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RIP Pierre Barouh

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A Man and a Woman singer Pierre Barouh dies at 82

The Straits Times
December 28, 2016

PARIS (AFP) - French songwriter, composer and singer Pierre Barouh, who penned and sang the international hit A Man And A Woman from the eponymous 1966 film, died Wednesday (Dec 28) aged 82, his wife said.

Barouh, who had been in hospital for five days, died following a heart attack, Atsuko Ushioda told AFP.

Raised in the western Paris suburbs in a Jewish family, Barouh followed a chequered career, becoming a journalist after World War II and playing for the national volleyball team before going on to Brazil where he befriended the main singers and composers of bossa nova.

He returned to France and starred in films and turned to composing music.

His biggest successes included the hit single A Man And A Woman from the Claude Lelouch film as well as La Bicyclette. His songs were performed by French stars such as Yves Montand and Francoise Hardy.


BAROUH, Pierre (Eli Pierre Barouh)
Born: 2/19/1934, Paris, Île-de-France, France
Died: 12/28/2016, Paris, Île-de-France, France

Pierre Barouh’s western – actor:
Another Man, Another Chance – 1977 (street singer)

RIP Debbie Reynolds

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Debbie Reynolds, ‘Singin’ in the Rain’ Star and Carrie Fisher’s Mother, Dies at 84

Variety
By Carmel Dagan
December 28, 2016

Debbie Reynolds, the Oscar-nominated singer-actress who was the mother of late actress Carrie Fisher, has died at Cedars-Sinai hospital. She was 84.

“She wanted to be with Carrie,” her son Todd Fisher told Variety.

She was taken to the hospital from Todd Fisher’s Beverly Hills house Wednesday after a suspected stroke, the day after her daughter Carrie Fisher died.

The vivacious blonde, who had a close but sometimes tempestuous relationship with her daughter, was one of MGM’s principal stars of the 1950s and ’60s in such films as the 1952 classic “Singin’ in the Rain” and 1964’s “The Unsinkable Molly Brown,” for which she received an Oscar nomination as best actress.

Reynolds received the SAG lifetime achievement award in January 2015; in August of that year the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences voted to present the actress with the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award at the Nov. 14 Governors Awards, but she was unable to attend the ceremony due to an “unexpectedly long recovery from a recent surgery.”

Reynolds had a wholesome girl-next-door look which was coupled with a no-nonsense attitude in her roles. They ranged from sweet vehicles like “Tammy” to more serious fare such as “The Rat Race” and “How the West Was Won.” But amid all the success, her private life was at the center of one of the decade’s biggest scandals when then-husband, singer Eddie Fisher, left her for Elizabeth Taylor in 1958.

Reynolds handled it well personally, but got more tabloid coverage when she divorced her second husband, shoe manufacturer Harry Karl, claiming that he had wiped away all of her money with his gambling. The 1987 novel “Postcards From the Edge,” written by Carrie Fisher, and the film adaptation three years later, were regarded as an embellishment on Reynolds’ up-and-down relationship with her actress daughter. In 1997, Reynolds declared personal bankruptcy after the Debbie Reynolds Hotel & Casino closed after years of financial troubles.

She continued to work well into her 80s, via film and TV work, guesting on “The Golden Girls” and “Roseanne” and drawing an Emmy nomination in 2000 for her recurring role on “Will and Grace” as the latter’s entertainer mother. She also did a number of TV movies, including an almost-unrecognizable turn as Liberace’s mother in Steven Soderbergh’s “Behind the Candelabra” for HBO in 2013. She also frequently did voice work for “Kim Possible” and “Family Guy.”For movie fans, she was always the pert star of movies, TV, nightclubs and Broadway. But to industry people, she was known for her philanthropy, including more than 60 years of working with the organization the Thalians on mental-health care. She was also known for her energetic battles to preserve Hollywood heritage. She bought thousands of pieces when MGM auctioned off its costumes and props, including Marilyn Monroe’s “subway dress” from “The Seven Year Itch,” a Charlie Chaplin bowler hat and a copy of the ruby slippers from “The Wizard of Oz.” Reynolds spent decades trying to get these items showcased in a museum.

Marie Frances Reynolds was born in El Paso, Texas; when she was 8, her carpenter father moved the family to Burbank. At age 16, “Frannie” entered the Miss Burbank Contest, winning in 1948 for her imitation of Betty Hutton singing “My Rockin’ Horse Ran Away.” She was spotted by Warner Bros. talent scout Solly Baiano, who signed her to a $65-a-week contract. Studio head Jack Warner renamed her Debbie — against her wishes, she said.

Reynolds languished at the studio, often having to perform errands such as escorting visitors on tours or addressing envelopes; she appeared in front of the cameras only for a bit part in “June Bride” and then a flashier role as June Haver’s sister in “The Daughter of Rosie O’Grady.”

When the contract lapsed, MGM picked her up at $300 a week. The studio, where she would reside for the next 20 years, first assigned her a role lip-synching Helen Kane’s voice as the original Betty Boop in the musical “Three Little Words.” In romantic musical “Two Weeks With Love,” she used her own voice to put across “Aba Daba Honeymoon,” and she was also given a supporting role in “Mr. Imperium,” starring Lana Turner.

After the studio insisted on her as the romantic lead in “Singin’ in the Rain,” Gene Kelly put her through rigorous dance training, which she admitted she needed. “They took this virgin talent, this little thing, and expected her to hold her own with Gene and with Donald O’Connor, two of the best dancers in the business,” she once told an interviewer. Many years later, “Singin’ in the Rain” was No. 1 on AFI’s 100 Years of Musicals list, and ranked No. 5 in its 2007 list of the greatest American films.

She was 20 when the film opened and her career kicked into high gear. She was next given the female lead in “The Affairs of Dobie Gillis,” co-starring Bobby Van, and segued into another musical comedy, “Give a Girl a Break,” with Marge and Gower Champion.

On loan to RKO, she impressed in the comedy “Susan Slept Here,” with Dick Powell as a screenwriter who must deal with a juvenile delinquent, played by Reynolds, on Christmas Eve. After the film became a hit, Reynolds’ contract was renegotiated. While she was assigned to lackluster musicals such as “Athena” and “Hit the Deck,” the comedies were better, such as “The Tender Trap,” with Frank Sinatra.

And she made a big impression in her dramatic turn as Bette Davis’s daughter in Gore Vidal’s adaptation of Paddy Chayevsky’s “The Catered Affair” (1956).

In 1956, she also starred in RKO’s “Bundle of Joy” (a musical remake of “Bachelor Mother”) opposite crooner Eddie Fisher, whom she had recently married.

“Tammy and the Bachelor,” which featured her million-selling single of the ballad “Tammy,” defined Reynolds and may have limited her to roles as the wholesome all-American type. She went on to play essentially the same part in such films as “The Mating Game” and “The Pleasure of His Company,” with only the occasional tart turn in movies such as “The Rat Race.”

Reynolds had one of the principal roles in 1962’s all-star Cinerama epic “How the West Was Won.” And in the 1960s she remained a star, despite the ho-hum boxoffice performances of  “Mary, Mary,” “Goodbye Charlie” and “The Singing Nun.”

When Shirley MacLaine dropped out of 1964’s “The Unsinkable Molly Brown,” Reynolds got her best chance to shine centerstage in a musical comedy about the real-life woman who went from rags to riches and survived the Titanic sinking. (One of the show’s signature songs, “I Ain’t Down Yet,” became an unofficial anthem for the actress as she survived all the turmoil in her life.

