Quantcast
Channel: Boot Hill
Viewing all 2465 articles
Browse latest View live

RIP Marjorie Lord

$
0
0


Marjorie Lord Dies: ‘Make Room For Daddy’ Actress Was 97

Deadline Hollywood
By Ross A. Lincoln
December 11, 2015

Marjorie Lord, best known for playing Kathy “Clancy” Williams opposite Danny Thomas on the 1950s and 60s sitcom Make Room For Daddy and later the revival Make Room For Grandaddy died November 28 from natural causes, the LA Times reported. She was 97.

Born Marjorie Wollenberg in 1918 in San Francisco, she soon moved to New York City when her father’s job transferred him, and her acting career began young as she made her Broadway debut at 16 in The Old Maid. Though she was most successful on television, she considered herself a stage actress first, and continued to act on the stage through the 1970s. In her most extended outing, she replaced Kitty Carlisle — the star of Anniversary Waltz, a comedy staged by Carlisle’s husband Moss Hart — from April 1954 through September 1955.

Early on, she signed as a contract player with RKO in 1935, and later with Universal. Among the films she appeared in through the 1930s and 40s were The Adventures of Smilin’ Jack, High Flyers, Sherlock Holmes in Washington, Escape from Hong Kong, and Chain Gang.

Lord made the jump to television in the 1950s and would join Make Room For Daddy, later renamed The Danny Thomas Show, during the show’s fourth season, in 1957. She played the second wife of Danny Thomas’ character, staying with the show until it was cancelled in 1964. She returned along with the rest of the cast for Make Room For Grandaddy, which aired in 1970 and 1971.

She was married three times: to John Archer from 1941–1955, Randolph Hale from 1958–1974, and Harry Volk from 1976 until his death in 2000. Among her survivors is her daughter, Oscar-nominated actress Anne Archer. She also published her memoir, A Dance and a Hug, in 2004.


LORD, Marjorie (Marjorie Wollenberg)
Born: 7/26/1918, San Francisco, California, U.S.A.
Died: 11/28/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Marjorie Lord’s westerns – actress:
Border Café – 1937 (Janet Barry)
Timber! – 1942 (Yvette Lacour)
Masked Rider – 1949 (Gale ‘Diablo Kid’ Trevett)
The Lone Ranger (TV) – 1950, 1955 (Kitty McQueen, Sheriff Clare Lee)
The Adventures of Kit Carson (TV) – 1951 (Alice Kincaid)
Down Laredo Way (TV) – 1953 (Valerie)
Hopalong Cassidy (TV) – 1954 (Adele Keller)
Wagon Train (TV) – 1957 (Mary Palmer)
Zane Grey Theater (TV) – 1957 (Amy Marr)

RIP Zale Kessler

$
0
0


RIP Zale Kessler

Los Angeles Times
December 11, 2015

October 1, 1938 - September 28, 2015 Zale Kessler of Los Angeles, CA … a character actor with a 60-year career encompassing all aspects of show business… passed away in his sleep on Sept. 28th. The cause of death was heart failure. Zale was a colorful character himself…larger than life, a superb raconteur, a very social guy who made a lot of friends during those 60 years. Born in St. Louis, he moved to New York City in the late 50's to appear in the Broadway musical THE NERVOUS SET. His off-Broadway debut came shortly after in a show called OH OYSTERS! (featuring Jon Voight). Other Broadway appearances included roles in GANTRY and DARLING OF THE DAY, with Vincent Price. He replaced Milo O'Shea as the leading man in Jerry Herman's DEAR WORLD, opposite Angela Lansbury. Also, THE UNKNOWN SOLDIER AND HIS WIFE, after it moved from Lincoln Center. Zale made a specialty of Middle-European characters with pronounced accents, which he put to good use in a number of operettas and in films such as Mel Brooks' THE PRODUCERS. Brooks used Zale in three other films as well, including TO BE OR NOT TO BE. Another Kessler specialty was the "patter song", a type of musical tongue-twister that frequently turns up in Gilbert and Sullivan operettas. He appeared on the stages of Opera Houses in New York, Chicago and San Francisco, performing in operettas such as DIE FLEDERMAUS, THE MERRY WIDOW and THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE, in which he played "the very model of a modern major-General". His television work included three appearances on MURDER SHE WROTE as well as a recurring role on FERNWOOD TONIGHT, and many commercials. He did extensive work in summer stock musicals throughout the years…too many to mention but the source of important income and many hilarious stories. Zale moved to California in the mid-70s and became quite active in the guilds/unions to which he belonged; he served as a Board member for Actor's Equity and took a particular interest in a project to develop housing for retired members. He is survived by his mother, Florence, his brother Earl and sister-in-law Shari, and two nieces, Nina and Aurora. He will be greatly missed by his family and his army of friends. Those who wish to honor his memory may make a contribution to the Actor's Fund: donate/Actorsfund.org


KESSLER, Zale
Born: 10/1/1938, St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.
Died: 9/28/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Zale Kessler’s western – actor:
Savate – 1995 (fight promoter)

RIP Christie George

$
0
0


Christie George

The Desert Sun
December 12, 2015

Christine "Teeny" George, 87, of Indio, Calif., passed away October 16, 2015. She was born January 3, 1928 in Oklahoma City. Christine worked as a hairdresser for television and movies. Christine's filmography credits were Grease, European Vacation, Diner and many more. Christine's favorite TV series to work in was Mannix. Her family would like to thank Mr. and Mrs. Mike Connors for their continued friendship and phone calls. Her sisters, Georgia Sherry, Esther Brovic, brothers, James and Constantine George preceded her in death. Christine was full of energy and had a love of life till the end. Her good friends, Irene Beagle and Douglas Pollock were by her side when she passed. Christine was lay to rest at Forest lawn in Cathedral City, Calif.


GEORGE, Christie (Christine George)
Born: 1/3/1928, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
Died: 10/16/2015, Indio, California, U.S.A.

Christie George’s westerns – actress, hairdresser:
Barbary Coast (TV) – 1975-1976 [hairdresser]
The Resurrection of St. James -2015 (Lenor)

RIP John Bottoms

$
0
0


Obituary: John Bottoms, physical actor and Tony nominee left his mark in New York, Boston and Minneapolis [pictured far right in photo]

Star Tribune
By Rohan Preston
December 15, 2015

John Bottoms, a Tony-nominated stage and screen actor who was a member of the Guthrie Theater’s acting company in the 1980s and ’90s, died Nov. 22 in Minneapolis, four days after suffering a pulmonary embolism, according to his family. He was 77.

“Besides being a wonderful all-around actor, he was the most gifted physical comedian I’ve ever worked with,” said director Joel Zwick of “My Big Fat Greek Wedding” fame. “He could do things with his body that were amazing, and he had a sense of humor that was highly evolved.”

Zwick met Bottoms in 1968, when both worked on “The Young Master Dante” at an off-Broadway house. Zwick invited Bottoms to join him at La MaMa, producer and director Ellen Stewart’s lab for company-developed experimental works. Bottoms was at La MaMa for five years, developing work in the highly physical style advanced by theater theorist Jerzy Grotowski. The company toured the country and Europe with its shows. One of those shows was “Dance Wit’ Me,” staged by Zwick. It went to Broadway, where Bottoms was nominated for a Tony for playing a dreamer. He also appeared on Broadway as clownish servant Launce in “Two Gentlemen of Verona,” directed by Mel Shapiro.

