

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Richard Johnston Porter II, known to those who loved him simply as "Rick," passed away at age 58. He was reminiscing at his homestead in Cypress, Texas when he was rushed to Saint Luke's hospital at Vintage Park in Houston. He died at 7:15 pm on February 25th, 2013 from congestive heart failure. Richard was born in Houston on August 31st, 1954 to Evelyn Fay Porter and Richard Johnston Porter. He had an older sister, Rosalind Marie Porter, and he had two wives during his life, Deborah and Felicia. He graduated with a BA in Drama and Acting from UT Austin and an MA in Screenwriting and Directing from Columbia. Rick played "Larry Ewing" on Another World soap opera for 10 years in New York City. He was also featured in numerous Broadway plays and television shows. He eventually gave up acting to pursue marketing and worked as a creative entrepreneur throughout many of his later years. Near the end of his life he acted as a consultant in senior care and alternative energy industries. Rick resided in Houston, Austin, New York, Los Angeles, and Scottsdale. He was a very friendly and outgoing man who had a lot of friends and built communities everywhere he went. Rick had an amazing sense of humor and boundless energy. Despite his many hardships, Rick was a man who thoroughly enjoyed living life to the fullest. Rick is survived by his only daughter, Allison Linsey Porter, and his older sister, Rosalind Marie Porter. He is predeceased by both his parents, Richard Johnston Porter and Evelyn Fay Porter. His memorial service was held on Sunday March 3rd, 2013 at his home in Cypress. It was attended by many close friends and family who loved Rick and wished to celebrate his life.

PORTER, Rick (Richard Johnston Porter II)
Born: 8/31/1954, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.
Died: 2/25/2013, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.

Rick Porter’s western – actor:
Walker, Texas Ranger (TV) – 1993 (Tripp)

RIP Valentino Macchi

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Valentino Macchi has died.

A native of Bologna, Macchi was born on August 4, 1937 worked with many directors both in Italy and abroad, among which we were Pupi Avati, Alberto Sordi and Giuseppe Orlandini. He appeared in comedies, westerns and Italian crime films in the 1970s. Macchi appeared in over 130 films and TV appearances. Among those many films were 21 Euro-westerns such as “A Man Called Gringo” (1965), “Yankee” and “Arizona Colt” (aka “The Man from Nowhere”), “Navajo Joe”, “A Bullet for the General” (all 1966), “Gentleman Killer”, “Any Gun Can Play” “Bandidos” (all 1967), “Starblack” (aka “Johnny Colt”) (1968).

MACCHI, Valentino
Born: 8/4/1937, Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
Died: 3/19/2013, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Valentino Macchi’s westerns:
Django - 1965 (Klan member)
The Man Called Gringo – 1965 (Tim Walton)
Lo sceriffo non paga il sabato – 1965
A Bullet for the General - 1966 (train engineer)
Django Shoots First - 1966 (Sheriff Hicks)
Halleluja for Django - 1966
Johnny Colt – 1966
The Man from Nowhere – 1966
Navajo Joe – 1966 (Duncan henchman)
The Tall Women – 1966
Yankee – 1966 (Garcia)
Zorro the Rebel – 1966
Any Gun Can Play - 1967 (Charo Ruiz)
Bandidos - 1967 (bearded saloon patron)
Django, the Last Killer - 1967 (sheriff)
Gentleman Killer - 1967
If You Want to Live... Then Shoot! – 1967
Killer Kid – 1967 [as Macchi Valentino]
Poker with Pistols – 1967 (Pat)
Two Faces of the Dollar – 1967 (Lieutenant Laffan)
I Want Him Dead - 1968 (Mallek henchman)
If You Want to Live… Shoot! – 1968
$20,000 for Seven – 1968
Two Pistols and a Coward – 1968

RIP Rosine Delamare

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Rosine Delamare a French costume designer died March 17, 2013 at 101 years of age.

