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RIP Gregory Walcott

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Gregory Walcott, Reluctant Star of 'Plan 9 From Outer Space,' Dies at 87

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
March 22, 2015

Gregory Walcott, an admired actor who appeared in such memorable films as Mister Roberts, The Eiger Sanction, Norma Rae and, unfortunately for him, Ed Wood’s lamentable Plan 9 From Outer Space, has died. He was 87.

Walcott, who starred as pilot Jeff Trent in Plan 9, considered one of the worst films ever made, died Friday of natural causes at his longtime Canoga Park home in Los Angeles, his son, Men in Black puppeteer Todd Mattox, confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter.

In a 1998 interview with Filmax magazine’s Dwayne Epstein, Walcott recalled being asked by a friend, fledgling producer J. Edwards Reynolds, about starring in a sci-fi film opposite Bela Lugosi. “But Ed, Bela Lugosi is dead,” he noted.

Indeed, the horror legend had died in 1956, but footage of him shot by writer-director Wood would be used in the 1959 ultra-low-budget movie.

“I refused at first,” Walcott said in the interview. “I read the script, and it was gibberish. It made no sense, but I saw Ed Reynolds as a naive, sweet man. I had done some pretty good things prior to that, so I thought I had a little credibility in Hollywood. I thought maybe my name would give the show some credibility. … The film was made surreptitiously. My agent didn’t even know I did it.”

Plan 9 has become a cult classic, but Walcott for years wanted nothing to do with it. “I had done so many great films and worked with so many great directors that I didn’t want to be identified with such a piece of trash,” he said.

In his final onscreen role, however, Walcott appeared in a cameo as a potential film backer (much like Reynolds) in Tim Burton’s 1994 biopic Ed Wood.

In films he was much more proud of, the burly 6-foot-4 Walcott played a shore patrolman in Mister Roberts (1955), romanced Claudette Colbert in Texas Lady (1955), portrayed merciless drill instructors in Battle Cry (1955) and Delbert Mann’s The Outsider (1960) and was Gene Hackman’s psychopathic brother in Prime Cut (1972).

In Martin Ritt’s Norma Rae (1978), he played the police chief who hauls away Sally Field’s character during the film’s famous protest scene.

Walcott also was a favorite of Clint Eastwood who worked with the actor-director on CBS’ Rawhide and in the features Joe Kidd (1971), Thunderbolt and Lightfoot (1973), The Eiger Sanction (1975) and Every Which Way But Loose (1978).

He also starred as Det. Roger Havilland on the 1961-62 NBC series 87th Precinct, based on the books by Ed McBain, and stood out as seven different characters on seven episodes of Bonanza — just one of the dozens of TV Westerns in which he appeared (Bat Masterson, Maverick, Laramie, Cheyenne, etc.).

Born Bernard Mattox, Walcott was raised in Wilson, N.C., where his father sold furniture. He served in the U.S. Army, attended Furman University on a football scholarship and in 1949 hitchhiked with just $100 in his pocket all the way to Los Angeles, where he studied acting with Ben Bard.

Legendary Western star Dale Evans introduced him to his future wife, Barbara, at a party.

Walcott landed a bit part in Red Skies of Montana (1951), starring Richard Widmark, and then appeared in Raoul Walsh’s Battle Cry (1954), which got him a contract at Warner Bros.

Walcott starred as a medical missionary (as well as produced) the 1967 film Bill Wallace in China (1966) and had roles in such other films as Badman’s Country (1958), On the Double (1961), Captain Newman, M.D. (1963), Steven Spielberg’s The Sugarland Express (1974) and Midway (1976).

He published a memoir, Hollywood Adventures: The Gregory Walcott Story, in 2003.

In addition to Mattox, Walcott's survivors include his daughters Jina and Pam and several grandchildren.


WALCOTT, Gregory (Bernard Wasdon Mattox)
Born: 1/13/1928, Wendell, North Carolina, U.S.A.
Died: 3/20/2015, Canoga Park, California, U.S.A.

Gregory Walcott’s westerns – actor:
Red Skies of Montana – 1952 (Randy O'Neill)
Stories of the Century (TV) – 1954 (John Younger)
Strange Lady in Town – 1955 (Scanlon)
The Man Behind the Badge (TV) – 1955 (Tom Barker)
Texas Lady – 1955 (Deputy Jess Foley)
Cheyenne (TV) – 1956 (Lou Gray)
Thunder of Arizona – 1956 (Mark Warren)
The Persuader – 1957 (Jim Cleery)
Zane Grey Theater (TV) – 1957 (Rafe)
Wagon Train (TV), 1957, 1960 (John Dawson, Jefferson Miller)
Bad Man’s County – 1958 (Bat Masterson)
Sugarfoot (TV) – 1958 (Duke McKlintock)
Frontier Country (TV) – 1958 (Red Redmond)
26 Men (TV) – 1958
The Rifleman (TV) – 1958, 1959 (Blade Kelby, Sid Halpern)
Shotgun Slade (TV) – 1959 (Lawson)
Trackdown (TV) – 1959 (Cliff Doby)
Maverick (TV) – 1959 (Cole Younger)
Colt .45 (TV) - 1959 (Art Fredman)
Tales of Wells Fargo (TV) – 1959, 1960 (Tyler, sergeant, Kyle Gentry)
Wichita Town (TV) – 1960 (Willy Sparks)
Overland Train (TV) – 1960 (Reed)
Texas John Slaughter (TV) – 1960 (Henderson)
Tombstone Territory (TV) – 1960 (poker player, Burt Taggert)
The Tall Man (TV) – 1960 (Jim Roberts)
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (TV) – 1960 (Odie Hewitt)
Riverboat (TV) – 1960 (Salem Cox)
Bat Masterson (TV) – 1960, 1961 (Sam Long, Lou)
The Deputy (TV) – 1960, 1961 (Reece, Gar Logan)
Laramie (TV) – 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963 (Duke, Ben Yuma, Shelly Stack, Rafe Seton, Willard)
Rawhide (TV) – 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964 (Crane, Mara, Girard, Roy Kane, Les Hunt)
Bonanza (TV) – 1960, 1963, 1967, 1969, 1970, 1972 (Farner Perkins, Danny Morgan, Captain John Fenner, Sheriff Crowley, Wade Turner, Ed Thornton, Will Cooper)
The Dakotas (TV) – 1963 (Tom Davis)
The Man Called Shenandoah (TV) – 1966 (Marshal, Sheriff Healy)
Shane (TV) – 1966 (Harmon)
The Big Valley (TV) – 1966 (Hoyt Vatcher)
Daniel Boone (TV) – 1967 (Tom Jimson)
The High Chaparral (TV) – 1969, 1970 (Truescott, Captain Winslow)
Alias Smith and Jones (TV) – 1971 (Sam Bleeker)
Joe Kidd – 1972 (Sheriff Mitchell)
Man of the East – 1972 (Bull Schmidt)
The Cowboys – 1974 (Culpepper)
Little House on the Prairie (TV) – 1975 (Slick McBurney)
The Quest (TV) – 1976 (blacksmith)
17.Donner Pass: The Road to Survival – 1978 (Will McKutcheon)

RIP Scott Arthur Allen

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Scott-Arthur Allen, Acting Coach for Four Decades, Dies at 76

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
March 19, 2015

Scott-Arthur Allen, an actor, talent manager and acting coach for more than four decades, died on March 13 at his home in Nixa, Mo., after a long bout with cancer his wife, Elizabeth, said. He was 76.

In 1976, Allen founded what would become the Creative Actors Workshop in Los Angeles. He then moved the enterprise to Springfield, Mo., in 2002. His students included Sela Ward, Heather Locklear, Tea Leoni and Leslie Hope and cast members on such films as Winter’s Bone (2011) and Super 8 (2011).

Allen also launched Gentle-Force Management and served as president of the Talent Managers Association.

A native of Shreveport, La., Allen was a singer, songwriter and piano player, who as a teenager fronted a band that shared stages with Elvis Presley and Jerry Lee Lewis. After serving in the U.S. Marine Corps, he came to L.A. and performed at The Troubadour and other venues before turning to acting.

He had roles on such TV shows as Police Story, Emergency!, The Bionic Woman and CHiPs and in the Blake Edwards film S.O.B. (1981).

Allen and his wife formed the production company Creative Actors Collective in 2010.


ALLEN, Scott Arthur
Born: 8/10/1938, Shreveport, Louisiana, U.S.A.
Died: 3/13/2015, Nixa, Missouri, U.S.A.

Scott Arthur Allen’s westerns – actor:
The Wild Women of Chastity Gulch (TV) – 1982 (Tom)

RIP Walter Grauman

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Director Walter Grauman Dies at 93


Variety

Carmel Dagan

March 20, 2015


Walter E. Grauman, who directed multiple episodes of “Barnaby Jones” and “Murder, She Wrote” in a career that stretched back to the late 1950s, died Friday in Los Angeles. He was 93, dying three days after his birthday.


