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RIP Don Harron

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Don Harron, Canadian entertainment icon, dead at 90

 

Harron created comedic alter ego Charlie Farquharson, brought Anne of Green Gables to the stage.

CBC News
January 17, 2015

 

Don Harron, who created the Canadian comedic icon Charlie Farquharson during a decades-long career in show business, has died at his Toronto home. He was 90.

 

His eldest daughter Martha told the Canadian Press her father died Saturday morning surrounded by family at his Toronto home after choosing not to seek treatment for cancer.

 

"He was still sharp. He was still capable of being funny even though his voice was barely above a whisper," she said in a telephone interview from Toronto. "It's horribly sad, but it's beautiful too."

 

Harron entertained generations of Canadians with his comic alter ego Farquharson and helped bring the Canadian classic novel Anne of Green Gables from the page to the stage.

 

During CBC’s 1952 television revue The Spring Thaw , the relatively unknown Harron took to the stage for a four-minute set. Few people watching knew they were about to witness a marquee moment in Canadian show business.

 

That evening he introduced Canada to Farquharson – the country bumpkin from rural Ontario known for his incessant puns and decrepit grey cardigan sweater – a character that would solidify Harron’s place among the nation’s great entertainers.

 

Starred on Hee Haw

 

Harron achieved international success in the late 1960s when he began an 18-season stint performing as Farquharson on the hit U.S. variety show Hee Haw.

 

His list of accomplishments extends far beyond Charlie.

 

Harron was a seasoned theatre performer, acting in a half-dozen Broadway plays and three shows in London’s West End. He also featured during the inaugural 1953 season of the Stratford Festival. It was in Stratford that he struck up a friendship with Oscar and Tony winner Christopher Plummer.

 

Harron also enjoyed considerable success behind the scenes as a writer and director.

 

He wrote the lyrics for five musicals, including the 1965 on-stage version of Anne of Green Gables, which was adapted from a television version he co-wrote nine years earlier. The show is performed every year during the Charlottetown Festival in P.E.I., a province where Harron has spent considerable time.

 

In between stints on the stage, Harron was the host of CBC Radio’s flagship program Morningside from 1977 to 1982, for which he won an ACTRA award for best radio host. He later helmed CTV’s The Don Harron Show from 1983 to 1985.

 

He also authored 17 books – most of them in character as Farquharson.  Perhaps his most personally revealing work came in 2012, when Harron published the 440-page memoir My Double Life: Sexty Years of Farquharson Around With Don Harn.

 

The release of the memoir roughly coincided with his retirement from the stage.

 

In a February 2012 interview with CBC’s Island Morning, Harron said he decided to walk away from performing after his short-term memory began to fade and he could no longer remember his set material in front of a live audience.

 

Gemini for lifetime achievement

 

Harron was invested as a member of the Order of Canada in 1980, and named as a member of the Order of Ontario in 2000 for his contributions to the Canadian entertainment industry. In 2007, he was given the Gemini Award for Lifetime Achievement in Radio and Television.

 

Born in Toronto in 1924, Harron got an early start as an entertainer, earning $10 or $15 per night doing ‘chalk-talks’ – drawing caricatures in chalk as he told stories to audiences at banquet halls during the Great Depression.

 

As a teenager,  he spent time working on farms in rural Ontario in the early 1940s and briefly attended the University of Toronto before joining the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1943 as the Second World War raged in Europe and the Pacific.

 

Harron told CBC host Peter Gzowski in a 1977 television interview that he developed the Farquharson character during those early years working as a farm hand.

 

He eventually returned to U of T after the war, earning a Bachelor of Arts.

 

Harron's granddaughter, freelance journalist Zoe Cormier, said Harron's intellectual passions nearly led him down a very different career path than the one that made him famous.

 

His passion for philosophy won him scholastic awards at the University of Toronto, she said, adding his confidence in both academic and entertainment arenas foreshadowed the range of roles he would take on during his performing career.

 

"He's one of the few people that I would describe as a true polymath," Cormier said. "Anything he ever put his hand to he excelled at."

 

 

Harron was married four times, most recently to French-Canadian comedian Claudette Gareau. He previously spent 34 years with Canadian singer Catherine McKinnon before divorcing in 2003.

 

In his memoir, Harron wrote openly about multiple extramarital love affairs and the impact they’ve taken on his personal life and family.

 

He is survived by three children and Gareau.

 

 

HARRON, Don (Donald Hugh Harron)

Born: 9/19/1924, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Died: 1/17/2015, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

 

Don Harron’s western – actor:

The Texan (TV) – 1958 (Julian Dowd)


RIP Walt Peregoy

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Walt Peregoy, ’101 Dalmatians’ Color Stylist, RIP

 

Cartoon Brew

By Amid Amidi

January 17, 2015

 

Walt Peregoy, the legendary artist who was the color stylist of Disney’s One Hundred and One Dalmatians and headed up Hanna-Barbera’s background department for a time during the late-Sixties, passed away yesterday at the age 89. The news was first reported by Disney’s official D23 Twitter account, which misidentified Peregoy as an animator.

 

Born Alwyn Walter Peregoy in Los Angeles in 1925, and raised on a small island in San Francisco Bay, Peregoy often described his background as “American white trash.” As a teenager, he attended Saturday art classes at Chouinard Art Institute. He dropped out of high school in the tenth grade, and was hired at Disney at the age of 17 in the position of “traffic boy,” the lowest-rung employees at the studio who ferried artwork and supplies between offices. He quit after just a few months, saying that the studio felt too much like a factory, and wouldn’t return for another eight years.

 

Following a short stint as a cowhand on the Irvine Ranch and a tour with the Coast Guard during World War II, Peregoy moved to San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, where he studied painting and sculpture at the Escuela de Bellas Artes “under the influence of [David Alfaro] Siqueiros, Diego Rivera and [José Clemente] Orozco.” Later in the 1940s, he lived in Paris where he studied painting. A key influence on him at this time was the French painter Fernand Léger.