She had two of her best roles in “Divorce, American Style,” directed by Bud Yorkin and co-written by Norman Lear; and the 1971 black-comedy suspenser “What’s the Matter With Helen?” with Shelley Winters.. But her movie roles were slowing down and the actress tried series television; “The Debbie Reynolds Show” lasted only one season on NBC from 1969-70.

In 1973, the actress divorced Karl and discovered she was almost $3 million in debt as a result of his gambling losses. She worked it off by appearing 42 weeks a year in nightclubs and Las Vegas and Reno.

She also established the Debbie Reynolds Professional Studios in Burbank. She went to Broadway in a revival of “Irene,” drawing a 1973 Tony nomination for best actress in a musical, which gave daughter Carrie Fisher one of her first roles. After doing “Annie Get Your Gun” on tour, Reynolds returned to Broadway in a short-lived turn in “Woman of the Year.” She toured with Meredith Willson’s stage musical “The Unsinkable Molly Brown” in 1989, 25 years after the film debuted.

Reynolds appeared in a number of successful exercise tapes for older women, “Do It Debbie’s Way,” and co-authored the autobiography “Debbie, My Life” in 1987.

That same year, Reynolds’ private life was again in the spotlight when Carrie Fisher’s novel “Postcards From the Edge” debuted. The work centered on the stormy relationship between an actress and her showbiz-star mother. Though many were convinced this was a roman a clef, Reynolds laughingly pooh-poohed comparisons with the self-centered mom. (MacLaine, the original choice for MGM’s “Molly Brown,” played the mother in the 1970 film adaptation.)

In 1993, the Debbie Reynolds Hotel & Casino opened in Vegas, where she appeared for most weekends in the showroom with Rip Taylor. The next year she opened her Hollywood Movie Museum in Vegas. Reynolds said she got the idea for the hotel as an afterthought, as she was looking for a permanent home for her collection of movie memorabilia.

Reynolds appeared in a number of films in the 1990s, including the title character in the Albert Brooks comedy “Mother.” She also cameo’d as herself in “The Bodyguard”; appeared in Oliver Stone’s “Heaven and Earth”; and played a mother determined to marry off her son whether he’s gay or not in the 1997 “In and Out.” She also appeared in a broadly comic role as the grandmother in Katherine Heigl vehicle “One for the Money” in 2012.

Reynolds also did voicework for many animated film and TV works, starting with the title character in 1973’s “Charlotte’s Web.” and providing voices for the English version of anime “Kiki’s Delivery Service” and for “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: The Movie,” “Rugrats in Paris” and “Light of Olympia.”

In 2005 she won the President’s Award at the Costume Designers Guild Awards “for her collection and conservation of classic Hollywood costumes.” However, a deal for placement of the collection fell through, and Reynolds was forced to auction off most of the collection, which was valued at almost $11 million.

In 1955 Reynolds was among the young actors who founded the Thalians, a charitable organization aimed at raising awareness and providing treatment and support for those suffering from mental health issues; Reynolds was elected president of the organization in 1957 and served in that role for more than five decades, and she and actress Ruta Lee alternated as chair of the board. Through Reynolds’ efforts, the Thalians donated millions of dollars to the Mental Health Center at Cedars-Sinai (closed in 2012) and to UCLA’s Operation Mend, which provides medical and psychological services to wounded veterans and their families.

Reynolds was married to third husband Richard Hamlett, a real estate developer, from 1984-96.

Daughter Carrie Fisher died Dec. 27, 2016; Reynolds is survived by her son Todd, a TV commercial director from her marriage to Eddie Fisher; and granddaughter, actress Billie Lourd.


REYNOLDS, Debbie (Mary Frances Reynolds)
Born: 4/1/1932, El Paso, Texas, U.S.A.
Died: 12/28/2016, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Debbie Reynolds’ westerns – actress:
The Second Time Around – 1961 (Lucretia ‘Lu’ Rogers)
How the West Was Won – 1962 (Lilith Prescott)
The Unsinkable Molly Brown – 1964 (Molly Brown)

RIP Anne Graves

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Los Angeles Times
December 29, 2016

November 15, 1940 - December 26, 2016 Anne Yarbrough Graves died peacefully at Providence Saint Joseph's hospital on December 26, 2016 after a valiant but mercifully short battle with cancer. She was 76.

Annie was born November 15, 1940 in Detroit, Michigan where she was a child actress and the four year old spokesperson for the Pressel Sausage Company.

Dreaming of stardom, her family moved to California in the 1940's and settled in Culver City. Attending Culver High in the 1950's, Annie was known for being kindhearted and funny. Head Cheerleader, Girl's League President, Homecoming Queen - she even dated the Captain of the football team thus sweeping the high school Superfecta. Always a hard worker, she went on to a modeling career at Robert Hall while working as a floral designer. Along the way, she won several 1950's beach pageant titles including Miss Culver City and Venice Surf Festival.

Acting, modeling and flowers would be the hallmarks of her life and she made every setting she touched more beautiful, whether by her creative designs or her charming, witty presence. While modeling, she worked as Miss Clairol, and most amusingly as "Miss Naugahyde" at the Los Angeles Auto Show, displaying with a graceful gesture (which she would later repeat to great comedic effect) "my hat is Naugahyde, my dress is Naugahyde, my shoes are Naugahyde and even my purse is Naugahyde!"

She earned small roles in several movies of the era including cult favorite "The Magic Sword" with Basil Rathbone and "Runaway Girl." She had recurring parts on both Gunslinger and Bonanza and was killed by Indians a number of times before this sad and final departure. In 1964 she met singer Glenn Yarbrough. They married in 1967, had one daughter, Holly, in 1969. By 1971 they had "quit the biz" to sail around the world on a 55-foot ketch they designed and built. During those years at sea, Annie cultivated her talent for writing. Excerpts of her memoir of the trip were published in the SSCA (Seven Seas Cruising Association) magazine. She also wrote many rhyming stories for children and countless memorable poems for friends.

In the mid-1970's Annie and Glenn co-founded one of the first artist-run labels: Brass Dolphin Records. Annie produced Glenn's "Live at the Troubadour" album and singlehandedly maintained an international mail order company for a decade. Later in the 1980's, her many years of floral arranging inspired her to start one of the first dedicated custom gift basket stores in L.A. called "I'm a Basket Case" on Ventura Boulevard in Studio City. Later, she enjoyed being one of the few female designers at the high-end Flower Basket next door. Since 1964 she lived in and lovingly cared for the Josef Van der Kar house in the Hollywood Hills. It was built by the architect for his own family in 1940 and Glenn and Annie were the second owners.

Annie dedicated her life to the maintenance of the house and garden and her spirit will always dwell there. Until his death in 2002, Mr. Van der Kar, who became a lifelong friend, always lava-rock waterfall planter in his once spare living room design. But it was the mid-sixties after all, and he lovingly absolved her of her architectural sins, often expressing gratitude at her adoration of the house and grounds and preservation of his work.

She was preceded in death by her parents, Luther Eldon and Marion Theresa Graves, her dear brothers, John Charles and Thomas Eldon Graves, her ex-husband and lifelong friend, Glenn Robertson Yarbrough, and her most beloved dog Nikolas. She is survived by her daughter, Holly Yarbrough Burnett, son-in-law Robert Burnett, as well as many dear family and friends. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in Annie's memory to the Stanford Department of Special Collections, Stanford University Libraries, Stanford, CA 94305. Funds designated in her name will be used to preserve the history of her beloved house in the permanent Van der Kar collection.


GRAVES, Anne
Born: 11/15/1940, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.
Died: 12/26/2016, Burbank, California, U.S.A.