Born Denise Rosemonde Delamare on June 11, 1911 in Colombes, Seine-Saint-Denis, Île-de-France, France She began her film career with “Untel père et fils” shot in 1939-1940 (first released in the United States, 1943). The last film in which it participated in was “Fort Saganne”, released in 1984. In all, she worked in a hundred films, mostly French films, but also some foreign films or co-productions including one Euro-western “The Legend of Frenchie King” (1971). For television between 1962 and 1984, she contributed to four TV movies and two series.
She was a costume designer throughout her entire career in films, stage and TV. She was the daughter of radio personality and writer Georges Delamare [1881-1975] and sister of actress Lise Delamare [1913-2006].

DELAMARE, Rosine (Denise Rosemonde Delamare)
Born: 6/11/1911, Colombes, Seine-Saint-Denis, Île-de-France, France
Died: 3/17/2013, France

Rosine Delamare’s western – costume designer:
The Legend of Frenchie King - 1971

RIP Lori March

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Lori Scourby, Wife of Alexander Scourby, Dies at Age 90


MEDIA ADVISORY, March 22, 2013 /Christian Newswire/ -- Lori March Scourby, wife of Alexander Scourby, famed actor and narrator of numerous books including King James Bible, died peacefully in her sleep on March 19, 2013 at the age of 90.

Lori March Scourby was born in Hollywood, California on March 6, 1923 to actor Theodore Von Eltz and screen writer Peggy Prior, and attended Beverly Hills High School.

Lori moved to New York in 1939 to study acting and got her first role in 1940, working under the pseudonym "Lori March." She went on to become a well known actress on television, Broadway and film working on serials, such as "The Brighter Day" and the Secret Storm.

Lori was 5 feet 5, had a slight frame and weighed 110 pounds, with sparkling brown eyes and dark brown hair. She had a quiet demeanor and always was elegantly dressed, except when she was at home, then her favorite attire were blue jeans. She was one of those people you never would forget once you met her.

While living in New York she met Alexander Scourby, an already established actor, and they married May 12, 1943. Their only child, Alexandra known as Lexi, was born on March 27, 1944. Lori gave up acting to become a full time mother and didn’t resume her acting career until Lexi was four years old.

Lori was a dedicated actress who always knew her lines and was never late for an appointment. During the height of her career she was called, "The First Lady of Daytime Television." She received a tremendous amount of fan mail and diligently worked to answer them all by hand. No Facebook, twitter or smart phones in the 1950's.

Lori and Alexander had a home in Connecticut and an apartment in New York. Lori's passion was gardening and she would spend long hours tending the vegetables and the fruit trees. Then in the fall she and Alex would "can" as much as they could for the winter months.

Alexander Scourby's passion was his narration of books and he spent his extra time recording books at the recording studios of the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB). During his career he ended up recording over 500 books for the AFB. He was so good at his craft that the Chicago Tribune wrote that he had "the greatest voice ever recorded and was the world's best audio book narrator bar none." His most famous recorded book was the King James Bible recorded in 1950's and it's still a best seller today.

Lori and Alexander Scourby had an idyllic life where they spent their time enjoying their acting careers, their homes in New York and Connecticut and often attending Broadway shows as well as entertaining in their home. But most importantly they enjoyed each other and it was one of those special relationships where love for each other was the foundation stone in their lives.

Lori once said the following with smiling eyes, "We have a good life, have love in our lives, good friends and similar careers that we love. We have a full balanced life and are never bored. We are very fortunate."

Alexander Scourby died in 1985 at age 71. This reporter was privileged to know both Lori and Alexander and this is written with a deep sense of loss for two of the finest people one could ever meet. One can only hope they are both now re-united in eternity and cradled in the hands of a loving God.

MARCH, Lori (Lori von Eltz)
Born: 3/6/1923, Hollywood, California, U.S.A.
Died: 3/19/2013, Connecticut, U.S.A.

Lori March’s westerns – actress:
The Rough Riders (TV) – 1959
The Tall Man (TV) – 1962 (Isabel Randall Stewart)

RIP Franklin Caicedo

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Actor Franklin Caicedo has died.

The Chilean actor Franklin Caicedo, based in Argentina for more than 40 years, died March 21st in Santiago.

Born in Iquique, Tarapacá, in 1928, Caicedo had settled in Argentina in 1969. In the first stage of his career, in Chile, he was part of the Experimental Theatre of the University of Chile, who led ‘The Rise and Death of Joaquin Murieta’, the only play by Pablo Neruda, with whom he maintained a friendship.