 

He was rehired at Disney in 1951 where “he started at the bottom again.” Peregoy worked for four years in the animation department as an inbetweener, assistant animator and clean-up artist, before production designer Eyvind Earle recruited him to become the first background painter on Sleeping Beauty in 1955.

 

The studio’s next feature, One Hundred and One Dalmatians, was the project that allowed Peregoy to apply his fine art training on a Disney film. As the film’s color stylist, Peregoy worked closely with production designer Ken Anderson to devise a new way of painting backgrounds. With the background linework printed on a separate cel level (thanks to the innovation of the Xerography process) and overlaid on top of the painted artwork, Peregoy designed the paintings as broad flat areas of color “with the awareness that it was not necessary to go in and render the hell out of a doorknob, or a piece of glass, or a tree.”

 

“Peregoy in the 1950s was a true ‘Modernist’—a talented fine art painter who brought Modernism to Disney with strong abstractions in both layout and painting technique,” Pocahontas art director Michael Giaimo told me when I wrote the book Cartoon Modern: Style and Design in Fifties Animation. “His work was a purer abstraction of reality as opposed to, say, the beautifully designed but more grounded work of Eyvind Earle.”

 

Peregoy made significant contributions to other films at Disney including Paul Bunyan, (1958), The Saga of Windwagon Smith (1961), The Sword in the Stone (1963), Mary Poppins (1964) and The Jungle Book (1967). While at Disney, he appeared in the famous Disney documentary 4 Artists Paint 1 Tree alongside artists Marc Davis, Eyvind Earle and Joshua Meador:

 

After being let go from the studio in the mid-Sixties, he started working in television on Format Film’s The Lone Ranger. On that show, he used a daring combination of grease pencil-on-cel with torn-construction paper underneath. Below, you can see a de-constructed background from the series that shows the grease pencil cel level and the separate color level underneath. “Powerful for Saturday morning, but you couldn’t say the backgrounds were Saturday morning crap because they weren’t,” Peregoy told interviewer Bob Miller.

 

His innovative work on The Lone Ranger led to being hired at the TV powerhouse Hanna-Barbera in 1968, where he headed the background department for five years. He either styled or supervised the background designs of The Perils of Penelope Pitstop, Scooby Doo Where Are You!, The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines, and Where’s Huddles?, among other series.

 

In the late-1970s, he returned to Disney’s theme park division WED, working on attractions for EPCOT such as Kraft’s The Land pavilion and Kodak’s Journey into Imagination. He continued freelancing in the animation industry during the Eighties and Nineties on projects that included My Little Pony: The Movie, Foofur, Tiny Toon Adventures, Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child, and The Specialists (below), a segment on MTV’s Liquid Television:

 

In later years, Peregoy was known as much for his colorful profanity-laced tirades against the industry as he was for his art. He was honored with an ASIFA-Hollywood Winsor McCay Award for lifetime achievement in 2012.

 

PEREGOY, Walt (Alwyn Walter Peregoy)

Born: 1925, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Died: 1/16/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

Walt Peregoy’s westerns – background artist:

The Saga of Windwagon Smith (TV) – 1961

The Lone Ranger (TV) – 1966-1969

The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (TV) – 1968-1969

Davy Crockett on the Mississippi (TV) – 1976

RIP Frank Mazzola

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Frank Mazzola, Film Editor and ‘Rebel Without a Cause’ Actor, Dies at 79

 

Variety

By Kevin Noonan

January 21, 2015

 

Frank Mazzola, longtime film editor and actor and technical consultant for the James Dean classic “Rebel Without a Cause,” died Jan. 13. He was 79.

 

The Hollywood native began his career as a child actor, with parts in films including “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,” “Always in My Heart,” “Casablanca” and “The Boy with the Green Hair.” After an extra role in Elia Kazan’s “East of Eden,” Mazzola worked in the most high-profile film of his career, “Rebel Without a Cause.”

 

In addition to playing the character of Crunch, Mazzola provided technical assistance on the film, advising director Nicholas Ray on creating the reality of rebellious teens from middle class families. He aided in the choosing of the film’s 1949 Mercury 8 Coupe as well as the red jacket worn by Dean in the film, and even helped stage the knife duel between Dean and Corey Allen.

 

Mazzola transitioned into a career as a film editor, working throughout the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s, on films including “Macho Callahan,” “Stiletto,” “Performance,” “The Hired Hand” and “The Second Coming of Suzanne.” In 1999, Mazzola completed work on a director’s cut of “Wild Side,” from the late director Donald Cammell, who died in 1996.

 

He is survived by four daughters and three grandchildren. Services will be held at 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, January 31 at Blessed Sacrament church in Hollywood.

 

 

MAZZOLA, Frank (Francisco Mazzola)

Born: 3/7/1935, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Died: 1/13/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

Frank Mazzola’s westerns – film editor:

Macho Callahan – 1970

The Hired Hand - 1971

RIP Gene Lasko

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RIP Gene Lasko

 

New York Times

January 19, 2015

 

LASKO--Gene, was a producer-director who worked with such esteemed actors as Dustin Hoffman and Marlon Brando. An Emmy Award winner, he directed and associate produced over 150 daytime television shows. Mr. Lasko was active in founding The National Theatre of the Deaf. He taught at NYU and SUNY Purchase, and chaired the Directing Department at the Actors Studio Drama School at the New School. He is survived by his nieces Joan Friedland and Margaret Crastnopol.

 

LASKO, Gene (Eugene V. Lasko)

Born: 193?, U.S.A.

Died: 1/19/2015, New York City, New York, U.S.A.

