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RIP Solvi Stubing

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Solvi Stubing has died, a celebrity in the commercials for Peroni beer.

Republica
July 3, 2017

The actress Solvi Stubing has died in Rome today.  She was 76 years old, and had been sick for a long time. Famous for beer advertising in the seventies ("Call me Peroni, I'll be your beer"), she had also appeared in numerous movies on horseback between the 1960s and the 1970s.  The funeral will be held tomorrow in Rome, in the church of the Delfi Games Square.

Solvi Stubing was born in Berlin on January 19, 1941 in a district that later became East Germany, and had reached popularity in Italy on TV and the big screen. Among the films, “Io la conoscevo bene” by Antonio Pietrangeli (1965) “Made in Italy” by Nanni Loy (1965), Dino Risi's “L'ombrellone” (1965), Umberto Lenzi's “La banda del Gobbo” (1977), “L'ingorgo” by Luigi's Comencini (1978).

In the 1980s she had conducted a series of television headlines dedicated to cinema broadcast on syndication and local TV (Cinerama, Magic Cinema, Cinemondo, My Cinema, Cine Rubrica, Ciak Turns, Grand Sipario).  And she owned a share of Isvema, the company that produced, among other things, many of the rotogravures she conducted.

She also appeared in Playman and Playboy, then left the show world to try a career in politics.  Member of the Commission of European Women at the time of Craxi President of the Council in 2004 had been nominated to the European Parliament in the National Alliance lists.


STUBING, Solvi
Born: 1/19/1941, Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Died: 7/3/2017, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Solvi Stubing’s westerns – actress:
Sheriff Won't Shoot - 1965 (Rita)
Garringo - 1969 (Julie)
Blindman – 1971 (bride)

RIP Paolo Villaggio

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Actor Paolo Villaggio, of Fantozzi fame, dies in Rome

Independent
July 3, 2017

Italian actor Paolo Villaggio, famous for the Fantozzi character he created, has died in Rome this morning.

He was 84.

Villaggio was born in Genoa in 1932 and throughout his long career interpreted various roles such as Professor Kranz and Gioandomenico Fracchia.

But he will be always remembered for the role of Ragioniere Ugo Fantozzi, a character who was always at the wrong end of the stick and faced numerous humiliations.

Villaggio is also the author of eight books related to the Fantozzi character.

He had also taken part in films directed by Federico Fellini, Marco Ferreri, Lina Wertmüller, Ermanno Olmi and Mario Monicelli.

Paolo Villaggio was born with a twin brother, Piero. His father was Ettore Villaggio (1905–1992), originally from Palermo. His mother, Maria, originally from Venice, was a language teacher.

Villaggio attended the classic school "Liceo ginnasio Andrea Doria" and initially studied Law, but did not complete his degree. His jobs included being a clerk for the Italsider steel works, which inspired his Fantozzi character. Villaggio was hired for the TV programme Quelli della domenica (Those guys of Sunday), in which Fantozzi made his first appearance, later also introducing his other characters, the aggressive "Professor Kranz" and the hypocritical "Giandomenico Fracchia".

After his television experience, Villaggio started writing short stories for the magazines L'Espresso and l'Europeo, featuring Fantozzi, a man with a weak character, dogged by misfortune. In 1971 the publishing house Rizzoli released the book Fantozzi, a collection of these stories, which sold over a million copies. The first book led to his 1975 appearance in the film Fantozzi. The film's success led to a sequel, Il secondo tragico Fantozzi, and later to six other films featuring the character.


VILLAGGIO, Paolo
Born: 12/30/1932, Genoa, Liguria, Italy
Died: 7/3/2017, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Paolo Villagio’s westerns – actor:
The Four of the Pater Noster – 1969 (Eddy)
What Am I Doing in the Middle of the Revolution – 1972 (Don Albino Moncalieri)
Don’t Touch the White Woman! – 1973 (CIA Agent/Professor Pinkerton)

RIP Skip Homeier

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Memory Alpha
July 2, 2017

George Vincent "Skip" Homeier (5 October 1930 – 25 June 2017; age 86) was an actor who played two different characters in two episodes of Star Trek: The Original Series: Deputy Führer Melakon in "Patterns of Force" and Dr. Sevrin in "The Way to Eden". He filmed his scenes for "Patterns of Force" on Monday 4 December 1967 and Tuesday 5 December 1967 at Desilu Stage 10, and his scenes for "The Way to Eden" between Friday 22 November 1968 and Friday 29 November 1968 at Stage 9 and Stage 10. He was also called in for a makeup and costume test on Thursday 21 November 1968 at Stage 9.

Outside of Star Trek, Homeier co-starred in such films as The Gunfighter (one of his many Westerns) starring Gregory Peck, The Ghost and Mr. Chicken starring Don Knotts, and the original acclaimed made-for-TV movie Helter Skelter, in which he portrayed Judge Charles H. Older, before whom Charles Manson and others were tried. Most of his credits were made up of Westerns and war films.

Playing Doctor Sevrin was not Homeier's first experience with facial prosthetics in a genre show: he wore them in a 1964 episode of The Outer Limits directed by Gerd Oswald called "Expanding Human" (which featured James Doohan, Keith Andes, Jason Wingreen and Peter Duryea).

He also appeared in numerous other television series, including Voyage To The Bottom of The Sea, Lost In Space, Rawhide, Perry Mason, Bonanza, Mission: Impossible, Fantasy Island (which starred Ricardo Montalban), and Quincy, M. E. (which starred Garry Walberg and Robert Ito).

Homeier died on June 25, 2017 at the age of 86.


HOMEIER, Skip (George Vincent Homeier)
Born: 10/5/1930, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died: 6/25/2017, Indian Wells, California, U.S.A.

