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RIP Ray Charles

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Ray Charles, Leader of Ray Charles Singers, Who Backed Perry Como, Dies at 96

Variety
By Carmel Dagan
April 7, 2015

Ray Charles, an American musician, songwriter, composer, conductor, arranger and leader of the Ray Charles Singers, died Monday at home in Beverly Hills. He was 96 (and was not the soul singer of the same name, who died in 2004).

An authority on American music, Charles served as a musical consultant to the Kennedy Center Honors for 31 years and for “The Muppet Show.”

As a singer, he is best known for the vocals, with Julia Rinker Miller, on the theme song for ABC comedy “Three’s Company.”

The Ray Charles Singers — named so by Perry Como, with whom Charles had a close association — recorded some 30 vocal albums and appeared on Como’s albums, TV series and specials over a period of more than three decades starting in 1959.

His film projects included “Funny Lady” and “Racing With the Moon”; much earlier, in 1947, he conducted the original cast album for the Broadway musical “Finian’s Rainbow” on Columbia Records.

Charles won Emmys two years running, in 1971 and 1972, for outstanding achievement in music, lyrics and special material, the first for “The First Nine Months Are the Hardest,” the second for an episode of “The Funny Side.” He was nominated five more times, including twice for musical direction of “The Kennedy Center Honors” and the final time, in 1993, for a special honoring Bob Hope’s 90th birthday.

Charles Raymond Offenberg was born in Chicago.

During WWII, he served in the Navy but was assigned to Hunter College, where he created a new music library for the Wave choruses and trained Wave choruses that sang on the radio, at bond rallies and at local veterans hospitals.

After the war he sang on radio, including on “Your Hit Parade,” before transitioning to early television.

Charles’ wife, Bernice, died in 2002, and a daughter, Wendy, died in 2004. He is survived by two sons, Michael, a film editor, and Jonathan, a music arranger; three granddaughters, Clover Hicks, Annalily Charles and Claire Acey, a band singer; and a grandson, Jonathan Kaufman.


CHARLES, Ray (Charles Raymond Offenberg)
Born: 9/13/1918, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died: 4/6/2015, Beverly Hills, California, U.S.A.

Ray Charles’ western – songwriter:
Robin Hood of Texas – 1947 [“You're the Moment of a Lifetime”]


RIP Geoffrey Lewis

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Geoffrey Lewis, Actor in Clint Eastwood Movies, Dies at 79

Variety
By Pat Saperstein
April 7, 2015

Actor Geoffrey Lewis, who appeared in several Clint Eastwood movies and made guest appearances on dozens of TV shows in the ’60s through ’80s, died Tuesday in Woodland Hills, Calif. of natural causes. He was 79. The character actor, who often appeared in Westerns, was the father of actress Juliette Lewis.

 He had roles in Eastwood’s “High Plains Drifter,” “Thunderbolt and Lightfoot,” as Orville Boggs in “Every Which Way But Loose” and “Any Which Way You Can” as well as in “Bronco Billy,” “Pink Cadillac” and “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.”

Among his other film credits were “The Devil’s Rejects,” Michael Cimino’s “Heaven’s Gate,” John Milius’ “Dillinger,” TV movie “Salem’s Lot” and Michael Ritchie’s “Smile.”

Lewis received a Golden Globe nomination for his performance on the 1980 series “Flo,” and appeared in numerous other shows including “Barnaby Jones,” “Hawaii Five-O,” “Lou Grant,” “Little House on the Prairie,” “Falcon Crest” and “Murder, She Wrote.”

Born in San Diego, he grew up in Rhode Island and moved to California at age 10. He is survived by his wife Paula Hochhalter, Juliette Lewis and nine other children including Lightfield and Matthew, both actors, and Dierdre, an actress.


LEWIS, Geoffrey
Born: 7/31/1935, San Diego, California, U.S.A.
Died: 4/7/2015, Woodland Hills, California

Geoffrey Lewis’ westerns – actor:
Bonanza (TV) – 1970 (Rogers Martin)
The High Chaparral (TV) – 1970 (bum)
Cade’s County (TV) – 1971 (Roederer)
Alias Smith and Jones (TV) – 1971, 1972 (Patch, Al, Deputy Burk Stover)
Bad Company – 1972 (Hobbs)
The Culpepper Cattle Co. – 1972 (Russ)
My Name is Nobody – 1972 (Wild Bunch leader)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1972 (Lafitte Bonner)
Silver Saddle – 1977 (2-Strike Snake)
High Plains Drifter – 1973 (Stacey Bridges)
Kung Fun (TV) – 1973 (Johnson)
The Gun and the Pulpit (TV) – 1974 (Jason McCoy)
Honky Tonk (TV) – 1974 (Roper)
The Return of a Man Called Horse – 1976 (Zenas)
The New Daughters of Joshua Cabe (TV) – 1976 (Dutton)
Little House on the Prairie (TV) – 1976, 1983 (Sam Galender, Cole Younger)
Shoot the Sun Down – 1978 (Scalphunter)
Centennial (TV) – 1978 (Sheriff Bogardus)
Heaven’s Gate – 1980 (Trapper Fred)
Tom Horn – 1980 (Walter Stoll)
Bronco Billy – 1980 (John Arlington)
Belle Starr (TV) – 1980 (Reverend Meeks)
The Shadow Riders – (TV) 1982 (Major Cooper Ashbury)
Bret Maverick (TV) – 1982 (Barney Broomick)
Gun Shy (TV) – 1983 (Amos Tucker)
September Gun (TV) – 1983 (Sheriff Johnson)
The Yellow Rose (TV) – 1984 (Louis)
Lust in the Dust – 1985 (Hard Case Williams)
Wildside (TV) – 1985 (Rileback)
Guns of Paradise (TV) – 1989 (Colonel Jack Russell)
Desperado: The Outlaw Wars (TV) – 1989 (Oliver Ostrow)
Gunsmoke: The Last Apache (TV) – 1990 (Bodine)
White Fang 2: Myth of the White Wolf - 1994 (Heath)
Maverick – 1994 (Matthew Wicker / Eugene, Banker)
Gambler V: Playing for Keeps (TV) – 1994 (Lynch)
Walker, Texas Ranger (TV) – 1994 (Sheriff Beau Langley)
Rough Riders – (TV) 1997 (Eli)
Renegade – 2002 (Greg Sullivan)
Chinaman's Chance: America's Other Slaves – 2008 (Lewis)

RIP Allan Lurie

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RIP Allan Lurie

Allan Lurie was a film, TV and voice actor who died in Valley Village, California on March 10, 2015. Born in Hamilton, Ohio on July 25, 1923, he was best known for his voice-over for Mezmaron in the 1982 cartoon Pac-Man and as Uglor the Alien in Space Stars. His name has constantly been shown in Hanna-Barbera cartoon credits, mostly as an additional voice. also known as Al Laurie and Bert Stewart. He was the father of Peter Lurie, another well-known voice actor.