 

Gene Lasko’s westerns – producer, creative consultant:

Little Big Man – 1970 [associate producer]

When Legends Die – 1972 [producer]

The Missouri Breaks – 1976 [creative consultant]

RIP Richard McWhorter

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RIP Richard McWhorter

 

Los Angeles Times

January 24, 2015

 

1914 - January 18, 2015 Richard F. McWhorter passed away on Jan 18, 2014 at the age of 100, peacefully in his home in the Los Angeles area. He began his movie industry career at Columbia Studios as a messenger boy in 1933. By 1937 he was working as a First Assistant at Paramount Studios, and was one of the original members of Directors Guild of America. His career eventually evolved into directing and producing. He worked with producers and directors including King Vidor, Sir Carol Reed, Hal Wallis and Frank Capra: Actors such as Burt Lancaster, Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor. A few of the most notable films he worked on are Rose Tattoo, Taming of the Shrew and Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid. When he was not working he could be found on the links of Wilshire Country Club, a 50 plus year avid golfer. In 1944 he started Studio Process Body Company which provided break-away auto and truck bodies for rent to studios for use in close up scenes. He is proceeded in death by Loreine McWhorter loving mother of his children, Adrian McWhorter, beloved wife of his later years, and his son Richard Dennis McWhorter. He is survived by his daughter Nancy Lord, son-in-law Michael Lord, daughter-in-law Francesca McWhorter, 8 grandchildren and 16 great grandchildren. No memorial service is planned.

 

 

McWHORTER, Richard (Richard F. McWhorter)

Born: 6/6/1914, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.

Died: 1/18/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

Richard McWhorter’s westerns – assistant director, production manager:

Arizona – 1940 [assistant director]

Desert Fury – 1947 [assistant director]

Unconquered – 1947 [assistant director]

The Paleface – 1948 [assistant director]

Red Mountain – 1951 [assistant director]

Silver City – 1951 [assistant director]

Broken Lance – 1954 [production manager]

RIP Robert Boon

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RIP Robert Boon

 

Los Angeles Times

January 24, 2014

 

October 26, 1916 - January 13, 2015 Robert Boon, Actor, born in Haarlem, the Netherlands, passed away, peacefully, after a heroic struggle with medical challenges, in West Hills Hospital, CA, at the age of 98. Robert Boon was a member of the Motion Picture Academy for over 50 years and for a number of years a member of the Foreign language Nominating Committee. He appeared as an actor in well known movies, and productions. Just one day short of making that long anticipated move to the Motion Picture and Television Fund Home in Woodland Hills, Robert left a long and colorful life. In 1943 Robert Boon volunteered for the Netherlands India oil battalion, went for training to the USA, and from there to Australia. Attached to the Australian Army he joined for the invasion of Borneo and after VJ day, went to Java and Sumatra and then back to the Netherlands. While studying in Amsterdam he got interested in theatre, but because of financial necessity left for Curacao to work for BPM (Shell Oil), in the Dutch West Indies where he joined a "Little Theatre" co. and did work for the local radio station as an actor and writer. Robert first landed in NYC where he quickly found work in Radio / Live T.V. He soon settled in Los Angeles in 1947, and worked in his first movie "Berlin Express". Robert would be working in Films /TV right into his eighties. His Family and all of his Friends, who had the privilege to share his Friendship, humor and stories, will truly miss him. His ashes will be scattered/Ocean. A Celebration of Roberts' life with Family and Friends will be hosted by one of his Friends, Ans E.,in July 2015.

 

 

BOON, Robert

Born: 10/26/1916, Haarlem, Noord-Holland, Netherlands

Died: 1/13/2015, West Hills, California, U.S.A.

 

Robert Boon’s westerns – actor:

The Alaskans (TV) – 1959

Tate (TV) – 1960 (Otto)

Rawhide (TV) – 1960, 1962 (Ernst Zwahlen, Siegfried)

The Virginian (TV) – 1964, 1970 (Hans Jungman, Steiner)

Laredo (TV) – 1965 (Paul)

Little House on the Prairie (TV) – 1982 (Sven Johanssen)

RIP Demis Roussos

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Greek singer Demis Roussos dies aged 68

 

Greek singer Demis Roussos, who sold more than 60 million albums worldwide, has died aged 68 the Hygeia Hospital in Athens has confirmed to the BBC.

 

He was best known for his solo hits in the 1970s and 80s, including Forever and Ever, Goodbye and Quand je t'aime.

 

He was also a member of progressive rock group Aphrodite's Child.

 

Roussos was renowned for his off-screen role in Mike Leigh's 1977 TV play Abigail's party, having provided the party's soundtrack.

 

Roussos was as famous for his outfits as his music

 

He had been in the private hospital with an undisclosed illness for some time.

 

Greek singer Nana Mouskouri paid tribute on French radio RTL: "He had a superb voice, he travelled in the world ... he loved what he was doing.

 

"He was an artist, a friend. I hope he is in a better world."

 

The singer was born Artemios Ventouris Roussos in Alexandria, Egypt, in 1946, to a Greek father and Egyptian mother of Italian origin.

 

He was raised there until his parents moved to Greece in the early 60s after losing their possessions during the Suez Crisis.

 

Roussos began his music career at 17, when he joined the a band called The Idols, where he met his future Aphrodite's Child bandmate Vangelis.

 

Aphrodite's Child produced three albums including It's Five O'Clock and The Apocalypse of St John, and enjoyed huge success in Europe in the late 1960s, especially France.

 

Roussos went on to enjoy a successful solo career, topping the charts in several countries with Forever And Ever in 1973, before doing the same in the UK in 1976.

 

The 1970s were a prolific time for the singer who talked about his UK success during that time in an interview with The Guardian in 1999.

 

"This country was one of my most important territories," said Roussos.

 

"Back in '75 I had five albums in the top 10. Simultaneously. And among them the number one album and the number one single. And my name was mentioned twice or three times in the Guinness Book of Records."

 

He continued: "In 1975 I had the award for the top male artist, the award for top single, the award for top album. The Abba and me we took everything. Hahahaha!"

 

Other solo hits include My Friend the Wind, My Reason, Someday Somewhere and Happy To Be On An Island In The Sun.

 

Roussos' fondness for kaftans saw him dubbed "the Kaftan King" and he often wore them for his performances on shows such as Top of the Pops.

 

He was also famous for his vocal adaptation of the score from the 1981 film Chariots of Fire, which had been composed by Vangelis.