In the late 1960's he came to Argentina and began working in the country, but also appeared in films. As Farina in "The Chilean" the classic La Patagonia Rebel. Healso starred, among others, in “La isla” directed by Alejandro Doria, “Tacos altos” by Sergio Renan, and “Yo, la peor de todas” by Maria Luisa Bemberg. He also participated in numerous films, plays and TV programs.

His last job was in the country with the play ‘El cartero de Neruda’ by Antonio Skármeta five years ago.

CAICEDO, Franklin
Born: 7/23/1928, Iquique, Chile
Died: 3/21/2013, Santiago, Chile

Franklin Caicedo’s western – actor:
Chiquitas: Rincon de luz - 2001

RIP Giancarlo Zagni

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Farewell to Giancarlo Zagni, worked with Visconti.

He died in Rome and was a director from Bologna. He was 86 years old. He married Alida Valli in Mexico. He was assistant to the great Luchino and directed Lollobrigida in “La bellezza di Ippolita”.

Zagni was born in Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy on November 4, 1926 and had started in the 1950s in the theater as an assistant to director Luchino Visconti in many works (from Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, “La locandiera” by Carlo Goldoni, “Tre sorelle” by Anton Chekhov, “Medea di Euripide”, “Il Seduttore di Fabbri”). Always with Visconti, had went on to the cinema as an assistant director for film direction. On the set of that masterpiece he met the magnificent Alida Valli and they married in Mexico. During the filming of Michelangelo Antonioni's "The Scream" he met screenwriter and writer Elio Bartolini, author of the novel “La bellezza di Ippolita” who, four years after he wrote Zagni to make his first feature film.

Meanwhile he broke with the master Visconti, who never forgave him. 1955 in his first trip to America, he attended the Actor's Studio in New York, run by Lee Strasberg and then went to Mexico to the Royal Theater, becoming the founder and professor of the School of Cinema National Autonomous University of Mexico.

In Italy he adapted from the novel by Elio Bartolini and directed the film “La bellezza di Ippolita” with Gina Lollobrigida and Enrico Maria Salerno, a film that represented Italy at the Berlin Film Festival. In 1966 he won the plate 'Lion of St. Mark' at the Exhibition of the Venice Film Festival with the film "Testadirapa" with Folco Lulli and Gigliola Cinquetti. Then he retired from filmmaking but not from the film: in the following years Zagni started a new career as a producer and distributor himself as an officer dell'Italnoleggio. He also devoted himself to theater in the square and with organizations such as UNICEF, then in 1980 which organizes and produces Ten to Survive, a television movie with cartoons on the bill of rights of children.


ZAGNI, Giancarlo 
Born: 11/4/1926, Bologna, Emilia Romagna, Italy
Died:  3/21/2013, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Giancarlo Zagni's western - screenwriter:
Execution - 1968 (co)

RIP Jerzy Nowak

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Jerzy Nowak, died on Tuesday March 26, 2013. He created memorable performances in such films as "Schindler's List," "Children of Irena Sendler" and "Promised Land." He was 89.


From the beginning of his career he worked in Krakow, where he graduated from the National Theatre School. Later, as an old theater actor, he was a teacher. Appearing mainly in supporting roles, he was always able to present a unique character, as in the case of his creation Zucker in the "Promised Land."

Marcin Koszalka, director of the film "Existence", remembers watching Jerzy Nowak , “One thing I can say with certainty: Nowak was definitely not of death. This trip movie, which I had showed me a lot about Jerzy Nowak. It was a movie about life, not death. Jerzy Nowak believed that the most important thing is life, action, and not death, nor the body, which he said was a piece of ragdoll. For him it was important that he left - the roles of theater, film, and this film, which has left a piece of his heart. It was moving and gives food for thought. Smith proved that you need to think about life, not death.”

Jerzy appeared in one Euro-western “Eucalytus” (2001) as Pancho Almodovar.