LURIE, Allan
Born: 7/25/1923, Hamilton, Ohio, U.S.A.
Died: 3/10/2015, Valley Village, California, U.S.A.

Allan Lurie’s westerns – actor:
The Texasn (TV) – 1958 (Gus Phelan)
The Plunderers of Painted Flats – 1959 (Cass Becker)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1959 (Singer)
U.S. Marshal (TV) – 1959 (fatman)

RIP Richard Dysart

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'L.A. Law' star Richard Dysart dies at 86

USA Today
Ann Oldenburg
April 9, 2015

Richard Dysart, known and loved by all L.A. Law fans as Leland McKenzie, has died after a long illness. He was 86.

Dysart died Sunday at his home in Santa Monica, California, his publicist Jeannine Jacobi tells AP.

Dysart was always calm, cool and smart as he played the the head of McKenzie, Brackman, Chaney and Kuzak law firm in the 1986-1994 series produced by Steven Bochco. He was nominated for four supporting actor Emmys in a row for his L.A. Law role before he final won the trophy in 1992.

Dysart, who got his start in radio before moving on to Broadway, TV and film work, had a long and multifaceted career.

His Broadway credits included 1965's All In Good Time and the 1967's The Little Foxes, directed by Mike Nichols. He won a Drama Desk Award in 1972 for his role as Coach in That Championship Season.

According to IMDB.com, among his many film appearances, he twice played Harry Truman, twice played J. Edgar Hoover and twice played Dwight D. Eisenhower.

He and his third wife, artist Kathryn Jacobi, married in 1987.


DYSART, Richard (Richard A. Dysart)
Born: 3/30/1929, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
Died: 4/5/2015, Santa Monica, California, U.S.A.

Richard Dysart’s westerns – actor:
Sara (TV) – 1976 (Noonan)
Pale Rider – 1985 (Coy LaHood)
Back to the Future III – 1990 (barbwire salesman)

RIP Eddie Aiona

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Eddie Aiona, Prop Master for Clint Eastwood, Dies at 83

Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
4/9/2015

Eddie Aiona, a property master on more than 20 Clint Eastwood films — from Magnum Force to The Bridges of Madison County — during a stretch of more than two decades, has died. He was 83.

Aiona, who worked on three Oscar winners for best picture, died March 31 of lung cancer at Providence Tarzana Medical Center, his friend, Ric Gentry, told The Hollywood Reporter.

Aiona also worked for such esteemed directors as Martin Scorsese on Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore (1974); for Sydney Pollack on The Electric Horseman (1979) and Absence of Malice (1981); for Paul Schrader on Hardcore (1979); for Robert Redford on Oscar best picture winner Ordinary People (1980); for Barry Levinson on the best picture winner Rain Man (1988); and for John Carpenter on Memoirs of an Invisible Man (1992).

Aiona was among the cadre of behind-the-scenes players whom Eastwood employed on picture after picture for years. To many, he was the prototypical creative member of Eastwood’s streamlined, fast-moving, hyper-efficient, tight-knit Malpaso Productions team.

“Eddie was a great guy, so talented and devoted to his craft," Eastwood said in a statement. "He made the job look effortless."

In between Magnum Force (1973) and his final credit, The Bridges of Madison County (1995), Aiona teamed with the actor-director-producer on Thunderbolt and Lightfoot (1974), The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), The Enforcer (1976), The Gauntlet (1977), Every Which Way But Loose (1978), Any Which Way You Can (1980), Firefox (1982), Honkytonk Man (1982), Sudden Impact (1983), City Heat (1984), Pale Rider (1985), Heartbreak Ridge (1986), Bird (1988), The Dead Pool (1988), Pink Cadillac (1989), The Rookie (1990), best picture winner Unforgiven (1992), In the Line of Fire (1993) and A Perfect World (1993).

“He was extreme in getting what was required for the screenplay,” Mike Sexton, Aiona’s assistant before becoming prop master at Malpaso following his mentor’s retirement, said in a statement. "If the sewing needle for Unforgiven indicated the year was 1898, Eddie wouldn’t accept a needle from 1899. No one would know the difference except Eddie, who would track it down through a whole network of resources until he had it absolutely right, and this was in the era before access to the Internet.

“It was the scene where Morgan Freeman darns Clint’s face. Eddie went from references he had for antique markets, period collectors and museums until he had the needle for that year, and then he put it together with a little kit that was period exact.”

Aiona’s prop specialty was weapons, Gentry said, and he designed a fully-functional camouflage pistol for the assassin played by John Malkovich in In the Line of Fire. He worked often with veteran cinematographer Jack N. Green.

Born in Hawaii, the sinewy Aiona arrived on the mainland as a champion lightweight boxer in 1959. He drifted from boxing to day work at Paramount and then at Warner Brothers before finding his niche as a prop master.

A gifted sketch artist, Aiona also served as prop manager for two features directed by Eastwood’s onetime girlfriend Sondra Locke: Ratboy (1986) and Impulse (1990), both from Malpaso.

Survivors include his wife of 29 years, Bobbe; children Edward, Jan, Tadd and Penny; stepchildren Lynne, Richard, Jane and Gary; and grandchildren Mat, Tali, Andy, Noah, Katie, Gus and Haley. A private service is set for Hawaii.


AIONA, Eddie (Edward Aiona, Jr.)
Born: 1931, Hawaii
Died: 3/31/2015, Tarzana, California, U.S.A.