 

In 1978 he decided to keep a lower profile and moved to Malibu Beach in the US.

 

Plane hijack

 

On 14 June, 1985, Roussos boarded TWA Flight 847 from Athens to Rome - and found himself at the mercy of the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, who hijacked the plane.

 

The men, who had smuggled a pistol and grenades through airport security, held the passengers at gunpoint.

 

The militant group demanded the release of 17 members of Hezbollah and the Iraqi Islamic Daawa Party, who had been detained in Kuwait for attacks that killed six people in 1983.

 

Roussos spent his 39th birthday in captivity, before being released in Beirut on 18 June - but most of the remaining 153 passengers spent 17 days on the plane.

 

Speaking to the Reuters news agency at the time, the singer said he had been "treated quite well".

 

"They gave me a birthday cake and they gave me a guitar, to sing," he said. "They have been very polite and very nice with us."

 

Return to music

 

Over the years, his quote became misinterpreted and distorted. Some papers said he had serenaded the hijackers. Others claimed he had pledged allegiance to Hezbollah.

 

Roussos, who rarely spoke about the incident, admitted he was riled by the exaggerations in an interview with Australia's Daily Telegraph in 2006.

 

"It is not every day that a pop superstar gets involved with terrorism as a victim, so the press takes advantage of that to say things they think are funny.

 

"I would like to see the journalist [who first reported the claim] in front of gunpoint like I was. Believe me, if he was there he would be so scared he wouldn't care about writing such stupidities like that.''

 

The experience changed his life and afterwards he decided the best way he could help others and promote understanding in the world was by returning to music.

 

He released his album The Story of Demis Roussos not long after.

 

 

ROUSSOS, Demis (Artemios Ventouris Roussos)

Born: 6/15/1947, Alexandria, Egypt

Died: 1/25/2015, Athens, Greece

 

Demis Roussos’ western – singer:

The Man from Cher (TV) – 1969 [member of the singing group Aphrodite’s Child]

RIP Demetrio González

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Mexican actor, singer Demetrio ‘El Charro Spanish’ González has died.
 
Milenio.com
1/26/2015

 

The baritone singer and actor Demetrio González, one of the figures of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, who worked alongside greats like Luis Aguilar, Lola Beltran, Jose Alfredo Jimenez and Miguel Aceves Mejía, among others, died Sunday at 8:50 pm in his house in Tepoztlan, Morelos, at 87 years of age.

 

In an interview with Notimex, Rodolfo Gonzalez, son of so-called 'El Charro Spanish,' said his father "became very sick year from a stroke and was already very ill, died yesterday ".

 

He said that the actor "last year was very weak, but for a long time has been ill, so it was that the last seven years he lived there (Tepoztlan)".

 

He said Demetrio González was removed from the art around 35 years ago and much time was spent on their stuff; although in recent years was now completely removed from everything."

 

He added that he and Rodrigo and Barbara are the children who survived the late actor who celebrated a marriage with Maria Lourdes Rosas Priego and a second with Marina Tuero Tamayo.

 

In recent years, "his favorite pastime was watching television, where he saw his films, among his favorite were 'Los Laureles' and 'Caminos de Guanajuato' by his friend José Alfredo Jiménez," said Rodolfo.

 

Demetrio González was born in Asturias, Spain on October 7, 1927 and died on January 25, 2015 in Tepoztlan, Morelos.

 

The son of the actor reported that on Monday at 21:00's his remains were cremated at a well-known funeral home, where he was viewed by family and friends.

 

 

GONZÁLEZ, Demetrio

Born: 10/7/1927, Castiello de Bernueces Gijon, Asturias, Spain

Died: 1/25/2015, Tepoztlan, Morelos, Mexico

 

Demetrio González’s westerns – actor:

El jinete solitario – 1958

Guitarras de medianoche – 1958 (Demetrio)

Tan bueno el giro como el Colorado – 1959 (Demetrio González 'El Gallo Colorado')

Dos maridos baratos – 1960

El jinete solitario' en El valle de los desaparecidos: La venganza del jinete solitario – 1960 (Demetrio/Jinete solitario)

Los inocentes – 1961

Los laurels – 1961 (Rafael)

Pa' qué me sirve la vida – 1961 (Demetrio Morales)

Pobre del pobre - 1961

Los cinco halcones – 1962 (Doctor Demetrio)

Vuelven los cinco halcones – 1962 (doctor)

El lobo blanco - 1962

El amor llegó a Jalisco - 1963

Para todas hay – 1965

Gallo corriente, gallo valiente - 1966

Ambición sangrienta – 1968 (Teniente Fermín Moreno)

Cuatro hombres marcados - 1968


RIP Marshall Schlom

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RIP Marshall Schlom
 
The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

1/26/2015

 

Marshall Schlom, a Hollywood script supervisor for four decades who worked with Alfred Hitchcock, Stanley Kramer, Mike Nichols and all the top directors of his day, has died. He was 86.

 

Schlom died Wednesday of complications from a fall at the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills, his daughter, Wendi, told The Hollywood Reporter.

 

His father was Herman Schlom, a top producer at RKO Studios who did such features as the film noir classic Born to Kill (1947) as well as several Dick Tracy movies.

 

Marshall Schlom’s incredible body of work includes Hitchcock’s Psycho (1960), William Wyler’s Funny Girl (1968), Peter Bogdanovich’s The Last Picture Show (1971), Franklin J. Schaffner’s Papillon (1973), Barry Levinson’s Rain Man (1988), John Hughes’ Uncle Buck (1989) and Mark Rydell’s On Golden Pond (1981),

 

He worked with Kramer on Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), Pressure Point (1962), It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), Ship of Fools (1965), Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner (1967), The Secret of Santa Vittoria (1969), Bless the Beasts & Children (1971) and The Domino Killings (1977).

 

Schlom teamed with Herbert Ross on Funny Lady (1975), The Sunshine Boys (1975) and California Suite (1978); with Arthur Penn on The Chase (1966) and Night Moves (1975); with Richard Brooks on The Happy Ending (1969), $ (1971) and Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977); with Nichols on Silkwood (1983) and Postcards From the Edge (1990); and with Mel Brooks on Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993) and Dracula: Dead and Loving It (1995), his final credit.