Anne Graves’ westerns – actress:
Bonanza (TV) – 1960 (Amanda McFadden)
Gunslinger (TV) – 1961 (Lucy Pearson)

RIP Angela Stevens

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Actress Angela Stevens was born Ann Evelyn in Eagle Rock, California on May 8, 1925 was and was an American model, film actress and singer. She made over 40 film and television appearances between 1950 and 1963. She spent the early years of her career appearing in several Three Stooges films such as “He Cooked His Goose”, “Pardon My Backfire” and “Blunder Boys”. Other credits include “The Hoodlum”, “Without Warning!” and “The Creature with the Atom Brain”. She was the uncredited Betty in “The Wild One.”

She married George Zika who predeceased her in 1999. The couple had a son Joseph Allen Zika who was born in 1943 and a daughter born in Princella. Her son Joseph died in 1981 at the age of 37. George and Ann moved to Sun City, California where she died on March 17, 2016.


STEVENS,  Angela (Ann Evelyn Allen)
Born: 5/8/1925, Eagle Rock, California, U.S.A.
Died: 3/17/2016, U.S.A.

Angela Stevens westerns – actress:
In Old Amarillo - 1951 (saloon girl)
The Cisco Kid (TV) – 1951 (Diane, Lorraine Bentley)
The Kid from Broken Gun - 1952 (Gail Kingston)
Outlaw Women - 1952 (. One of Uncle Barney's Girls)
Jack McCall, Desperado - 1953 (Rose Griffith)
The Mississippi Gambler – 1953 (girl)
Blackjack Ketchum, Desperado - 1956 (Laurie Webster)
Utah Blaine - 1957 (Mary Blake)
Circus Boy (TV) – 1957 (Susie)
Casey Jones (TV) – 1958 (Caroline Sawyer)
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1959 (Anita)
Have Gun - Will Travel (TV) – 1960 (Young Woman at Hotel Carlton)

RIP William Christopher

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William Christopher, Father Mulcahy on 'MASH,' dies at 84

KABC
December 31, 2016

William Christopher, the actor best known for his role as Father John Mulcahy on the hit TV show "M*A*S*H," died on Saturday, his family confirmed to Eyewitness News.

His son, John Christopher, said the actor died from non-lung small cell carcinoma at his home in Pasadena.

He was 84.

The actor played the role of Father John Mulcahy on "M*A*S*H" from 1972 to 1983 and in the follow-up series "After M*A*S*H*" from 1983 to 1985.

He also had parts in the movies "The Fortune Cookie,""With Six You Get Eggroll," and the TV show "Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C."

William Christopher leaves behind his wife Barbara and his sons John and Ned.


CHRISTOPHER, William
Born: 10/20/1932, Evanston, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died: 12/31/2016, Pasadena, California, U.S.A.

William Christopher’s westerns – actor:
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1966 (Sonny)
The Shakiest Gun in the West – 1968 (hotel manager)
Alias Smith and Jones (TV) – 1971 (telegrapher)
Nichols (TV) – 1971-1972 (Niles)
The Virginian (TV) – 1971 (hotel clerk)
Hearts of the West – 1975 (bank teller)

RIP William T. Marshall

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Toronto Film Fest Founder and Producer Bill Marshall Dies at 77


Variety
By Pat Saperstein
January 1, 2017

Bill Marshall, who co-founded the Toronto International Film Festival in 1976, died Sunday in Toronto. He was 77.

The festival and his family reported that he died of cardiac arrest while in the hospital.

He was also a film producer, producing the noted Canadian film “Outrageous!” and 12 other feature films, as well as many documentaries. He also produced live theater productions such as the Toronto production of “Hair.”

In a statement, the festival said, “We are deeply saddened by the passing of our friend and TIFF Chair Emeritus Bill Marshall.

“Founder of the Festival of Festivals in 1976 (along with Co-Founders Henk Van der Kolk and Dusty Cohl), Bill was also the organization’s Director in its first three years. He was a pioneer in the Canadian film industry and his vision of creating a public Festival that would bring the world to Toronto through the transformative power of cinema stands today as one of his most significant legacies.

“Without his tenacity and dedication, the Toronto International Film Festival would not be among the most influential public cultural festivals today.”

Marshall moved to Canada from Glasgow, Scotland in 1955. He served as campaign manager and chief of staff for three different Toronto mayors and an advisor to Canadian politicians.

In addition to TIFF, he helped establish the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television, The Toronto Film and Television Office, and he was past president of the Canadian Association of Motion Picture Producers.


MARSHALL, William T.
Born: 1939, Glasgow, Scotland, U.K.
Died: 1/1/2017, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

William T. Marshall’s western - producer:
Wild Horse Hank – 1979

RIP Jeffrey Hayden

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Yahoo
By Denise Petski
January 3, 2017

Prolific TV and theater director Jeffrey Hayden, whose credits include Peyton Place and The Donna Reed Show, among many others, died December 24. Hayden passed away following a year-long battle with cancer at his Los Angeles home surrounded by his family, including his wife, Eva Marie Saint. He was 90.

Hayden began his decades-long career at NBC New York after graduating from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He joined ABC Television as an associate director two years later and directed the first color specials for NBC Television, Lady in the Dark, starring Ann Sothern, and The Chocolate Soldier, starring Eddie Albert and Rise Stevens. He then directed his wife, actor Eva Marie Saint, and Richard Kiley in the prestigious Omnibus series on CBS. Hayden also directed the variety series The Bert Parks Show and the quiz show The Big Payoff.

In 1954, Hayden was chosen by producer Fred Coe to join the staff of The Philco Television Playhouse, where he directed live television dramas with such stars as James Dean, Walter Matthau, and Paul Newman. His work attracted the attention of several film studios, and Hayden moved with his family to Los Angeles to direct a film for Dore Schary at MGM, The Vintage, starring Michèle Morgan, Pier Angeli, John Kerr, and Mel Ferrer.

In addition to Peyton Place and The Donna Reed Show, Hayden’s many TV directing credits include The Andy Griffith Show, Leave it to Beaver, Lassie, Dennis the Menace, Please Don’t Eat the Daisies, , 77 Sunset Strip, Name of the Game, Route 66, Mannix, Quincy, The Bold Ones, Ironside, Alias Smith & Jones, Cagney and Lacey, In the Heat of the Night, and Magnum, P.I., among others. Hayden was executive producer/director of the daytime series Santa Barbara, and directed several highly praised afterschool specials for ABC.

Hayden was honored with the Governor’s Media Award for The Loretta Young Show, the NAACP Award for Palmerstown, USA, and the New York Emmy Award and Cine Golden Eagle Award for the PBS documentary Children in America’s Schools with Bill Moyers. He also wrote, produced, and directed the Cine Golden Eagle Award-winning documentary Primary Colors: The Story of Corita for PBS.

Hayden also was praised for his direction of stage works such as The Front Page, and productions starring Eva Marie Saint of Summer and Smoke, Desire Under the Elms, Candida, The Fatal Weakness, Duet for One, Death of a Salesman and The Country Girl, for which he won the Drama-Logue Award. He also produced and directed Awake and Sing, The Oldest Living Graduate, Dark at the Top of the Stairs, Winesburg, Ohio and Sunrise in My Pocket. At the Odyssey Theatre in Los Angeles, Hayden directed The Sunshine Boys, Fences, Desire Under the Elms and, his most recent production in 2015, Sunset Baby. Hayden and Saint also performed together in both Love Letters and in Willa Cather’s On the Divide.