Eddie Aiona’s westerns – prop master:
The Outlaw Josey Wales – 1976
The Electric Horseman – 1979
Unforgiven - 1992

RIP Monte Merrick

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RIP Monte Merrick
Los Angeles Times
Staff
April 10, 2015

October 6, 1949 - March 24, 2015 Beloved brother, uncle and friend Monte L. Merrick died peacefully on March 24, 2015 in Santa Monica, California, following a courageous battle with cancer. He will be missed greatly by so many who knew him as a caring and genuine man with many interests and creative talents. Monte was born October 6, 1949 in Portland, Oregon to his parents, Arthur P. and Pearl Merrick, who predeceased him. He is survived by four siblings: Art (Velva) Merrick of Santa Fe, NM; Blake (Kimberly) Merrick of Phoenix, AZ; MarKay Merrick (Steve Spaulding) of Gresham, OR; and Lori Merrick Silkwood of Tucker, GA, and her children, Hanna and Aaron Silkwood. A creative genius, Monte was an accomplished and successful playwright, novelist and screenwriter. His first novel, "Shelter," was published in many languages. His screen credits include writing such hit films as "Memphis Belle,""8 Seconds," and "Mr. Baseball." His plays were produced off-Broadway and in theaters across the country; they include "Open Heart" and "A Hell of a Town." He traveled the world widely for many years. He was devoted to opera and symphony music, reading, movies and theater. He is a graduate of Lewis & Clark College in Portland and holds a master's degree in theater from the University of Colorado in Boulder. No memorial service has been planned, but donations may be made to The Nature Conservancy at www.nature.org  .


MERRICK, Monte (Monte Lynn Merrick)
Born: 10/6/1949, Portland, Oregon, U.S.A.
Died: 3/24/2015, Santa Monica, California, U.S.A.

Monte Merrick’s western – writer:
8 Seconds - 1994

RIP Richard L. Bare

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Richard Bare, director of TV's 'Green Acres' and longtime Newport resident, dies at 101

The Orange County Register
By Michael Hewitt
April 10, 2015

Richard L. Bare, a noted television director who helmed nearly all of “Green Acres” as well as the memorable “Twilight Zone” episode “To Serve Man,” died last week at 101, according to his family.

A 42-year resident of Newport Beach, Bare could boast of a career that spanned seven decades. He worked with Charlie Chaplin, butted heads with Eva Gabor, discovered James Garner and in the late 2000s was still writing and pitching scripts.

Born in Turlock in 1913, Bare grew up in Modesto, where his father was a successful grape farmer. Bare’s fascination with film began early, and as a teenager his father bought him a 35mm movie camera. Bare used it to make a short film with a couple of high school buddies – one of them the father of “Star Wars” creator George Lucas.

Bare left central California in the 1930s for Los Angeles and the nascent USC film school, where he won an award for outstanding short subject in 1934. Unable to break into Hollywood during the Depression, Bare moved to Carmel to run an arthouse theater, where he met and befriended Chaplin.

During World War War II, Bare enlisted and became a captain in the Army Air Forces film unit.

After the war, he returned to USC to teach, where he wrote and directed a short subject, “So You Want to Quit Smoking,” which he sold to Warner Bros. Its success led to a series of 63 “So You Want to ...” comedy shorts starring George O’Hanlon as the hapless Joe McDoakes.

But television was where Bare would find his greatest success. He directed Westerns, the pilot to “77 Sunset Strip,” and episodes of “Twilight Zone” and other shows before spending a year doing “Petticoat Junction.” That led to “Green Acres,” where he spent six years.


BARE, Richard L. (Richard Leland Bare)
Born: 8/12/1913, Turlock, California, U.S.A.
Died: March 28, 2015 Newport Beach, California, U.S.A.

Richard L. Bare’s westerns – director, screenwriter, presenter:
The Adventures of Texas Jack – 1939 [presenter]
Two Gun Troubador – 1939 [director]
Circus Horse – 1947 [director]
The Grass is Greener – 1950 [director]
Return of the Frontiersman – 1950 [director]
So You Want to Be a Cowboy – 1950 [1951 [director, screenwriter]
Cheyenne (TV) – 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962 [director]
Border Showdown – 1956 [director]
The Outlanders – 1956 [director]
The Storm Riders – 1956 [director]
Broken Arrow (TV) – 1956, 1957, 1958 [director]
Shoot-Out at Medicine Bow – 1957 [director]
The Travellers – 1957 [director]
Lawman (TV) – 1958 [director]
Sugarfoot (TV) – 1958 [director]
Colt .45 (TV) – 1958 [director]
Maverick (TV) – 1958, 1958, 1959 [director]
Tombstone Territory (TV) – 1958, 1959 [director]
The Dakotas (TV) – 1963 [director]
The Virginian (TV) – 1963, 1964 [director]
Alias Smith and Jones (TV) – 1972 [director]

RIP Lukács Bicskey

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Lukács Bicskey has died

Origo
4/8/2015
 
Deadly Disease struggled Luke Bicskey struggled against a deadly disease. He played the psycho in the Argo movies. Due to the speed of the actor’s disease treated he was recently in hospitalized and died on Wednesday at dawn. He was fifty-three years old.

Bicskey’s colleagues were worried for some time now, when he canceled all performances in November last year, and had to be replaced in the New Theatre.

Great Shakespearean roles

Bicskey was especially remembered for his roles in Shakespeare where he performed great classic roles as Romeo, Iago or Macbeth.

He was born on May 11, 1961 in Szeged. Registered in the name of Karoly, but took great-grandfather, Lukács’ name, as Lukács was a founding member of the Bicskey Veszprém Petőfi Theatre has been a member of the acting troupe. He mainly played dramatic roles in theater, and in 1996 the US and British filmmakers discovered his distinctive face.

Filmmaker face

When I first played in American films, I could not speak English. Film about the beginning of his career so he told in an interview:

.. "18 years of unemployment, I applied to an agency in two days the photos were seen and I told them I did not speak the language but did not want to let go so I got a different role, which it did not have to speak. Charles Manson, the cult serial killer I created "This battle was the action movie was over the bay, which was one of the starring Rutger Hauer.

Later, I is always given the role of the villain. I have worked with celebrities such as Ornella Muti, Tom Berenger, Donald Sutherland, Christopher Lambert and Whoopi Goldberg. The partially shot in Hungary historical adventure film The Eagle with Channing Tatum and Jamie Bell played the main role of the two, a druid Bicskey formed in it.