Skip Homeier’s westerns – actor:
Boy’s Ranch – 1946 (Skippy)
The Big Cat – 1949 (Jim Hawks)
The Gunfighter – 1950 (Hunt Bromley)
The Last Posse - 1953 (Art Romer)
Dawn at Socorro - 1954 (Buddy Ferris)
The Lone Gun - 1954 (Cass Downing)
At Gunpoint - 1955 (Bob Dennis)
The Road to Denver - 1955 (Sam Mayhew)
Ten Wanted Men - 1955 (Howie Stewart)
The Burning Hills - 1956 (Jack Sutton)
Dakota Incident - 1956 (Frank Banner)
Stranger at My Door - 1956 (Clay Anderson)
Thunder Over Arizona - 1956 (Tim Mallory)
The Tall T – 1957 (Billy Jack)
Zane Grey theater (TV) – 1975 (Cleve Roarke)
Day of the Badman - 1958 (Howard Hayes)
Jefferson Drum (TV) – 1958 (Kading)
Wanted: Dead or Alive (TV) – 1958 (Ted Jenks)
Plunderers of Painted Flats - 1959 (Joe Martin)
The Deputy (TV) – 1959 (Johnny Shanks)
Lawman (TV) – 1959 (Ches Ryan)
Rawhide (TV) – 1959, 1961, 1965 (Lucky Markley, Jess Clayton, Wichita Kid)
Wichita Town (TV) – 1959 (Murdock)
Comanche Station - 1960 (Frank)
Outlaws (TV) - 1960 (Gabe Cutter)
The Rifleman (TV) – 1960 (Brud Evans)
Frontier Circus (TV) 1962 (Colonel Rastatt)
Johnny Shiloh (TV) – 1963 (Captain MacPherson)
Showdown – 1963 (Caslon)
The Virginian (TV) – 1963, 1964, 1969 (Jed Carter, Sgt. Danny Bohannon, Joe Cleary, Callan)
Bullet for a Badman - 1964 (Pink)
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1964, 1965 (Doc Holliday, Rev. Ben Darniell)
Wagon Train (TV) – 1964 (George Simpson)
Branded (TV) – 1965 (Luke Garrett)
Shane (TV) – 1966 (Augie)
Bonanza (TV) – 1966 (Jack Geller)
Iron Horse (TV) – 1966 (Marshal Gault)
The Loner (TV) – 1966 (Paul Philby)
Starbird and Sweet William - 1973 (
How the West Was Won (TV) – 1979 (Minister Boyle)
The Wild Wild West Revisited (TV) – 1979 (Joseph)
Quell and Co. (TV) - 1982 (Alexander Kirk)

RIP Manlio De Angelis

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Manlio De Angelis has died, he was the voice of Joe Pesci

Spettacolo
July 3, 2017

Manlio De Angelis died in Rome at the age of 82. One of the finest dubbers of the old school, a descendant of a historic family, he was the Italian voice of Joe Pesci, Roy Scheider, Alan Arkin, and Richard Dreyfuss. His son Vittorio, who was also a dubber was Joey's voice on TV’s "Friends", died prematurely in 2015.

He will be remembered most of all for having dubbed actor Joe Pesci in the golden age of the Italian-American actor. She was the voice of cult characters in films of the last thirty years: the rickety Tommy in "Those Good Guys" (1990) and Nicky Santoro in "Casino" (1995), both Martin Scorsese's films, "Bronx" and "The Good Shepherd" (2006) by Robert De Niro, "Jimmy Hollywood" (1994) by Barry Levinson.


De ANGELIS, Manlio
Born: 1/9/1935, Rome, Lazio, Italy
Died: 7/3/2017, Olbia, Sardinia, Italy

Manlio De Angelis’s westerns – voice dubber:
Blood for a Silver Dollar – 1965 [Italian voice of Benito Stefanelli]
The Trmaplers – 1965 [Italian voice of Romano Puppo]
The Avenger – 1966 [Italian voice of Ivan Scratuglia]
Django – 1966 [Italian voice of Luciano Rossi]
The Big Gundown – 1967 [Italian voice of Lorenzo Robledo]
A Stranger in Town – 1967 [Italian voice of Aldo Berti]
Death Sentence – 1968 [Italian voice of Luciano Rossi]
Once Upon a Time in the West – 1968 [Italian voice of unknown actor]
A Sky Full of Stars for a Roof – 1968 [Italian voice of Franco Balducci]
Revenge for Revenge – 1968 [Italian voice of Mauro Mannatrizio]
Viva Django! – 1968 [Italian voice of Luciano Rossi]
The Forgotten Pistolero – 1969 [Italin voice of unknown actor]
The Stranger’s Gundown – 1969 [Italian voice of Artemio Antonini]
Drop Them or I'll Shoot – 1969 [Italian voice of Lucio Rosato]
Have a Nice Funeral – 1970 [Italian voice of unknown actor]
Sabata the Killer – 1970 [Italian voice of Peter Lee Lawrence]
Showdown for a Badman – 1971 [Italian voice of Dennis Colt]
Trinity is STILL My Name – 1971 [Italian voice of Tony Casale]
Man of the East – 1973 [Italian voice of Jean Louis]
Shanghai Joe – 1973 [Italian voice of Tito Garcia]
Keoma – 1976 [Italian voice of Joshua Sinclair]

RIP Ji-Tu Cumbuka

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WE REMEMBER Ji-Tu Cumbuka: Veteran Actor Who Starred in ‘Roots’ Dies at 77

Ji-Tu means "giant" in Swahili and Cumbuka means "to remember”.

eurweb
July 5, 2017

Ji-Tu Cumbuka, who gained critical acclaim as the “Wrestler” in Alex Haley’s 1977 award winning TV miniseries “Roots” and also for the ‘Toothless Gambler’ in the classic “Harlem Nights” movie passed away at 2:40 a.m. ET on July 4th in Atlanta, Georgia. He was 77 years old.

The world has lost a truly great actor and warrior of all times,” his family said about the “A Giant to Remember” author who spent more than 40 years in Hollywood playing opposite numerous stars including Eddie Murphy and Sophia Loren.

Ji-Tu was a good friend of beloved late actor Richard Pryor and appeared with him in three films: “Harlem Nights,” “Moving,” and “Brewster’s Millions.”

The movie that secured his fame was the 1968 Jules Dassin directed “Uptight” starring Raymond St. Jacques and Ruby Dee. This would be the first time he would appear on the big screen with his younger brother, Robert Holyfield.

Other notable movies and TV shows he appeared in: “Blacula,” “Mandingo,” “Bound for Glory,” “A Man Called Sloan,” “Dr. Black, Mr. Hyde,” “Sanford and Son,” “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, “The A Team,” Knots Landing” and ” Young Daniel Boone.”

He was proud to have been an Army paratrooper in the Vietnam War.

The Alabama native’s name was given to him by his grandmother. Ji-Tu means “giant” in Swahili and Cumbuka means “to remember.”