Bottoms also worked for Joe Papp’s Public Theater, acting in the legendary 1978 production of “The Taming of the Shrew” in Central Park with Raul Julia and Meryl Streep. Bottoms later went to Cambridge, Mass., for a memorable 1981 production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” at the American Repertory Theater (A.R.T.), playing the wise fool Bottom. He was a founding member of A.R.T., the company at Harvard where he also taught acting.

“Johnny made bold choices and he worked them fearlessly onstage,” said actor Mark Linn-Baker, who played Puck in the “Midsummer” production and acted with Bottoms in other shows. “He was self-educated, so he had this wild imagination that came at things intensely and, sometimes, sideways.”


BOTTOMS, John
Born: 12/8/1938, Dayton, Ohio, U.S.A.
Died: 11/22/2015, Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.A.

John Bottoms’ westerns – actor:
The Traveling Executioner – 1970 (lawyer)
Doc – 1971 (Virgil Earp)
The Long Riders – 1980 (mortician)

RIP Michael Wexler

$
0
0


RIP Michael Wexler

Chicago Tribune
December 14, 2015

Michael Brett Wexler, December 12, 2015, Age 52. Late of Chicago, formerly of Homewood. Beloved son of Nan and the late Herb Wexler. Dear brother of David (Evie) Wexler, Evie (Larry) Plofsky, Ron (Daryel) Wexler, and Bobbi (Rob) Macdonald. Cherished uncle of Jacyn Wexler, Justin (Lauren Umek) Wexler, Rachel (Ari Finestein) Mylan, Sarah Mylan, David Plofsky, Jacob Plofsky, Isaac Plofsky, Shana Plofsky, Danyel (Tim) Ilg, Rory Carolan, Trent Wexler, Sadie Macdonald, Eve Macdonald and Ramsay Macdonald. Shiva will be held Sunday, December 13, and Monday, December 14th from 3:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. at the family residence located at 1655 W. 184th Place, Homewood, IL 60430.


WEXLER, Michael (Michael Brett Wexler)
Born: 12/5/1963, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A
Died: 12/12/2015, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.

Michael Wexler’s western – actor:
Fangs vs Spurs – 2015 (Victor)

RIP Ken Pogue

$
0
0


RIP Ken Pogue

Times Colonist
December 19, 2015

POGUE, Ken Canadian Actor Born 1934, died December 15th, 2015 of Metastatic Cancer. Beloved husband of Diana (nee Barrington) Pogue. Our life together was rich in love, adventure and laughter, surmountable disappointment, understanding and great goodness: "Of all the people and places in my life There is no one compares with you" Forever in my heart my darling. Leaves his wonderful family, Stefan Caunter, Gemma Claridge, grandchildren: Jack, Ben, & Max and Kealyn all of whom were the delight of his life, and brother-in-law Paul. Private cremation. Donations to "Our Place" in direct action for the Homeless.


POGUE, Ken (Kenneth Woodrow Pogue)
Born: 7/26/1934, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Died: 12/15/2015, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

Ken Pogue’s westerns – actor:
Silence of the North – 1981 (The Wildman)
The Grey Fox – 1982 (Jack Budd)
Frontiers – 1984
Louisiana (TV) – 1984 (Doctor Murphy)
Dead Man’s Gun (TV) – 1997, 1998 (Theodode Claxton, Alistair Whipley)
The Jack Bull (TV) – 1999 (Judge Wilkins)
Crossfire Trail (TV) – 2001 (Gene Thompson)
Johnson County War (TV) – 2002 (Wally Tascott)
Monte Walsh (TV) – 2003 (old doctor)
Into the West (TV) – 2005 (Abraham Wheeler)

RIP Tommy 'Snuff' Garrett

$
0
0


RIP Tommy 'Snuff' Garrett

Record producer Thomas “Snuff” Garrett died Thursday (December 17) in Arizona at the age of 76. Born in Dallas, he worked as a disk jockey in Lubbock (where he was friends with Buddy Holly) and Wichita Falls, Texas before moving to Hollywood and becoming a producer with Liberty Records. Over the years he produced such hits (for Liberty and independently) as “Take Good Care Of My Baby” for Bobby Vee, “This Diamond Ring” from Gary Lewis & the Playboys, Johnny Burnette’s “You’re 16,” “The Night The Lights Went Out In Georgia” from Vicki Lawrence, Gene McDaniels’ “A Hundred Pounds Of Clay” and “Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves,” “Half Breed” and “Dark Lady” for Cher. He also appeared six times on the album charts with instrumental collections as the “50 Guitars of Tommy Garrett”. He later founded Snuff Garrett Records and Viva Records before retiring in 1983.


GARRETT, Tommy ‘Snuff’ (Thomas Lesslie Garrett Jr.)
Born: 7/5/1939, Oak Cliff, Dallas, Texas, U.S.A.
Died: 12/17/2015, Sonoita, Arizona, U.S.A.

Tommy Garret’s – record producer - western LP’s:
Six Flags Over Texas – 1962
Bordertown Bandido – 1964
El Hombre – 1968
Mexican Leather and Spanish Lace – 1969
Bob Nolan: The Sounds of a Pioneer - 1978

RIP Angela McEwan

$
0
0


Actress Angela McEwan, 'Nebraska' Scene-Stealer, Dies at 81

The Hollywood Reporter
By Gregg Kilday
12/21/2015

After raising a family, McEwan realized a lifelong dream by becoming a professional actress.

Angela McEwan, who was in her '70s when she began to fulfill a lifelong dream to become a professional actress and went on to earn a prominent supporting role in 2013’s Nebraska, died Dec. 20 of complications related to lung cancer. She was 81.

In Alexander Payne’s Nebraska, she played newspaper editor Peg Nagy, sharing a scene with Will Forte’s lead character that the New Yorker critic Richard Brody wrote “quietly wrenches the movie apart and makes the distant, unspoken past vibrate with a revived passionate power.”

McEwan had a recurring role on HBO’s Getting On, and also had appeared in the recent film Moments of Clarity and completed work on the upcoming indie The Boonville Redemption.

McEwan, who was born in Santa Monica on April 23, 1934, studied acting at Los Angeles City College and later at UCLA, where she met Guillermo McEwan, then a medical student. The couple married and moved to Mexico, where Angela began acting. After a subsequent move to Temple, Texas, and raising a family, she continued to act in local theater and was on the board of directors for the Temple Civic Theatre. She also earned a master's degree in Spanish from UC Irvine and taught there for several years before becoming a criminal court Spanish interpreter for nearly 30 years.

After her husband, a gastroenterologist, retired about 10 years ago, she began taking acting lessons and soon started getting roles in low-budget films and on television shows such as New Girl and Parks and Recreation.

"My mom had an amazing capacity to see good in everyone. I can’t recall ever hearing her say something negative about others,” said her son Carlos McEwan. “She believed that everyone tries to do their best within their abilities, so there is no reason to be negative.” 

McEwan is survived by her sons Carlos and William McEwan and her grandchildren Lynsey, Ian and Ellis McEwan. Her husband, Guillermo McEwan, died in 2009. Services are pending.