He often assumed dubbing roles of many foreign blockbuster actors he lent his voice. Most memorable works include the synchronization of Jar Jar Binks was The Phantom Menace Star Wars movie.

His most famous role

Most people in the Argo Pszichójaként fixed Bicskey Luke. The character has gained great popularity after the premiere of the first part, so there was no question moment to re-appear in the second part.


BICSKEY, Lukács (Karoly Bicskey)
Born: 5/11/1961, Szeged, Hungary
Died: 4/8/1915, Budapest, Hungary

Lukács Bicskey’s western – actor:
No Hero Here – 2014 (Melon)


RIP Peter Price

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RIP Peter Price

British assistant director and production manager Peter Price died in London on April 6th. He was 85. Price started work at Ealing studios in 1946 as post boy then worked his way up to the production department and after several months training, worked as 3rd Assistant on the film "It Always Rains on Sunday", which was made again in 1948 when crews returned from the services. He then started his freelance career an Assistant Director working at all the major studios, and with many top directors. He had the privilege of working as 1st Assistant with all the Ealing Directors: Sandy Mackendrik, Charles Crichton, Basil Deardon,Les Norman, Michael Truman.


PRICE, Peter
Born: 1/9/2930, London, England, U.K.
Died: 4/6/2015, London, England, U.K.

Peter Price’s westerns – assistant director:
Shalako – 1968 [assistant director]
Chato’s Land – 1972 [assistant director]
Heaven’s Gate – 1980 [production manager]

RIP Ritchie D'Horsie

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RIP Ritchie D’Horsie

Comedian Ritchie D' Horsie passes away at 58

GMA News
April 18, 2015

Comedian Ritchie D' Horsie (real name: Ricardo Reyes) has passed away due to complication of diabetes, kidney failure and brain stroke. He was 58.

According to a report on GMA News TV's Balitanghali, the Loyola Memorial Chapels & Crematorium in Marikina confirmed that the wake of the comedian will start Saturday afternoon.

The report added that the family, friends and former co-workers of D' Horsie are expected to arrive at the Loyola chapel at around 2 p.m.

His "Iskul Bukol" co-star and screenwriter Bibeth Orteza paid tribute to him in a series of posts on Facebook.


D’HORSIE, Ritchie (Ricardo Reyes)
Born: 1957, Philippines,
Died: 4/17/2015, Manila, Philippines

Ritchie D’Horsie’s western – actor:
The Return of the Long Ranger & Tonton: How the West Was Wrong – 1992 (Horse with No Name)

RIP Jonathan Crombie

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Jonathan Crombie, Anne of Green Gables actor, dead at 48

Actor best known for playing Gilbert Blythe in TV movies, also played lead in Drowsy Chaperon in 2008

CBC News
April 18, 2015

Jonathan Crombie, who played Gilbert Blythe in the Anne of Green Gables movies, has died at the age of 48, CBC News has learned.

He was also the son of David Crombie, who was mayor of Toronto from 1972 to 1978 and served as a federal Progressive Conservative cabinet minister in the 1980s.

The actor's sister, Carrie Crombie, told CBC News on Saturday that her brother suffered a brain hemorrhage and died in New York City on April 15.

"We've been going through lots of stories the last couple days," she said.

"He was funny, he was sweet, he loved acting, he loved comedy and singing and dancing. As a little kid, he just loved Broadway shows and all of that kind of stuff and would sing and dance in the living room."

Answered to the name Gil

Jonathan Crombie will be best remembered for his role in the CBC TV movie Anne of Green Gables in 1984 and its two sequels in 1987 and 2000.

Carrie Crombie said her brother never shied away from the fame that came along with playing the role of Gilbert Blythe, and happily answered to the name Gil when recognized by fans on the street.

"I think he was really proud of being Gilbert Blythe and was happy to answer any questions...he really enjoyed that series and was happy, very proud of it — we all were," she said.

"[But] I think his proudest part was when he played the lead in Drowsy Chaperone on Broadway. That was just an amazing thing for him to be able to do."

Anne of Green Gables producer Kevin Sullivan said dozens of actors, including Jason Priestley, tried out for the role of Gilbert Blythe but none captured the spirit of the character.

Casting director Diane Polley eventually discovered the then-17-year-old Crombie while he was acting in a high school play. Polley is also the mother of Sarah Polley, who portrayed the main character in the Road to Avonlea series.

"She said, 'Trust me. He's it," Sullivan said. "We never screen-tested him. We met him and he was cast. It was a perfect storm...It just all worked perfectly."

'A devastating tragedy'

Sullivan said Crombie and the on-screen character he came to embody were actually pretty similar.

"I think for legions of young women around the world who fell in love with the Anne of Green Gables films, Jonathan literally represented the quintessential boy next door, and there were literally thousands of women who wrote to him over the years who saw him as a perfect mate," Sullivan said.

"I think there will be hundreds of people who will be floored that this has happened. It's such a devastating tragedy. In reality, Jonathan was as generous, as kind, as sensitive and as ambitious, in some ways, as the character he came to be identified with."

Sullivan said Crombie and Megan Follows, the actress who played Anne Shirley in the movies, had a special relationship off screen.

"Megan was more of a seasoned professional, in some ways, than Jonathan was," he said.

"He was kind of a newbie and I just remember that they were able to ground each other extremely well and the relationship that they had was one of great affection...they were both very generous with each other and both really made those performances vivid and real."

'Kinda quirky'

Jonathan Crombie also performed with a sketch comedy troupe featured in the Canadian TV series Comedy Now! in 1998. Carrie Crombie said her brother was incredibly passionate about improv and sketch comedy.

"John was funny. He was kinda quirky in some ways," she said.

"Like he would only take the bus back and forth from Toronto to New York. And, to be honest, that's how we are going to be bringing him back. We felt that it was an ode to Jonathan. He would never go on a plane, so we're going to make the trek from New York to Toronto on a bus with his ashes."

Crombie said her brother just didn't feel it necessary to spend the money required to make the journey by plane.

"He always seemed to attract interesting people on buses. He always had great stories about characters on buses, so we always had fun listening to his impersonations."

Carrie Crombie said she didn't think her brother had any major health issues, and was committed to staying healthy. She said his organs have been donated, which is something he would have been proud of.