In the last years of his life Ji-Tu founded Help Somebody Foundation Ministries a not-for-profit outreach program that assists people with addictions and social challenges to help return them to the community as productive citizens.

All inquiries regarding funeral arrangements or donations (in lieu of flowers) to Ji Tu’s foundation, Help Somebody Foundation Ministries, may be sent to: agianttoremember@yahoo.com.


CUMBUKA, Ji-Tu
Born: 3/4/1942, Montgomery County, Alabama, U.S.A.
Died: 7/4/2017, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A.

Ji-Tu Cumbuka’s westerns – actor:
Daniel Boone (TV) – 1970 (Lucas Hunter)
Kung Fu (TV) – 1975 (Omar)
Young Daniel Boone (TV) – 1977 (Hawk)
Walker, Texas Ranger (TV) – 1994 (Dexter)

RIP Nick Scoggin

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Daily Democrat
July 7, 2017

Nicky, aka "Nick", passed away Thursday, June 29, peacefully, in the home of his brother and sister-in-law, Russell and Cathy Scoggin of Esparto, at the age of 69 from Congestive Heart Failure. Nick is preceded in death by his father and mother the late L.R. and Evelyn Eloise Cunningham-Scoggin and his late, sister, Leslie "Susie" Scoggin of Coeur'd'Alene, ID, and leaves behind many family members. Nick spent the last 36 years residing in the Bay Area, living in the City of Sausalito. He worked as an Aikido Instructor for the City of Aikido having obtained 6th degree Black Belt in Aikido in addition to various other forms of Martial Arts. Nick was an accomplished actor, having performed in several made for television and movies such as: The Long Road Home, Streets of San Francisco, Murder in the First, Copy Cats, Jack, The Matrix Reloaded, and many others too numerous to mention. He worked construction labor from time to time while pursuing his acting career. Nicks artisti

Nick resided in an apartment owned by a wonderful dear friend and landlord, Nancy Drew, also of Sausalito. Nick had many he considered his family during his years spent in Sausalito. His family wishes to "thank those who helped Nick through-out his life, especially during his illness this year". Your care and support of Nick will always be a tribute to his life and character of those he sought out as "true friends and comrades".

Nick requested no services. His family asks any donations to be made in his honor to the City of Aikido, Dojo.
c and creative nature brought about a love for singing, sculpture, theater, dance, a love of drawing, and most recently Nick began to play guitar.


SCOGGIN, Nick
Born: 2/1/1948, U.S.A.
Died: 6/29/2017, Esparto, California, U.S.A.

Nick Scoggin’s westerns – actor:
Love Comes Softly (TV) – 2003 (Reverend Johnson)
The Fenceline – 1009 (Ayden Paulson)

RIP David Lewis Yewdall

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Rest in Peace: Sound Editor David Yewdall

Deadline
By Jonathan Barkan
July 6, 2017

It is with a very heavy heart that we report the passing of David Yewdall, who died Tuesday, July 4th, after a battle with pancreatic cancer. He was 66 years old.

Yewdall was the sound editor on films such as Escape from New York, The Thing, Twilight Zone: The Movie, and The Fifth Element. He also worked on Return of the Living Dead III, Halloween 5, A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors, and Evil Dead II.

Steve Lee, a friend and fellow sound man, told Deadline, “The Thing is arguably his masterpiece. All those frightening creature sounds he created are just fantastic, and just as scary today as they were when the film opened 35 years ago — almost to the week.

On top of his work in the sound world, Yewdall was also a teacher and an author whose book Practical Art of Motion Picture Sound was released in 1999 and has had four editions since then. Yewdall was working on the fifth edition at the time of his death.

We send our deepest condolences to David’s family and friends during this very sad time.


YEWDALL, David Lewis
Born: 10/30/1950, U.S.A.
Died: 7/4/2017, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, U.S.A.

David Lewis Yewdall’s westerns – supervisor sound editor, sound effects designer:
Lone Wolf McQuade – 1983 (sound effects designer)
Fran & Jesse – 1995 (supervisor sound editor)

RIP Elsa Matinelli

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Italian actress Elsa Martinelli dead aged 82

The Le Rouge Et Le Noir star passed away in Rome today

Mirror
By Emmeline Saunders
July 8, 2017

She passed away in Rome after a long and glamorous career as a star of the silver screen.

Elsa was best known for her roles in Le Rouge Et Le Noir in 1954 and for The Indian Fighter the following year, in which she starred opposite Kirk Douglas.

He reportedly claimed to have spotted her on a magazine cover and hired her for his production company, Bryna Productions.

The star was born Elisa Tia in Grosseto, Tuscany, before moving to Rome with her family.

She was discovered in 1953 by fashion designer Robert Capucci, who introduced her to the world of fashion.

Elsa became a model and began playing small roles in films.

In 1956, Elsa won the Silver Bear for Best Actress as the 6th Berlin International Film Festival for playing the title role in Mario Monicelli's Donatella.

She went on to star in many more films, including 1693's The VIPs and 1968's Candy, as he divided her time between Europe and the United Stated throughout the 50s and 60s.

Elsa's last English-speaking role was as Carla the Agent in 1992's Once Upon A Crime, and her most recent appearance was in the 2006 European TV series, Orgoglio, as the Duchessa di Monteforte.

Elsa was married twice, first to Count Franco Mancinelli Scotti di San Vito, and secondly to Paris Match photographer and furniture designer, Willy Rizzo, in 1968.

She has a daughter from her first marriage, Cristiana Mancinelli, who was born in 1958 and is also an actress.


MARTINELLI, Elsa(Elsa Tia)
Born: 1/30/1935, Grosseto, Tuscany, Italy
Died: 7/8/2017, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Elsa Martinelli’s westerns – actress:
The Indian Fighter – 1955 (Onahti)
Belle Starr Story – 1968 (Myra Belle Shirley/Belle Starr)

RIP Paquita Rico

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Actress and singer Paquita Rico dies at age 87

El Mundo
July 9, 2017

According to a family spokesman, death has been due to "complications derived from old age"

The actress and singer Francisca Rico Martínez, Paquita Rico, died today in Seville, her native city, at 87 years of age, due to natural causes, sources close to the family have confirmed.

Paquita Rico has died shortly before 20:00 hours, and her body is in a funeral parlor in the capital of Seville, where friends and acquaintances have begun to arrive to give her a last goodbye.