McEWAN, Angela
Born: 4/23/1934, Santa Monica, California, U.S.A.
Died: 12/20/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Angela McEwan’s western – actress:
Boonville Redemption – 2015 (Iris)

RIP Louis DiGiaimo

$
0
0


RIP Louis DiGiaimo


Oakland Memorial Home

Obituary of Louis DiGiaimo

DiGiaimo, Louis age 77 of Oakland, NJ passed away on December 19th 2015 after a 7 month illness. Born in Paterson, NJ he was the son of the late Angelina and Giuseppe DiGiaimo. Beloved husband of 53 years to Lee, devoted father to Luann McGonigle and husband Brian and Louis J. DiGiaimo and wife Susan. Cherished Pop to Michael, Nicholas, Krista Matthew, Thomas and Julianne. Brother to Paul DiGiaimo and sister in law to Janina Mele, uncle too many nephews and nieces. A graduate of Fairleigh Dickerson University, Lou was an Emmy Award winning Casting Director and Producer for almost 4 decades with offices in NYC. He was a member of the Academy of Motion Picture and Sciences. He worked on more than 100 Movies and Television shows. Some of his most memorable were the Godfather, Rain Man, Thelma and Louise and Gladiator. He was producer on Donnie Brasco and Dinner Rush. Lou enjoyed going to the movies, spending time at his house at the Jersey shore and world Travel-especially to his all-time favorite destination, Italy. His happiest times were spent with his family and grandchildren who brought him much pleasure and comfort. Visitation will be held on Monday December 21, 2015 from 4 to 8 PM at the Oakland Memorial Home 330 Ramapo Valley Road Oakland, NJ. Funeral Services will be held Tuesday 10 Am from the Funeral Home followed by a 10:30 AM Funeral Liturgy at Our Lady of Perpetual Help RC Church 117 Franklin Avenue, Oakland, NJ. Cremation to follow is private. For additional information, condolences and directions please visit Oaklandmemorial.com


DiGIAIMO, Louis
Born: 1938, Patterson, New Jersey, U.S.A.
Died: 12/19/2015, Oakland, New Jersey, U.S.A.

Louis DiGiaimo’s westerns – casting director:
Breakheart Pass – 1975
Rancho Deluxe – 1975
Sons of Trinity – 1995
Renegade – 2004
Bandidas - 2006

RIP Carol Burns

$
0
0


Prisoner actor Carol Burns dies in Brisbane aged 68

ABC News
12/22/2015

ustralian actor Carol Burns, famous for her award-winning role as Franky Doyle in the television series Prisoner, has died aged 68.

The Brisbane-born film and television star died in Brisbane's Princess Alexandra Hospital after a short battle with cancer, with her partner, composer and musician Alan Lawrence, by her side.

Burns began her professional career as a founding member of the Queensland Theatre Company (QTC) in 1969 and went on to star in numerous productions.

QTC artistic director Sam Strong said the news was a devastating loss for the Queensland arts community.

"Carol was a legend of the Australian and Queensland stage, and it is tragic that she has been taken away from the audiences she captivated, as well as from Alan and her family," he said.

"I was lucky enough to be welcomed to Queensland personally by Carol only a few weeks ago and in that moment I was privileged to experience just a taste of the warmth and inspiration she has provided to generations of artists.

"Our thoughts and sympathies are with Alan and Carol's family."
'A true fighter for the arts industry'

QTC executive director Sue Donnelly called Ms Burns "one of the greats of Australian theatre".

"QTC was incredibly fortunate to have her grace our stages on many occasions, most recently in the extraordinary portrayal of Winnie in Happy Days," Ms Donnelly said.

"Even though she was ill at the time, Carol was insistent that the show go on and everyone was transfixed by this monumental performance.

"Carol was a generous, caring and friendly person who made everyone feel instantly at ease. She was also a true fighter for the arts industry and her contribution will be remembered far and wide. We will miss her so much."

On Twitter, Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk wrote: "Carol Burns was dedicated to the arts in Qld and leaves behind a legacy of passion & talent. My condolences to her family, friends & fans".

Ms Burns held roles with Queensland Arts Council/Artslink, Actors Equity Queensland among others, and was vice president of the Actors'& Entertainers' Benevolent Fund (Qld) Inc.


BURNS, Carol
Born: 2/22/1947, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Died: 12/21/2015, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Carol Burns’ western – actress:
Eureka Stockade (TV) – 1984 (Anastasia Hayes)

Jorge Estrada Mora

$
0
0


Jorge Estrada Mora, Argentinian Producer, Dies at 68

Variety
John Hopewell
December 21, 2015

Jorge Estrada Mora, a cosmopolitan, multifaceted and enterprising producer who helped take Argentina cinema onto the world stage, died Dec. 9 from a prostate tumor. He was 68.

From the get-go, Estrada Mora’s life and cinema knew few borders. He was born in Colombia, in the Antioquia highlands, educated at Washington and Lee University in Virginia – going on to serve on its board until 2012 — worked in the oil business for Geosource in Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador and Kenya, and settled in Argentina.

It was from Argentina, that he launched an effective second career as a film producer, emerging from the get-go as one of its internationally most ambitious producers.

Among early productions, all set up at Buenos Aires’ Jempsa — which he founded in 1987 — 1987’s “Under the Earth,” from Beda Docampo Feijoo, was set in Poland; 1988’s “Southbound,” from Juan Bautista Stagnaro, shot in Yugoslavia; “The Loves of Kafka,” also Docampo’s, in Czechoslovakia; Jeanine Meerapfel’s 1989 “The Girlfriend,” co-produced with Germany and co-written by Agnieszka Holland, brought Liv Ullmann to Buenos Aires; “Warriors and Prisoners,” co-produced with France, starred Dominique Sarda; the English-language “The Perfect Husband,” a riff on Dostoevsky texts, toplined Tim Roth.

Though his friendships crossed a broad political spectrum, when producing films in overseas places and with international talent Estrada Mora skirted neither the Argentine Junta’s Dirty War nor other political issues. “The Girlfriend” portrayed the Dirty War’s impact on two women’s lifelong friendship, which is strained by one woman’s years-long search for her son who disappeared under Argentina’s military dictatorship. Set against the background of Holocaust, World War II drama “Under the Earth” follows a Jewish family in hiding in Poland, desperately attempting to avoid deportation.

From the late ’90s, Estrada Mora found the perfect alliance for his international ambitions: Juan Jose Campanella, with whom he teamed to produce in 1997 the noirish English-language “Love Walked In,” then four further films made out of Argentina in Spanish, three starring Ricardo Darin and Eduardo Blanco comprising a loose-knit humor-laced trilogy. “Same Love, Same Rain” (1999), “The Son of the Bride” (2001) and “Moon of Avallaneda” (2004) drill down on men’s midlife crises: Their struggle to let go of childhood passions, whether a sports club or the family restaurant; guilt at being bad sons or fathers; dismay at not achieving their professional dreams; and above all, an inability to commit in relationships. Using an Argentine background, but exploring a universal emotional idiom, the trilogy put Campanella and Estrada Mora on the international map.

It may be little coincidence that their final film together, 2013’s “Underdogs” was made in the most international of film types, animation. It weighed in as Latin America’s biggest toon feature ever, was co-produced with Spain and had as its background the world’s most international sport: soccer. Turning on Foosball figures who come alive to help their lifelong player save his village and conquer his childhood love, “Underdogs” initiated Argentina’s still young tradition of local blockbusters, grossing $14.3 million, and sold worldwide.

“Jorge was an excellent producer and a much better friend. Of good taste, a gentleman, you would always savor chatting with him, about the world, politics and, why not, cinema,” Campanella said.