Grauman also directed the 1964 feature thriller “Lady in a Cage,” starring Olivia de Havilland; the 1965 drama “A Rage to Live,” starring Suzanne Pleshette and Bradford Dillman; the 1966 WWII thriller “I Deal in Danger,” starring Robert Goulet; and the 1970 WWII film “The Last Escape,” starring Stuart Whitman.


In addition to these films, Grauman directed the 1964 WWII film “633 Squadron,” starring Cliff Robertson.  George Lucas has said that he patterned the “trench run” sequence that results in the destruction of the Death Star in “Star Wars: Episode IV” on a scene in “633 Squadron.”


Grauman helmed 53 episodes of Angela Lansbury’s “Murder, She Wrote” and 49 episodes of Buddy Ebsen detective series “Barnaby Jones.” But his career also encompassed directing episodes of series ranging from “Peter Gunn,” “Perry Mason,” “The Untouchables,” “The Fugitive” and “The Twilight Zone” through “The Streets of San Francisco” and “Trapper John, M.D.”


Grauman, who was born in Milwaukee and later attended the University of Arizona, was distantly related to Sid Grauman, who built Hollywood’s Chinese and Egyptian movie theaters: His father was Sid Grauman’s first cousin.


During WWII he served for four years in the U.S. Army Air Forces, flying 56 combat missions over Europe in a B-25 and receiving the Distinguished Flying Cross.


He began his showbiz career as a stage manager at NBC.


Grauman was the creator and executive producer of the Los Angeles Spotlight Awards, run through the Music Center.


He was also a member of the board of governors of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.


Grauman is survived by his wife, Peggy; a daughter and son; and four grandchildren.



GRAUMAN, Walter

Born: 3/17/1922, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S.A.

Died: 3/20/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.


Walter Grauman’s westerns – director:

Colt .45 (TV) – 1957

Lancer (TV) - 1958

Hotel de Paree (TV) – 1959

Wichita Town (TV) – 1960

Man Without a Gun (TV) – 1958-1959

Empire (TV) - 1962

RIP Ralph Taeger

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Ralph Taeger, Star of the 1960s TV series 'Hondo,' Dies at 78

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
March 20, 2015

Ralph Taeger, a rugged 1960s TV actor who starred alongside James Coburn in two adventure shows and played Hondo Lane in a series based on the John Wayne film, has died. He was 78.

Taeger died March 11 after a long illness at Marshall Medical Center in Placerville, Calif., where he owned a firewood business, his family announced.

Taeger played Mike Halliday alongside Coburn in NBC's Klondike, which was set during the Alaskan gold rush of the 1890s and debuted in October 1960. When the series ended after 18 episodes in February 1961, the two transitioned to another NBC show that same month, playing Korean War veterans turned beachcombers in Acapulco. (That one was gone after just eight installments.)

More than a decade after Wayne starred as a cavalry officer who helps a young mother fend off Apaches in the popular Warner Bros. Western Hondo (1953), Taeger reprised the role for an ABC series. Bowing in September 1967, it was canceled after 18 episodes.

In The Twilight Zone episode “From Agnes — With Love,” which aired on Valentine’s Day 1964, the hunky Taeger gets the girl that another computer technician (Wally Cox) had been trying to date. (The computer had given Cox's nebbishy character some bad advice.)

The episode was directed by Richard Donner, who earlier had cast Taeger as a test pilot in X-15 (1961).

Taeger also starred in such films as Stage to Thunder Rock (1964), A House Is Not a Home (1964), The Carpetbaggers (1964) and The Delta Factor (1970), and he appeared in the TV series Highway Patrol, Bat Masterson, Sea Hunt, The Six Million Dollar Man and Father Murphy.

Born in New York City as the son of German immigrants, Taeger played minor-league baseball for the Dodgers before a leg injury ended his hopes for an athletic career.

Survivors include his wife of 47 years, Linda, and son Richard.


TAEGER, Ralph (Ralph Adolph Taeger)
Born: 7/30/1936, Queens, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 3/11/2014, Placerville, California, U.S.A.

Ralph Taeger’s westerns – actor:
Tombstone Territory (TV) – 1959, 1960 (Kirby Crane, Horn)
Bat Masterson (TV) – 1960 (Frank Dexter)
Klondike (TV) – 1960-1961 (Michael Halliday)
Stage to Thunder Rock (TV) – 1964 (Reese Sawyer)
Hondo (TV) – 1967 (Hondo Lane)
Father Murhpy (TV) – 1983 (Brimmer)

RIP Marilyn H. Durham

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RIP Marilyn H. Durham

Courier Press
March 25, 2015

Marilyn J. (Wall) Durham
Evansville, Ind.

Marilyn J. (Wall) Durham, 84, of Evansville, Indiana, passed away Thursday, March 19, 2015 at Columbia Healthcare Center.

Marilyn was born in Evansville, Indiana on September 8, 1930 to the late Russell and Stacy (Birdsall) Wall. Marilyn wrote three novels, two of which became best-sellers. Her works include The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing (1972), Dutch Uncle (1973), and Flambard's Confession (1982). The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing was adapted into a film released in 1973, starring Burt Reynolds and British actress Sarah Miles. Marilyn spoke at numerous writing workshops at the University of Evansville, the University of Southern Indiana, and at other fiction writing groups in Evansville. She won the Fiction Award of the Society of Midland Authors in 1973. Marilyn worked as an instructor for McGraw-Hill's Continuing Education Center for over ten years. Marilyn taught Sunday school at Trinity United Methodist Church in downtown Evansville. She also enjoyed opera and reading "the unread treasures from the sales table" at Barnes & Noble.

Marilyn is survived by her daughter, Elaine Otto; sister and brother-in-law, Kay and Larry Henderson; grandsons Marine Staff Sgt. Robert Durham (Christina) and Andrew Otto; granddaughter Stacy Otto; great-grandchildren Theodore, Evalyn, and Elizabeth Durham; and cousins, Bill and Jan Fares.

Marilyn is preceded in death by her husband of 44 years, Kilburn H. Durham, and her daughter, Jennifer Felker.

Funeral services will be held at 10:00 AM on Saturday, March 28, 2015, at Browning Funeral Home, 738 Diamond Avenue, Evansville, IN 47711, with Pastor Kaitlin Moore officiating. Burial will follow at Oak Hill Cemetery.

Friends may visit from 4:00 PM until 8:00 PM, on Friday, March 27, 2015, and from 9:00 AM until service time on Saturday at Browning Funeral Home.

Memorial contributions may be made to the Smile Train, P.O. Box 96231, Washington, D.C. 20090-6231 or the Vanderburgh County Humane Society, 400 Millner Industrial Drive, Evansville, IN 47710.


DURHAM, Marilyn
Born: 9/8/1930, Evansville, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died: 3/19/2015,Evansville, Illinois, U.S.A.

Marilyn Durham’s western – author:
The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing - 1973

RIP Carl K. Mahakian

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Carl K. Mahakian (1926 - 2015)

The Desert Sun
March 23, 2015

USMC Retired. 1943 – 1986

Colonel Mahakian served in World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, and the Cold War.

Between wars, he received a BA degree from USC. He worked in Radio, Television Broadcasting and Motion Pictures as a Post Production Coordinator, Film Editor and Sound Editor. His Motion Picture career spanned from Television series such as The Odd Couple, The Brady Bunch as well as several others, to Major Films such as Rebel Without a Cause, The Manchurian Candidate, West Side Story and more. He was awarded a Golden Reel Award and two Emmys.

In retirement, he loved collecting books and stamps.

Carl was devoted to his loving wife Patricia and his daughter Susan. His loss in this world will be felt by many.

Donations can be made to the VFW-Veterans of Foreign Wars.

Burial services will be held in Arlington National Cemetery, VA. Services have been entrusted to FitzHenry-Wiefels Palm Desert.

MAHAKIAN, Carl Karnig
Born: March 7, 1926, San Francisco, California, U.S.A.
Died: March 9, 2015, Palm Springs, California, U.S.A.

Carl Mahakian’s westerns – sound editor, dialogue editor:
The Far Horizons - 1955 [sound editor]
Barbary Coast (TV) - 1975 [sound editor]
Death Hunt - 1981 [dialogue editor]

RIP Roy Douglas

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Roy Douglas, composer - obituary

Composer noted for working with William Walton and Ralph Vaughan Williams

The Telegraph
March 26, 2015

Roy Douglas, who has died aged 107, was a composer and arranger, but was best known for the assistance he gave to Ralph Vaughan Williams and William Walton in the preparation of their works for performance and publication.

 He assisted Vaughan Williams from 1947 until the composer’s death at the age of 85 in 1958. It was said of him that he “knew Vaughan Williams’s mind and, perhaps a rarer accomplishment, could read his handwriting”.

Vaughan Williams unintentionally embarrassed him by introducing him jocularly as “Mr Douglas, who writes my music for me”. Some people took this seriously, and Vaughan Williams had to explain that Douglas’s job was to make a fair copy of the score of a new work, correct “a lot of careless errors on my part” and make suggestions about the pianoforte and celesta parts where applicable – a process Vaughan Williams described as “washing the face” of the work concerned. The persistent rumour that Douglas “orchestrated” Vaughan Williams’s later works was totally false.