She was born on October 13, 1929 in Seville in a modest family, where the father earned his living as a traveling merchant, and as he remembered, he sold in many occasions the typical seafood cucuruchos.

Since she was a little girl, she became interested in copla and, as a young woman, she enrolled in Adelita Domingo's singing and dancing school.

She participated in the Spanish ballet of Montemar with the actresses and singers Carmen Sevilla and Ana Esmeralda until a scout, José Brageli, took her to the company of Pepe Pinto, with whom she toured in Spain.

The year 1948 was the year of her film debut with the film director Florián Rey Brindis to Manolete and two years later she starred in the film Debla, the gypsy virgin, with the postwar gallant Alfredo Mayo.

With this feature film she won the Best Performance at the Cannes Film Festival, which she popularly enshrined, while the producer Cesáreo González took his services exclusively.

Not long afteward she began touring America and Europe, as well as Spain and while it strengthened her career as a singer, she gained special respect for her cinema work.

Among her films, she emphasized her role as Queen of the Mercedes in Where You Go, Alfonso XII (1958), who, along with the actor Vicente Parra, was a commercial success.

Two years later, Paquita Rico coincided with the actresses and singers Lola Flores and Carmen Sevilla in the film El balcón de la luna, an atypical production of the time, since it united three stars that habitually carried out films known for their individual appearances.

At that time also she appeared in the films El duende de Jerez and Malvaloca in 1954, Lavanderas de Portugal (1957), Tierra Brutal, Historia de una noche and La viudita naviera in 1962 and Las otoñales (1966).

In 1960 Paquita Rico married the bullfighter Juan Ordoñez, 'Juan de la Palma', a marriage that ended in tragedy after the suicide of her husband. Eight years later, she married Canarian businessman Guillermo Arsenio Arocha Fernández, who died in 2002.

Throughout her long film career she touched both drama and comedy genres. Of this last belongs the Cid Cabreador (1983), under the direction of Angelino Fons, in which it incarnated to Dona Urraca.

The famous composers Moraleda, Ramón Cabrera, Juan Solano and Quintero, León and Quiroga composed for her.

And among her ample repertoire, are Luis I of Bavaria, El beso, Adiós marinero, which premiered in the film El balcon de la luna (1962), passing through Malvaloca or Do not go the dove.

Also she entered the world of the theater, obtaining successes like Marriage of Blood (1962) in the Madrid theater  of Fine Arts under the direction of Jose Tamayo.

Her last theatrical contribution took place at the beginning of August of 1988, with the title Of Madrid to the Sky, of the Company of Popular Theater Don Ramón de la Cruz.

Due to her popularity she was also was asked to collaborate with Encarna Sánchez on her radio program Directamente Encarna during the 1980s, and participated in the TV series Hostal Royal Manzanares (1977) with Lina Morgan and Manos a la obra (1998).

In the late 1990's she retired from the show and returned to her native Seville.


RICO, Paquita (Francisca Rico Martínez)
Born: 10/13/1929, Triana, Seville, Andalusia, Spain
Died: 7/9/2017, Seville, Andalusia, Spain

Paquita Rico’s western - actress
Savage Guns – 1962 (Franchea)

RIP A'leisha Brevard

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TransGriot
By Monica Roberts
July 8, 2017

Maybe the question of gender is just that simple; a need for everything to match..feeling you're complete as the person you've always known yourself to be.  Christine Jorgensen, indeed all the early sisters and brothers, paved the way.  The community has been blessed with an opportunity for making wonderful choices. -Aleshia Brevard, November 14, 2008  

On Saturday July 1 we lost a trans pioneer and elder in actress, model, director and writer Aleshia Brevard at age 79 in Santa Cruz, CA.   She peacefully passed away in her sleep.

As of this writing, no word on when a memorial service is happening for this trans pioneer and icon.

She was one of the initial group of people to undergo SRS in the United States, having done so under the care of Harry Benjamin in 1962. .

Aleshia was born in the Appalachian mountains of eastern Tennessee on December 9, 1937 but grew up on a farm in rural middle Tennessee.  She headed west to California immediately after her high school graduation and found work at the renowned Finocchio's female impersonation club in San Francisco under the stage name Lee Shaw.

She quickly became a headliner at the club, where she worked for three years until she left to head to Los Angeles for her gender confirmation surgery.

After SRS and a year of recovery in Tennessee, she enrolled in and graduated from Middle Tennessee State with a BA in Arts in 1965, later earned a Masters of Arts degree from Marshall University in 1976, and taught theater as a university professor.

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Her first acting role was in the 1969 movie The Love God, and Aleshia not only went on to act in seven additional films, but perform in Broadway shows and appear on televisions shows like The Partridge Family, Night Gallery, and the ABC soap One Life To Live.

Because of the transition protocols of the time, she basically lived her non disclosed trans life outside the trans community until her 2001 autobiography The Woman I Was NOT Born To Be -A Transsexual Journey was released and revealed to the community and the world that she was a girl like us.  She wrote a sequel to that memoir in 2010 entitled The Woman I Was Born To Be. 

She also wrote a novel entitled Bilbo's Bend in 2013 in addition to five stage plays, and directed numerous theater productions.

You can check out Monika Kowalska's five part interview with Aleshia here which discusses her amazing life in five parts

I also have to close out this post about her with a comment from her AlesiaBrevard.com Aleshia Speaks section of her site that she wrote on November 14, 2008.

    'Why not choose to be proud?  By respecting ourselves we'll ensure that future generations will have no need for that 'T' before their name,they'll need no hyphen, there'll be no stigma. Please allow this crone with a green thumb one final analogy--we're all weeds growin' in a  patch.  Some are brambles, some dandelions, some may even be marijuana - but we're weeds each and every one --plain ol' garden variety men and women  

Rest in power and peace, Aleshia.  I wish I'd gotten the opportunity to meet you before you departed this Earth.   I do admire you tremendously for living your life well and being a trailblazing role model to the current generation of trans actresses who are trying to follow in your pioneering Hollywood and Broadway footsteps

You've earned your rest my sister, and all who were blessed to get to know you will miss you.


BREVARD, A’leisha (Alfred Brevard Crenshaw)
Born: 12/9/1937, Trousdale, Tennessee, U.S.A.
Died: 7/1/2017, Santa Cruz, California, U.S.A.