NOWAK, Jerzy
Born: 6/20/1923, Brzesko, Poland
Died: 3/26/2013, Varsovie, Poland] - stage, TV actor

Jerzy Nowak's western - actor:
Eucalyptus - 2001 (Pancho Almodovar)

RIP Fay Kanin

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Former Writers Guild of America, West Vice President, past AMPAS President, and award-winning writer Fay Kanin died today at age 95 at her home in Santa Monica, California.
 Born on May 9, 1917, in New York City, industry icon Kanin sustained a remarkable, trail-blazing career that spanned stage, screen, and television over several decades, leaving an indelible impression in entertainment and popular culture.

Kanin launched her screenwriting career in 1942 with the classic comedy Sunday Punch, co-written with her longtime writing partner and husband, the late Michael Kanin, and Allen Rivkin. Fay and Michael Kanin soon emerged as part of one of the most successful wife-husband screenwriting teams in Hollywood, co-writing a string of screenplays for films such as My Pal Gus (1952), Rhapsody (1954, Screenplay by Fay Kanin and Michael Kanin and Ruth Goetz and Augustus Goetz, Based on the Novel Maurice Guest by Henry Handel Richardson), The Opposite of Sex (1956, adapted from the play “The Women” by Clare Booth), and the classic romantic comedy Teacher’s Pet (1958). Her additional screenwriting credits include The Right Approach (1961, Screenplay by Fay Kanin and Michael Kanin) and The Swordsman of Siena (1962, Screenplay by Fay Kanin & Michael Kanin and Alec Coppel, Based on a Story by Anthony Marshall), and Blondie for Victory (1942, Screenplay by Karen De Wolf & Connie Lee Bennett, Screen Story by Fay Kanin).

Later in her career, Kanin transitioned to television, emerging as a prolific writer-producer of some of the small screen’s most distinguished projects, including telefilms such as Tell Me Where It Hurts (1974), Hustling (1975), based on the book by Gail Sheehy, and Friendly Fire (1979), based on the novel by C.D.B. Bryan, which she wrote and co-produced. In 1980, she partnered with Lillian Gallo to form her own production company Kanin-Gallo, yielding TV movies such as Letting Go and Fun and Games, which received the National Commission of Working Women Broadcast Award. She also penned and co-produced Heartsounds (1984), based on the book by Martha Weiman Lear.

Over the course of her five-decade writing career, Kanin’s film and television projects earned her multiple industry accolades, including: an Academy Award nomination for Teacher’s Pet (Best Story and Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen, 1958), as well as a Writers Guild Award nomination for Screen Comedy; two Emmy Awards in 1974 for her work on Tell Me Where It Hurts (Best Writing in Drama, Original Teleplay and Writer of the Year - Special); a 1975 Writers Guild Award (Anthology Adapted) for Hustling, as well as an Emmy nomination for the TV movie (Outstanding Writing in a Special or Program – Drama or Comedy – Original Teleplay); a 1979 Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama or Comedy Special and a Writers Guild Award for Adapted Anthology in 1980 for Friendly Fire, as well as an Emmy nomination (Outstanding Writing, Limited Series or Special, 1979) and Humanitas Prize nomination for the sobering Vietnam-era drama; and Emmy, WGA, Golden Globe writing award nominations for the telefilm Heartsounds.

A Writers Guild, West member since 1942, Kanin served as WGAW Council Vice President from 1973-75, as well as a member of the WGAW Council Screen Branch (1964-67), as Secretary-Treasurer of the WGAW Council Screen Branch (1967-70), as Vice President of the WGAW Council Screen Branch (1969-71), and as President of the WGAW Council Screen Branch (1971-73).

Kanin was one of the Writers Guild’s rare members to earn multiple WGAW honorary and service awards. In 2005, she received the Guild’s Edmund H. North Award, given to a writer whose “courageous leadership, strength of purpose, and continuing selfless activity on behalf of the Guild throughout the years, as well as personal achievement of the highest order, have served to establish the Writers Guild of America as a pillar of strength and security for writers throughout the world.” In 1980, she received the WGAW’s Morgan Cox Award for her longtime service to the Guild, and in 1975, she received the WGAW’s Valentine Davies Award for her humanitarian efforts and whose contributions “to the entertainment industry and the community at large have brought dignity and honor to writers everywhere.”