She said a "huge, wonderful celebration of life" will be held in his honor sometime in the coming weeks.


CROMBIE, Jonathan (Jonathan David Crombie)
Born: 10/12/1966, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Died:  4/15/2015, New York City, New York, U.S.A.

Jonathan Crombie’s western – actor:
The Campbells (TV) - 1985-1988 (Kevin Sims)

RIP Robert Rietty

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British-born voiceover actor who specialized in James Bond villains and was so in demand he played 98 roles in one film

Hollywood Reporter
Mike Barnes
4/19/2015

Robert Rietti, “The Man of a Thousand Voices” who dubbed for several James Bond villains and uttered every single Orson Welles line heard in the 1972 film Treasure Island, died April 3, The Times of London reported. He was 92.

When filmmakers wanted to rerecord dialogue after production was done or if they needed lines translated to other languages for movies to play in other countries, they often turned to the prolific Rietti, who worked for more than seven decades as an actor and voiceover artist.

Many of his 256 acting credits found on IMDb list his character as “voice, uncredited,” and the London native said he spoke for an incredible 98 characters alone on Waterloo (1970), which starred Rod Steiger, Christopher Plummer and Welles, a longtime friend.

“Sometimes, a director will be happy with the physical performance of an actor on the screen but not like his voice, in which case one has a great deal of license to change everything,” Rietti said in a Film 94 profile of him that aired on the BBC. “But on other occasions, when the person is well-known on the screen, one doesn’t want to change his voice, so then one must serve him and really take the best from what he does.”

In the latter case, he imitated Welles’ famous baritone as Long John Silver for Treasure Island. “There’s not a word of his on the original track,” he said. “It’s all my voice, I am afraid, doing Orson Welles.”

Rietti also provided the voice of the cold-blooded, eyepatch-wearing Emilio Largo (portrayed onscreen by Adolfo Celi, who spoke with a thick Italian accent) in Thunderball (1965), and he spoke as the cat-loving evil genius Ernst Stavro Blofeld (this time played by Englishman John Hollis) in another Bond film, For Your Eyes Only (1981).

“In nearly every Bond picture, there’s been a foreign villain, and in almost every case, they’ve used my voice,” he once said.

It was Rietti whom audiences heard out of the mouth of British Intelligence chief John Strangways (Tim Moxon), who is killed near the start of the first Bond movie, 1962’s Dr. No. Rietti is then heard a couple of minutes later, replacing the voice of another character at a card table.

His Bond work also includes dubbing as Japanese secret service agent Tiger Tanaka (Tetsuro Tanba) in You Only Live Twice (1967), donating several voices to Casino Royale (1967) and appearing onscreen in Never Say Never Again (1983).

Rietti voiced multiple characters in the Agatha Christie film Ten Little Indians (1974), once again stepping in for, among others, Celi. “When people didn’t realize that was not his voice, he achieved many international films, and I had a job for life,” he said with a grin during the BBC piece.

Rietti appeared as a child actor in such films as The Scarlet Pimpernel (1934), starring Leslie Howard, and later was heard (and even seen!) in such films as The Italian Job (1969), The Omen (1976) and Hannibal (2001).

Rietti replaced Plummer's voice for some scenes in The Royal Hunt of the Sun (1969) so that American audiences could more clearly understand his words, and he dubbed for Robert Shaw in Avalanche Express (1979) after the actor died of heart attack.

He voiced “Number Two” in some episodes of the ITV show The Prisoner and often stood in, orally, for veteran English actor Jack Hawkins, who had lost his voice to throat cancer.

Rietti also can be heard on such noteworthy films as The Guns of Navarone (1961), Lawrence of Arabia (1962), The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964), Doctor Zhivago (1965), Barbarella (1968), Frenzy (1972), Murder on the Orient Express (1974) and Trail of the Pink Panther (1982).

Of course, few knew the voiceover expert was involved with any of these pictures.

“The simple answer to the question of whether Robert has received the recognition that he deserves is no, he hasn’t,” Julian Granger of the British Film Institute says in the short documentary, The Man With the Thousand Voices. “Hardly anyone knows about the work he’s done. Which I think is a terrible shame.”


RIETTY, Robert (Lucio Rietti)
Born: 2/8/1923, Ferrara, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
Died: 4/3/2015, London, England, U.K.

Robert Rietty’s westerns – voice actor:
Mackenna’s Gold – 1969 [English voice of Ted Cassidy]
The Valley of Gwangi – 1968 [English voice of Gustavo Rojo]
The Desperados – 1969 [English voice of David Thompson]
Land Raiders – 1969 [English voice of Harper wagon master]
A Talent for Loving – 1969 [English voice of two unknown characters]
Captain Apache – 1971 [English voice of unknown character]
A Town Called Hell – 1971 [English voice of Michael Craig]
The Genius – 1975 [English voice of Patrick McGoohen]

RIP George Cooper

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RIP George Cooper

San Luis Obispo The Tribune
April 19, 2015

George Cooper George Healey Cooper passed February 14, 2015. He was 95 years old. George was born in January 1920 in Brooklyn, New York, the same month prohibition began. His father, George Healey Cooper was a stage and silent film actor. He moved to Hollywood, California when he was nine months old before moving to Santa Monica in 1927. He loved California and lived there most of his life. He enlisted in the Navy in 1942 and attended The Ben Bard Players acting school in 1945 where he met and married Valerie Conte the mother of his four children. Noteworthy accomplishments include an actor under contract with RKO Studios and later worked in both film and television before developing George Cooper Publications. He was a fine art marine artist, husband and loving father. He enjoyed traveling and spending time near the ocean. He spent the last 15 years of his life on the Central Coast of California and always referred to it as his oasis. He was most grateful and proud to have forty-four years of sober living. George is survived by his children: George Cooper III, Christine Alton Shiers, Mary Leavitt, and Kerry Germain; grandchildren: Kameron Alton, Ryan Alton, and Jack Germain, and great- granddaughter, Hazel Alton. His ashes will be scattered over the Pacific Ocean during a private family service and celebration of his life. Sign his guestbook at sanluisobispo.com/obituaries


COOPER, George (George Healey Cooper)
Born: 1/24/1920, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 2/14/2015, San Luis Obispo, California, U.S.A.