“I’d like to say of him the best one can say of a producer and friend: He was always there for the failures. He never complained about missteps: We’d immediately begin a new project, or a new conversation. Those who know about cinema will understand when I say that Jorge was the George Bailey of my life.”

With Campanella, Gaston Gorali and Roberto Schroeder, Estrada Mora launched MundoLoco Animation Studios, which announced a three-series deal with Discovery Kids and Cris Morena at 2015’s Mipcom and is shaping up as one of Latin America’s most important animation hubs. Estrada Mora also helped launch housing developments, opinion polls – with Enrique Zuleta Puceiro and Sofres-Ibope – and grew grapes for wine in Mendoza and, in a bold leap of the imagination, in Mar del Plata, never a traditional wine area. From 2010, he also served as an honorary consul for Singapore in Argentina.

Jorge Estrada Mora is survived by his wife, Nancy O’Toole, and their five children Annie, Carolina, Juan, Estefania and Javier.


ESTRADA, Jorge (Jorge Estrada Mora)
Born: 8/15/1947, Donmatías, Colombia
Died: 12/9/2015 Buenos Aires, Argentina

Jorge Estrada’s western – producer:
The Last Harvest - 1991

RIP George Clayton Johnson

$
0
0


George Clayton Johnson has Died

Salem News
By Bonnie King

(SALEM, Ore.) - The illuminating, exoterical, astronomical George Clayton Johnson has died. The genius science-fiction writer behind so much of what we’ve all watched and enjoyed has passed on to his next adventure.

George Clayton Johnson wrote the very first episode of Star Trek, The Man Trap; he wrote eight original Twilight Zone episodes for series creator Rod Serling including "Nothing in the Dark", "Kick the Can", "A Game of Pool", and "A Penny for Your Thoughts".

In 1960, while he was one of the proprietors of Cafe Frankenstein (seen as sort of a "den of iniquity" by the uptight) in Laguna Beach, California, he sold the first story he ever wrote. That story served as the basis for the movie Ocean's 11, he even wrote the original screenplay.

He joined the Southern California School of Writers that included Theodore Sturgeon, William F. Nolan, Charles Beaumont, Richard Matheson and Ray Bradbury (whom he credits with having made him believe in himself as a writer). And through these fine folks, he met Rod Serling.

“Serling’s Twilight Zone scripts are, in a word, surreal,” Johnson said in a 2006 interview. “As an art form, surrealism tries to banish the distinction between the real and the unreal to provide an infinite expansion of reality.

“The Twilight Zone played just as much a part in the renaissance transformation of The Sixties as bright-colored clothing, rock music and marijuana did. It helped to jack people up to a higher level.”

George is perhaps most well-known for the 1967 science fiction classic, Logan's Run, which he co-wrote, it was a box-office hit and an Oscar winning film for MGM in 1976; and he also wrote for TV shows including Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Route 66, The Law and Mr. Jones and Kung Fu.

A free soul for life, he often spent time with Jack Herer, the Emperor of Hemp, and Captain Ed Adair. Together they smoked a lot of marijuana, and traversed galaxies, as they expanded their inner horizons.

I met and interviewed George Clayton Johnson in 2010, at Jack Herer's funeral. He spoke during the ceremony, and mentioned the relevance of wishing on a star, which he believed in. George found depth and relevance in the common elements of life, and he meant to share what he could, at all times.

George was present when Jack Herer and Captain Ed made their historic pact to “to work every day to legalize marijuana and get all pot prisoners out of jail, until we were dead, marijuana was legal, or we could quit when we turned 84. We wouldn't have to quit, but we could,” Jack Herer said.

An outgoing advocate for the legalization of marijuana, George is said to have smoked weed all day, every day, well into his 80’s.

George Clayton Johnson was a pleasure to speak with, and gave me the best compliment of my professional career. He said, "I was hoping to meet you, you are a writer of the highest order." Wow. He definitely knew just what to say.

Those that spent the time with him recently commented that he was always sharp as a tack, eloquent to the end.

He co-created the comic book series Deepest Dimension Terror Anthology with cartoonist and author Jay Allen Sanford (Revolutionary Comics), and appeared at recent Comic conventions. He had so much to give, and knew better than to waste his chance.

“For me, fantasy must be about something, otherwise it's foolishness... ultimately it must be about human beings, it must be about the human condition, it must be another look at infinity, it must be another way of seeing the paradox of existence.”

— George Clayton Johnson quoted in The Twilight Zone Companion

"I want to be remembered as a person who early on in his life took control of his life and set goals. When people gave me a lined paper, I wrote the other way. When people expect some certain behavior from me, I will frustrate their expectations."
— George Clayton Johnson

“He’s dead, Jim.” (said Bones)
— George Clayton Johnson, first aired episode of STAR TREK.

RIP George, I wish I'd known you better.


JOHNSON, George Clayton
Born: 7/10/1929, Cheyenne, Wyoming, U.S.A.
Died: 12/22/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

George Clayton Johnson’s western – screenwriter:
Kung Fu (TV) – 1974

RIP Haskell Wexler

$
0
0


Haskell Wexler, Oscar-winning cinematographer, dies at 93

Los Angeles Times
By Dennis McLellan and Jack Dolan
December 27, 2015

Haskell Wexler, a two-time Academy Award-winning cinematographer — for “Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” and “Bound for Glory” — and the writer-director of the landmark 1969 film “Medium Cool,” died Sunday morning. He was 93.

Wexler, a lifelong liberal political activist who made documentaries that reflected his social and political concerns throughout his more than six-decade career, died peacefully in his sleep at Providence St. John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, said his son, Jeff Wexler.

“His real passion was much larger than just making movies,” Wexler said of his father. “His real passion was for human beings, and justice, and peace.”

One of the few cinematographers to have received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (in 1996), Wexler won his first Oscar for his black-and-white photography on “Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” director Mike Nichols' 1966 debut film starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton.

He won his second Oscar for “Bound for Glory,” director Hal Ashby's 1976 movie starring David Carradine as legendary singer-songwriter Woody Guthrie.

Wexler also won Oscar nominations for best cinematography for the 1975 film “One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest” (shared with Bill Butler), “Matewan” (1987) and “Blaze” (1989).

Among Wexler's other feature film credits as a cinematographer are “America, America,” “The Loved One,” “The Best Man,” “The Thomas Crown Affair,” “In the Heat of the Night,” “Coming Home,” “Colors” and “The Babe.”

He also was visual consultant on George Lucas' 1973 classic “American Graffiti.” And he received an “additional photography” credit on Terrence Malick's 1978 film “Days of Heaven,” for which cinematographer Nestor Almendros won an Oscar.

Wexler made his feature-film directorial debut with “Medium Cool,” a low-budget 1969 film that he wrote and for which he served as the director of photography and was a producer.

Described by Wexler as “a wedding between features and cinema verite,” the drama about an emotionally detached TV news cameraman was partially shot in Chicago during the tumultuous 1968 Democratic National Convention.

Considered “a seminal film of '60s independent cinema,” “Medium Cool” was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry in 2003.

Wexler also directed and wrote the 1985 feature film “Latino,” a war drama shot in Nicaragua that movie critic Michael Wilmington described as “an indictment of U.S. involvement in Nicaragua that pulls no philosophical punches and was made under conditions of real danger, near actual battle zones.”