A member of the Actors Studio in New York, Hayden became an active member of Actors Studio West in Los Angeles where he frequently facilitated the Playwrights/Directors Unit. A guild supporter, Hayden was an original member of the Directors Guild of America’s first Creative Rights Committee, collaborating on the creation of the “Bill of Creative Rights.” Throughout his career, Hayden remained an outspoken advocate for directors’ rights. Hayden also was passionately involved with the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s.

In addition to his wife, Hayden is survived by his children Laurette and Darrell, and grandchildren Eli, Tyler, Molly and Stella.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that gifts be made in Hayden’s memory to UCLA’s Jonsson Cancer Center Foundation.


HAYDEN, Jeffrey
Born: 10/15/1926, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 12/24/2016, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Jeffrey Hayden’s westerns – producer, director:
Redigo (TV) – 1963 [director]
Shane (TV) – 1966 [director]
Cowboy in Africa (TV) – 1967 [director]
Dundee and the Culhane (TV) – 1967 [director]
The Virginian (TV) – 1971 [director]
Alias Smith and Jones (TV) – 1971-1973 [director]
How the West Was Won (TV) – 1976-1977 [producer]

RIP Francine York

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Francine York, Alluring Actress of the 1960s, Dies at 80

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
1/6/2017

She was memorable as a villainess on TV's 'Batman' and in such films as 'Bedtime Story,''Cannon for Cordoba' and 'The Doll Squad.'

Francine York, the statuesque actress who showed off her sexuality as The Bookworm's moll on Batman and in such films as It's Only Money, Cannon for Cordoba and The Doll Squad, has died. She was 80.

York died Friday morning at Valley Presbyterian Hospital in Van Nuys, Calif., after a battle with cancer, her friend, television producer Pepper Jay, told The Hollywood Reporter.

A native of Aurora, Minn., York appeared in scores of TV shows, from Rescue 8 in 1959 to The Mindy Project in 2015. She played a seductive Venus de Milo on an episode of Bewitched, a bake-off contestant on The Odd Couple and an ex-prostitute/blackmailer on Days of Our Lives. She also appeared in five different roles on Burke's Law, a series renown for featuring gorgeous guest stars.

York was memorable as the willowy Lydia Limpet, the henchwoman of The Bookworm (Roddy McDowall), in a first-season installment of ABC's Batman in 1966. She uses a boring book to lure Robin to sleep and gets to ride in the Batmobile.

"Everybody wanted to work on Batman and ride in that car," she told Tom Lisanti in his book Fantasy Femmes of Sixties Cinema.

She played a sexpot for Jerry Lewis in It's Only Money (1962), and In Cannon for Cordoba (1970), starring George Peppard, she did a nude scene and a belly dance. The Doll Squad (1973) saw her fronting a team of gorgeous female assassins aiming to stop a megalomaniac (Michael Ansara) from destroying the world. Many see that movie as the precursor to Charlie's Angels.

York's other notable film appearances include Bedtime Story (1964), opposite Marlon Brando and David Niven), and Elvis Presley's Tickle Me (1965). She turned in a well-received performance as Marilyn Monroe in Marilyn: Alive and Behind Bars (1992) and played Nicolas Cage's mother-in-law in The Family Man (2000).

In 1961, York portrayed a princess opposite her childhood idol Shirley Temple in Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid for the NBC kids anthology series Shirley Temple's Storybook.

At age 17, the 5-foot-8 York was runner-up in the Miss Minnesota beauty pageant. She toured the U.S. as a model and landed in Northern California, where she finished second in the Miss San Francisco contest.

York was working as a showgirl at the popular Moulin Rouge nightclub on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood when she decided to pursue acting. She studied under Jeff Corey and was spotted by a producer who cast her as a duplicitous magazine editor in her film debut, Secret File: Hollywood (1962).

York attracted the attention of Lewis, who put her in It's Only Money (1962) and then in small roles in his films The Nutty Professor (1963), The Patsy (1964), The Disorderly Orderly (1964), The Family Jewels (1965) and Cracking Up (1983), in which she played a 15th century noblewoman.

Her film résumé also includes the 1965 sci-fi releases Mutiny From Outer Space and, playing the world's first female astronaut, Space Probe Taurus.

York also appeared on TV in Route 66, Hawaiian Eye, 77 Sunset Strip, My Favorite Martian, Death Valley Days, Perry Mason, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., Lost in Space, Green Acres, The Wild, Wild West, Ironside, I Dream of Jeannie, Love, American Style, Mannix, Mission: Impossible, Kojak, Columbo, Matlock, The King of Queens and Hot in Cleveland.

York also was known as a gourmet cook and fitness and nutrition expert who hosted lavish parties in Hollywood. She was the decade-long companion of director Vincent Sherman (The Young Philadelphians) until his death in 2006.

She was polishing off her autobiography at the time of her death.


YORK, Francine (Francine Yerich)
Born: 8/26/1936, Aurora, Minnesota, U.S.A.
Died: 1/6/2017, Van Nuys, California, U.S.A.

Francine York’s westerns – actress:
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1964, 1965 (Lillie Langtry)
Ride to Hangman’s Tree – 1967 (Connie)
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1968 (Dr. Sara Gibson)
Cannon for Cordoba – 1970 (Sophia)
Hec Ramey (TV) – 1973 (Kate Harris)
Dirty Sally (TV) – 1974 (Lauraleen)
Barbary Coast (TV) – 1975 (Brandy)
The Quest (TV) – 1976 (Jenny)
Miracle at Sage Creek – 2005 (Mrs. Stanley)

RIP Angelina Gatell

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Angelina Gatell is deceased

Adoma: Artistas de doblaje de Madrid
1/7/2017

We are saddened to have to inform you about the death of Angelina Gatell, who was much more than an actress and director of dubbing: actress, scriptwriter, translator, poet, essayist and fighter. And know that your profile of Facebook was the most lucid and brilliant of all you have ever visited.

All our love in these hard moments for our partners Mar and Alvaro.

Rest in peace.

Whoever wants to, can say goodbye to Angelina and accompany her family and friends at the La Paz de Tres Cantos funeral parlor, room 3, starting tomorrow, January 8, at 10 H.


GATELL Angelina (Angelina Gatell Comas)
Born:  6/8/1925, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Died: 1/7/2017, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

Angelina Gatell’s western – voice actress:
Sting of the West – 1973 [Spanish voice of María Vico]

RIP Jackie Skarvellis

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Obituary Jackie Skarvellis

The Stage
By Michael Quinn
December 14, 2016

Born in Cardiff and a graduate of the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama, Jackie Skarvellis was a committed champion, as an actor and playwright, of London’s fringe theatre for more than 40 years.

She began her career at the Little Theatre, St Martin’s Lane in William Gerhardie’s lyrical comedy Donna Quixote in 1968. Already a prolific writer (in 1972 The Stage noted a tally of “over 30 plays”), her own early work was cut from an altogether different cloth, as the title of 1973’s Wankers – an attack on critics – illustrated.

She forged close relationships with (and also managed) a number of London fringe companies, including Playroom Theatre, the Canal Cafe Theatre and Pentameters, while also maintaining a busy freelance schedule.

In 1980, she understudied Dorothy Tutin as Madame Dubarry (a part she played) in John Peacock’s Reflections and, similarly, Joanna David’s Varya in The Cherry Orchard in 1983, both at the Theatre Royal Haymarket.

In 1981, Skarvellis performed as French chanteuse Piaf in Vanessa Drucker’s eponymous play at the New Inn Theatre, Ealing and appeared as Jocasta in Sophocles’ King Oedipus with Theatr Clwyd.