One work he did orchestrate was the ballet devised from Chopin’s music, Les Sylphides. Disgusted by the many poor orchestrations, he did his own in 1936. He was offered an outright fee of £10 but wisely refused, for royalties from it provided a substantial income for the rest of his life. It was taken up by most leading ballet companies. When the Royal Ballet on one occasion substituted an arrangement by Sir Malcolm Sargent, the restoration of Douglas’s version was demanded by Margot Fonteyn.

Roy Douglas was born at Tunbridge Wells, where he would live for much of his life, on December 12 1907. He began to play the piano when he was five, and at 10 was composing little piano pieces. His mother extracted a shilling a week from her meagre housekeeping money to pay for piano lessons. As a child he suffered from recurrent heart trouble and had little formal education. He never had lessons in composition, orchestration or conducting.

 From the age of eight he spent hours at the piano, reading at sight everything he could find from Beethoven to ragtime. When the family moved to Folkestone in 1915, Roy played regularly in local orchestras, and in 1927 he joined Folkestone Municipal Orchestra as Mustel-organist, deputy pianist, celesta player, extra percussionist, librarian and programme-planner – all for £6 a week for 14 performances and two rehearsals.

When the local council reduced orchestral salaries, Douglas resigned and moved to Highgate with his parents and sister. He obtained engagements with the London Symphony Orchestra, and from 1933 was a full-time member as pianist, celesta player, organist, fourth percussionist and librarian. He also played in ballet seasons at the Alhambra, Coliseum and Drury Lane. He reckoned he played the piano part in Stravinsky’s Petrushka 80 times; and in the Polovtsian Dances from Borodin’s Prince Igor, he “played triangle and tambourine, both parts together, one with each hand”.

In the 1930s he was a pianist in many West End shows, including revivals of The Desert Song and The Vagabond King, and performed light music in the restaurants at the Savoy and at Frascati’s, as well as in cinemas.

Between 1937 and 1941 Douglas provided the orchestration for recordings by several famous singers when HMV, Columbia and Parlophone decided that an orchestral accompaniment was preferable to the original voice and piano. Thus he orchestrated Brahms for Elisabeth Schumann, and other composers for Gigli, Paul Robeson, Webster Booth, Dennis Noble, Peter Dawson (who insisted on his fox terrier being present at sessions) and John McCormack. The orchestra was usually conducted by Walter Goehr, father of the composer Alexander Goehr, and led by Alfredo Campoli.

At one Abbey Road session, the pianist Benno Moiseiwitsch was recording Weber’s Invitation to the Dance, in which the player’s right thumb has four times to execute a glissando up the white keys, ending on a top G. Four times Moiseiwitsch had hit the wrong note at the end, necessitating in those days a complete retake. The record producer Walter Legge fetched Douglas to stand by the piano and hit the G after Moiseiwitsch had completed the glissando – and that is how the record was issued.

The LSO played many composers’ scores for films during the Second World War, and through these engagements Douglas came to work with Walton, Alan Rawsthorne, John Ireland and Arthur Benjamin. He made an orchestral arrangement of Liszt’s Funérailles and orchestrated all Richard Addinsell’s music for eight BBC programmes and 24 films. The latter included Dangerous Moonlight (1941), which contained the famous and popular “Warsaw Concerto”.
Dangerous Moonlight was about a Polish airman who was also a concert pianist (played by Anton Walbrook). The original idea was that he should be shown playing Rachmaninoff’s second concerto, but for some reason this was abandoned (and taken up successfully in Brief Encounter).

Addinsell wanted the Warsaw Concerto to sound like Rachmaninoff, so while Douglas was working on the orchestration he surrounded himself with the miniature scores of the second and third concertos and the Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini.

The recording sessions began in March 1941 with the young Australian pianist Noel Mewton-Wood; but the pianist for the final soundtrack was Louis Kentner, who agreed to perform only if his name was not publicised – presumably because he feared that it might be thought degrading to play for film music. But when later he heard that the gramophone recording of the soundtrack was a bestseller (three million copies), he asked for (and got) royalties.

Douglas also asked for royalties on his orchestration, but was told he had been commissioned to score the entire music for the film for £100 and that was that. He later worked out that a penny on each of the three million copies would have brought him £12,500, a huge sum at that time.

He first worked with Walton in 1940, on revision of the Violin Concerto. He also gave the composer some lessons in conducting. He performed the same function for Walton as he was later to do for Vaughan Williams, but on occasions helped Walton by orchestrating a few bars of film music when the composer fell behind a deadline.
 One example of this was in the music for Gabriel Pascal’s film of Shaw’s Major Barbara. Douglas also “washed the face” of Walton’s film scores for The First of the Few and Henry V and later of the operas Troilus and Cressida and The Bear and the later orchestral works. During rehearsals for Troilus and Cressida at Covent Garden, Douglas discovered 238 mistakes in the printed parts.

Douglas’s first encounter with Vaughan Williams was with some of his wartime film music when he copied out the orchestral parts of Coastal Command because the manuscript score was deemed “unreadable”. In 1944 the composer asked him to make a reduced score of his Thanksgiving for Victory to enable it to be performed by societies which could not afford the original version. Then, in 1947, Vaughan Williams wrote to him to say he had “been foolish enough to write another symphony (No 6). Could you undertake to vet and then copy the score?”
Thus began an association which brought Douglas close friendship with Vaughan Williams and his wife, Ursula. He worked on Sinfonia Antarctica, the Eighth and Ninth Symphonies, the opera The Pilgrim’s Progress and many other compositions. He also orchestrated six of the nine Songs of Travel after Vaughan Williams’s death.

Douglas wrote a fascinating account of their collaboration, Working with RVW, in 1972 and expanded it in 1988 as Working with Vaughan Williams. It includes many of the composer’s letters to him. After Vaughan Williams’s death, Douglas went through all his manuscripts and was of invaluable assistance to his biographer. He continued to vet the publication of Vaughan Williams scores until he was in his eighties.

Douglas was a founder member of the Committee (now Society) for the Promotion of New Music in 1943, and an early committee member of the Composers’ Guild of Great Britain .
 He moved back to Tunbridge Wells in 1939, and after the war joined the town’s dramatic society, appearing as Oberon, Shylock, Touchstone and Dr Chasuble. In 1950 he played the piano part in Falla’s Love the Magician with the Royal Tunbridge Wells Symphony Orchestra and continued to play with it, and occasionally to conduct it, for many years; in 1985 he was elected president.

His compositions include an oboe quartet, Four Old Scots Tunes for strings and an Elegy for strings. He wrote music for 32 radio programmes and six documentary films.

Douglas was a remarkable all-round musician. His sardonic sense of humour made him a splendid raconteur, and he had a hatred of sloppy English. Perhaps surprisingly, his favourite recreation was motorcycling: he travelled throughout England on a Triumph 200cc Tiger Cub which he bought in 1958, replacing it with a Triumph 350cc on which he covered more than 55,000 miles until his doctor ordered him to stop after his 80th birthday.

Roy Douglas was unmarried, sharing his home with his sister Doris until her death in 1997.


DOUGLAS, Roy (Richard Roy Douglas)
Born: 12/12/1907, Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England, U.K.
Died: 3/23/2015, Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England, U.K.

Roy Douglas’ western – composer:
The Overlanders - 1946

RIP Sally Forrest

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Sally Forrest, Actress and Protege of Ida Lupino, Dies at 86

The Hollywood Reporter
Mike Barnes
March 25, 2015

Sally Forrest, a dancer, actress and protege of Hollywood pioneer Ida Lupino who starred in the 1949 feature dramas Not Wanted and Never Fear, has died. She was 86.

Forrest died March 15 at home in Beverly Hills after a long battle with cancer, publicist Judy Goffin announced.

Forrest starred as a young unwed mother who puts her baby up for adoption in shame and then wants him back in Not Wanted, then stood out as an up-and-coming dancer who is paralyzed from polio in Never Fear.

These performances led Hollywood columnist Hedda Hopper to name Forrest the Star of the Year.

Lupino wrote and produced Not Wanted and appeared in the film as Forrest’s mother. (She also took over for Elmer Clifton after he suffered a heart attack during filming, making that film her directorial debut). Lupino, one of the few women to direct features in her era, then helmed and wrote Never Fear.

Forrest then reteamed with director Lupino in Hard, Fast and Beautiful (1951).

Born Katherine Feeney in San Diego on May 28, 1928, she worked as a model and taught ballet while still in high school. Forrest was hired as choreographer and lead dancer for her first film, Till the Clouds Roll By (1946), and went on to appear in several MGM musicals.

Forrest also appeared in such films as The Strip (1951) with Mickey Rooney; Bannerline (1951); Excuse My Dust (1951); The Strange Door (1951) with Charles Laughton and Boris Karloff; Son of Sinbad (1955); and Fritz Lang’s While the City Sleeps (1956).

She had musical spots on The Ed Sullivan Show, The Dinah Shore Show and The Red Skelton Hour and dramatic turns on such TV series as Suspense, Rawhide and The Millionaire.