Once named one of the 10 most influential cinematographers in movie history in a survey of International Cinematographers Guild members, Wexler became the first active cameraman to receive the American Society of Cinematographer's Lifetime Achievement Award in 1993.

“His body of work is exceptional,” ASC President William A. Fraker said at the time. “He has already made a lasting impact.”

Describing his camera work in a 1993 interview with American Cinematographer magazine, Wexler said, “Movies are a voyeuristic experience. You have to make the audience feel like they are peeking through a keyhole. I think of myself as the audience. Then I use light, framing and motion to create a focal point.”

As a cinematographer, Wexler was known for being difficult — as several filmmakers attested to in “Tell Them Who You Are,” the highly personal 2004 documentary on Wexler made by his son, Mark, himself a target of his father's prickly nature.

Wexler was fired from “One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest” more than halfway through shooting because, according to director Milos Forman, “He was sharing his frustrations with the actors.”

Michael Douglas, who was one of the producers of “One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest,” said in the documentary: “He reminds me of my own father: critical and judging.”

For his part, Wexler said in the documentary: “As a director of photography, I always have worked as if it's my film. I don't think there is a movie that I've been on that I wasn't sure I could direct it better. But certainly also, as a director of photography, I have to serve the movie in whatever way I can as a filmmaker.”

A child of wealth — his father made a fortune in electronics and continued to prosper during the Depression — Wexler was born Feb. 6, 1922, in Chicago.

Despite his privileged background, he demonstrated his lifelong rebellious streak and political bent at 17 when he helped organize a workers' strike in his father's electronics factory.

After a year at UC Berkeley, Wexler dropped out in 1941 and joined the merchant marine. By the end of World War II, he had become a second officer and had survived 10 days in a lifeboat with 20 other merchant seaman after their supply ship was torpedoed in the Indian Ocean.

Back home after the war, Wexler's father asked him what he wanted to do.

“I thought of something really outlandish,” Wexler recalled in the 1993 interview with American Cinematographer. “I told him I wanted to be a filmmaker.”

Although he had previously only shot home movies with his father's 16-millimeter camera, Wexler received financial backing from his father to open a small movie studio in Des Plaines, Ill.

He produced an industrial film for an Alabama mill company, “Half Century With Cotton,” but the filmmaking enterprise was not a success. Wexler closed his studio in 1947 and began working as a freelance assistant cameraman on industrial, educational and other films.

By the late '50s, he had begun amassing feature film credits as a cinematographer.

In the mid-1970s, Wexler and a friend, Oscar-winning cinematographer Conrad L. Hall, launched a TV commercial company. Between shooting feature films, Wexler directed and shot commercials for products such as Miller Beer, STP and, most memorably, for Great Western Savings & Loan with John Wayne.

In 2001, he received an Emmy nomination in 2001 for outstanding cinematography for a mini-series or movie for “61,” the Billy Crystal-directed HBO film about New York Yankee sluggers Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris' quest to break Babe Ruth's single-season home run record.

More recently, he addressed the movie industry problem of sleep deprivation among film crews who must work excessively long hours in the 2006 documentary “Who Needs Sleep?”


WEXLER, Haskell
Born: 2/6/1922, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died: 12/27/2015, Santa Monica, California, U.S.A.

Haskell Wexler’s western – cinematographer, photographer:
Five Bold Women – 1960 [cinematographer]
Days of Heave – 1978 [photographer]

RIP Fred J. Scollay

$
0
0


TC Palm
December 27, 2015

Fred J. Scollay, veteran television and movie actor, died Tuesday, November 3, 2015 in Hobe Sound, FL. Mr. Scollay was born March 19, 1923, in Roxbury, Massachusetts. He was predeceased by his beloved wife of 67 years, Ann (Barr) Scollay in 2013. They lived most of their professional lives in Queens, NY with their lake house in Voluntown, CT their weekend getaway.

After serving in the Navy during WWII, Mr. Scollay had a long and successful acting career in daytime and primetime television, movies, and commercials.

On daytime TV, Mr. Scollay was an original cast member of The Doctors, playing hospital chaplain Rev. Sam Shafer (1963-1964). On Another World (1977-1980), he played Charley Hobson, the last husband of Ada Hobson (Constance Ford). He also had smaller roles on several other soap operas.

In primetime, he had roles dating back to the earliest days of television. He made numerous appearances in such programs as Studio One, Kraft Television Theatre, Armstrong Circle Theatre, Naked City, The Defenders, Dr. Kildare, Route 66, U.S. Steel Hour, and Gunsmoke, among many others. His last part was a recurring role as Judge Andrew Barsky on several episodes of Law & Order (1991-1996). His movie credits include the District Attorney in the first Death Wish (1974).

In 2014 Mr. Scollay established the Ann M. Scollay Education Endowed Scholarship Fund to benefit students enrolled in the Nursing Program at Indian River State College.

Mr. Scollay is survived by his sister-in-law Frances Barr and several nieces and nephews. Services will be private.


SCOLLAY, Fred J. (Frederick J. Scollay)
Born: 3/19/1923, Roxbury, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
Died: 11/3/2015, Hobe Sound, Florida, U.S.A.

Fred J. Scollay’s westerns – actor:
Destiny, West! (TV) – 1960 (Senator Lewis Linn)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1965, 1967 (Clint Fisher, Morgan Haley)
Dundee and the Culhane (TV) – 1967 (Sheriff Bean)

RIP Elain Riley

$
0
0


Legacy.com

Elaine Riley, an actress who appeared in dozens of 1940s and '50s motion pictures, has died, according to multiple news sources. Riley, who died Dec. 7, was 98.

The cause of death was not announced.

A former pinup model, Riley won the beauty pageant in her hometown of East Liverpool, Ohio. In 1937, she was runner-up in the Miss Ohio Beauty Pageant. She also did some modeling work in New York City.

Her first movie role was in 1944's "Higher and Higher," a musical that also starred Frank Sinatra in his debut movie role. Other credits, mostly in small roles, include "The Stork Club,""Texas Bad Man" and "Pardners."

After signing with Paramount Pictures in 1946, she became the leading lady for Westerns that featured Hopalong Cassidy, played by the actor William Boyd.

Starting in 1951, she co-starred on the TV Western series "The Gene Autry Show,""The Range Rider" and "Hopalong Cassidy."

She retired from acting in 1960.

Riley received the Golden Boot Award in 2004. The award goes to actors and crew members who have made important contributions to the genre of Western movies and TV programs. Other recipients of the award that year were fellow actors Pat Hingle, Noel Neill, Gale Storm and Val Kilmer.

She was preceded in death by her husband of more than 45 years, actor Richard Martin; he died in 1994.