She was seen in Hisashi Inoue’s Kabuki-influenced Kesho (Bloomsbury Theatre, 1988), Steven Berkoff’s Greek (1993) and East (1994) at the White Bear, Kennington and Martin Sherman’s Messiah (Hackney Empire, 1999).

Later roles included Omega (Euripides’ Hecuba, Theatro Technis, 2003), Queen Victoria (The Pirates of Penzance, English National Opera, 2007) and Bette (Aristophanes’ The Frogs, Theatro Technis, 2013).

Productions of her own plays included The Hall of the Falling Ushers (1981), Eat Your Heart Out Joan Crawford (1983) and Batter (1985). Her one-man play, James Dean Is Dead! (Long Live James Dean), was published by Oberon Books in 2010.

In 2009, she received a best fringe auteur award from Fringe Report.

Jackie Skarvellis was born on December 26, 1942 and died on October 26, aged 73.


SKARVELLIS, Jackie (Jacqueline Skarvellis)
Born: 12/26/1942, Cardiff, South Wales, U.K.
Died: 10/26/2016, U.K.

Jackie Skarvellis’ western – actress:
Sky Bandits – 1986 (waitress)

RIP Buddy Bergman

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The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
1/9/2017

He was one of Verve Records' first employees, collaborated with Ella Fitzgerald and Bing Crosby and orchestrated the film version of 'The Pajama Game.'

Buddy Bregman, a conductor, arranger and composer who worked with the likes of Ella Fitzgerald, Ethel Merman and Bing Crosby and on films including The Pajama Game, has died. He was 86.

Bregman died on Sunday evening in Los Angeles after a long battle with Alzheimer’s disease, his family announced. Survivors include his daughter Tracey Bregman, who plays Lauren Fenmore on the CBS soap opera The Young and the Restless.

His uncle was the legendary Broadway songwriter Jule Styne.

For a long stretch starting in the mid-1950s, Bregman was one of the busiest music men in Hollywood, with his work covering records, television and the movies.

For The Pajama Game (1957), an adaptation of the Broadway smash hit, Bregman did the arrangements for all the famous Bob Fosse numbers in the Stanley Donen-George Abbott classic, including "Steam Heat,""Once-a-Year-Day" and "Hernando's Hideaway."

The Chicago native also scored and orchestrated other films including Five Guns West (1955), The Wild Party (1956), The Delicate Delinquent (1957) and Born Reckless (1958).

Following a tenure as one of the first employees at Verve Records, Buddy became the musical director of NBC’s The Eddie Fisher Show in the late 1950s.

He also served as Merman’s personal arranger; produced TV specials/documentaries that featured Crosby, Judy Garland, Shirley Bassey and Mel Torme; worked as a producer on Jonathan Winters' CBS variety show; and directed several TV movies.

Bregman had become fascinated with music as a youngster and said he could orchestrate by the age of 11.

"At 14, I heard my first chart being played by a rehearsal band in Chicago led by the about-to-be famous [Stan Kenton trombonist] Bill Russo. Bad was the understatement of my work, but I did hear what was wrong — it was every single thing," he once said in a interview with Bruce Kimmel.

Bregman attended UCLA and did the orchestration and conducted for a few Lieber & Stoller songs, including "Bazoom I Need Your Lovin," recorded by The Cheers. It made the charts in 1954, and that prompted him to leave school.

At age 25, Bregman was hired by the legendary jazz impresario Norman Granz as the A&R head of a new label called Verve. There, he worked as an arranger for such artists as Crosby, Rosemary Clooney and Fred Astaire.

Bregman arranged two of the albums in Fitzgerald’s song-book project as well as several of her early Verve singles. He also produced the 1956 album Bing Sings Whilst Bregman Swings at Verve and did four albums with Sammy Davis Jr. (He also acted alongside Davis in the play The Desperate Hours.)

Bregman was the first American director hired for the BBC, where he produced and directed 1965's An Evening With Ethel Merman and ran its specials department. In 1966, he was appointed head of light entertainment for the weekday ITV company Redifussion London.

In addition to his daughter, survivors include his son Barry; his former wife, actress Suzanne Lloyd; his grandsons Austin, Landon, Bernie and Adam; his great-grandson Ace; and his brother Bobby and sister-in-law Ellisa.


BERGMAN, Buddy
Born: 7/9/1930, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died: 1/8/2017, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Buddy Bergman’s westerns – orchestrator, composer:
Red Garters – 1954 [orchestrator]
Five Guns West – 1955 [composer]
Born Reckless – 1958 [composer]
Valley of the Redwoods – 1960 [composer]

RIP Manlio Rocchetti

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Buongiorno Miami
By Silvia Bulckaen
January 11, 207

Florida: goodbye to Manlio Rocchetti, the makeup artist Oscar winner

It 'happened last night. At his home in Florida Manlio Rocchetti died, the makeup artist of the stars. A professional with great ability, a talent that led him in 1980 to win the Emmy award for his make-up work on Lonesome Dove. But it was only the beginning. His fame in fact was destined to grow inexorably. In 1990 came the turning point. Manlio Rocchetti won the Academy Award for Best Makeup for the film "Driving Miss Daisy". For Driving Miss Daisy he deserved a statuette, which rewarded a life entirely devoted to hair and makeup. Manlio Rocchetti is in fact the son of artists. Since 1874 his family, with the laboratory Rocchetti wigs in Rome, provided wigs and hairpieces to the entertainment industry, first at the theater, after that for television and film. Manlius was born in 1943 in this very vibrant and stimulating environment. And naturally he entered the world of show business which was in his veins and would become his destiny.

Make-up artist which was directed by his uncle, who urges him to debut with the film Green by Renato Castellani. And from there begins a meteoric rise, which led him to be the make-up artist most coveted by film and television. Manlio Rocchetti worked with directors of the caliber of Sergio Leone, Federico Fellini, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Roberto Rossellini, Ettore Scola, Brian De Palma, Martin Scorsese.

Nearly all movie stars have passed through his hands: Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Sean Connery, George Clooney, Leonardo DiCaprio, Jack Nicholson, Kevin Costner, Matt Damon, Charlize Theron, Morgan Freeman, Winona Ryder, Anthony Hopkins , Liza Minnelli, Keanu Reeves. Among the Italians were Marcello Mastroianni, Monica Vitti, Claudia Cardinale and Michele Placido. Since 2011 the great experience of Manlio Rocchetti has been promoted and valued by the National Film of Bologna, at which the make-up artist was a professor of makeup and special effects. "I still cannot believe it, it seems impossible to me" continues to repeat Thomas Paolicchi, make-up artist and student of Manlio Rocchetti - he was an extraordinary teacher, the great talent ... I owe him my training to be a make-up artist." But it is the memory of  a man, that moves the student. "He was a simple man, who recommended us to remain humble, even in a job like this that leads to contact with the gilded world of success. I am honored to have had him as a teacher. "


ROCCHETTI, Manlio
Born: 1943, Rome, Lazio, Italy
Died: 1/10/2017, Miami, Florida, U.S.A.

Manlio Rocchetti’s westerns – make-up:
Lonesome Dove (TV) – 1989
Geronimo an American Legend – 1993
The Ballad of Lucky Whipple (TV) – 2001
Brokeback Mountain - 2005

RIP Tony Rosato

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Tony Rosato, veteran of SCTV and Saturday Night Live, dead at 62

Toronto comic actor who endured a stint in jail and battled a mental disorder died on Monday evening, according to his girlfriend’s post on Facebook.

The Toronto Star
By Laura Beeston
January 11, 2017

Toronto comic actor Tony Rosato, veteran of SCTV, Saturday Night Live and more, has died.