Forrest married writer-producer Milo Frank in 1951, and they moved to New York two years later. She took over the starring role the opposite Tom Ewell in the original Broadway production of The Seven Year Itch (she had the role immortalized by Marilyn Monroe in the movie) and later appeared in major stage productions of Damn Yankees, As You Like It and No, No, Nanette.

Frank died in 2004. Survivors include her niece Sharon and nephews Michael and Mark.


FORREST, Sally (Katherine Feeney)
Born: May 28, 1928, San Diego, California, U.S.A.
Died: 3/15/2015, Beverly Hills, California, U.S.A.

Sally Forrest’s films – actress:
The Kissing Bandit – 1948 (Fiesta dancer)
Vengeance Valley – 1951 (Lily Fasken)
Rawhide (TV) – 1959, 1964 (Clovis Lindstrom, Loreen Bouquet)


RIP Rik Battaglia

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The World of Cinema is in Mourning, Rik Battaglia has Died

The great actor has died at his home in Corby, had 88 years

Spettacolo
March 28, 2015

Rovigo, March 28, 2015 – He died yesterday seized by an illness at his home in Corbola, in the province of Rovigo where he was born 88 years ago, Rik Battaglia.  He was a great film actor.  He participated in more than 100 films (many as the main character) from 1955 to 1999 in Italy, the U.S. and Germany.

He owed his fame to the friendship with the writer Goffredo Parise who noticed him at a bar in the restaurant Agip Milan. He was then presented to the director Mario Soldati that engaged hiu for the film " La donna del fiume" (1955) with Sophia Loren, shot in the Delta, and it opened the doors to an extraordinary career.  Soldiers even escorted him when he attend the Experimental Cinema Centre and has since taken the road of continued success.  He worked in the films of the great masters, of all Sergio Leone which was also a friend.  He worked for him in "A Fistful of Dynamite" (1971).  The cinema of Rik Battaglia was also that of the great Hollywood star Esther Williams, Liza Minnelli.  With the latter he shot "Nina" (1976), the latest film by Vincente Minnelli.  He met the great writers and writers, in addition to Parise, Moravia, Pasolini, Flaiano.


BATTAGLIA, Rik (Caterina Bertaglia)
Born: 2/18/1927, Corbola, Rovigo, Italy
Died: 3/27/2015, Corbola, Rovigo, Italy

Rik Battaglia’s westerns – actor:
Shatterhand – 1963 (Dixon)
The Sheriff was a Lady – 1964 (Steve Perkins)
Pyramid of the Sun Gods – 1964 (Captain Lazoro Verdoja)
The Desperado Trail - 1965 (Rollins)
Legacy of the Incas – 1965 (Antonio Perillo)
Pyramid of the Sun Gods – 1965 (Captain Lazoro Verdoja)
The Treasure of the Aztecs – 1965 (Captain Lazoro Verdoja)
Thunder at the Border – 1966 (Sergeant/Captain Mendoza)
This Man Can’t Die – 1967 (Vic Graham)
Black Jack - 1968 (Skinner/Sanchez)
The Longest Hunt – 1968 (Major York/Norton) [as Rick Austin]
This Man Can’t Die – 1968 (Vic Graham)
The Man With the Long Gun – 1968 (Murdock)
Chapaqua’s Gold - 1970 (Mexico/Murphy)
Hey Amigo, to Your Death - 1970 (Barnett/Burnett)
Duck You Sucker - 1971 (Santerna)
The Long Ride of Vengeance – 1972 (Montana) [as Rick Battaglia]
The Call of the Wild - 1972 (Dutch Harry)
White Fang - 1973 (Jim Hall)
Challenge to White Fang - 1974 (Jim Hall)
The Genius - 1975 (captain)
A Man Called Blade - 1977 (Gerard Merton)
Buck at the Edge of Heaven - 1991 (Bauman)

RIP Fred Robsahm

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RIP Fred Robsahm
Norwegian actor Fred Robsahm died at his Lillesand home on March 26th. He was 71. Born Frederick Otto Robsahm on June 29, 1943 in Lillesand, Aust-Agder, Norway he was the younger brother of actress Margarete Robsahm [1942- ]. Fred was famous for his role in Barbarella (1968) with Jane Fonda and John Philip Law. He went on to make only 12 films, among which were three Euro-westerns: “Bandidos” (1967), “No Room to Die” (1969) and “Black Killer” (1971). He was married for fifteen years to Italian actress Agostina Belli [1947- ]. In the late 1980s Fred was arrested as a passenger on a boat carrying drugs. While in prison he contacted the HIV virus from a needle used to sedate the prisoners. The drugs he took to fight the HIV virus caused many side effects so he left the world he knew and bought a sailboat and started to sail the world. In 1992 he started drinking heavily and developed liver failure. For years he lived in an apartment in Lillesand on a disability pension. 


ROBSAHM, Fred (Frederik Otto Robsahm)
Born: 6/29/1943, Lillesand, Aust-Agder, Norway
Died:  3/26/2015, Lillesand, Aust-Agder, Norway

Fred Robsahm’s westerns – actor:
Bandidos - 1967 (Kane henchman)
No Room to Die – 1969 (Mexican)
Black Killer - 1971 (Bud/Burt Collins)
Carambola - 1973

RIP Matilde Conesa

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Matilde Conesa, voice actress of the Bruja Avería  and Angela Channing dies.

El Mundo
3/29/2015

The announcer and radio actress Madrid Matilde Conesa, who gave voice to the breakdown Witch "Crystal Ball" and Angela Channing in Falcon Crest TV series, died Sunday at age 86.

Matilde Conesa was born in Madrid in 1928, began her career with small roles in film and as an announcer on Radio SEU after Youth Radio.  In 1948 she was hired at Radio Madrid for the picture of actors who then conducted National episodes.

Her first soap opera was ''Un clavel en el frac', and later became famous first as a radio serial actress at the time of the "boom" of radio-fifties.

She played mostly dramatic roles but also made ​​some comedies, as Sister St. Sulpice brothers Alvarez Quintero, and the famous Matilde, Perico and Periquín evening series.

Other successful series were ‘Lo que nunca muere’, ‘Ama rosa’ and ‘La dama de las camelias’, always in the company of the late Pedro Pablo Ayuso.

At the same time she was ​​dubbing films and television series put her voice to the mothers of "En familia" and ‘Vicki el vickingo’.

She remained in Radio Madrid until 1985, when ended the famous Los Porretas series, and then went on to collaborate with TVE in ‘The Crystal Ball’ series that lasted until 1988, and "The Leper Bishop," another serial in which she acted in person for the first time.

Shee won several awards, including the Actors Union, the Special Award A Life of dubbing (2006) and several Ondas Awards (1955, 1971, 1999).

Her latest award, the Gold Medal of the Academy of Radio, was obtained in February 2014

She was the widow of Julio Montijano, who was also an actor in radio. They had a daughter Carolina who also is dedicated to dubbing.


CONESA, Matilde (Matilde Conesa Valls)
Born: 4/13/1928, Madrid, Madrid, Spain
Died: 3/29/2015, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

Matilde Conesa’s westerns – voice actress:
Relevo para un pistolero – 1963 [Spanish voice of Silvia Solar]
Fast Hand is Still My Name - 1973 [Spanish voice of Celine Bessy]
Garden of Venus - 1979 [Spanish voice of Isela Vega]

RIP Anne James

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RIP Anne James

Lowell Sun
March 27, 2015

Delores Anne 'Dorrie' Sheehan Devout Catholic TEWKSBURY -- God gave the world a unique gift when Delores Anne Sidener was born on April 15, 1932 to Marie (Kelly) Sidener (a City of Chicago budget manager) and James Samuel Sidener (a Chicago Police Officer).

Delores "Dorrie" developed her strong Catholic faith at her mother's knee and at St. Adrian's school. She was baptized at St. Adrian's, and received the Sacraments of Penance, Holy Communion, and Confirmation there. In her teens, she lived in California, where, blessed with a beautiful and powerful Coloratura Soprano voice, she sang professionally with the Greek Theater. Her goal was to sing with Las Calla or the Metropolitan Opera. Before that could happen, however, she was discovered by a Hollywood talent scout, and was signed by Columbia Studios.

She attended Hollywood Professional School while playing the female lead in two Western Movies "Pecos River" with Jock Mahoney and John Penn; and "Barbed Wire", with Gene Autry and Smiley Burnett, and a comedy, "Sound Off" opposite Mickey Rooney.

During the Korean War, she entertained our troops and worked in bond drives to support the war effort.

Later, she returned to Chicago, where she became one of that city's top-ten fashion and photographers' models.

At West Point in 1954, she met Cadet Donald Sheehan. For four years he courted her during his Christmas and summer leaves, and during Air Force pilot training after graduation.

Dorrie returned to West Point for Don's graduation in 1956, sharing with him and his family the many events of June Week including a visit to Flirtation Walk on his last day as a cadet, and pinning his Second Lieutenant bar on his shoulder on graduation day. Don gave her a star on December 23, 1957, and they were married at St. Adrian's on the fourth anniversary of their meeting.