A’leisha Brevard’s western – actress:
The Female Bunch – 1971 (Sadie)

RIP John Karlsen

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John Karlsen, sometimes credited as Charles John Karlsen or John Karlson died in Auckland, New Zealand on July 5, 2017. He was 97. Born on October 20, 1919 in Wellington, New Zealand, he was very active in the Italian cinema between 1958 and 2003 in roles as a character actor. He appeared with directors such directors as Louis Malle, Joseph Losey, Roman Polanski, Federico Fellini, Alessandro Blasetti, Dino Risi and Roberto Benigni. John has appeared in over 80 films and television appearances.

Karlsen played the University Dean in Sergio Sollima’s 1967 film “Face to Face” starring Tomás Milian, Gian Maria Volonte and William Berger.

He may be best remembered for his role of the Evil Duke in “Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure” in 1989.

Karlsen’s last role was in “The Order” (2003) as Eden's Manservant.


KARLSEN, John
Born: 10/20/1919, Wellington, New Zealand
Died:7/5/2017, Auckland, New Zealand

John Karlsen’s western – actor:
Face to Face – 1967 (university dean)

RIP Fikret Hakan

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Renowned Turkish actor Fikret Hakan passes away at 83

Hurriyet Daily News
July 11, 2017

Fikret Hakan, a renowned Turkish stage and screen actor, has died aged 83 in Istanbul on July 11. 
    
The actor’s management said the Hakan had passed away in hospital where he had been receiving treatment for lung cancer.       

Born in the northwestern region of Balıkesir in 1934, Bumin Gaffar Çıtanak -- Hakan's birth name -- was also a journalist and broadcaster.       

He began his career in 1950 as an actor for the Ses (Voice) Theatre.       

After three years, Hakan had his first screen role in the 1953 film Köprüalti Çocukları (Kids Under The Bridge).       
Performing in hundreds of soap operas and starring in close to 200 motion pictures, he also directed four films, three of which written by himself, some of which were award-winners.     

He starred in films including 1962’s Yilanlarin Ocu (Revenge of the Snakes ), Keşanlı Ali Destanı (The Ballad of Ali of Keshan) in 1964 and 1966’s Ölüm Tarlasi (The Death Field). 
     
Hakan also wrote books such as Tellak Ali (Masseur Ali) in 1953, Hamal’ın Uşaklari (The Butlers of Hamal) in 1997, and collections of poetry, including Ince Müzikli Otobüsler (The Busses with Light Music) and İmbikci Duvar (The Imbibing Wall).     


HAKAN, Fikret (Bumin Gaffar Citanak)
Born: 4/23/1934, Balikesir, Turkey
Died: 7/11/2017, Istanbul, Turkey

Fikret Hakan’s westerns – actor:
Devlerin Intikami – 1967
Ölümsüzler 1969 (Emiliano)

RIP Susan Cummings

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Twilight Zone Museum
July 11, 2017

Actress Susan Cummings (born Susanne Gerda Tafel July 10, 1930) at the time of her death on December 3, 2016 she was living in Sun Lakes, Arizona. A popular film and TV actress of the 1950s and 1960s, she appeared in several television shows and films. From 1958 to 1959, she portrayed Georgia, proprietress of the Golden Nugget Saloon, in the syndicated Western television series Union Pacific.

She made two guest appearances on Perry Mason — one as Lois Fenton in the title role in the 1957 episode, "The Case of the Fan Dancer's Horse", and as Margaret Swain in the 1959 episode, "The Case of the Lame Canary". She appeared as Patty in the iconic 1962 episode of The Twilight Zone, "To Serve Man", in which she deciphers an alien manifesto called To Serve Man and yells "It's a cookbook!" in a vain attempt to save the lead character. Cummings was at one time married to actor Keith Larson from1953 to 1960 and was the mother of Keith Larsen Jr. and Eric Larsen.


CUMMINGS, Susan (Susanne Gerda Tofel)
Born: 7/10/1930, Bavaria, Germany
Died: 12/3/2017. Sun Lakes, Arizona, U.S.A.

Susan Cummings’ westerns – actress:
The Adventures of Kit Carson (TV) – 1954, 1955
Secret of Treasure Mountain – 1956 (Tawana)
The Sheriff of Cochise (TV) – 1956 (Gloria)
Tomahawk Trail – 1957 (Ellen Carter)
Utah Blaine – 1957 (Angie Kinyon)
Man from God's Country - 1958 (Mary Jo Ellis)
Bat Masterson (TV) – 1958, 1959, 1960 (Valorie Mitchell, Lili Napoleon, Rona Glyn)
Union Pacific (TV) – 1958-1959 (Georgia)
The Rough Riders (TV) - 1959 (Rita Renee)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1960 (Stella Carney)
Johnny Ringo (TV) – 1960 (Lil Blanchard)
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (TV) – 1960 (Sadie Roberts)
The Man from Blackhawk (TV) 1960 (Glory Vestal)
Overland Trail (TV) – 1960 (Nitro Nell)
Riverboat (TV) – 1960 (Tekla Kronen)
Shotgun Slade (TV) – 1960
Laramie (TV) – 1961 (Holly Matthews
Cheyenne (TV) (Helen Ransom)

RIP Wally Burr

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TFW 2005
By Sol Fury
July 10, 2017

It is with sadness that we report Walter “Wally” Burr, the voice director for the original Generation 1 Transformers cartoon and the 1986 Transformers the Movie, passed away yesterday, 9 July, 2017.

If you watched a cartoon in the 1980s, chances are, Wally Burr would have been the voice director, guiding the performances of the various actors to bring the show to life. His credits included not only the original Transformers, but G.I. Joe, Jem, Visionaries, Inspector Gadget, Dino Riders, Captain Caveman, Dynomutt the Dog Wonder, and the 1980s Spider-Man. His work, however, also saw him occasionally take to the other side of the recording booth, providing additional voices for some of the shows he directed; in the case of Transformers, he voiced Kremzeek, as well as Jazz, Ratchet, Seaspray, and Thundercracker in individual episodes when their regular voice actors were unavailable.

Many of us will remember Wally Burr for his work; for his reputation for perfection which has doubtless contributed to the timeless nature of many of the shows that he worked on, or simply for the happy memories of watching the shows that he was credited on working on. Some of us might remember having the pleasure of meeting him at his convention appearances.