George Cooper’s westerns – actor:
Blood on the Moon – 1948 (Fred Barden)
Roughshod – 1949 (Jim Clayton)
The Gene Autry Show (TV) – 1951 (Johnny ‘Buckeye’ Hollis)

RIP Sid Tepper

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Sid Tepper, who wrote more than 50 songs for Elvis Presley, dies at 96

Miami Herald
By Howard Cohen -
4/25/2015

 Songwriters seek inspiration in all sorts of manner. Sid Tepper turned pressure into songs.

Right from the start, the first big hit he wrote with his songwriting partner Roy Bennett was a charming tune called Red Roses for a Blue Lady, which became a Top 10 hit twice in early 1949 via recordings by Vaughn Monroe and Guy Lombardo and His Royal Canadians.

Yet the song was written after Tepper had a tiff with his new bride, Lillian.

“I sent her some red roses and wrote on the card, ‘I’m sorry, red roses for a blue lady.’ And about a week later, I thought, ‘What a great idea for a title, and the song wrote itself,” Tepper said in a Miami Herald profile in 2008 on his 90th birthday. The town of Surfside marked that occasion as Sid Tepper Day. Tepper and his wife were married for 58 years until her death in 2005.

Tepper died Friday at 96. He lived in Surfside for more than 40 years and most recently at Williams Island in Aventura.

“One of his biggest joys was walking to Harding Avenue every day and delivering his home made tuna fish sandwiches to the shop owners, bankers. They all loved him!” said his daughter Jackie Tepper.

That love song he wrote for her mother had legs. In 1965, vocalists Vic Dana and Wayne Newton and instrumentalist Bert Kaempfert turned Roses into a Top 40 hit all over again.

“One thing I’ve learned is you can’t leave love in your will, you have to give it while you’re living,” Tepper said at 90. Often, he poured the emotion out in the lyrics he composed.

Beatlemania and the resulting British Invasion wreaked havoc with many American songwriting teams. Even a hot contemporary songwriter like Neil Sedaka went cold from 1963 to 1974.

But not Tepper and Bennett who, during their partnership from 1945 to 1970, published more than 300 songs. Among the artists who recorded a Tepper-Bennett original: the Beatles (Glad All Over, recorded live for the BBC), Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Rosemary Clooney and Britain’s “Elvis,” Cliff Richard, who cut 21 Tepper/Bennett tunes, including his breakthrough, The Young Ones, in 1961.

Elvis Presley was, however, Tepper’s biggest client even though the two never met in person. Presley recorded 56 Tepper-Bennett songs for his string of movies in the 1960s, including G.I. Blues, Hawaiian Sunset, New Orleans and Fort Lauderdale Chamber of Commerce from the 1965 flick Girl Happy.

A year earlier, Tepper dealt with pressure again. This time The King was in need of a closing line. Tepper was writing songs for Viva Las Vegas, a 1964 musical starring Presley and Ann-Margret. The Lady Loves Me, a duet for the stars, was in the can when the phone rang. Director George Sidney wanted the last line of the song to comment on a scene in which Ann-Margret pushes Presley into a pool.

He delivered “the gentleman’s all wet.” Everyone was happy.

“Talk about pressure and deadlines!” Tepper quipped in the Herald article. In 2002, the songwriting team was honored in Memphis by Lisa Marie Presley for their contributions to her father’s catalog.

Tepper was born June 25, 1918 in Brooklyn, a hotbed for musical talent that would later spawn Neil Diamond, Barbra Streisand and Barry Manilow. He was already writing songs and poetry in elementary school and scored a staff writing job with publishing company Mills Music in New York City after serving with the Army during World War II. There, he and childhood friend Bennett began their musical partnership.

After a heart attack, he retired to Surfside in the early 1970s. He would still write songs and poems and he’d sing at family events for fun. “He had an amazing voice and sounded a lot like Elvis when he sang,” Jackie Tepper said.

“He was never impressed with himself, it was his job. He loved it, but it was not something he bragged about,” she said. “My dad was a real family man and preferred hanging out at home with his family and close friends over going out. He’s left an amazing legacy, that will be listened to and enjoyed forever. To have done all of this and lived almost 97 years is more than anyone can ask for. He is our hero.”

Tepper is survived by his children Susan Tepper-Kopacz, Michelle Tepper-Kapit, Brian, Warren and Jackie Tepper; grandchildren Rachel Reinberg, Jennifer Kopacz, Jessica, David, Joanna, Maxx and Samantha Tepper; great-grandchildren Ben, Sara and Lily Reinberg.

Services will be held at 12:30 p.m. Sunday at Levitt-Weinstein Memorial Chapels, 18840 W Dixie Hwy., North Miami Beach.


TEPPER, Sid (Sidney Tepper)
Born: 6/25/1918, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 4/24/2015, Surfside, Florida, U.S.A.

Sid Tepper’s westerns – songwriter:
Flaming Star – 1960 (“A Cane and a High Starched Collar”)
Buffalo Gun – 1961 (“Sugaree”)
Stay Away Joe – 1968 (“Dominic”, “Stay Away”)

RIP Jayne Meadows

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RIP Jayne Meadows

Fox News
April 27, 2015

Actress Jayne Meadows Allen dies at 95

Jayne Meadows Allen, award winning stage and screen actress, died peacefully of natural causes in her Encino, Calif. home Sunday night at age 95.

Jayne -- who was born in Wuchang, China to missionary parents -- enjoyed more than six decades in the entertainment industry, from Broadway roles like "The Gazebo" in 1958 to her Emmy-nominated role on CBS'"High Society" in 1995. Jayne was also a regular panelist on the CBS hit program, "I've Got a Secret." During her run on the show, Jayne was the highest rated actress on CBS, second only to Lucille Ball.

In film, Jayne appeared in many roles, including 1946's Undercurrent alongside Katharine Hepburn. Her one woman show, "Powerful Women in History" -- which toured the United States for seven years -- earned her the International Platform Association Award. Jayne received the Susan B. Anthony Award for her continued positive portrayals of women in her acting.

Jayne's husband of 46 years, Steve Allen -- the first host of "The Tonight Show" -- passed away in 2000.

Jayne's son, Bill Allen tells ET that Jayne was immediately charmed by Allen when she met him, even telling her sister Audrey Meadows -- who passed away in 1996 and notably starred as Jackie Gleason's wife on "The Honeymooners" -- "If that man isn't married he soon will be...and to me."