They were separated by Don's assignment to Korea 77 days after their wedding, but Dorrie joined him a year later for duty in Japan. There they enjoyed a two year second honeymoon, absorbed Japanese culture, and brought their first two daughters, Maria Anastasia and Maria Gabrielle into the world.

Dorrie became a gourmet cook under the tutelage of the Benedictine Nuns in Tokyo. She became Don's inspiration as he studied for a master's degree in English at the University of Illinois (1962-63). There she gave birth to Maria Christina. With masters' degree in hand, Dorrie and Don and their three babies drove to Colorado for service in the English Department faculty at the Air Force Academy. Dorrie personified the virtues and attributes of Air Force wife and mother. She gave birth to Maria Mia in 1964, to Michael in 1965, and Matthew John in 1966, and taught her children the tenets of her Catholic faith.

In 1967, Dorrie lived in the Philippine Islands, while Don flew tactical airlift missions during the Vietnam War. At the end of that assignment, they returned to the Air Force Academy English Department, and Adam Francis was born in 1970.

In 1973, the nine Sheehan's moved to Alaska, where Don flew C-130 aircraft. Dorrie moved her family to Tewksbury for Don's service as Commander of Air Force ROTC Detachment 345 at the UMASS-Lowell.

For 38 years, Dorrie and Don lived in Tewksbury, where their children grew in grace and wisdom, completing their college degrees, marrying, and raising eighteen grandchildren and four great grandchildren.

Throughout their 55 years of marriage, Dorrie exemplified the finest virtues of a Catholic lady, wife, mother, and grandmother. The needs of her family always came first, before any personal considerations. She led by example, guiding her children in developing Catholic values. Dorrie helped her children develop self-confidence and respect for others. She was the architect of her family's prayer life and the matriarch of Sidener/Sheehan family traditions. Her children and grandchildren emulated her virtues as well as the values of patriotism, integrity, honesty, and humility.

Her many talents and skills included home decor, unique gastronomic excellence, creative acrylic and water color painting, and unmatched devotion to God and her family. In her recovery from three near-fatal automobile accidents, she displayed courage and discipline beyond the call of duty. In extended therapy to regain her mobility, she demonstrated quiet and powerful leadership.

Dorrie brought indescribable joy to Don, her family, and friends all the days of her life.

On Wednesday, March 25, 2015, the Loving God Who gave her life, called her home to join her Mom, Dad, sisters, Mary Sidener and Suzanne Kennedy, and brother, Sonny Sidener.

Mother of Stacy Decker of Lowell, Gigi Hovanec and her husband, George of Dracut, Chris Vecchi and her husband, Dennis of Andover, Mia Primeaux and her husband, Christopher of Lake Charles, LA, Michael A. Sheehan and his wife, Doreen of Derry, NH, Matthew J. Sheehan and his wife, Lisa of Chelmsford, and Adam F. Sheehan of Derry, NH. She also leaves 18 grandchildren, four great-grandchildren; many nieces and nephews.

SHEEHAN -- Delores Anne "Dorrie" (Sidener). Visitation at the foot of the altar at St. Robert Bellarmine Church, 198 Haggetts Pond Road, Andover, is Today, Friday, March 27, from 7-9 p.m. Holy Mass celebrating her Catholic life will be held Saturday, March 28, at 11 a.m. in St. Robert's Church. Burial will follow at St. Mary Cemetery, Tewksbury. In lieu of flowers, donations to the Wounded Warrior Project, www.woundedwarriorproject.org, P.O. Box 78517, Topeka, KS 66675 or to Poor Clares of Andover, 445 River Rd., Andover, MA 01810, would be gratefully appreciated. Arrangements entrusted to Farmer & Dee Funeral Home, Tewksbury. www.farmeranddee.com


JAMES, Anne (Delores Anne Sidener)
Born: 4/15/1932, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died: 3/25/2015, Tewksbury, Massachusetts, U.S.A.

Anne James’ western – actress:
Barbed Wire – 1952 (Gay Kendall)

RIP Robert Z'Dar

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Cult actor Robert Z'Dar dies in Pensacola

Pensacola News Journal
By Julio Diaz

Actor Robert Z'Dar, the massive man with the gigantic chin best known for the cult film series "Maniac Cop," died Monday night in Pensacola after being hospitalized when he came to town to appear at Pensacon, according to his long-time manager and friend Jim Decker.

Born Robert J. Zdarsky, the 6-foot-2 actor was featured in more than 121 films, including cult classics like the first three "Maniac Cop" films, "Soultaker,""The Final Sanction" and "Samurai Cop" (the sequel to which Z'Dar had been set to join immediately after Pensacon). He also enjoyed roles in mainstream hits such as "Tango & Cash" and TV roles on "Growing Pains" and the 1990 series "The Flash."

Instantly recognizable for his large face and jutting jaw, his fanbase grew when two of his films, "Soultaker" and "Future War," were lampooned on "Mystery Science Theater 3000." A staple on the convention scene, he appeared at both of Pensacon's shows.

Decker said Z'Dar was hospitalized after suffering chest pains during Pensacon, and was on the mend before going into cardiac arrest Monday night.

"We talked every day," Decker said. "We've been together through thick and thin. He was the first actor I took on in my career as an agent. We spent many weekends on the road together and a lot of time enjoying each other's company. I miss him dearly."

Decker said Z'Dar continued to be in demand as an actor and he continued to review scripts up until the last moments of his life. He'd been looking forward to his role in "Samurai Cop 2" and was eager to get back to work.

Decker mentioned that prior to his acting career, Z'Dar played football for Arizona State University, was in a band called Nova Express and spent time as a Chippendale's dancer.

Pensacon Chairman Mike Ensley said he and other representatives of Pensacon have been keeping tabs on Z'Dar's condition since the convention, and that he appeared to be improving before his heart gave out.

"Everyone at Pensacon is very saddened," Ensley said. "But we are glad he was here and that he didn't pass away alone."

Decker said that Z'Dar, who was 64, is survived by a brother, Billy Zdarsky, and a nephew, Matthew. He said those who would like to send condolences could do so through his email, esotericking@gmail.com.

Funeral arrangements were not immediately available.


Z’DAR, Robert (Robert J. Zdarsky)
Born: 6/3/1950, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died: 3/30/2015, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.A.

Robert Z’Dar’s western – actor:
Cherry 2000 – 1987 (Chet)

RIP Eddie Hice

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The Signal
March 29, 2015

Edward L. "Eddie" Hice (1930 - 2015)

Edward L. "Eddie" Hice passed away on March 12, 2015 at Olive View Hospital in Sylmar, CA, after a short illness. He was born in Los Angeles, CA on March 19, 1930.Eddie proudly served in the U.S. Marines from 1946 to 1949. He worked in the motion picture business for 48 years as a stuntman, stunt coordinator, and second unit director. Eddie loved his horses and dogs ~ there wasn't an animal that did not love him.He is survived by his wife of 34 years, Dianne L. Hice; his son Freddie Hice; his daughter Lori Hice; his grandchildren: Dylan Christal Hice, Ronan Hice, Dustin Hice, Cassidy Hice and Dylan V. Hice; and his sister Mary Jo Ortega. Services will be held at 11:00a.m. on Saturday, April 18, 2015 at Grace Baptist Church, 22833 Copper Hill Drive, Santa Clarita, CA 91350.


HICE, Eddie (Edward Louis Joseph Hice)
Born: 3/1/1930, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
Died: 3/12/2015, Sylmar, California, U.S.A.

Eddie’s Hice’s westerns – actor:
The Texan (TV) – 1959 (Garry, cowhand, Luke Bisbee)
Tombstone Territory (TV) – 1959 (townsman)
Bonanza (TV) – 1960 (carnival attendee)
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (TV) – 1960, 1961 (horse thief, Ringo henchman, Clanton cowboy, Hannegan henchman)
Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) – 1963 (church member)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1964, 1965, 1966 (Duster, Frank, cowboy, townsman)
Young Fury – 1965 (Hellion gang member)
Little House on the Prairie (TV) – 1976 (Ray Collins)
The Quest (TV) – 1976 (Emmett Driscoll)
The Soul of Nigger Charly – 1977 (Mexican)
Bret Maverick (TV) – 1982 (Sam Black)
Silverado – 1985 [stunts]
Tall Tales & Legends (TV) – 1985 [stunts]
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1999 [stunts]
American Outlaws – 2001 [stunts]

RIP Bek Nelson

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RIP Bek Nelson

IMDb Message Board
Frank Reighter
April 3, 2015

According to the Internet Movie Database (IMDb), Bek Nelson was in 51 films and TV shows from 1951 to 1970, including many Westerns. Her lone Three Stooges appearance was in "Flying Saucer Daffy" (1958) with Joe Besser as the third Stooge. Archive footage from that short was used in "Three Stooges Fun-O-Rama (1959).

Bek was born Doris Stiner May 8, 1927 in Canton, Ohio, to Ralf and Mae Stiner. She became a bathing suit model and singer at the Copacabana night club in New York. After moving to Hollywood she met and married Don Gordon (Birth name Donald Walter Guadagno; born November 13, 1926 in Los Angeles, California). They adopted a daughter, Gabrielle (Now Mrs. Ken Adelman). Bek and Don divorced May 23, 1979. (Don has since married again and is still alive in Los Angeles, California).