RILEY, Elaine (Elaine Louise Riley)
Born: 1/15/1917, East Liverpool, Ohio, U.S.A.
Died: 12/7/2015

Elain Riley’s westerns – actress:
The Falcon Out West – 1944 (cigarette girl)
Girl Rush - 1944 (troupe member)
Trailin' West - 1944 (Linda)
The Devil's Playground – 1946 (Mrs. Evans)
False Paradise – 1948 (Anne Larson)
Sinister Journey – 1948 (Jessie Garvin)
Strange Gamble - 1948 (Nora Murray)
Rider from Tucson – 1950 (Jane Whipple)
The Lone Ranger (TV) – 1950, 1955 (Peggy Dingle, Julia Gregory)
The Hills of Utah - 1951 (Karen McQueen)
The Range Rider (TV) – 1951, 1952, 1953 (Connie Lane, Sue Wooley, Sally, Kathy Roberts,
      Alice Booth)
The Gene Autry Show (TV) – 1952 (Joyce Lawson, Jan Carter Gray, Sheriff Kathy Vale)
Leadville Gunslinger - 1952 (Carol Davis)
Hopalong Cassidy (TV) – 1952, 1954 (Mrs. Evans, Nora, Jessie, Nancy Mathews)
Texas Bad Man - 1953 (Lois)
The Cisco Kid (TV) – 1955 (Irene Moore, Millie Stone)
Stories of the Century (TV) – 1955 (Virginia Slade)
Fury (TV) – 1956 (Alice Parker)
Wanted: Dead or Alive (TV) – 1960 (Panama)
Pardners – 1956 (dance hall girl)
The Texas (TV) – 1958 (Dolly)
26 Men (TV) – 1958

RIP Carson van Osten

$
0
0


Carson Van Osten, Ex-Todd Rundgren Sideman, Dies

Ultimate Classic Rock
By Nick DeRiso
December 27, 2015

Carson Van Osten, a former bassist with Todd Rundgren who went on to work with Disney, has died at age 70.

The pair first collaborated in an early group called Woody’s Truck Stop, then co-founded Nazz in 1967, releasing an early version of Rundgren’s No. 5 1972 solo hit “Hello It’s Me.” Thom Mooney and Robert “Stewkey” Antoni rounded out a lineup that focused on psychedelic and garage rock mixed with power pop. Their first appearance was as an opening act with the Doors, and Nazz found very modest early success with a self-titled debut album that also included “Open Your Eyes.”

Unfortunately, the latter song wouldn’t earn widespread notice until its inclusion on the 1972 compilation Nuggets. Nazz Nazz followed in 1969, but by then the band was disintegrating. Rundgren departed and, soon after, so did Van Osten. Rick Nielsen briefly joined, and a collection of odds and ends arrived in 1971, titled Nazz III. By then, however, Rundgren was gearing up for Something/Anything?, the gold-selling solo double album that featured his own version of “Hello It’s Me.”

Van Osten, meanwhile, returned to his roots as a former student at the Philadelphia College of Art. He joined Disney as a writer and artist at the turn of the 1970s, becoming a staff comic artist in ’74. “For me, Walt Disney Studios was really kind of like an ivory tower,” he once said. “Whenever I draw Mickey Mouse, I don’t realize it, but I start smiling.”

After helping to create comic books featuring Mickey Mouse and Goofy through the late ’70s, he was named manager of creative services with Disney consumer products in 1980. There, Van Osten oversaw motion picture tie-in advertising – and, in a return to his roots with Rundgren, the Disney music company.

Van Osten earned the first of a series of vice president-level positions with the company in 1988. Among his most notable projects was the design of the Walt Disney Studios logo. Van Osten earned the Disney Legends award for his service in August 2015, sharing the bill with George Lucas.

Antoni later revived Nazz around a new lineup, with dates commencing in 2006. Nielsen would go on to form the nucleus of Cheap Trick, and they used Rundgren as producer on 1983’s Next Position Please. Van Osten, who died on Dec. 22, leaves behind a wife, two children and three grandchildren.


van OSTEN, Carson
Born: 9/24/1945, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Died: 12/22/2015, Thousand Oaks, California, U.S.A.

Carson van Osten’s western – animator:
A Cowboy’s Work is Never Done - 1972

RIP Michael Earl

$
0
0


Sesame Street puppeteer Michael Earl dies.




The Daily Voice
By Sherrill Fulghum
December 24, 2015

Emmy Award winning Muppeteer Michael Earl died early in the afternoon of December 23 as a result of colon cancer at the age of 56. Earl had been fighting the disease for the past three years.

While Earl performed in a variety of productions, it is his role on “Sesame Street” as Mr. Snuffleupagus that he is best known. He joined the ranks of Jim Henson’s Muppet crew in 1978 at the age of 19. Earl spent the next 15 years in a variety of Muppet adventures.

Earl got an early start in the entertainment business by starring in a Curad bandage commercial when he was only five years old and then the as the “Is it Soup yet?” Lipton soup kid. He continued to appear in TV ads as a teen. Earl began creating his own puppets when he was eight and his puppeteering began at age 10. After hearing about Michael Earl from Mike Oznowicz – Frank Oz’s father – and Kermit Love; Jim Henson hired the 19 year old for his debut film “The Muppet Movie”. Earl then took over the Mr. Snuffleupagus duties from Jerry Nelson. Though he was never needed, Earl was the understudy for Big Bird – a role an 82 year old Caroll Spinney continues to play.

Earl says that his favorite Muppet to play was Oscar the Grouch’s pet Slimey the worm.

As a Muppet performer Earl’s credits include “Sesame Street”, “The Muppet Movie”, “John Denver and the Muppets: A Christmas Together”, “The Dark Crystal”, “The Muppets Take Manhattan”, “Little Muppet Monsters”, “The Muppets: A Celebration of 30 Years”, “National Wildlife Federation” Public Service Announcement as a Muppet Penguin, the pilot episode of “The Jim Henson Hour”, the “Family Challenge” and “When Food Goes Bad” episodes of “Dinosaurs”, “Sesame Street: Sing Yourself Silly”, “Sesame Songs: Rock & Roll”, “Sesame Street: Learning about Numbers”, a Muppet performer in a Target commercial, a “Sesame Street” Muppet performer in the Eaton’s Santa Claus and Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parades, and “Kermit: A Frog’s Life”.

But Michael Earl was much more than a member of the Muppet family. His other acting, puppeteering, voice over, and creative credits include “Team America: World Police”, a puppet alien in “Men in Black II”, “The Adventures of Timmy the Tooth”, “Ticktock Minutes”, ”Little Shop of Horrors”, “Michael Earl & Friends”, “An Evening with Michael Earl”, the Bob Baker Marionette Theater, Bil Baird’s Marionettes, Sid & Marty Kroftt’s “A Broadway Baby”, the Goodspeed Opera House in Connecticut, “Shrek”, “Fame”, “Where on Earth is Carmen Sandiego?”, “Digimon Tamers”, and an M&M commercial.

During his career Earl has also worked with Whoopi Goldberg, Gregory Hines, and Victor Borge.

He was born Michael Earl Davis on September 10, 1959 in Oakland, California.


EARL, Michael (Michael Earl Davis)
Born: 9/10/1959, Oakland, California, U.S.A.
Died: 12/23/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Michael Earl’s western – voice actor:
The Adventures of Timmy the Tooth: Big Mouth Gulch – 1995 [English voice of Ms. Flossie/ Bunky]

RIP Wayne Rogers

$
0
0


Wayne Rogers, Trapper John on 'M*A*S*H*,' dies at 82

Fox News
December 31, 2015

LOS ANGELES –  Wayne Rogers, whose Trapper John McIntyre alongside Alan Alda's Hawkeye Pierce brought mischief, martinis and meatball surgery to the masses in the 1970s every week on "M.A.S.H.," has died.

The actor was surrounded by family when he died Thursday in Los Angeles of complications from pneumonia at age 82, his publicist and longtime friend Rona Menashe told The Associated Press.