Having served on the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science’s Board of Governors since 1974, Kanin served as AMPAS President from 1979 to 1983, as well as served as a member of AMPAS’ Board of Governors’ Writer Branch for several terms, having also chaired AMPAS’ Finance, Foreign Language Film Award, Long Range Planning, Nicholl Fellowships, and Student Academy Awards committees over the years. She was a founding Trustee and long-time Secretary of the Writers Guild Foundation, as well as a former WGF Vice President and, more recently, Emeritus Vice President, a position she retained until her death. A member of the Board of Trustees of the American Film Institute, she co-chaired AFI’s Center for Film and Video Presentation, as well as chaired the National Film Preservation Board in Washington D.C.

Lauded for her volunteer efforts on behalf of women, Kanin earned honors from the American Civil Liberties Union, the League of Women Voters, the American Women for International Understanding, and the Crystal Award of Women in Film, among other organizations. Known for her signature style and wit, Kanin remained an articulate industry spokesperson and leader on a variety of issues important to creative artists, including film preservation.

KANIN, Fay (Fay Mitchell)
Born: 5/9/1917, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 3/27/2013, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Fay Kanin’s western – screenwriter:
The Outrage 1964

RIP Robert Nichols

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RIP Robert Nichols

By GUY KOVNER
 THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Tuesday, March 26, 2013 at 6:41 p.m.

Robert Nichols, a singer, dancer and actor, enjoyed a career on stage, television and movies for nearly 70 years in London, New York and Los Angeles as well as Occidental, his home since 1991.

Nichols, an Oakland native who entertained troops during World War II and later performed on Broadway and in Hollywood films, died of heart failure at home on Thursday. He was 88.

Nichols' film credits included “The Thing,” the original 1951 version that became a cult classic, “Giant” with Rock Hudson and Elizabeth Taylor, and “The Red Badge of Courage” with Audie Murphy.

On television, he appeared in “Maverick,” “Gunsmoke,” “The Addams Family,” “The Real McCoys” and “The Dick Van Dyke Show.”

Nichols, who started out as a song and dance man, favored the stage most of all, said his wife, Jennifer Nichols of Occidental.

“Live theater was absolutely the thing he loved,” she said.

Nichols' distinction, in an industry known for many starving artists, was to have made a living as a “working actor,” his wife said. “To survive in this business is a big deal.”

His favorite Broadway role was in “Take Me Along,” a musical based on the Eugene O'Neill play “Ah, Wilderness” in 1959.

Another career highlight was performing the role of Cap'n Andy in a 1988 recording of “Showboat,” recognized as the best musical comedy recording of the decade.

To see Nichols in action, check the YouTube clip “Robert Nichols goes dancing,” showing him in the 1952 movie “Sally and Saint Anne.”

Nichols began performing at his Oakland high school, and continued during his wartime duty with the Army's Special Services, playing at stateside bases with soldiers from the burlesque trade and managing a band of black jazz musicians in Japan.

After the war, Nichols won a scholarship to the Royal Academy for Dramatic Art in London, followed by song and dance and stage performances in the British capital. His first film role was in the 1949 feature “I Was a Male War Bride” shot in Germany with Cary Grant.

Deported by the British for lack of a work permit, Nichols went to Los Angeles, where he met Jennifer in 1950 at a beach party near Malibu celebrating her 19th birthday. The couple got engaged after two dates and married months later.

After a decade of film and television work, Nichols returned to London, appearing in musicals, plays and films shot in England and on the European continent.

Nichols returned to Los Angeles in 1965, then moved to New York, where he worked steadily on stage, including “Man and Superman” and “The Man Who Came to Dinner.”

In 1991, the couple bought rural property in Occidental, and Nichols continued working for another decade. His last stage production was in “Ragtime,” which played in Los Angeles, Chicago and Vancouver.

Jennifer Nichols, who worked as a film wardrobe supervisor, said her husband was an ethical, intelligent and good-humored man who cared about others. “Most of all, he made me laugh at myself — essential in a long marriage,” she said.