Bek later entered Danamore, a retirement home at 460 Eureka Canyon Road, in Watsonville, California. In early March, 2015, in failing health, she was transferred to a rehabilitation facility, where she died peacefully on Saturday, March 28, 2015. According to her wishes, her body was donated to the University of California, San Francisco, where, after their research, her body will be cremated, and her cremains scattered into the Pacific Ocean off the San Francisco coast.

Special thanks to Three Stooges Fan Club members Sim Gershon and Rich Gallo, who alerted me to Bek's death, and to her adopted daughter, Gabrielle Gordon Adelman (Bek's only surviving relative), for information about her passing and the final disposition of her body.


NELSON, Bek (Doris Stiner)
Born: 5/8/1927, Canton, Ohio, U.S.A.
Died: 3/28/2015, Watsonville, California, U.S.A.

Bek Nelson’s westerns – actress:
Tales of the Texas Rangers (TV) – 1957 (Claire Tatum)
Cowboy – 1958 (Charlie’s girl)
Gunman’s Walk – 1958 (dancehall girl)
The Restless Gun (TV) – 1958 (Dixie Starr)
Lawman (TV) – 1958-1959 (Dru Lemp)
Bonanza (TV) – 1959 (Glory)
Buckskin (TV) – 1959 (Melissa Jankins)
Shotgun Slade (TV) – 1959 (Kathy)
The Deputy (TV) – 1960 (Claudia)
Wanted: Dead or Alive (TV) – 1960 (Hannah)
Bat Masterson (TV) – 1961 (Martha Yale)

RIP George Wang

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Chinese actor George Wang died of heart failure in Taipei, Taiwan, China on March 27, 2015. He was 96.

In 1935 he was admitted to the Department of Economics, Northeastern University, Department of History, and there changed his name to Wang Jue. After the outbreak of the Marco Polo Bridge Incident in 1937, he dropped out of school to join the national salvation movement and appeared in drama performances throughout the north in anti-Japanese propaganda plays. In 1938 he joined the "China Film Studio", the following year, he appeared in Chongqing's first film "Paul’s Home." In addition to Chongqing movies he also made dramatic performances on stage.

After World War II he moved to Shanghai finding work in a factory. In 1947 he appeared in the Taiwan film "Hualien Harbor", the following year he returned to Taiwan to narrate an experimental film "Myanmar Dang". Little filming was going on and in 1949 the Chinese film studios, actors, crews and equipment moved to Taiwan. Wang appeared in drama performances at Zhongshan Hall and operated a Sichuan restaurant with his wife called Sichuan Garden. In 1950 he is appointed head of Taiwan's studio technology department, and appeared in several films during the early 1950s.

Wang went to Italy in 1959 to shoot a joint production called the "Great Wall" (later renamed "Last Train to Shanghai". After filming was completed he chose to stay in Italy where motion picture filming was thriving, and participated in “The Mongols” (1961), "55 Days at Peking” (1963) and eventually appearing in nearly fifty films. Now billed as George Wang he was almost the only active Oriental film actor in Europe, and became very influential in the Italian film industry, even contributing to the cooperation with Shaw Brothers Pictures. During his stay in Italy he became one of the Euro-western genre’s premiere villains and appeared in over a dozen Euro-westerns including “A Taste of Killing” (1966) with Craig Hill, “Blood and Guns” (aka “Tepepa”) (1968) with Tomas Milian, “Have a Nice Funeral” (1970) with Gianni Garko, “Shanghai Joe” (1973) with Chen Lee and “A Colt in the Hands of the Devil” (1973).

In 1976 he returned to Hong Kong and had been involved in films with his own film production
company "Wang Film Company," such as “Along Comes the Tiger” (1977) and “Hot, Cool and Vicious” (1978). In 1978 he returned to Taiwan, performing in "Coldest Winter", where he won a Golden Horse Award for Best Supporting Actor. He continued acting in such films as "Xinhai Double Ten","Guningtou Wars" and other films. In 2009 he was awarded a Special Contribution Award at the 46th Golden Horse Awards. His last appearance was in 2010’s “Close to You”. He was married to actress Luo Yang His and his son is Tao Wang [1945- ] who is also an actor.


WANG, George (Wang Yie)
Born: 11/12/1918, Liao Ning Andong Province, China
Died: 3/27/2015, Taipei, Taiwan, China

George Wang’s westerns – actor:
Cisco - 1966 (Capobanda/Torro/Tuscerora)
A Taste for Killing – 1966 (Mingo)
A Colt in the Hand of the Devil - 1967 (El Condor/Il Capataz)
Blood and Guns - 1968 (Mr. Chu)
Have a Nice Funeral - 1970 (Peng/Lee Tse Tung)
Kill Django… Kill First – 1971 (Lupe Martinez)
Jesse and Lester, Two Brothers in a Place Called Trinity - 1972 (Chinaman)
The Judgment of God - 1972 (Ramon Orea)
The Long Ride of Vengeance – 1972 (Ling Fu) [as Georgie Wang]
Six Bounty Killers for a Massacre – 1972 (Ming/Messinas)
When the Devil Grips a Colt – 1972 (Warner)
Shanghai Joe – 1973 (Master Yang)
The Son of Zorro – 1973 (Pedro Garincha/Garcia)

RIP Julie Wilson

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Julie Wilson Dies: Incomparable Voice Of Sondheim & Cole Porter Was 90

Deadline Hollywood
By Jeremy Gerard
April 6, 2015

Julie Wilson, a sultry, whiskey-voiced chanteuse who ruled the soigné cabaret rooms of Manhattan, from the top of the world at the St. Regis Hotel to the Oak Room of the Algonquin Hotel, died Sunday night at her Midtown home. She was 90. No cause of death was given in the announcement by her longtime friend and protege Ann Hampton Callaway, but Wilson had been in poor health for some time.

Wilson, who arrived in New York a starry-eyed girl from Omaha, NE, and soon was trodding the boards of Broadway musicals, led a kind of double life as a saloon singer who patterned herself on her personal goddess Billie Holiday, right down to the ever-present gardenia behind her ear at every performance. Sleek, dark and sheathed in elegance betrayed only by a mischievous glint of the eye and just-between-us intimacy of style, Wilson taught generations of cabaret singers how it’s done. And thousands of worshipful fans why the great American songbook is a sacred if ever-evolving touchstone.

Her first Broadway show was Three To Make Ready in 1946, and in the mid-1950s she joined the casts of Kismet and The Pajama Game. Her final Main Stem show was playing a cabaret singer in Legs Diamond, for which she earned her lone Tony nom. Other Broadway credits include The Girl In The Freudian Slip, Jimmy and Park. She played the West End in such shows as South Pacific and Kiss Me, Kate and recorded numerous cabaret albums including Live From The Russian Tea Room and Julie Wilson At The St. Regis.

In her later years, battling crummy health, constant pain and the indifference of a dwindling industry, Wilson not only persevered with her own shows but was an inexhaustible champion of young singers, regularly appearing at clubs to show her support.

On her own, however, Wilson was to the bone an incomparable show woman and interpreter of the greats from Irving Berlin to Stephen Sondheim. When I first met her in the 1980s, she was a regular at the now-shuttered Oak Room. I persuaded her to come to Dallas, where I was working at the time, and a fast and enduring friendship was born. I was hardly alone as she took everyone who crossed her path under her wing. With her enthusiasm for life, for the unmatched beauty of a witty lyric matched with a haunting melody, for the latest gossip.


WILSON, Julie (Julie May Wilson)
Born: 10/21/1924, Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.A.
Died: 3/5/2015, New York City, New York, U.S.A.

Julie Wilson’s western – actress:
The Rough Riders (TV) – 1997 (Mrs. Fish)

RIP Richard Rosenbloom

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Richard Rosenbloom, Executive Producer of 'Cagney & Lacey,' Dies at 91

Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
4/6/2015

Richard Rosenbloom, a three-time Emmy Award nominee, television executive and producer of such series as Cagney & Lacey, has died. He was 91.

Rosenbloom died March 28 at a retirement community in Palo Alto, Calif., his son, Robert, announced.

Rosenbloom shared an Emmy nomination for outstanding drama series in 1983 for his work on the acclaimed CBS cop drama Cagney & Lacey. He earned another nom for executive producing (with Tina Sinatra) the 1992 CBS miniseries Sinatra, starring Philip Casnoff as the Chairman of the Board.

Rosenbloom joined CBS in New York during the era of live TV before moving to Southern California in 1960. He worked as an executive at MGM, Four Star Television, Filmways and Orion Pictures and as an independent producer and exec producer. He retired in 1994 as president of Orion Television.

Rosenbloom also executive produced Scarlett, a 1994 CBS miniseries that starred Timothy Dalton as Rhett Butler and Joanne Whalley as Scarlett O’Hara, and the 1973 CBS telefilm Applause (1973), toplined by Lauren Bacall and Larry Hagman.