All of us here at TFW2005 send our thoughts and best wishes to Mr Burr’s family during this time. And we come together with one voice to say, “thank you, sir, for making our childhoods so enjoyable”.


BURR, Wally (Walter Story Burr)
Born: 6/2/1924, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A
Died: 7/9/2017, U.S.A.

Wally Burr’s western – director:
The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn – 1968

RIP David Armstrong

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Memory Alpha

David Thomas "Dave" Armstrong (16 October 1924 – 13 May 2016; age 91) was the actor who played Kartan in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Operation -- Annihilate!". He filmed his scene on Wednesday 15 February 1967 at the TRW Space and Defense Park in Redondo Beach, California.

Armstrong made an uncredited appearance in the 1954 film A Star Is Born, as guest star Richard Webb. He also appeared as a reporter in the 1977 film, New York, New York. That film also featured TNG/DS9 guest actor Dick Miller. His television appearances include guest spots on Mission: Impossible, The Invaders, The Twilight Zone, and The Man from U.N.C.L.E..


ARMSTRONG, David (David Thomas Armstrong)
Born: 10/16/1924, U.S.A.
Died: 5/13/2016, U.S.A.

Daivd Armstrong’s westerns – actor:
The Restless Gun (TV) – 1957 (Zack)
Wagon Train (TV) – 1957 (Indian brave)
Heller in Pink Tights – 1960 (Achilles)
Sugarfoot (TV) – 1960 (Red Cane)
Kung Fu (TV) – 1973 (gate guard)
Blazing Saddles – 1974 (Pressman)

RIP Tom Rowe

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Vancouver Sun
July 12, 2017

A highly skilled film and television producer and mentor to many, Tom died peacefully while napping in his chair on Gambier Island, overlooking Howe Sound, after a day of puttering around his cabin, followed by a swim in the sea with his dog Lucky, surrounded by orcas. Predeceased by his much adored mother Yvonne (nee Makinson) and father Reginald Rowe and dear nephew James Rowe. Devoted to and loved beyond measure by his wife Vicki Gabereau and daughter Katherine Makaroff (Chris); grandsons Elliott, Avery; siblings Michael (Donna), Vicki (Daryl), Jane (Lloyd), Jim (Michelle); nieces Cooper, Maxine, Cameron, Shayna and Erin; nephews William, Robert, Corey, Bill, Tom; stepchildren Morgan Gabereau (Stephanie) and Eve Gabereau (Craig) and grandchildren Lucas, Elodie, and Blaise. Interment at Capilano View Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Lions Gate Hospital Foundation. Enthusiastic wake and monster rally for industry and friends to be held in the fall.


ROWE, Tom (Thomas John Rowe)
Born: 2/19/1955, Canada
Died: 7/2/2017, Gambler Island, British Columbia, Canada

Tom Rowe’s western – assistant director:
The Grey Fox - 1982

RIP Robert Lesko

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Los Angeles Times
July 13, 2017

BUSINESS EXECUTIVE TURNED PROFESSIONAL ACTOR Robert Lesko was a true Renaissance man who had an accomplished business career, ending as a corporate officer at AT&T, and then pursued his passion as an actor in Los Angeles. As a young man, Lesko was a member of the University of Notre Dame's legendary football team. He was a man who was as comfortable in the boardroom of a Fortune 500 company as he was performing on stage or on a football or rugby team. Lesko received a BS degree in Mechanical Engineering in 1964 from the University of Notre Dame and an MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania in 1967. He was a classically trained actor who received his MFA from the Catholic University of America in 1979. Surrounded by his loving family, Lesko peacefully passed away on June 26, 2017 at the Huntington Hospital in Pasadena, California after a valiant battle with a rare lung disease. He was 74. Lesko's signature artistic achievement was authoring and performing his one-man show about Benjamin Franklin titled "B. Franklin," which the "Huffington Post," described as "superb" and "sublime.""Working with Bob on his triumphant drama project was joyous. He was ever diligent, cooperative, imaginative, tireless, curious, and brimming with bonhomie," said director Bjorn Johnson. According to veteran actor Eric Pierpoint, "It was an absolutely riveting night of theatre. For years Bob would talk about his fascination with Ben Franklin and the American Revolution. His painstaking research and meticulous attention to detail paid off in a truly authentic and brilliant performance of his play." Lesko was a television, film and stage actor who was a long-time member of Actors' Equity and the Screen Actors' Guild. His television and film credits include "The Young and the Restless" (CBS), "The Toy Maker,""Who Flew,""TV Virus,""The Passion According to John,""One Problem Leads to Another,""Bearskin" (PBS), and "Countdown To Looking Glass" (HBO). On Los Angeles stages he appeared in "Room Service,""Fernando," and "Both" at The Open Fist Theatre, the operetta "Charlotte: Life? Or Theatre" at the Met Theatre, and "The Heiress,""Iphigenia in Aulis,""The Circle," and an evening of one-act comedies with Circus Theatricals (now the New American Theatre). He appeared in numerous productions of the original musical "Life Begins Again." At Arena Stage in Washington, DC he appeared in "Undiscovered Country,""Galileo," and "After The Fall." Lesko also performed in "Richard III" at the Folger Shakespeare Theater and in "The Miser" and "The Tenth Man" at the Olney Theater Center. He performed in other regional theater productions in the Washington, DC area, including "Flesheaters,""Macbeth,""The Seagull,""A Man For All Seasons,""Stephan D.,""Antony and Cleopatra," and "King Lear." Residing for many years in Georgetown in Washington, DC, Robert Lesko also had a noteworthy and long career in business as a management consultant. As a corporate officer at AT&T, Lesko led AT&T's global consulting and network integration business unit. Earlier, he was a partner with Deloitte & Touche, where he led its banking consulting practice in North America, specializing in large-scale operational and information systems. He worked with clients such as Citibank, Norwest Bank (now Wells Fargo), Prudential Life Insurance, Liberty Mutual, Universal Card, the Irish National Bank, National Australia Bank, and Lloyds Bank. He was a member of several corporate boards, including AT&T Solutions, Inc., AvantGo Inc., and Software A&E, Inc. Lesko also served on charitable boards at OXFAM-AMERICA, VSA arts (formerly Very Special Arts), and the Friends of the Hartke Theatre at Catholic University. He was a visiting faculty member in the graduate business programs at George Washington University and American University. For the past thirteen years he resided in Pasadena, California, with his wife Kathleen, a research scholar and writer at the Huntington Library, whose career had been at Georgetown University and the Folger Shakespeare Library. He was born on September 24, 1942 to Joseph and Irene Lesko, and was raised in Homestead, Pennsylvania, where his family operated a funeral home across the street from the historic Homestead Steel Works on the Monongahela River. Lesko is survived by his wife Kathleen, his sons Mark and Bob, their wives Karen and Sarah, his sisters Catherine and Mary Jo, his brothers Jim and Tim, and his three grandsons Risley, Dylan, and Justin. Lesko was preceded in death by his beloved brother Richard. A funeral service is scheduled for Friday, July 21, 2017 at 11:00 a.m. at Holy Family Church, 1501 Fremont Avenue, in South Pasadena, California, with a reception to follow. Msgr. Clement J. Connolly along with concelebrants Fr. Charles L. Currie, SJ, and Fr. Mark Nowel, OP, will officiate the ceremony. All are welcome to attend and celebrate Lesko's life. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to the retirement community for those in the entertainment industry at the Motion Picture & Television Fund, Wasserman Campus, Suite 220, 23388 Mulholland Drive, Woodland Hills, California 91364. Note that your donation is in tribute of Robert Lesko.