In an exclusive letter to ET, Bill fondly remembered his mom.

"She was the most loving mother and grandmother I could ever imagine," said Bill. "Seeing only the best in all her family members and giving us all confidence that we had value to offer the world and should take risks because we could do no wrong in her eyes."

"She was not only an extraordinarily gifted actress who could move audiences from laughter to tears and back again all in one scene, but she was the greatest story teller I have ever known and I will miss her endlessly fascinating and frequently hilarious anecdotes about her life and the many brilliantly talented people she worked with and befriended along the way. She will be sorely missed and never forgotten."


MEADOWS, Jayne (Jayne Meadows Cotter)
Born: 9/27/1919, Wuchang, Wuhan Hubei, China
Died: 4/26/2015, Encino, California, U.S.A.

Jayne Meadows’ westerns – actress:
Here Come the Brides (TV) – 1969 (Eleanor Tangiers)
City Slickers – 1991 (Mitch’s mom)
City Slickers II: The Legend of Curly’s Gold – 1994 (Mitch’s mom)

RIP Richard LaSalle

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RIP Richard LaSalle

Monterey Herald
April 26, 2015

Richard W. LaSalle
January 18, 1918 ~ April 5, 2015Carmel, CA

Richard W. LaSalle passed away on April 5, 2015 at his home in Carmel, CA. Richard was born in Louisville, Colorado. He began as a performer for local hotels as a pianist and orchestra leader between the 1940s and 50s. He had his own orchestra for over 18 years and played all over the country. In 1958 he joined the American Society of Composers and Publishers in which he started his main career in film composing. His first work was done for a 1958 movie called Tank Battalion starring Frank Gorshin. Other works of composing include Diary of a Madman, Twice Told Tales, Conflict Stage, Fort Courageous, A Yank in Vietnam, Ambush Bay, 40 Guns to Apache Pass and many more. His total work included over 400 films. Richard and his wife of 73 years, Patricia, moved to Carmel over 30 years ago. Richard was a member of the Carmel-by-the-Sea Rotary Club and a Past Vice-President of the Monterey County Symphony. Richard and Patricia, who preceded him in death, traveled all over the world, spending over three years cumulatively on ships of Seaborne Cruise Line.

A special thank-you to Central Coast Senior Services and Hospice for their loving care at the end of Richard's life. In lieu of flowers, donations to the music program of the Carmel Youth Center would have been Richard's wish.

LaSALLE, Richard (Richard W. LaSalle)
Born: 1/18/1918, Louisville, Colorado, U.S.A.
Died: 4/5/2015, Carmel, California, U.S.A.

Richard LaSalle’s western – composer:
Gun Street – 1961
The Purple Hills - 1961
The Broken Land – 1962
The Firebrand - 1962
California - 1963
Apache Rifles – 1964
Blood on the Arrow - 1964
The Quick Gun – 1964
Arizona Raiders – 1965
Convict Stage – 1965
Fort Courageous - 1965
War Party - 1965
F Troop (TV) – 1965-1967
40 Guns to Apache Pass – 1967

RIP Betsy von Furstenberg

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Betsy von Furstenberg, Baroness and Versatile Actress, Dies at 83

 

The New York Times
By Sam Roberts
April 29, 2015

Betsy von Furstenberg, a glamorous German-born baroness who made her debut in the movies and on the Broadway stage in the early 1950s as a teenager and later reinvented herself as a television actress, writer and philanthropist, died on April 21 at her home in Manhattan. She was 83.

The cause was complications of Alzheimer’s disease, said her son, Glyn Vincent.

Born in a castle in Westphalia, Ms. von Furstenberg left Germany with her parents for New York before World War II. She was tutored by the choreographer Anton Dolin when she was 4 and performed with American Ballet Theater when she was 7.

While attending the Hewitt School in Manhattan, she began modeling at 14 and embarked with her mother on a globe-girdling career that led to a role in an Italian film called “Women Without Names,” about post-World War II internees. That projected her onto the cover of Look magazine, photographed by Stanley Kubrick, for an article titled “Working Debutante.”

In 1951, she made her Broadway debut in Philip Barry’s “Second Threshold,” which earned her a spot on the cover of Life magazine (accompanied by a photograph inside of her stage-door mother) as “the most promising young actress of the year.” Brooks Atkinson wrote in The New York Times, more guardedly, that her part, like those of the rest of the supporting cast, was “agreeably played.”

She went on to star or co-star in “Oh, Men! Oh, Women!,” “The Chalk Garden,” “Nature’s Way,” “Mary, Mary” and, in 1970, Neil Simon’s “The Gingerbread Lady,” for which Walter Kerr of The Times lauded her “brusque, dry, exquisitely enameled performance as a fading beauty.”

Ms. von Furstenberg also appeared on television, on “Alfred Hitchcock Presents,” “Have Gun — Will Travel” and “Playhouse 90,” among other series; on variety shows like Ed Sullivan’s “Toast of the Town” and “The Johnny Carson Show”; and on the soap opera “As the World Turns.”

“She often played mischievous, flirty or rebellious young women,” her son said, “and was noted in the society columns for her naughty behavior offstage as well.”

Elizabeth Caroline Maria Agatha Felicitas Therese Freiin von Furstenberg-Hedringen was born in Arnsberg, Germany, near Cologne, on Aug. 16, 1931. Her father, Franz-Egon, was a count. Her mother, the former Elizabeth Foster-Johnson, an American from Memphis whom the count met on a vacation, was devoted to her daughter’s career.

Besides her son, Ms. von Furstenberg is survived by a daughter, Gay Caroline Gerry; two grandchildren; and a half-brother, Count Egon von Furstenberg.

She continued to perform onstage into the 1980s and was active in supporting the Theater for the New City and Young Concert Artists.

She also began writing, contributing articles and columns to various publications and, in 1988, publishing a novel, “Mirror, Mirror,” about an heiress who befriends her servant’s daughter and pursues love and ambition among Europe’s glitterati.

In an essay on the front of the Arts & Leisure section of The Times in September 1972, Ms. von Furstenberg wrote that all the world was theater, even for actors offstage.

“For myself, even when I’m working and have an audience to look forward to every night, I still find I perform better at home when there’s an eye — preferably approving — to mark my progress as a cook, mother, flower arranger, etc.,” she explained.