 

Schlom also served as script supervisor on the CBS series Perry Mason from 1963-66, worked on NBC's The Monkees and was a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences foreign film committee for four decades.

 

Schlom attended the University of California at Berkeley and UCLA, then set out to join his father at RKO. Studio chief Howard Hughes would not permit relatives of employees to be hired, however, so he submitted his résumé under the name of Michael Scott and landed a job.

 

Talking about working with Hitchcock on Psycho, Schlom said in 2012 interview that the director “knew everything about making movies, it was his job to go to work and make movies.

 

“I can tell you without a doubt, he knew more about making movies than any other director that I’ve been associated with. He ran a master class for me, that’s the best way to describe it.”

 

In addition to his daughter Wendi, Schlom also is survived by his wife of 64 years, Dorothy; children Val and Marla; grandchildren Evan, Derek, Zoe, Micah, Jenna and Hunter; and sister Lois.

 

 

SCHLOM, Marshall

Born: 3/3/1928, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Died: 1/21/2015, Woodland Hills, California, U.S.A.

 

Marshall Schlom’s westerns – script supervisor:

Sergeants 3 – 1962

The Hired Hand – 1971

Oklahoma Crude - 1973

RIP Pavle Minčić

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RIP Pavle Minčić

 

Blic

1/25/2015

 

The famous actor, satirist, humorist, singer and pianist, died yesterday at the age of 84 in Belgrade.

 

He was born on June 16, 1931 in Belgrade and was a theater actor, but he also tried his hand at film and radio. He attended elementary school, high school and the Academy for theater, film, radio and television in the class of Professor Raše Plaovića.

 

The rich acting career was realized in important roles in the plays "Jaje", "Olovka piše srcem","Tužna je nedelja", "Revizor", "Sponzor noćas mora pasti".. Egg".

 

He was the first actor in Belgrade who played monodrama, Gogol's play "The Diary of a Madman," He had some original shows on television programs such as "Godine prolaze vreme teče". His acting power ruled the scene and won the audience.

 

He retired after 40 years of work at the National Theatre in Belgrade, where he appeared in more than 120 roles. Someone at that time wrote that the National Theatre has a great, small stage and Pavle Minčić.

 

He received many awards ("Radoje Domanović", "Golden Turkey", "Golden Laurel" and others) including plaque "Artists and Performers" and "Golden Chain Award for Lifetime Achievement" for lasting contribution to culture. He was a prominent member of the "OSISANI hedgehog".

 

He will be remembered as a hero of our childhood, a cheerful spirit and dear to the hearts of many generations while playing Paju in the children's series “Na slovo, na slovo”, in “Davitelj protiv Davitelja” played Dr. Dobricu Kopicl, in a series of “Pozorište u kući” was Sonny Boy, and Živorad in the series “Ljubav na seoski način”, and all this in addition to numerous television films in which he played.

 

He was modest, never worked for money and did not get a national pension, while at the same time show performers received spoke: "It's behind me now," he usually rode the trolley.

 

 

MINCIC, Pavle

Born: 6/16/1931, Belgrade, Serbia, Yugoslavia

Died: 1/25/2015, Belgrade, Serbia

 

Pavle Minčić’s western – actor:

The Golden Sling - 1967 (pianist)

RIP Neil LeVang

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Noted Guitarist Neil LeVang Passes

 

Vintage Guitar Magazine

1/28/2015

 

Neil LeVang, the noted studio guitarist whose list of credits includes dozens of television and film soundtracks as well as a 23-year stint with the Lawrence Welk Orchestra, died January 26. He was 83.

 

Born in Adams, North Dakota, in 1932, LeVang was a child when his family moved to Bemidji, Minnesota. From a very young age, he was fascinated with music he heard on WLS radio, as well as the violin and guitar played by his father and older brother. He started learning to play both instruments and was just 10 years old when he began playing in a band with a kid from the local high school.

 

Featured by Rich Kienzle in the December ’09 issue of Vintage Guitar magazine, LeVang recalled how, in 1945, his family moved to Riverside, California, where he would play violin at jazz jams, which led to stints in bands in various cities over the next several years.

 

In the mid ’50s, he returned to Hollywood and began to focus on a career as a guitarist. He replaced Barney Kessel on Jimmy Wakely’s weekly CBS radio show, and earned a spot as a regular in the studios. In ’59, he was tapped to replace Buddy Merrill, who was leaving Lawrence Welk’s band to join the Army. The gig occupied one day each week, giving LeVang ample time to continue expanding his studio efforts, which eventually included work with noted arrangers Neal Hefti, Nelson Riddle, Don Costa, and Billy May, as well as Hoyt Curtin at the Hanna-Barbera animation studios.

 

Other sessions included with the original Tijuana Brass with Herb Alpert, Frank Sinatra (with Hefti as arranger), Liberace, Eddie Fisher, Carol Burnett, Frank Zappa (on the Mothers of Invention debut album, Freak Out!), Bobby Darin, Bobbi Gentry, David Clayton Thomas, Elvis Presley, Neil Diamond, and Noel Boggs. He also worked extensively on television-music sessions including a “Beverly Hillbillies” cast album for Columbia, the themes for “Green Acres” and, on his Fender Bass VI, “Batman” (also with Hefti) and alongside guitarists Howard Roberts and Al Hendrickson.  He accompanied orchestral arrangers including John Williams, Patrick Williams, Marty Paich, Artie Butler, and Henry Mancini, as well as Frank DeVol, who did the themes for “The Brady Bunch” and “Family Affair.” Other television-related work included “The Ed Sullivan Show,” “The Monkees,” “Highway to Heaven,” and “Petticoat Junction.” His list of movie-soundtrack work included All the President’s Men, At Long Last Love, Valley Of The Dolls, Dick Tracy, Good Morning, Vietnam, Disney’s Herbie The Love Bug series, Rosemary’s Baby, and Smokey and the Bandit. He played mandolin on the Godfather soundtrack.