Rogers' army surgeon Trapper John was one of the most beloved characters -- and half of one of the most beloved duos -- in TV history, despite the actor's appearing in only the first three of the show's 11 seasons on CBS.

The two skilled doctors, Hawkeye and Trapper, blew off steam between surgeries pulling pranks, romancing nurses and tormenting their tent-mate Frank Burns, with a seemingly endless supply of booze and one-liners at the ready.

In one classic moment, Trapper reaches out as though he's checking for rain and says, "Hmm, feels like it's going to martini," as Hawkeye promptly passes him a drink.

And in another line that typified the show's ethos, Trapper answers a question with "How should I know? I dropped out of school to become a doctor."

McIntyre was on "M.A.S.H." from 1972 to 1975, becoming one of many original cast members to leave the wildly popular show that went on until 1983. He was initially considered for Alda's character, but he preferred Trapper's sunnier disposition to Hawkeye's darkly acerbic personality.

The characters were essentially equals when the show began, but it increasingly focused on Alda, which was a factor in Rogers' departure.

Two other actors played Trapper in other incarnations. Elliot Gould was same character in the "M.A.S.H." feature film that preceded the TV show, and Pernell Roberts played the title character in the 1980s spinoff drama "Trapper John, M.D."

An Alabama native and Princeton University graduate, Rogers had parts on many short-lived shows early in his career, specializing in westerns like "Law of the Plainsman" and "Stagecoach West." He had a bit part in the 1967 film "Cool Hand Luke" with Paul Newman.

In the years after "M.A.S.H." he returned to TV regularly, including a recurring role in the early 1990s on "Murder, She Wrote."

He moved beyond acting to see serious success later in life as a money manager and investor. In 1988 and 1990, he appeared as an expert witness before the House Judiciary Committee to speak in favor of maintaining the Glass-Steagall banking laws of the 1930s. In recent years he was a regular panelist on the Fox News stock investment show "Cashin' In."

Rogers is survived by his wife Amy, two children, Bill and Laura, and four grandchildren.


ROGERS, Wayne (William Wayne McMillan Rogers III)
Born: 4/7/1933, Birmingham, Alabama, U.S.A.
Died: 12/31/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Wayne Rogers westerns – actor:
Zane Grey Theater (TV) – 1959 (Frank Sanders)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1959, 1962, 1965 (Tom, Brack, Stretch Morgan)
Law of the Plainsman (TV) – 1959, 1960 (Fran Anderson, Deputy Billy Gordon)
Johnny Ringo (TV) – 1960 (Charlie Hanford)
Stagecoach West (TV) – 1960-1961 (Luke Perry
Wanted: Dead or Alive (TV) – 1960 (Ash Langford)
The Great Adventure (TV) – 1963 (Tombs)
Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) – 1963 (Daniel Powers)
The Glory Guys – 1965 (Lt. Mike Moran)
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1965 (Lt. Richard H. Pratt)
Shane (TV) – 1966 (Jim Greevey)
The Big Valley (TV) – 1968 (Don Jarvis)
Lancer (TV) – 1968 (Ted Lewis)

RIP Jason Wingreen

$
0
0


Jason Wingreen, 'All in the Family' Bartender and Voice of Boba Fett in 'Star Wars,' Dies at 95




The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
January 1, 2016

The prolific character actor, with credits from 'The Twlight Zone' to 'Seinfeld,' was everywhere on television from 1955 until his retirement in the mid-1990s.

Jason Wingreen, who played Harry the bartender on All in the Family and Archie Bunker’s Place and provided the voice of the bounty hunter Boba Fett in Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back, has died. He was 95.

The recognizable character actor, who has almost 200 credits listed on IMDb, died at his home in Los Angeles on Christmas Day, his son, Ned, told The Hollywood Reporter.

Name a TV show, and Wingreen was probably on it.

The Brooklyn native appeared in three episodes of The Twilight Zone, most notably portraying the real train conductor in the 1960 episode in “A Stop at Willoughby.”

He played a Chicago police caption on The Untouchables, a major on 12 O’Clock High and Judge Arthur Beaumont on Matlock; did six episodes apiece of The Fugitive, The FBI and Ironside, appearing as 18 different characters; and died a memorable death as Dr. Linke on the 1968 Star Trek episode “The Empath.”

And in Airplane (1980), he played a doctor from the Mayo Clinic who is seen talking on the phone as a beating heart bounces all over his desk.

Wingreen portrayed Harry Snowden, the Kelsey's barkeep with the sympathetic ear, for 117 episodes and seven seasons of the CBS sitcoms All in the Family and Archie Bunker’s Place, both starring Carroll O’Connor. The role, which kept him employed from 1976 until 1983, “allowed me to retire, let me put it that way,” he said in a 2010 interview on The Classic TV History Blog.

“I loved it. It was wonderful. We worked from Tuesday on to the rest of the week. Monday, you had [off], to go to the bank and the laundry. We’d arrive on Tuesday morning, we’d sit around, read the script. We’d start laughing in the morning and laugh until 5 o’clock, when we’d quit. I mean, how could you not like it?”

On The Empire Strikes Back (1980), Wingreen auditioned for the part of Yoda. He didn’t get that role (Frank Oz did), but he was given four lines of dialogue spoken by the masked Boba Fett, the feared bounty hunter who captures Han Solo (Harrison Ford).

“I think the actual work, aside from the hellos and goodbyes and all that, could have been no more than 10 minutes,” he said. He received no credit for his work (it didn’t become publicly known that the voice was his until about 2000) and lamented that he received no residuals for the performance — especially since it’s Wingreen heard on some Boba Fett action figures.

The son of a tailor, Wingreen was born Oct. 9, 1920, in Brooklyn and raised in the Howard Beach neighborhood of Queens. He wanted to be a sportswriter and attended Brooklyn College, where he took his first acting class. His first show business job was with a marionette company.

After serving in World War II, Wingreen was one of the founders of the famed Circle in the Square theater company in New York's Greenwich Village, and he appeared for the first time on Broadway in two 1954 plays: The Girl on the Via Flaminia and Fragile Fox.

In 1956, Wingreen starred on the first installment of the CBS anthology series Playhouse 90, an episode that was written by future Twilight Zone creator Rod Serling.

He made his movie debut in The Bravados (1958), starring Gregory Peck, and also appeared on the big screen in A Guide for the Married Man (1967), Marlowe (1969), They Only Kill Their Masters (1972), The Terminal Man (1974), Oh, God! You Devil (1984).

He retired after appearances on Seinfeld and In the Heat of the Night in the 1990s.

In addition to his son, survivors include two grandchildren and his sister, Harriet Wingreen, for decades an orchestra pianist for the New York Philharmonic.