Born in Far Rockaway, N.Y., Rosenbloom graduated from the University of Michigan and continued his education at the New School for Social Research in New York and at the Ecole Technique du Cinema in Paris. He served as a naval aviator and aerial navigator during World War II.

In addition to his son Robert (and his wife Fina), survivors include another son Steven (and his wife Natasha) and grandchildren Ryan and Uliana. Rosenbloom’s wife of 57 years, Jean, died in 2008.

A memorial gathering will be held at 2 p.m. on Friday at the Vi retirement community in Palo Alto. A contribution may be made to the Homeward Bound Golden Retriever Rescue & Sanctuary.


ROSENBLOOM, Richard (Richard M. Rosenbloom)
Born: 1924 Far Rockaway, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 3/28/2015, Palo Alto, California, U.S.A.

Richard Rosenbloom’s western – producer:
Pioneer Woman (TV) - 1973

RIP James Best

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Kentucky Native James Best "Rosco P. Coltrane" Dead at 88

WBKO
April 7, 2015

HICKORY, N.C., April 6, 2015—James Best, the actor best known for his portrayal of bumbling yet endearing Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane on TV’s “The Dukes of Hazzard,” died at 9:28 p.m. ET Monday after a brief illness and complications of pneumonia. He was 88.

The youngest of eight brothers and a sister, James was born Jewel Franklin Guy in hardscrabble Powderly, Ky., on July 26, 1926, to parents Lena Mae Everly Guy (sister of Ike Everly, who was father of musical legends Don and Phil) and Larkin Jasper Guy. After spending a short time in an orphanage following his mother’s death in 1929, the young boy was adopted by Essa and Armen Best and moved with them to their home in Corydon, Ind.

When his adoptive parents asked what name he wanted to be called, young Jewel said, “Jimmie,” likely a toddler’s recollection of the name of one of his older brothers. Jimmie’s adoptive father taught him boxing skills, marksmanship with assorted firearms and a lifelong passion for fishing and the outdoors. During his youth, Jimmie also sacked groceries at the local Kroger with a future governor of Indiana (Frank O’Bannon), was a Boy Scout and acted in his first play, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court.

Jimmie’s experiences and observations as a boy growing up in the Great Depression would later be inspiration for his writing the play Hell-Bent for Good Times, which he also produced, directed and starred in with leading lady Peggy Stewart to rave reviews from Atlanta to Los Angeles. Jimmie also adapted the play for the screen and had even filmed some sample scenes for his Best Friend Films production company.

While ideas for future creative works percolated, Jimmie, fresh out of high school in 1944, enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Corps with dreams of being a pilot. But the Air Corps at that point needed gunners and radio operators more than pilots, so Jimmie trained for those duties instead. Once most of the enemy’s aircraft were out of commission and there was less need for him to be fighting in the sky, Jimmie was transferred to the military police to help handle dangerous problems on the ground in Germany. Many of Jimmie’s experiences as an MP contending with the Werwolf resistance in Germany during the war were incorporated into Samuel Fuller’s acclaimed 1959 film Verboten! in which Jimmie starred as Sergeant David Brent.
It was during his real wartime on the ground in Germany that Sergeant Best became enlightened about how servicemen who entertained the troops as part of Special Services were given better food and living quarters and, most important, got to travel and socialize with the pretty actressesin those units. And he noticed that the folks in Special Services also generally didn’t have people shooting at them.

Jimmie used his stellar record with the military police as leverage to join the military theatrical company. His first role was playing a drunk in director Arthur Penn’s production in Germany of My Sister Eileen. Jimmie’s show business career was now officially locked and loaded.

After the war, Jimmie had stars in his eyes and headed to New York City with visions of Broadway. He ended up honing his acting skills in winter stock and summer stock productions. He also did some fashion modeling, which got him noticed by an influential Hollywood casting director. That led to Jimmie’s leap to Hollywood as a contract player for Universal Studios, where Tony Curtis, Rock Hudson, Shelley Winters and war hero Audie Murphy were among the group of budding contract players with Jimmie at the time.

Jimmie stayed busy in lots of films, including classic westerns with movie legends who would become friends, such as James Stewart (four films together, including Winchester ’73) and Paul Newman (two films, including The Left-Handed Gun, which was also a nice reunion for Jimmie with director Arthur Penn). Mr. Stewart, as Jimmie always referred to him, was Jimmie’s icon and mentor. They became great friends. Jimmie’s prize possession was the framed sketch that Mr. Stewart drew for him of Harvey the rabbit. Jimmie called it his Oscar. Farther from Oscar, Jimmie also starred in purely popular fare during this period, including a Ma and Pa Kettle film, as well as one with Francis the Talking Mule.

Jimmie himself could be mule-like—that is, hard-kicking, ornery and stubborn. Jimmie’s storied reputation as a renegade eventually led to his essentially being prematurely turned out to pasture at Universal, while also being considered too hot to handle by other studios, with one key exception. Gene Autry gave Jimmie good work when he needed it most. Jimmie was soon back working steadily, first on Autry’s TV show and then for many others. He performed in hundreds of episodes for TV, including iconic roles in multiple installments of hits such as “The Twilight Zone,” “Alfred Hitchcock” and “The Andy Griffith Show.”

Jimmie’s work with Jerry Lewis on a 1965 episode of TV’s “Ben Casey” led to more work with Lewis (including Three on a Couch) and a long friendship filled with laughs, not a little tomfoolery and some fishing. Likewise, Jimmie first worked with Burt Reynolds in a 1963 episode of “Gunsmoke.” Their friendship and appreciation of each other’s work led to later collaboration on film (including Hooper) and theater projects and many legendary adventures.

Jimmie’s natural curiosity and creative energy were qualities that always made him an interesting person to work with and just to be around. He was a prolific and respected painter of oils and watercolors. He was a black belt in karate. He also founded a highly regarded school of motion-picture technique for actors, which he operated in various forms and locations for more than 25 years. (Students included Lindsay Wagner, Roger Miller, Glen Campbell, Quentin Tarantino and Regis Philbin.) His expertise not only in writing, directing and performing in plays and films but also in teaching acting technique led to his being named artist in residence at the University of Mississippi during an “escape” from Hollywood in the early 1970s. He also taught acting and film technique at the University of Central Florida.
He returned to Hollywood in the 1970s to work on camera and behind the scenes on a string of hit films, including Best Picture nominee Sounder, Ode to Billy Joe and three with Burt Reynolds. But what happened next was as unexpected as it was stupendously successful. Lured both by the prospect of filming a TV series in prime fishing country in Georgia and by the chance to work with old pal Denver Pyle, Jimmie agreed to work on a mid-season replacement series for CBS called “The Dukes of Hazzard.”

If there were ever any question that the cool, dashing and sometimes rough-edged actor of dozens of gritty westerns and war films could be believable in a comedy, the answer came in 1979 in the person of Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane, which would become the signature role of Jimmie’s long Hollywood career. In many ways, it was an ironic yet natural fit for Jimmie, the fabled Hollywood rebel, to comically portray a character who is a blundering fool at trying to enforce laws and outwit rural rule-benders like “those Duke boys.”

Throughout the decades that followed its seven-season run and two reunion movies, “Dukes” continued to keep Jimmie busy with reunions and personal appearances at festivals and fan gatherings. Through the enormous viewership of “Dukes” reruns, the popularity of the show has now spanned several generations of fans.

Keenly devoted to dogs and an advocate for their humane treatment, Jimmie was always especially thrilled to meet fans who, as homage to Rosco’s beloved basset hound Flash, brought their own basset hounds to meet Jimmie, who kept some “doggie num nums” handy to offer as treats. Jimmie reveled in the enthusiasm for the show that was displayed by fans of all ages, many of whom were also among the ardent admirers of his paintings, most of which depict the great outdoors and rustic subjects, including, in recent years, some inspired by “Dukes.”

Even while happily satisfying the huge public demand to see and meet Rosco, Jimmie continued with his passion for writing (including songs, poems, plays and screenplays), producing, directing and performing for stage and screen. His skills and taste ranged from solemn to silly and from heartfelt to campy. The common denominators were his passion, talent, true grit, genuine wit and boundless work ethic.

There is perhaps no better example of his persistence than his dream pet project of producing a sequel to The Killer Shrews, the 1959 cult horror classic in which Jimmie starred. Jimmie’s dream came true with the 2012 release of the nightmarish Return of the Killer Shews, with Jimmie not only reprising his original role, but also helping to develop and write the film over a period of years. It is a movie that never would have been made without Jimmie and wife Dorothy’s sheer force of will that it simply must be done. It was just too obvious of a chance for some great fun for everybody involved.

Once again showing his wide range, Jimmie’s last completed film was 2013’s The Sweeter Side of Life, a tender movie for Hallmark that was written and produced by daughter Janeen Damian and her husband, Michael, who also directed. And back on stage, James won a Best Actor award for a 2014 production of On Golden Pond. At the time of his death, he also was scheduled to star in Old Soldiers, a feature film about World War II veterans that was set to begin filming this year. And he was hard at work on co-writing a screenplay about the Civil War.