LESKO, Robert (Robert Joseph Lesko)
Born: 9/24/1942, Homestead, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Died: 6/26/2017, Pasadena, California, U.S.A.

Robert Lesko’s western – actor:
Bearskin: or The Man Who Didn’t Wash for Seven Years – 1984 (Innkeeper)

RIP Héctor Lechuga

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Mexican comedian Hector Lechuga dies

Univision
By: María de Jesús Candedo
July 13, 2017


A victim of a cardiac arrest at the age of 92, Héctor Lechuga died today at his home in Veracruz.
Héctor Lechuga was born in Orizaba, Veracruz, on April 18, 1929. He was an actor, comedian, political-humorist commentator and collaborator of different radio stations throughout his career.

The summit of his success was achieved with the program 'Ensalada de Locos', originally broadcast between 1970 and 1973. The program counted on sketches and white humor jokes where he shared credits with Manuel 'El Loco' Váldes and Alejandro Suárez .

Among his films are: Buenas noches Año Nuevo (1964), El dengue del amor (1965), La muerte es puntual (1964), Detectives o ladrones (1966), Réquiem por un canalla (1967) and Masajista de señoras(1973), Which is a classic in Mexican cinema of yesteryear.

The actor had deteriorated as a result of Alzheimer's, but that did not stop him from continuing to think about his audience. He died accompanied by his family as a result of a heart attack in his home in Veracruz.

It will be veiled at the funeral home Gayosso de Félix Cuevas, starting at 6 pm Mexico City time. Rest in peace the last comical politician of Mexico.


LECHUGA, Héctor
Born: 4/18/1929, Orizaba, Veracruz, Mexico
Died: 7/13/2017, Xalapa, Veracruz, Mexico

Héctor Lechuga’s westerns - actor:
Rayo veloz (TV) – 1951-1954
The Braggarts – 1960 (Nieto del chaparro)
Los resbalosos – 1960
Bang bang… al hoyo - 1971

RIP Martin Landau

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Martin Landau, Oscar Winner for 'Ed Wood,' Dies at 89

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
7/16/2017

His résumé includes 'Mission: Impossible,''Tucker: The Man and His Dream' and 'North by Northwest.' It does not, however, include 'Star Trek.'

Martin Landau, the all-purpose actor who showcased his versatility as a master of disguise on the Mission: Impossible TV series and as a broken-down Bela Lugosi in his Oscar-winning performance in Ed Wood, has died. He was 89.

Landau, who shot to fame by playing a homosexual henchman in Alfred Hitchcock’s 1959 classic North by Northwest, died Saturday of "unexpected complications" after a brief stay at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, his rep confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter.

After he quit CBS’ Mission: Impossible after three seasons in 1969 because of a contract dispute, Landau’s career was on the rocks until he was picked by Francis Ford Coppola to play Abe Karatz, the business partner of visionary automaker Preston Tucker (Jeff Bridges), in Tucker: The Man and His Dream (1988).

Landau received a best supporting actor nomination for that performance, then backed it up the following year with another nom for starring as Judah Rosenthal, an ophthalmologist who has his mistress (Angelica Huston) killed, in Woody Allen’s Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989).

Landau lost out on Oscar night to Kevin Kline and Denzel Washington, respectively, in those years but finally prevailed for his larger-than-life portrayal of horror-movie legend Lugosi in the biopic Ed Wood (1994), directed by Tim Burton.

Landau also starred as Commander John Koenig on the 1970s science-fiction series Space: 1999 opposite his Mission: Impossible co-star Barbara Bain, his wife from 1957 until their divorce in 1993.

A former newspaper cartoonist, Landau turned down the role of Mr. Spock on the NBC series Star Trek, which went to Leonard Nimoy (who later effectively replaced Landau on Mission: Impossible after Trek was canceled).

Landau also was an admired acting teacher who taught the craft to the likes of Jack Nicholson. And in the 1950s, he was best friends with James Dean and, for several months, the boyfriend of Marilyn Monroe. “She could be wonderful, but she was incredibly insecure, to the point she could drive you crazy,” he told The New York Times in 1988.

Landau was born in Brooklyn on June 20, 1928. At age 17, he landed a job as a cartoonist for the New York Daily News, but he turned down a promotion and quit five years later to pursue acting.

“It was an impulsive move on my part to do that,” Landau told The Jewish Journal in 2013. “To become an actor was a dream I must’ve had so deeply and so strongly because I left a lucrative, well-paying job that I could do well to become an unemployed actor. It’s crazy if you think about it. To this day, I can still hear my mother’s voice saying, ‘You did what?!’ ”

In 1955, he auditioned for Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio (choosing a scene from Clifford Odets’ Clash by Night against the advice of friends), and he and Steve McQueen were the only new students accepted that year out of the 2,000-plus aspirants who had applied.

With his dark hair and penetrating blue eyes, Landau found success on New York stages in Goat Song, Stalag 17 and First Love. Hitchcock caught his performance on opening night opposite Edward G. Robinson in a road production of Middle of the Night, the first Broadway play written by Paddy Chayefsky, and cast him as the killer Leonard in North by Northwest.