WINGREEN, Jason
Born: 10/9/1920, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 12/25/2015, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Jason Wingreen’s westerns – screenwriter, actor:
The True Story of Jesse James – 1957 (Peter)
The Bravados – 1958 (hotel clerk)
The Rough Riders (TV) – 1958 (Degnan)
Man Without a Gun (TV) – 1959
Zane Grey Theater (TV) – 1969 (gambling proprietor)
Wanted Dead or Alive (TV) – 1960 (Nick Peters)
Bonanza (TV) – 1963, 1964, 72 (Hank, Luke, Graham)
The Loner (TV) – 1965 (Lucas)
The Big Valley (TV) – 1966 (Ketchie)
A Man Called Shenandoah (TV) – 1966 (hotel clerk)
The Rounders (TV) – 1966 (Shorty Dawes)
Shane (TV) – 1966 (Ira Jackson)
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1966 (policeman) [screenwriter]
The Road West (TV) – 1967 (Norman Todd)
Lancer (TV) – 1968, 1969, 1970 (clerk, Henry Wilkes)
Cimarron Strip (TV) – 1968 (Mr. Glass)
The Guns of Will Sonnett (TV) – 1968 (Milby)
Cheyenne Social Club – 1970 (Dr. Farley Carter)
Cade’s County (TV) – 1971 (Sgt. Egan)
The Skin Game – 1971 (2nd speaker)
The Magnificent 7 Ride - 1972 (warden)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1972 (Dr. Cleery)
Kung Fu (TV) – 1973 (Mr. Kennemer)
Honky Tonk - 1974
Barbary Coast (TV) – 1976  (waiter)
The Quest (TV) – 1976 (Brannon)

RIP Vilmos Zsigmond

$
0
0


Vilmos Zsigmond, Oscar-Winning Cinematographer, Dies at 85

Variety
By Carmel Dagan
January 3, 2015

Hungarian-born cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond, winner of an Oscar for his achievements on “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” and a nominee for “The Deer Hunter,” “The River” (1984) and the “The Black Dahlia” (2006), has died at 85. His business partner Yuri Neyman said he died January 1.

Over a period of five decades in Hollywood, his other outstanding achievements included “Deliverance,” “Blow Out,” “The Ghost and the Darkness” and such Robert Altman films as “McCabe and Mrs. Miller” and “The Long Goodbye.” And he considered it the ultimate compliment that no two of his movies looked alike.

Working into his eighties, Zsigmond also shot a number of episodes of the Fox sitcom “The Mindy Project” from 2012-14. Zsigmond ranked among the 10 most influential cinematographers in film history in a 2003 survey conducted by the International Cinematographers Guild.

The ICG’s Steven Poster, who worked on three of his movies, said in a statement, “Vilmos’ genius was not only in his images, but in his sense of duty to honest storytelling. Working up close with him, I also learned about perseverance and an obligation to the story from the master. His brave beginnings providing footage from the Hungarian revolution will always be an important part of his legacy and to future generations of cinematographers and film students. He made a difference.”

Escaping from his native Hungary after the 1956 Russian invasion, Zsigmond slowly worked his way up starting with low-budget exploitation films. After a decade he finally got his break with Altman’s stylistically daring “McCabe” (1971), in which he used a limited palate of desaturated colors, giving the Western a boldly unconventional and melancholy look. Also for Altman he did “Images” and “The Long Goodbye,” and was tapped by John Boorman to be the cinematographer on “Deliverance,” the 1972 classic for which he provided a crisp, evocative look.

For the next two decades Zsigmond was one of the most in-demand cinematographers in Hollywood, going on to work with such directors as Michael Cimino, Spielberg, Scorsese, De Palma and George Miller.

Belying his comment to Rolling Stone that “a cinematographer can only be as good as the director,” Zsigmond often flattered his directors’ capabilities with his innovative use of lighting and his painterly eye.

The young Spielberg selected him for his debut feature “The Sugarland Express” (1974); De Palma’s “Obsession” followed. Spielberg was so pleased that he used Zsigmond on the breakthrough “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” which brought him his first Oscar. But in an interview, Zsigmond professed dissatisfaction about working with Spielberg; despite having many good ideas for the look of the film, he felt like nothing more than a glorified cameraman. He never worked with the director again.

He picked up an Oscar nom for “The Deer Hunter” (1979), which he considered one of his finest achievements. Though the film was critically panned, Zsigmond’s work on Cimino’s “Heaven’s Gate” was equally strong. He brought a documentary style to the film musical “The Rose,” directed by Mark Rydell, which led to the Scorsese documentary about the Band, “The Last Waltz.” Another high-water mark for Zsigmond was De Palma’s 1981 thriller “Blow Out.”

During the ’80s he worked on smaller films including “Jinxed,” “Table for Five” and “No Small Affair.” He received another Oscar nomination for Rydell’s “The River” in 1984 and also scored with “The Witches of Eastwick” for Aussie director George Miller and “Fat Man and Little Boy” (1989). Zsigmond shot “Chinatown” sequel “The Two Jakes” for Jack Nicholson in 1990 as well as De Palma’s “The Bonfire of the Vanities.”

Zsigmond tried his hand at directing in 1992 with Hungarian/Israeli co-production “The Long Shadow,” starring Michael York and Liv Ullman, then segued into television for the HBO film “Stalin,” starring Robert Duvall, for which he won an American Society of Cinematographers award. Other films in the ’90s included “Sliver,” “The Crossing Guard” and “Intersection”; “Maverick” and “Assassins,” both for Richard Donner; “The Ghost and the Darkness”; and “Playing by Heart.”

He shot TNT’s miniseries adaptation of “The Mists of Avalon” in 2001, drawing an Emmy nomination in the process.

Zsigmond also lensed a series of Woody Allen films in the 2000s, “Melinda and Melinda,” “Cassandra’s Dream” and “You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger”; Dan Pritzker’s silent tribute to Louis Armstrong, “Louis”; and De Palma’s adaptation of James Ellroy’s “The Black Dahlia,” for which the cinematographer picked up another Oscar nomination.

In 2011 Zsigmond shot “The Maiden Danced to Death,” the two story of two brothers in Communist Hungary, and “Bolden!,” another jazz bio from Pritzker, and in 2013 he lensed director Arthur Allan Seidelman’s feature adaptation of Richard Alfieri’s play “Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks” starring Gena Rowlands.

He was born in Cegled, Hungary, the son of a famous soccer player. After studying for four years at the Budapest Film School, he left his native land at age 26 after furtively filming the Russian invasion along with fellow student Laszlo Kovacs. They were detained at the Austrian border but then released, taking the footage with them, and it was later incorporated into his documentary “Hungary Aflame,” CBS’ 1961 documentary “Twentieth Century” and the 2009 documentary “No Subtitles Necessary: Laszlo and Vilmos,” which detailed the long relationship between the two lensers.

For several years he worked as a still photographer and lab technician, assisting in the photography of 1962’s “Wild Guitar.” His first credit as cinematographer was on cult film “The Sadist” in 1963. For several years he worked on other exploitation films including “Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed-Up Zombies” along with Kovacs and other horror pics including “Horror of the Blood Monsters” and “Five Bloody Graves.” He also shot the low-budget comedies “Tales of a Salesman” (1965) and “The Monitors” (1969).

Zsigmond was a member of the Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (cinematographers branch) beginning in 2007.

For his outstanding work Zsigmond was honored with lifetime achievement awards from the ASC in 1999 and Poland’s cinematography-focused festival Cameraimage in 1997.


ZSIGMOND, Vilmos
Born: 7/6/1930, Cegled, Hungary
Died: 1/1/2016, Big Sur, California, U.S.A.

Vilmos Zsigmond’s western – cinematographer, director of photography, actor:
Deadwood ’76 – 1965 [director of photography]
Five Bloody Grave – 1969 [director of photography]
The Hired Hand – 1971 [cinematographer[
McCabe and Mrs. Miller – 1971 (Albert Bierstadt) [director of photography]
Heaven’s Gate – 1980 [cinematographer]
Maverick – 1994 [cinematographer]
Viewing all 2465 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images