“One of the most frustrating drawbacks of being an actor-parent,” she wrote, “is to have your children accuse you of acting when you’re being perfectly sincere.”


von FURSTENBERG, Betsy(Elizabeth Caroline Maria Agatha Felicitas Therese Freiin von Furstenberg-Hedringen)
Born: 8/16/1931, Neheim-Hüsten, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany   
Died: 4/21/2015, Manhattan, New York, U.S.A.

Betsy von Furstenberg’s western – actress:
Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) – 1958 (Isabel Werstrope)

RIP Patachou

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The singer Patachou has died

Le Monde
4/30/2015

Patachou, one of the most cheeky voices of French music after the war, which had owned a famous Parisian cabaret in Montmartre before launching herself on stage, died Thursday at 96 years, surrounded his family.

Her real name was Henriette Ragon, Patachou, born June 10, 1918 in Paris, and died at her home in Neuilly (Hauts-de-Seine), announced her son Pierre Billon who told AFP, confirming a report by France 2.

Brassens and Brel started her cabaret

This artisan girl, was first a typist and factory worker, in 1948 she opened and managed a cabaret-restaurant in Montmartre, with her husband Jean Billon, she quickly made a famous place of the Parisian night life.


"At Patachou" it saw the start of many artists like Jacques Brel and Georges Brassens with which she performed "Maman, Papa," a duet.  Hugues Aufray and Michel Sardou also performed in this nightclub of the popular song, which was closed in the ‘70s.

Originally, Patachou, blonde with short hair, began by making pastry, then bought a nearby local location for her cabaret-restaurant.

In a Renoir film

Supported by Maurice Chevalier, Patachou then took to the microphone herself, with a repertoire of realistic songs (“La complainte de la Butte”, “Gamin de Paris”) and light ditties (“le Tapin tranquille”, “Douce Marijane”).  Interpreter with a slight warm hoarse voice, her “Bal chez Temporel” is remembered as “La Bague à Jules” is remembered as well as “Toutes les femmes de mon mari”.

She has also performed abroad (U.S.A., Canada, Great Britain, Brazil), as well as getting small roles in film (1954) in "French Cancan" and Renoir's "Napoleon" by Guitry.  In 1966 Patachou is back in Paris at the tavern " La Tête de l'art" and in 1969 the restaurant of the Eiffel Tower, before ending her singing career.  From the 1980s, Patachou is seen in film and television.

The singer and actress was promoted to Officer of the Legion of Honour and Commander of Arts and Letters.


PATACHOU (Henriette Eugénie Jeanne Ragon)
Born: 6/10/1918, Paris, Île-de-France, France
Died: 4/30/2015 Neuilly, Hauts-de-Seine, France

Patachou’s western – actress:
Bordertown (TV) – 1991 (Suzanne Dumont) [episode 3.25 Frontier Passage guest appearance)]

RIP Maria Elena Velasco

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Mexican actress Maria Elena Velasco, best known for character 'La India Maria' dies

Associated Press
5/1/2015

MEXICO CITY – Mexican actress and comedian Maria Elena Velasco, best known for her character “The Indian Maria,” has died at age 74.

The Mexican film institute announced through its Twitter account that Velasco, also a screenwriter and director, died Friday, but did not specify the cause.

Velasco’s “La India Maria,” which exaggerated stereotypes about Mexico’s indigenous people, became one of the most recognizable characters in Mexican film, dressed in colorful blouses and full skirts with her hair in braids.

“La India Maria,” often accompanied by her faithful donkey “Filemon,” sometimes illustrated the journey from her native village to the big city and the inevitable comic situations that followed.

Velasco started her career performing on stages in Mexico City. Her popularity eventually carried her to film fame and a long run on television.


VELASCO, Maria Elena (María Elena Velasco Fragoso)
Born: 12/17/1940, Puebla, Puebla, Mexico
Died: 5/1/2015, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico

Maria Elena’s westerns – actress:
El revolver sangriento – 1964 (Pedro’s wife)
El bastardo - 1968

RIP Michael Blake

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Oscar-Winning ‘Dances With Wolves’ Author/Screenwriter Michael Blake Has Died

Deadline Hollywood
By Mike Fleming Jr.
May 2, 2015

After a long illness, Dances With Wolves author and screenwriter Michael Blake died today in Tucson, Arizona where he and his family lived for many years.  He was 69. His passing was confirmed by his manager and producer Daniel Ostroff, who is working on a Dances With Wolves sequel, The Holy Road.

Blake’s best known novel sold over 3.5 million copies, and was translated into 15 languages. The 1990 film, which Kevin Costner directed and starred in, won seven Oscars including Best Picture and Best Screenplay for Blake. He also won the WGA Award and Golden Globes for his script. Blake is survived by his widow, Marianne Mortensen Blake, whom he married in 1993. He is also survived by their three children, whom he named after historic Native Americans. The children’s names are 18-year old Quanah Valdemar Blake, 17-year old Monahsetah Dagmar Blake and 14-year old Lozen Ingefred Blake. He is also survived by a younger brother, Daniel Webb.

Blake also wrote the books The Holy Road, Airman Mortensen, Marching to Valhalla, Indian Yell, Twelve The King, and the autobiographical Like A Running Dog, which detailed his career in writing and Hollywood. A sequel to the latter book will be published soon. Blake was internationally acclaimed for his humanitarian work on behalf of Native Americans and America’s wild horses. The family is asking for privacy but asks that any donations be made in his name to ISPMB which benefits the horses he loved so much.

As for his screenplay work, Blake last adapted the classic German novel, Winnetou for Constantin Films. Costner, who collaborated with Blake on Stacey’s Knight and Dances With Wolves, commissioned Blake to write two other screenplays, The Mick and The One, the latter of which was based on a Blake short story. Broadway producer Matt Murphy developed a stage version of Dances With Wolves.


BLAKE, Michael (Michael Lennox Blake)
Born: 7/5/1945, Fort Bragg, North Carolina, U.S.A.
Died: 5/2/2015 Tucson, Arizona, U.S.A.

Michael Blake’s westerns – author, screenwriter:
Dances With Wolves – 1990 [author, screenwriter]
Winnetou – 2010 [screenwriter]

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