The 62-year-old’s death on the evening of Jan. 10 was confirmed Tuesday by his longtime agent Larry Goldhar, who said that an autopsy is planned, but the death apparently resulted from a heart attack.

“It’s heartbreaking,” Goldhar told the Star. “He is truly one of the gentlest people I have ever met. He was just such a kind person.”

Goldhar recalled that Rosato was “grateful all the time” and that it was a pleasure to work for him. “I can tell you, every time I saw him he would tell me, ‘I love you.’ Like, every single time. You know? That’s the kind of person he was.”

Rosato was best known for his regular performances on stage at Second City, SCTV, Saturday NightLive, Street Legal and had a recurring character on Night Heat. He would later become a lead on the series Diamonds and was “busy all the time,” Goldhar recalled.

The Naples-born actor joined Second City’s Toronto cast in 1979, and came to be recognized for his zany characters — in his youth, he was once pegged to be the next John Belushi.

Movie stardom never came, but he was working steadily on locally filmed TV projects through the 1980s. Occasional TV roles and voice-over work in animation followed in the 1990s and beyond but his career stalled when, in 2005, the actor suffered a serious bout of mental illness and ended up languishing in the maximum-security Quinte Detention Centre in Napanee.

The Star later reported that Rosato had been in jail for two years awaiting trial on a harassment charge when he was, in fact, suffering from Capgras syndrome, a rare condition in which the sufferer believes those close to him have been replaced by substitutes.

He believed that his ex-wife Leah and their infant daughter had been replaced by impostors in the spring of 2005, and he began to frantically call the police, who charged him with harassing Leah.

The actor’s lawyer, Dan Brodsky, blamed mistakes by prosecutors, judges and others in the justice system for the long wait behind bars, telling the Star that Rosato spent more time in custody pending trial “than any other convicted prisoner in Canada has ever spent on the same charges.”

Fellow actor Dan Aykroyd and a band of Second City performers came to Rosato’s trial. He was not convicted; instead he was handed a conditional discharge and ordered to reside at a psychiatric facility until deemed fit to leave. He was out on probation by early 2009.

His demons vanquished by antipsychotic medication, Rosato spoke to the Star later that year of his gratitude for the “miracle” of being free and having “the privilege . . . to start over again.”

Rosato then made a comeback to performing after his time in custody; Goldhar credits work in radio for sustaining him in his early days of freedom. Work on TV and in small films eventually returned; however, the ordeal eventually broke apart his marriage.

It was Rosato’s girlfriend, Tanya Moore, who discovered he had died, according to a post on the actor’s Facebook account.

“Tony, my beautiful, loving and precious boyfriend passed away last night,” she posted on Facebook. “I will love you forever and as you said so many times to me with all my heart.”

No details about his funeral were available as of Tuesday afternoon.


ROSATO, Tony
Born: 12/26/1954, Naples, Campania, Italy
Died: 1/10/2017, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Tony Rosato’s western – actor:
Lonesome Dove (TV) – 1994 (prisoner)

RIP Albert J. Nader

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Questar video house founder Albert J. Nader dead at 84

Chicago Sun Times
By Maureen O’Donnell
1/7/2017

They might not have been “La La Land” or “Rogue One,” but the movies Albert J. Nader wrote, produced or packaged bloomed into a library totaling more than 5,000 titles, many of them hardy perennials of the video world now available through online streaming.

Mr. Nader, who grew up near Wrigley Field and lived on Lake Shore Drive, died Dec. 22 from a suspected aortic aneurysm or heart attack on a family vacation in Palm Springs, California, said his wife, Gemma Allen Nader. He was 84.

He founded Questar, a Michigan Avenue company that produces, acquires and distributes video programming under the slogan “Everything in the World Worth Watching.”
ADVERTISING
inRead invented by Teads

From nature to history to baseball, Questar offered videos and then DVDs, Blu-Rays and streaming video with appeal to both mass audiences and niche markets, like “Where Jesus Walked,” “My Classic Car,” “Best of Minnie Pearl” and “The Original Flash Gordon.”

Then, there are its animal features: “First Flight: A Mother Hummingbird’s Story,” “Running of the Bulls” (Live from Pamplona Spain) and “All God’s Creatures. . . .There When You Need Them!”

Its hipper fare includes chef Anthony Bourdain’s Food Network show, “A Cook’s Tour.”

After visiting the Palm Springs Air Museum, he added great air battles to Questar’s catalogue.

“He saw opportunity everywhere,” Gemma Allen Nader said.

Thanks to multiple generations of TV watchers and armchair travelers, what Mr. Nader packaged never stopped selling. Some of Questar’s most popular videos feature Victor Borge, Andy Williams and Bobby Darin, as well as great railway vacations, famous baseball stadiums and national parks. Its Civil War videos combined historic re-enactments with new travel footage.

“He caught the wave of home video and then DVDs and turned it into one of the largest producers of independent, special-interest programming,” said Dennis Burkhart, an Oregon filmmaker who has worked for National Geographic.

After Mr. Nader contacted him with an idea about filming national parks, they collaborated on 30 one-hour programs.

71nziz7syol-_sy445_Mr. Nader, who was active with Moody Church, also developed video programming with inspirational and religious themes. A program he helped create for the former Pax TV channel, “It’s a Miracle,” with host Richard Thomas, is still in distribution.

Questar gained its footing with gorgeous photography and voiceovers from stars including Shari Belafonte, Peter Coyote, Jeff Daniels, Richard Kiley, Joe Mantegna, Martin Sheen and James Whitmore.

Mr. Nader guided Questar through changing technology, his wife said. Its videos are available on Hulu, Roku, Amazon and Netflix.

His company also produced programs for the Discovery Channel, the History Channel, the Travel Channel and PBS, and it streams educational programming to classrooms on math, ocean life and historical figures such as Sacagawea.

Mr. Nader grew up on the North Side, attended Blaine grade school and played baseball and basketball for Lake View High School. His Assyrian father, Joshua, immigrated from Iran and married Olga, a Chicago woman of Assyrian heritage. The father operated a tailor shop near the Biograph Theater. Mr. Nader graduated from DePaul University and served in the Marines as a first lieutenant, according to his wife.

Earlier in his career, he worked for Sears, Montgomery Ward and Rand McNally, where he helped develop films, globes, maps and textbooks for libraries and schools. He also co-founded an ad agency, Nader-Lief.

In 1978, he started Questar, though his wife said naysayers told him, “What are you thinking? Everyone’s got a TV.”

“He said, ‘No, I think videos are something people want to collect,’ ” she said.

Mr. Nader wrote scripts or assembled teams to put together travel movies. Later, the company expanded its catalogue to history and baseball.

When he compiled videos on stars, their families and estate lawyers “would entrust things to Albert,” his wife said. “Albert was very charismatic and 100 percent trustworthy, and his Chicago roots were part of that. He’d start out with a cold call and end up with a relationship.”

And he understood a basic fact of his business, she said: “You have to be a really faithful royalty-payer.”

The Naders met in 1995 after he lost his first wife, Barbara, to breast cancer.

Questar will continue, she said: “He had a great team in place.”

Mr. Nader is also survived by a daughter Page Weissmann, son Jason Nader, stepdaughter Bridget Wiley and stepson Sean Hagerty. A memorial service — featuring video about Mr. Nader — is planned for 10 a.m. Jan. 14 at Moody Church, 1635 N. LaSalle. His six grandchildren plan to wear blue blazers and white pocket squares — his signature lo


NADER, Albert J.
Born: 8/1/1932, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died: 12/22/2016, Palm Springs, California, U.S.A.