Jimmie was always totally present in whatever he was doing. He was also always eager to see what interesting experiences he could get into next. He had the perspective and wisdom that comes with a long life lived to the fullest. As he wrote in his 2009 autobiography, Best in Hollywood: The Good, the Bad and the Beautiful, “The only thing that makes me sad about having so little time left is leaving the people I love and those who love me. There are also films and other projects that I want to get done, and there are always fish that need catching.”

Realizing full well that he had lived a charmed life and that he was blessed to have been able to follow his rainbow, Jimmie looked forward to still more opportunities to embrace life with his legendary gusto. As he stated at the end of his autobiography: “God be willing, maybe I will touch my rainbow one more time before He takes my hand and leads me to eternity.”

As full and accomplished as Jimmie’s professional career was, family and friends made his life complete. In 1986, he married actress Dorothy Collier, the love of his life and partner in all things for several years before their marriage and his beloved wife for the next 29 years, until his passing. He is also survived by son Gary Allen Best and wife Angela, daughter JoJami Best Tyler and husband Eric, and daughter Janeen Damian and husband Michael Damian; and by grandchildren Lauren Best, Cameron Tyler and Tessa Tyler.

Private arrangements are pending. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to a local humane society of choice.


BEST, James (Jules Franklin Guy)
Born: 7/26/1926, Powderly, Kentucky, U.S.A.
Died: 4/6/2015, Hickory, North Carolina U.S.A.

James Best’s westerns – actor:
Kansas Raider – 1950 (Cole Younger)
Comanche Territory – 1950 (Sam)
Winchester ’73 – 1950 (Crater)
Apache Drums – 1951 (Bert Keon)
The Battle of Apache West – 1952 (Corporal Hassett)
The Cimarron Kid – 1952 (Bitter Creek Dalton)
City of Bad Men – 1953 (Deputy Gig)
Column South – 1953 (Primrose)
Seminole – 1953 (Corporal Gerad)
The Raid – 1954 (Lieutenant Robinson)
They Rode West – 1954 (Lieutenant Finlay)
The Yellow Tomahawk – 1954 (Private Bliss)
Hopalong Cassidy (TV) – 1954 (Rick Ashton)
Stories of the Century (TV) – 1954 (Dave Ridley)
Annie Oakley (TV) – 1954 (Jess Dugan, Scott Warren)
The Gene Autry Show (TV) – 1954 (Ray Saunders, bank teller)
The Adventures of Kit Carson (TV) – 1954, 1955 (Henry Jordan)
Seven Angry Men – 1955 (Jason Brown)
Buffalo Bill, Jr. (TV) – 1955 (Telegrapher Larry Martin)
The Lone Ranger (TV) – 1955 (Jim Blake)
The Adventures of Champion (TV) – 1955, 1956
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1955, 1962, 1964 (Ruel Gridley, Jimmy Burns, Jim Campbell)
Red Ryder (TV) – 1956 (Perry Cochran)
Frontier (TV) – 1956 (Paul Kenyon, Mace Kincaid)
Last of the Badmen – 1957 (Ted Hamilton)
Zane Grey Theater (TV) – 1957 (Pyke Dillon)
Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) – 1957, 1961 (Andy Fisher, Roy Smith)
Cole Younger, Gunfighter – 1958 (Ben Reed, Jason Cartwright)
Pony Express (TV) – 1957 (Pyke Dillon)
The Sheriff of Cochise (TV) – 1957 (Mike Norris)
Trackdown (TV) – 1957, 1958 (Rand Marple, Bob Ahler, Joe Sunday)
Cole Younger, Gunfighter - 1958 (Kit Caswell)
The Left Handed Gun – 1958 (Tom Folliard)
Tombstone Territory (TV) – 1958 (Mitt Potter)
The Restless Gun (TV) - 1958 (Jim Kenyon)
Wanted: Dead or Alive (TV) – 1958, 1959 (Stoner, Luke Perry)
Bat Masterson (TV) – 1958, 1960 (Joe Best, Danny Dakota)
Ride Lonesome – 1959 (Billy John)
Black Saddle (TV) – 1959 (Ben Travers)
Cast a Long Shadow – 1959 (Sam Mullen)
Frontier Justice (TV) – 1959 (Pyke Dillon)
Wagon Train (TV) – 1959, 1960 (Bowman Lewis, Art Bernard)
Laramie (TV) – 1959, 1960, 1962 (Dallas, Ben Leach, Johnny Best)
Pony Express (TV) – 1960 (Bart Gentry)
The Texican (TV) – 1960 (Clay Kirby)
Overland Trail (TV) – 1960 (Private Frank Cullen)
The Rebel (TV) – 1960 (Ted Evans, Waares)
Stagecoach West (TV) – 1960, 1961 (Les Hardeen, Jack Craig, Mike Pardee)
Whispering Smith (TV) – 1961 (Hemp Reeger)
Bonanza (TV) – 1961, 1963, 1968 (Carl Reagan, Page, Sheriff Vern Schaler)
The Rifleman (TV) – 1962 (Bob Barrett)
Bronco (TV) – 1962 (Banton)
Cheyenne (TV) – 1962 (Ernie Riggins)
Redigo – 1963 (Les Fay)
Temple Houston (TV) – 1963, 1964 (Gotch)
Rawhide (TV) – 1963, 1964 (Willie Cain, Brock Quade, Art Fuller)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1963, 1964, 1969 (Dal Creed, Beal, Charlie Noon)
The Quick Gun – 1964 (Scotty Grant)
Destry (TV) – 1964 (Curly Beamer)
Daniel Boone (TV) – 1965 (Wyatt)
Black Spurs (TV) – 1965 (Sheriff Ralph Elkins)
Shenandoah – 1965 (Carter)
The Virginian (TV) – 1965 (Curt Westley)
Iron Horse (TV) – 1966 (Chico)
The Guns of Will Sonnett (TV) – 1967, 1969 (Rake Hanley, Harley Bass)
Firecreek – 1968 (Drew)
Lancer (TV) – 1970 (Clayt)
Centennial (TV) – 1978 (Hank Garvey)
How the West Was Won (TV) – 1979 (Sheriff Gruner)

RIP Stan Freberg

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Stan Freberg, Acclaimed Satirist, Dies at 88

Hollywood Reporter
by Duane Byrge
4/7/2015

Stan Freberg, whose freewheeling career in advertising garnered him worldwide acclaim and whose satirical entertainments abounded on TV, the radio and on records, has died. He was 88.

He passed away of natural causes at a Santa Monica hospital, his son and daughter, Donavan and Donna Freberg, confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter.

“He was and will always be my hero, and I will carry his brilliant legacy forward as best I am able,” his son wrote on Facebook.

He is survived by his wife, Hunter Freberg, and granddaughter.

The godfather of humorous and irreverent commercials, Freberg lampooned cultural institutions and described himself as a “guerilla satirist.” The New York Times dubbed him the “Che Guevara of advertising,”  and years later, “Weird Al” Yankovic called him a major influence on his career.

Freberg also was known for his musical parodies. “Wun’erful Wun’erful,” his 1957 spoof of “champagne music” — on which he collaborated with orchestra leader Billy May — lampooned The Lawrence Welk Show.

He also parodied Johnnie Ray’s hit “Cry,” which Freberg rendered as “Try.” (Ray was quite angry until he realized the parody was fueling sales of his record.)

Freberg had hit records on his own, including St. George and the Dragonets, a send-up of the series Dragnet. His recordings were so popular that he landed his own radio program in 1954, That’s Rich. In 1957, he presented The Stan Freberg Show on CBS Radio, where he regularly mocked commercials by advertising bogus products.

He won a Grammy Award in 1959 for best performance, documentary or spoken word for The Best of the Stan Freberg Shows.

Earlier in his career, Freberg helped create and write the Emmy Award-winning comedy Time for Beany, also performing on the show. Its droll, off-the-wall humor appealed to fans including Albert Einstein. During the show’s early gestation, he and the other writers had no office, so they wrote in coffee shops at night as well as in an “office” in a condemned building.

Not surprisingly, Freberg ruffled institutional feathers. Capitol Records balked at releasing his satires of radio-TV personality Arthur Godfrey and Ed Sullivan’s early variety show Toast of the Town.

In 1958, Freberg opened his own ad agency, Freberg Ltd. His slogan was “more honesty than the client had in mind,” and he even had a corporate motto: “Ars Gratia Pecuniae” (Art of the Sake of Money).

Freberg disdained the hard sell. He created such classic comic ad capers as “Nine out of 10 doctors recommend Chun King Chow Mein,” and his Jeno’s Frozen Pizza campaign featured the Lone Ranger and Tonto. He skewered the greed of the ad business in “Green Chri$tma$, which criticized the over-commercialization of the holiday.


FREBERG, Stan (Stanley Victor Freberg)
Born: 8/7/1926, Pasadena, California, U.S.A.
Died: 4/7/2015m Santa Monica, California, U.S.A.

Stan Freberg’s westerns – actor, voice:
Callaway Went Thataway – 1951 (Marvin)
Posse Cat – 1954 [voice of Tom’s master]

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