 

LeVang helped Leo Fender create the Bass VI, based in part on a de facto prototype created when LeVang installed bass strings on a Telecaster. He later used it on Glen Campbell’s “Wichita Lineman.”

 

LeVang stayed with the Welk orchestra until ’82, when Welk discontinued the program. That year, he was nominated for best artist on a specialty instrument (mandolin) at the Country Music Association awards. Throughout his career, he played instruments including the Bass VI, Fender Precision Bass, Dobro, a Gibson L-5, a Fender King, a Tarrega classical, the mandolin, as well as four-string tenor and five-string banjos.

 

He is survived by his wife, Nancy, son Mark, and daughters Coral, Sonja, Erika and Tanya.


 

LeVANG, Neil

Born: 1/3/1932, Adams, North Dakota, U.S.A.

Died: 1/26/2015, Canyon Clountry, California, U.S.A.

 

Neil Levang’s western – actor, studio musician:

Rio Grande – 1949 (cowhand)

Paint Your Wagon – 1969 [studio musician]

True Grit – 1969 [studio musician]

The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean – 1972 [studio musician]

The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing – 1972 [studio musician]

The Apple Dumpling Gang – 1975 [studio musician]

The Last Hard Men – 1976 [studio musician]

Goin’ South – 1978 [studio musician]

Hot Lead and Cold Feet – 1978 [studio musician]

Zorro, The Gay Blade – 1981 [studio musician]

Little House on the Prairie (TV) [studio musician]

RIP Vanj Orico

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Dies in Rio actress Vanja Orico, the 'Cangaço Cycle muse'

 

She struggled against bowel cancer and had multiple organ failure.

Actress was the only Brazilian to work with Italian director Frederico Fellini.

 

Do Gi Rio

1/28/2015

 

She died on Wednesday (28) in Rio, after 85 years, the singer, actress and filmmaker Vanja Orico. Affected by Alzheimer's, she still struggled against bowel cancer and was hospitalized since 11 January. The funeral is scheduled for this Thursday (29), at 16h, in St. John the Baptist Cemetery, South Zone of Rio.

 

Vanja was designed in the art scene in 1953 when interpreting the music Woman Lacemaker, movie theme The Cangaceiro, Lima Barreto. She ended up being consecrated as the Muse "Cangaço Cycle", and participated in films like Lantern, The King's Cangaço and Jesuíno Bright, the bandit.

 

The Rio de Janeiro artist participated in more than 20 films and was the only Brazilian actress to work with the filmmaker Federico Fellini, in the 50s, in the movie "Luci del varietà" ("Women and Lights").

 

Vanja also had notable participation during the military dictatorship. She was arrested and tortured after stopping the action of police during the student's funeral Edson Luiz, killed by repression. "Do not shoot, we're all Brazilians," would have screamed Vanja to police the system.

 

 

ORICO, Vanja (Evangelina Orico)

Born: 11/15/1929, Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Died: 1/28/2015, Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

 

Vana Orico’s westerns – actress:

Cangaciero – 1953 (Maria Clodia)

Lampiao, King of the Badlands – 1965

Cangacieros de Lampiao – 1967 (Mariana)

Jesuíno Brilhante, o Cangaceiro – 1972 (Maria de Goes)

RIP Rod McKuen

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Rod McKuen, prolific songwriter and poet, dies at 81

Los Angeles Times

Staff

January 29, 2015 

 

Rod McKuen, a prolific songwriter and poet whose compositions include the Academy Award-nominated song “Jean” for the 1969 film “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,” has died. He was 81.

 

McKuen had recently been hospitalized and died Thursday at a Beverly Hills rehabilitation center of respiratory arrest after suffering from pneumonia, according to his friend and producer Jim Pierson.

 

Among McKuen’s commercial successes in the 1960s and '70s were his reworking of Jacques Brel’s song "Le Moribond" for the English-language version of “Seasons in the Sun,” later covered by the Kingston Trio and Terry Jacks. Frank Sinatra recorded an album of McKuen songs in 1969 called “A Man Alone,” which included “Love’s Been Good to Me.”

 

He composed some wonderful and tuneful songs - I was just humming "Love's Been Good to Me" a couple of days ago. How great to leave songs that people sing -- onstage or in the shower.

 

Besides his score for “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,” McKuen’s music for the animated feature “A Boy Named Charlie Brown” was also nominated for an Oscar.

 

McKuen was born in Oakland in 1933 and wrote later of an unhappy childhood and the abuse he endured at the hands of his stepfather. In the '60s, McKuen moved to Paris and began writing poetry. In all, he published more than three dozen collections of poems and essays.

 

 

McKUEN, Rod

Born: 4/29/1933, Oakland, California, U.S.A.

Died: 1/29/2015, Beverly Hills, California, U.S.A.

 

Rod McKuen’s westerns – actor, songwriter:

Wild Heritage – 1958 (Dirk Breslin)

Scandalous John – 1971 [songwriter]

RIP Juan Carlos Galvan

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 Actor Juan Carlos Galvan has died

DuarioVeloz
1/31/2015

The actor died at age 83.  He worked in film, theater and television for over 64 years.

The actor Juan Carlos Galvan died at age 83, according to the Argentina Association of Actors.  He excelled on the big screen, theater and television for over 64 years.  In 2004 he was awarded by the Senate of the Nation and the Argentina Association of Actors with Podesta Honorable Achievement Award.

His remains are veiled in Zucotti House (Thames 1164).  From 14 will be transferred to the crematorium in the cemetery of Chacarita. "Our condolences to his daughter, actress Fabiana García Lago, his sister Virginia Lake, family, friends and coworkers," expressed from said entity statement.

Del cuplé al tango, Los Acusados, Fin de fiesta con Arturo García Buhr y Graciela Borges, Propiedad con Tato Bores and Nelly Beltrán, Hombre de la esquina rosada and Los inocentes con Alfredo Alcón were some of the films in which he worked.