Albert J. Nader’s westerns – producer:
America’s Greatest Indian Leaders – 1994
Sacagawea - 2003

RIP John Siddall

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John Siddall, art director on the Pink Panther series from the 1970s onwards, died in July 15, 2016.

Siddall started as an art director on the 1950s ‘William Tell’ TV series and entered the film industry as a draughtsman working on “Sink the Bismarck!”, “Lolita” and “The L-Shaped Room”, “The Black Torment” and “2001: A Space Odyssey”. As an assistant art director or art director he worked on “Madhouse”, “11 Harrowhouse”, “The Dogs of War”, “Champions” “Shanghai Surprise” and one Euro-western “Sky Bandits” (1986).


SIDDALL, John
Born: 19??, U.K.
Died: 7/15/2016, Bushey, Hertfordshire, England, U.K.

John Siddall's western - art director:
Sky Bandits - 1986

RIP Marietta Elliott

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RIP Marietta Elliott

Los Angeles Times
January 13, 2017

September 19, 1925 - December 2, 2016 Marietta Elliott Hayes passed away quietly, surrounded by family and friends. Born in New York City, she was the only child of Clyde E. Elliott, a motion picture director known for Frank Buck's "Bring 'Em Back Alive" and "Devil Tiger"; and Marie Flavia Elliott, an actress born in Poland. As a child, Marietta traveled throughout Asia as her father filmed adventures for Paramount, eventually settling down in Los Angeles and attending Hollywood High school. While there, Marietta excelled as a fencer studying with the great Ralph Faukner at the old Falcon studios. She gave up the blade to study ballet. She began her dancing career as one of the renowned Earl Carroll Girls, known for their exceptional beauty, then segued into several productions done by the Los Angeles Light Opera. She danced on many musical variety Television shows and in feature films such as "Showboat", "Singing in the Rain", "An American in Paris" and "Gunsmoke".

While under contract at Fox, she met the novelist and screenwriter Alfred Hayes, whom she later married. When she retired from dance, she went on to have a long career as a real estate agent and broker throughout Los Angeles. A wonderful wife, mother, grandmother, and tireless defender of all animals great and small, she was as tough as she was gentle. A true wild Irish rose. She will be greatly missed. Marietta is survived by her two sons, Alfred Elliott and Alan Clyde, their families, granddaughter Asia Bleu, and an extended network of friends and loved ones. The family has requested to honor Marietta, any donations be made in her memory to Actors and Others for Animals. 11523 Burbank Blvd, North Hollywood, CA 91601.


ELLIOTT, Marietta
Born: 9/19/1925, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 12/2/2016, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Marietta Elliott’s westerns – actress:
Annie Get Yout Gun – 1950 (cowgirl)
The Half-Breed – 1952 (Can-Can girl)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1953 (saloon dancer)

RIP Paula Dell

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RIP Paula Dell

Los Angeles Times
January 12, 2017

November 15, 1926 - January 9, 2017 Paula Adele Unger Boelsems, (stage name Paula Dell) 90 passed away at her long time Santa Monica home with her son by her side. Born in Longmont, Colorado to Ralph and Clayton Unger. Her family moved to California in 1935 where she became the Queen of Muscle Beach, a Hollywood stunt woman, an international acrobatic judge, a school teacher, a graduate of Santa Monica High School, Stephens College and USC. Predeceased in death by husband Hal, a lifetime Santa Monica resident, survived by son Randy ( K. C.) and granddaughters Emily & Gracie Boelsems, sister Rosalie Cloud, 6 nieces, 4 nephews and their families. Memorial Services January 25, 2017, 11 AM Grace Lutheran Church, 4427 Overland, Culver City, CA 90230. Followed by Celebration of Life in the church fellowship hall. Interment 2 PM Woodlawn Cemetry, 1847 14th Street, Santa Monica, CA 90404 Casual dress and Beachwear are appropriate. In lieu of flowers, please make donations in her name, to Grace Lutheran Church of Culver City.


DELL, Paula (Paula Adele Unger)
Born: 11/15/1926, Longmont, Colorado, U.S.A.
Died: 1/9/2017, Santa Monica, California, U.S.A.

Paula Dell’s western – stuntwoman:
Blazing Saddles - 1974

RIP Horacio Guarany

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Horacio Guarany dies at the age of 91

The popular singer, owner of an extensive artistic trajectory, died of a cardiac arrest in his city, Luján

Horacio Guarany passed away to the 91 years.  This was confirmed by his manager, Ruben López, in social networks.

 "With deep pain I have to confirm that our teacher has gone to other celestial festivals . Thank you Guara for everything ," he wrote.  Then, in communication with Clarín.com, he reported that his departure had been " quiet , at peace and at home with his people", and that the reasons for his death had to do with "things of the age, added to the Diseases that accumulate over the years. "

 He also informed that by decision of his relatives there would be no public wake and that, at least for the moment, the intention is to do something more intimate .  On that plane, Kike Teruel, musician of Los Nocheros, confirmed that only a ceremony would be held for his relatives and close friends in Lujan , where Guarany had his house.

A little less than a year ago, the manager and representative of the singer and writer had revealed that Guarany suffered from chronic heart failure . "It is not yet to work, so we had to suspend the Fisherman and Jesus Maria and at the end of the month have a control in The Favaloro, "he had said last January.

In September of 2015, the singer was hospitalized of urgency in the Foundation Favaloro after a decompensation provoked by a heart failure.  "Horacio is a 90-year-old person who is very demanding and only being of that age makes it difficult for doctors to work with tranquility and wisdom," Lopez explained at the time.

Horacio Guarany was born on May 15, 1925 in Las Garzas, Santa Fe province, with the name of Eraclio Catalín Rodríguez .  At age 17 he settled in Buenos Aires with the project to succeed as a singer.  At the beginning of his career he played folklore, but also tangos and boleros, while earning his living as a stevedore in the port.

 At the age of 32 he published the first of the 57 albums that includes the career of one of the most popular folk artists;  A trajectory that had its apogee in the years '60 and '70, with its messages of protest and its vindication of the lives of the peones, the peasants and the swallow workers.

 He won 15 Gold Records and a dozen Platinum Records , and in 2005 won a Gardel Award.  Already in 1985 he had been honored with a Platinum Konex as the greatest male singer of folklore.

Clarification on the health of Horacio Guarany

 The singer remained active practically until a year ago.  In January of 2015 had acted in the Festival of Jesus Maria , although in 2016, for reasons of health, suspended its recital.


GUARRANY, Horacio (Eraclio Catalín Rodríguez Cereijo)
Born: 5/15/1925, Santa Fe, Argentina
Died: 1/13/2017, Luján, Argentina

Horacio Guarrany’s western – actor:
The Return of Martin Fiero - 1974

RIP William Peter Blatty

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'Exorcist' author William Peter Blatty has died

USA Today
January 13, 2017

NEW YORK  — Novelist and filmmaker William Peter Blatty, a former Jesuit school valedictorian who conjured a tale of demonic possession and gave millions the fright of their lives with the best-selling novel and Oscar-winning movie The Exorcist, has died. He was 89.

Blatty died Thursday at a hospital in Bethesda, Md., where he lived, his widow, Julie Alicia Blatty, told the Associated Press. The cause of death was multiple myeloma, a form of blood cancer, she said.

Inspired by an incident in a Washington suburb that Blatty had read about while in college, The Exorcist was published in 1971, followed two years later by the film of the same name. Blatty's story of a 12-year-old-girl inhabited by a satanic force spent more than a year on The New York Times fiction best-seller list and eventually sold more than 10 million copies.