Survivors, in addition to his wife, are his daughter, Christie Nichols of Santa Cruz; son, David Nichols of Fort Myers, Fla; sister, Nancy Schweitz of Santa Rosa and two grandchildren.
No services will be held because Nichols' friends are either deceased or live far away and “an actor needs a full house,” his wife said.

Friends may plant a rose bush in his memory, she said.

NICHOLS, Robert
Born: 7/20/1924, Oakland, California, U.S.A.
Died: 3/21/2013 Occidental, California, U.S.A.

Robert Nichols’ westerns – actor:
The Command – 1954 (2nd Lieutenant)
Giant – 1956 (Mort ‘Pinky’ Smythe)
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (TV) – 1956, 1958, 1959 (Simp Sheldon, Professor Jordan, Spencer)
Trackdown (TV) – 1958 (Cotti)
Wanted: Dead or Alive (TV) – 1959 (Deputy Sheriff Sam, John Evans)
Tales of Wells Fargo (TV) – 1959 (Butler)
Elfego Baca (TV) – 1959 (Pronto)
Maverick (TV) – 1959, 1960 (Red Herring, Driscoll)
Bonanza (TV) - 1960 (Johnny)
Sugarfoot (TV) – 1960 (Ab Davies)
The Big Valley (TV) – 1967, 1968 (Sam Becker, Chet Staley)
Alias Smith & Jones (TV) – 1972 (First Man, Magruder)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1972, 1973 (Warden, Willie)
Westworld – 1973 (1st Male Interviewee)

RIP Jesus Franco

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 Jess Franco dies, father of Spanish Series B


Tuesday, April 2, 2013


 

The director was hospitalized in Malaga since last Wednesday after suffering a stroke.


 Irreducible to the last breath. Jesus Franco Manera, better known as Jess Franco (Madrid, 1930) has died today at age 82 in Malaga, where he was admitted since last Wednesday after suffering a stroke. The director, actor, writer, composer, producer and editor, considered the father of the Spanish B series, had just released his latest film vs Al Pereira. The Alligator Ladies (2012) in theaters Artistic Metropol Madrid; preestrenada film was the last Festival of Sitges.


 The role of Jess Franco in the Spanish cinema is fundamental: nearly two hundred films directed under about 40 pseudonyms (Clifford Brown, Jess Frank, Wolfgang Frank, Lulu Laverne, Franco Manera, John O'Hara, Dan Simon, etc.) Between 50s of last century to the present filmed in Spain, France, Germany, Switzerland, Portugal, Italy and the United States gives a good account of his legacy. Eroticism, uncover, Series B, comic book aesthetic, low-budget fantasy film and flirting with porn are some of the hallmarks of this revered cult filmmaker worldwide.


 Franco studied film at the Royal Conservatory and the Institute for Research and cinematic experiences in Madrid, before going to the French at the Sorbonne University. After working in various productions and perform several short, would the film up and roll up to four films before his first big hit Night Visions (1962), with the legendary Howard Vernon embodying first first Dr. Orloff, one of the characters most iconic filmmaker. Another of his most recognized is Necromicron (Necronomicon / Succubus) (1967), German film production finished participating in the Berlin Film Festival and opened wide the doors of the international market. Since then, would be known collaborations with Christopher Lee (who played great villains like Fu Manchu-The Castle of Fu Manchu (1969) and Dracula, Count Dracula (1970) - under the direction of Franco) and his prolific production in the horror genre series B. Among his classics, include Miss Death (1960), Vampyros Lesbos (1971), The Curse of Frankenstein, Dracula Against Frankenstein (1972), Dracula Against Frankenstein (1974), Schoolgirls rape, sexual aberrations of a married woman (1981), The shameful orgies of Emmanuelle (1982), Barbys Killer (1996), women's crypt damned (2008) and Paula-Paula (2010).


In 2008, the exquisite French Cinematheque devoted an extensive cycle comprising the bulk of his work and honoring the work of a director unaccustomed to institutional tributes. The following year, the Spanish Film Academy's Goya would give the honor for his film career. Today, in addition to keep rolling (Al Pereira vs. The Alligator Ladies is his last film), collaborated with the publication Cinemanía.