In the last decade he filmed Chiche Bombón, Sueños atómicos, Madrileña bonita, Igualita a mí y La sublevación, Historias de cronopios y de fama, among some of his latest film appearances.


On television he was part of the cast of Como pan caliente, Chiquilina mía, La extraña dama, Más allá del horizonte, Alta Comedia, Por siempre Mujercitas, Buenos Vecinos, Barracas al sur, El chupete, Matrimonios y algo más, Vulnerables, El Pulpo Negro,Carola and Carolina, La Bonita Página, La Chona Superstar.


GALVAN, Juan Carlos (Juan Carlos Garcia Galvan)
Born: 6/26/1932, Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Died: 1/30/2015, Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Juan Carlos Galvan’s westerns – actor:
Savage Pampas – 1966 (Isidro)
Santos Vega – 1971

RIP Than Wyenn

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RIP Than Wyenn

Los Angeles Times
February 1, 2015

May 2, 1919 - January 30, 2015 Than Wyenn, accomplished actor, generous teacher, and loving husband, father, brother, and grandfather, passed away peacefully the morning of January 30, 2015 at the age of 95 with his wife and family by his side at the Motion Picture & Television Fund in Woodland Hills, CA. Born to Benjamin and Sadie in New York City on May 2, 1919, Than was the third of four children. At a Madison House dance, 13-year old Than met 11-year old Guy and the two have been inseparable ever since. Than and his beloved wife Guy have been married for 71 years; Than was a deeply devoted husband, companion, and soul mate. He was also a loving and devoted father to their two sons Joel and Neil, father-in-law to Tina and Ellen, and cherished grandfather to their five grandchildren Morgan, Diana, Michael, Shane and Brittany Lauren. Than found his passion at an early age beginning his acting career as a teenager at a settlement house in New York City before studying with Harry Coult, Lee Strasberg, and Michael Chekhov, and touring nationally with a Shakespearean troupe. During WWII, Than helped the war effort by joining the land army and working on a farm in Vermont. After the war, Than married Guy and they moved to Los Angeles where he starred in the celebrated world premiere production of "Once Upon a Tailor" at The Circle Theater catching the eye of theatrical agent Meyer Mishkin and launching a forty-year career in film and television. Best known for "Beginning of the End,""Zorro,""Imitation of Life,""Twilight Zone,""Being There," and "Splash," Than's credits include more than 120 television appearances and 30 feature films. A proud member of Actors' Equity Association and SAG-AFTRA, he became a voting member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1966. Than was also a distinguished Jewish humorist and dramatist playing to synagogues and Jewish organizations, worked for thirty-seven years as the Drama Consultant for the Los Angeles Bureau of Jewish Education, created the Yiddish Kinder Theater, and was the founding director of Camp Hess Cramer. His work in the Jewish community was honored with a resolution of tribute from the Los Angeles City Council. Later in life, he and his wife Guy became world travelers, documenting Jewish life throughout the world. As part of their travels, he led tour groups to India, exploring Jewish communities both historic and present. He received Israel's State Medal of Honor for his photographs of Jewish subjects from the Museum of the Diaspora in Tel Aviv where his collection has been donated. In his senior years, he also became an accomplished painter. Than was an incredibly special person; his loving spirit touched and inspired many, most of all, his family. He will be greatly missed. A private family interment service will be held at Mt. Sinai. In lieu of flowers, the family requests memorial donations be made to the Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles (jewishla.org) or Bridge House (boulderbridgehouse.org), where his granddaughter works.


WYENN, Than
Born: 5/2/1919, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 1/30/2015, Woodland Hills, California, U.S.A.

Than Wyenn’s westerns – actor:
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1955, 1956, 1957 (card dealer, Darcy, Lonnie Pike)
Zorro (TV) – 1957-1958 (Licenciado Pina)
The Sign of Zorro (TV) – 1958 (Licenciado Pina)
Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) – 1958 (clerk)
Zane Grey Theater (TV) – 1958 (Chick Braus)
Trackdown (TV) – 1958 (Ed Teller)
Boots and Saddles (TV) – 1958 (Sanchez)
Jefferson Drum (TV) – 1958 (Casey)
The Texan (TV) – 1959 (Barth)
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1959, 1960 (Isaacs)
Wanted: Dead or Alive (TV) – 1959, 1960 (Yanqui Jones, Gregg Haggerty, Gib Rafford, Elkins)
Stagecoach West (TV) – 1960, 1961 (Nacho, Pasaquindice, Angel)
The Rifleman (TV) – 1961 (Ramos)
The Dakotas (TV) – 1963 (Indian)
Rawhide (TV) – 1963 (Malvado)
The Wide Country (TV) – 1963 (Father Lugarte)
The Virginian (TV) – 1964, 1966, 1968 (coroner, Grey Horse, Morgan, blacksmith)
A Man Called Shenandoah (TV) – 1966 (Nacho)
The Big Valley (TV) – 1966, 1967 (Mateo)
The High Chaparral (TV) – 1970 (Gonzales)
Hec Ramsey (TV) – 1973 (Ben)

RIP Dave Bourne

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 RIP Dave Bourne


Dave "Fess" Bourne was a full-time pianist living in Southern California with his wife, Patty. A trained teacher and the son of a band instructor, Dave's affinity for the music of Bob Nolan began when he joined the Wagonmasters, the singing cowboy group that entertained at Knott's Berry Farm from 1955 – 1968. In 1988 he formed The Lobo Rangers with three of the original Wagonmasters and he continued to perform western music with an emphasis on Nolan compositions. Just before Christmas 2014, Dave recorded the last of Bob Nolan's songs for the website, A Prayer for Christmas Time. We did not realize how ill he was. Dave died on January 30, 2015. We owe him so much. We will miss him greatly.


BOURNE, Dave ‘Fess’ (David Bourne)
Born: 1938, Anaheim, California, U.S.A.
Died: 1/30/2015, Agoura Hills, California, U.S.A.