It reached a far wider audience through the movie version, directed by William Friedkin, produced and written by Blatty and starring Linda Blair as the young, bedeviled Regan.

"RIP William Peter Blatty, who wrote the great horror novel of our time," Stephen King tweeted Friday. "So long, Old Bill."

Even those who thought they had seen everything had never seen anything like the R-rated The Exorcist and its assault of vomit, blood, rotting teeth, ghastly eyes and whirlwind head-spinning — courtesy of makeup and special effects maestro Dick Smith. Fans didn't care that Vincent Canby of The New York Times found it a "chunk of elegant occultist claptrap," or that the set burned down during production. They stood for hours in freezing weather for the winter release and kept coming even as the movie, with its omnipresent soundtrack theme, Mike Oldfield's chilly, tingly Tubular Bells, cast its own disturbing spell.

From around the world came reports of fainting, puking, epileptic fits, audience members charging the screen and waving rosary beads, and, in England, a boy committing murder and blaming The Exorcist. The Rev. Billy Graham would allege that the film's very celluloid was evil.

"I was standing in the back of a theater in New York at the first public press screening of the film, too nervous to sit down," Blatty told IGN.com in 2000. "And along came a woman who got up in about the fifth or sixth row. A young woman, who started walking up the aisle, slowly at first. She had her hand to her head. And then I could see her lips moving. She got close enough, and I could hear her murmuring, 'Jesus, Jesus, Jesus.'"

Named the scariest movie of all time by Entertainment Weekly, The Exorcist topped $400 million worldwide at the box office, among the highest at the time for an R-rated picture. Oscar voters also offered rare respect for a horror film: The Exorcist was nominated for 10 Academy Awards and received two, for best sound and Blatty's screenplay.

"When I was writing the novel I thought of it as a super-natural detective story, and to this day I cannot recall having a conscious intention to terrifying anybody, which you may take, I suppose, as an admission of failure on an almost stupefying scale," Blatty told The Huffington Post in 2011.


BLATTY, William Peter
Born: 1/7/1928, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 1/12/2017, Bethesda,Maryland, U.S.A.

William Peter Blatty’s western – screenwriter:
The Great Bank Robbery - 1969

RIP Dick Gautier

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Dick Gautier, Hymie the Robot on 'Get Smart,' Dies at 85

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
1/14/2017

The actor got his start as a stand-up comic and received a Tony nomination for playing the Elvis-like singer in the original production of 'Bye, Bye Birdie.'

Dick Gautier, who starred on Broadway in the original production of Bye, Bye Birdie and then famously played Hymie the Robot on the sitcom Get Smart, has died. He was 85.

Gautier died Friday night at an assisted living facility in Arcadia, Calif., after a long illness, his daughter Denise told The Hollywood Reporter.

Gautier, who started his career as a stand-up comic, received a Tony nomination in 1961 for playing Conrad Birdie, the character based on Elvis Presley, in the memorable, original 1960 production of Bye, Bye Birdie, starring Dick Van Dyke.

The handsome actor appeared as Hymie on just six episodes of Get Smart over four seasons, yet he was one of the spy spoof's most popular characters.

Hymie, who was incredibly strong and had a supercomputer for a brain and wires and components in a compartment in his chest, originally was built for the evil organization KAOS but came over to CONTROL (the good guys) because Max (Don Adams) was the first one to treat him like a real person.

"When I met with the powers that be, I told them that when I was a kid in Canada I saw a man in a storefront window acting like a manikin to drum up business," he said in 2013. "If you could make him smile, you’d get $10. So, I tried, but not by acting crazy — I merely imitated his movements. I didn’t win the $10, but I got the part of Hymie, which was a little better."

Eventually, Max picked Hymie to be his best man for his wedding with Agent 86 (Barbara Feldon), and Gautier returned as the robot for a 1989 Get Smart TV movie.

In 1975, Gautier starred as Robin Hood on the short-lived ABC series When Things Were Rotten, co-created by Mel Brooks, who, of course, had launched Get Smart as well.

Gautier was a veteran stand-up performer and working at The Blue Angel nightclub in New York as an opener for headliner and singer Margaret Whiting when he was spotted by Bye, Bye Birdie director Gower Champion and Charles Strouse, who did the music for the production.

"They asked me to read for this thing," he recalled in a 2014 interview with Kliph Nesteroff. "I was a little put off because I didn't like rock and roll. Not at that point. I said, 'I don't think it's for me. I like Jerome Kern and George Gershwin.'

"They said, 'Will you at least come in and audition?' I went in and they said, 'Would you sing an Elvis song?' I said, 'I don't know any Elvis songs.' So they just played some blues and I ad-libbed and I guess they liked it. Couple months later they called.

Gautier told his agent, "'It's not for me. I feel very inhibited and very intimidated by this whole Elvis thing because it's not me.' He said, 'It's a satire.' Then I went, 'Ohhhhh.' When he said that, then I got it. Suddenly it was OK. I got the part, got a Tony nomination, and my career was in a whole different place. I didn't work nightclubs anymore."

Gautier was born on Oct. 30, 1931, in Culver City, and his father, a French-Canadian, worked as a grip at MGM. He spent some time growing up in Montreal and sang and did a comedy act with a band that wound up on a local TV show in L.A.

He served in the U.S. Navy, where he booked acts, including a young Johnny Mathis. When he got out of the service in San Francisco, he hung out at the hungry i nightclub and decided to try stand-up. He and the legendary Mort Sahl were among the first comics to be booked at the club, which would go on to become a renowned breeding ground for stand-ups.

The charming Gautier played clubs all over the country and for a time toured with the folk act Kingston Trio. When he was looking for material for an act in Las Vegas, he paid Jay Leno and David Letterman $100 an hour to write jokes for him, he said in the chat with Nesteroff.

Gautier appeared in a guest stint on The Patty Duke Show and was in the Joshua Logan-directed Ensign Pulver (1964), and he had regular roles on the short-lived series Mr. Terrific and Here We Go Again, starring Larry Hagman. He also played an amorous sportscaster on an episode The Mary Tyler Moore Show.

He co-wrote the 1968 pot movie Maryjane (1968) with future Hollywood Squares host Peter Marshall and the 1972 film Wild in the Sky (1972), starring Georg Stanford Brown.

Gautier also appeared in such films as Divorce American Style (1967) — playing Van Dyke's attorney — Fun With Dick and Jane (1977) and Billy Jack Goes to Washington (1977) and on TV shows like Charlie's Angels, The Love Boat, Murder, She Wrote, Silk Stalkings and Nip/Tuck.

He also was a guest on many game shows, including Tattletales, on which he appeared with his then-wife, actress Barbara Stuart.

Starting in the mid-1980s, Gautier worked often as a voice actor on such shows as Galtar and the Golden Lance, G.I. Joe, The Transformers, The New Yogi Bear Show and The Addams Family.

An accomplished artist, Gautier also wrote and illustrated several books about drawing and how to become a cartoonist.

"Cartooning has been my hobby, my therapy, a delicious pastime and on occasion my salvation — it got me through some tight financial spots when I was a struggling actor," he wrote in the introduction to his 1989 book, The Creative Cartoonist.

In addition to Denise, survivors include his wife Tess, daughter Chris and son Rand.


GAUTIER, Dick (Richard Gautier)
Born: 10/30/1931, Culver City, California, U.S.A.
Died: 1/13/2017, Arcadia, California, U.S.A.

Dick Gautier’s western – actor:
Zorro and Son (TV) – 1983 (El Excellente)
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