Franco was married was his principal muse, Lina Romay, who met working for the 70. Both lived in Malaga, where they were married on April 23, 2008. Romay died last year of a cancer victim.
FRANCO, Jesus (Jesus Franco Manera)
Born: 5/12/1930, Madrid, Madrid, Spain
Died: 4/2/2013, Malaga, Andalusia, Spain
Jesus Franco's westerns - director, screenwriter, actor:
The Coyote - 1954 (co) [screenwriter]
The Judgment of the Coyote - 1955 (co) [screenwriter]
The Vengeance of Zorro - 1962 [screenwriter]
Zorro the Avenger - 1962 [screenwriter]
The Jaguar - 1963 [director, screenwriter]
Alias Smith & Jones (TV) - 1972 (guard)
The Crazy Nuns - 1974 [director]

RIP Milo O'Shea

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Milo O'Shea dies after a short illness Milo O'Shea died after a short illness on Tuesday night


The Irish actor, Milo O'Shea, has died after a short illness, his son has confirmed. He was 86.


The Dubliner, who had a long career on the stage and screen, died in a New York hospital on Tuesday night.


He is best remembered for his role in Franco Zeffirelli's film, Romeo and Juliet, the 1968 film Barbarella, and for his performance as Leopold Bloom in an adaptation of James Joyce's Ulysses.


He also appeared in several hit US TV shows, including Frasier and Cheers.


He played a chief justice in The West Wing TV series, and also had a brief role in the Golden Girls in the 1980s.


In 1982, he starred alongside Paul Newman in the legal drama, The Verdict, and he also worked alongside Irish director Neil Jordan in the Butcher Boy.


He played a villain, Durand-Durand, in Roger Vadim's futuristic fantasy film, Barbarella, and years later, his character inspired the name of the 1980s pop group, Duran Duran.


In 2003, O'Shea starred in Puckoon, a movie based on a comic novel by Spike Milligan.


The satire, set in a village divided in two by the partition of Ireland, was mostly filmed in Northern Ireland and the border counties of the Irish Republic.


O'Shea began his acting career as a schoolboy in Dublin.


He moved to New York in the 1970s and lived there until his death.


 

He is survived by his wife, actress Kitty Sullivan, his two sons and three grandchildren.


 

O’SHEA, Milo


Born: 6/2/1926, Dublin, Ireland


Died: 4/2/2013, New York, U.S.A.



Milo O’Shea’s western – actor:

Peter Lundy and the Medicine Hat Stallion (TV) – 1977 (Brisly)


RIP Tomás Picó

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Adios to Tomás Picó, actor and director


Tomás Picó, actor and director, died in Tarifa (Cadiz), victim of lymphoma after a lifetime devoted to intense appearances in front of and behind the camera. The son of a renowned Basque architect, he opted for the interpretation of film and debuted at Teatro Eslava Madrid in 1960, where his gallant bearing of finesse marked him in the 1960s and 1970s. Emblematic song titles of the youthful Luis Lucia, he leapt to fame as a child prodigy of Rocio Durcal, in the great family of Fernando Palacios.


Other film credits are “Fulanita and Menganos” (Pedro Lazaga, 1976); “Erotic Games of the Bourgeoisie” (Micel Vianey, 1977) and “Cariñosamente infiel” (Javier Aguirre, 1980).


In the theater he shared the stage with Pepe, Emilio Gutiérrez Caba, Kiti Manver and Concha Velasco, and collaborated with the actor and director Luca Ronconi in Italy where he lived for nearly a decade. Picó, was a committed and passionate man of his profession to his beloved Tarifa, the Teatro Municipal Hall between 1995 and 2005. He also worked with the inmates of the prison in Algeciras. His teaching and his acting never fall was always relevant. Too bad such genuine people find it necessary to undertake the ultimate trip ahead of schedule and with such outstanding work.

 


PICO, Tomás (Tomás Picó Hormeño)

Born: 1/16/1940, Cáceres, Llanos de Cáceres Spain


Died: 3/29/2013, Tarifa, Cádiz, Spain



Tomás Picó’s westerns – actor:

Mutiny at Fort Sharp – 1966 (Confederate soldier)


Seven Pistols for a Massacre – 1967


Dead Men Ride – 1971 (miner)


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