Dave Bourne’s westerns – actor, musician:
Wild West Tech (TV) – 2004, 2005 (fiddler)
Deadwood (TV) – 2004-2006 (Tolliver henchman, piano player)
Jonah Hex – (banjo player) – 2010 (banjo player)
Wolf Town - 2011 (wolf hunter)

RIP Mark Dana

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RIP Mark Dana

Several websites have reported the death of actor Mark Dana but I have not found a printed obituary. This notice will be replaced by an official obituary if and when an official obituary becomes available.



DANA, Mark
Born: 6/27/1920, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.
Died: 1/26/2015, Santa Barbara, California, U.S.A.

Mark Dana’s westerns – actor:
Thunder Over the Plains – 1953 (Lieutenant Williams)
Hopalong Cassidy (TV) – 1954 (Harry Keller)
The Adventures of Champion (TV) – 1956 (George McNab, Matt Douglas)
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1956, 1958 (Harry Nelson, Brad Forrester)
The Gray Ghost (TV) – 1957 (Sam Chappman)
The Restless Gun (TV) – 1958 (George Willis)
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (TV) – 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959 (Robert Harlow, CaL McDavid, Major Fletcher)
Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) – 1959 (Mr. Grayson)
Frontier Doctor (TV) – 1959 (Hamilton)
The Texican (TV) – 1960 (John Maddox)
Outlaws (TV) – 1961 (Cruse)
Laramie (TV) – 1961, 1963 (Bracket, Doan Ballard)

RIP Norman Yemm

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RIP Norman Yemm
 
Australian actor Norman Yemm from Homicide, Number 96 dies 

Herald Sun
By Colin Vickery and Tom Minear 
February 5, 2015 


THE Australian television industry is mourning the loss of actor Norman Yemm, who has died aged 82. 
 
The lanky actor, who was also a singer and cabaret performer, starred in many of the country’s most famous TV series including Homicide, Number 96 and The Sullivans.

Yemm was also a familiar face on Division 4, Matlock Police, Prisoner, A Country Practice, Neighbours and Blue Heelers, as well as miniseries A Fortunate Life and The Petrov Affair.

Lorraine Bayly, his co-star on wartime drama The Sullivans, said she loved working with him.

“It’s a sad, sad thing. He was such a lovely, lovely man and such a good actor,” Ms Bayly told 3AW. “You could just rely on him totally.”

She shared her “love and condolences” with Yemm’s family, including twin brother Gordon and daughter Jodie, who is also an actor.

Yemm took to acting late after a career in musicals.

He spent 4½ years as a principal baritone for the Australian Opera Company before getting his first part on Channel 7’s Homicide in 1965.

A Seven spokeswoman said he was “a much loved member” of the cast.

“Norman was an understated person, who gave his best to each and every performance, which is why audiences loved his work,” she said.

A Channel Nine spokeswoman also paid tribute to Yemm as “an important part of the early years of drama at Nine”.


YEMM, Norman
Born: 3/23/1933, Elstenwick, Victoria, Australia
Died: 2/4/2015, Rosebud, Victoria, Australia

Norman Yemm’s western – actor:
Raw Deal – 1977 (O’Neill)

RIP Odete Lara

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Odete Lara (1929-2015)

Maringa News
February 4, 2015

The actress Odette Lara, who died today in Rio de Janeiro at 85 years old, participated in the 1st National Cinema Festival of Maringá, held in May 1958. In the photo, the JC Cecílio acquis, she appears alongside Alberto Ruschel, Eva Wilma and John Herbert visiting a coffee plantation.

  Odette Lara started as mannequin and poster girl and made his film debut in the 50's, working in more than 50 films, including "Go to work, bum" and "Empty Night". In music, has partnered with Chico Buarque and Vinicius de Morais. On television, his last performance was in 1994, "My Motherland" novel, on Rede Globo. She left the race after he converted to Buddhism. Odette Lara died in his sleep, and the body will be taken tomorrow to Freiburg, where it will be cremated.

LARA, Odete (Odete Righi Bertoluzzi)
Born: 4/17/1929, São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
Died: 2/4/2015, Rio de Janiero, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil


Odete Lara’s western – actress:
Antonio das Mortes – 1969 (Laura)

RIP Martin Ťapák

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He died director Pacha, Brigand outlaw.  Actor and choreographer Martin Ťapák


Showbiz
01/02/2015

BRATISLAVA - At the age of 88 years passed away on Sunday in the early hours Slovak director, actor, dancer and choreographer Martin Ťapák, which he made places like Pacho, the Brigand highwayman (1975) and Sváko Ragan (1976).

Martin Ťapák was born October 13, 1926 in Liesek.  He graduated from the conservatory and the study director and choreography at the Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava, which ended in 1956.

In the years 1945-1950 was an actor and assistant director of the Slovak National Theatre in Bratislava.

After acting in films Vlcie early hole, Action B, homeland, Kate and others focused on the choreography and overhead activities in the Slovak Folk Art Ensemble.  For three years he worked in the Czech capital Prague as director of Laterna Magica, then the study director of feature films in central Bratislava and Slovak film director.

His directorial debut was the television film The Ballad of Vojtová Marino (1964), hereinafter also filmed images that Kubo (1965), Living Whip (1966), Malka (1968), Rysavá heifer (1970), Bride Ridges (1971), Lost Valley ( 1976), Christmas wafers (1977), fasting Justice (1978), Lifeguard and winches (1981), Bearskin largest in the world (1982), rooster shall not crow (1986) or Near to Heaven (1987).

In his most successful film can be identified audiences successful parody of Slovak robbers Pacho, the Brigand robber.

Martin Ťapák given the title of Merited Artist (1969), SSR State Prize (1974), Order of Labour (1976) and the title of National Artist (1988).  President Ivan Gasparovic it has received in January 2007 award for significant contributions to the cultural development of the country.


TAPAK, Martin
Born: 10/13/1926, Liesek, Czechoslovakia
Died: 2/1/2015, Bratislava, Slovakia

Martin Ťapák s western – actor:
The Sons of Great Bear – 1965 (Schonka)

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