In Middle of the Night, “I played a very macho guy, 180 degrees from Leonard, who I chose to play as a homosexual — very subtly — because he wanted to get rid of Eva Marie Saint with such a vengeance,” he recalled in a 2012 interview.

As the ally of James Mason and nemesis of Saint and Cary Grant, Landau plummets to his death off Mount Rushmore in the movie’s climactic scene. With his slick, sinister gleam and calculating demeanor, he attracted the notice of producers and directors.

He went on to perform for such top directors as Joseph L. Mankiewicz in Cleopatra (1963) — though he said most of his best work on that film was sent to the cutting-room floor — George Stevens in The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965), John Sturges in The Hallelujah Trail (1965) and Henry Hathaway in Nevada Smith (1966).

Landau met Bruce Geller, the eventual creator of Mission: Impossible, when he invited the writer to an acting class. Bain was in the class as well, and Geller wrote for them the parts of spies Rollin Hand and Cinnamon Carter. Landau earned an Emmy nomination for each of his three seasons on the series.

He could have starred in another series.

“I turned down Star Trek. It would’ve been torturous,” he said during a 2011 edition of the PBS documentary series Pioneers of Television. “I would’ve probably died playing that role. I mean, even the thought of it now upsets me. It was the antithesis of why I became an actor. I mean, to play a character that Lenny (Nimoy) was better suited for, frankly, a guy who speaks in a monotone who never gets excited, never has any guilt, never has any fear or was affected on a visceral level. Who wants to do that?”

Landau found a kindred spirit in Burton, who also cast him in Sleepy Hollow (1999) and as the voice of a Vincent Price-like science teacher in the horror-movie homage, Frankenweenie (2012).

“Tim and I don’t finish a sentence,” Landau told the Los Angeles Times in 2012. “There’s something oddly kinesthetic about it. We kind of understand each other.”

Landau played puppet master Geppetto in a pair of Pinocchio films and appeared in other films including Pork Chop Hill (1959), City Hall (1996), The X-Files: Fight the Future (1998), Rounders (1998), Edtv (1999), The Majestic (2001), Lovely, Still (2008) and Mysteria (2011).

On television, he starred in the Twilight Zone episodes “Mr. Denton on Doomsday” and “The Jeopardy Room,” played the title role in the 1999 Showtime telefilm Bonnano: A Godfather’s Story and could be found on The Untouchables, Bonanza, Gunsmoke, Maverick, Wanted: Dead or Alive, Wagon Train, I Spy and The Man From U.N.C.L.E.

More recently, Landau earned Emmy noms for playing the father of Anthony LaPaglia’s character on CBS’ Without a Trace and guest-starring as an out-of-touch movie producer on HBO’s Entourage. He portrayed billionaire J. Howard Marshall, the 90-year-old husband of Anna Nicole Smith, in a 2013 Lifetime biopic about the sex symbol, and starred for Atom Egoyan opposite Christopher Plummer in Remember (2015).

And Landau appeared opposite Paul Sorvino in The Last Poker Game, which premiered at this year's Tribeca Film Festival.

Landau worked as director, teacher and executive director at the Actors Studio West. He has been credited with helping to guide the talents of Huston, Warren Oates and Harry Dean Stanton in addition to Nicholson.

A documentary about his life, An Actor's Actor: The Life of Martin Landau, is in the works.

Survivors include his daughters Susie (a writer-producer) and Juliet (an actress-dancer) from his marriage to Bain; sons-in-law Roy and Deverill; sister Elinor; granddaughter Aria; and godson Dylan.


LANDAU, Martin
Born: 6/20/1928, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 7/15/2017, Westwood, California, U.S.A.

Martin Landau’s westerns – actor:
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1958, 1966 (Thorp, Britton)
Lawman (TV) – 1958 (Bob Ford)
Maverick (TV) – 1958 (Mike Manning)
Sugarfoot (TV) – 1958 (Jim Kelly)
Rawhide (TV) – 1959 (Cort)
Tales of Wells Fargo (TV) – 1959 (Doc Holliday)
Johnny Ringo (TV) – 1960 (Wes Tymon)
Tate (TV) – 1960 (John Chess)
Wanted: Dead or Alive (TV) – 1960 (Khorba)
Wagon Train (TV) – 1960 (preacher)
Bonanza (TV) – 1961 (Emeliano)
Outlaws (TV) – 1961 (Ranklin)
The Rifleman (TV) – 1961 (Miguel Patrone)
The Tall Man (TV) – 1961, 1962, Francisco Valdez, Father Gueselin)
Stagecoach to Dancer’s Rock – 1962 (Dade Coleman)
The Travels of Jaime McPheeters (TV) - 1963 (Cochio)
The Big Valley (TV) – 1965 (Mariano Montoya)
A Man Called Shenandoah (TV) – 1965 (Jace Miller)
Hallelujah Trail – 1966 (Chief Walks-Stooped-Over)
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1965 (General Grimm)
Branded (TV) – 1966 (Edwin Booth)

Nevada Smith – 1966 (Jesse Coe)
A Town Called Hell – 1971 (The Colonel)
Kung Fu: The Movie (TV) – 1986 (John Martin Perkins III)

RIP Red West

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Red West, Memphis actor and friend of Elvis, dead at 81

Commercial Appeal
By John Beifuss
July 19, 2017

Red West, the longtime and sometimes critical confidante and bodyguard of Elvis Presley who became a successful film and television actor after the singer's death, died Tuesday night after suffering an aortic aneurysm at Baptist Hospital. He was 81.

Born in Bolivar,  Tennessee, the athletic Robert Gene "Red" West befriended Elvis at Humes High School, where the 6-foot-2 redhead protected the smaller pre-fame Elvis from bullies on at least a couple of occasions, according to Presley lore. He worked for Elvis for some 20 years, occasionally taking small roles in such films as “Flaming Star” and writing or co-writing such memorable Elvis songs as the 1972 hit "Separate Ways," the holiday favorite "If Every Day Was Like Christmas" and the 1975 masterpiece of infidelity, "If You Talk in Your Sleep," recorded at Stax.

West also composed or contributed to songs recorded by other artists, including Ricky Nelson, Pat Boone and Johnny Rivers. 

An ex-Marine, Golden Gloves boxer, karate instructor and genuine tough-guy-with-a-heart-of-gold (at least in his later years), West said it was his protective streak that motivated him to co-write "Elvis: What Happened?," a tell-all best-seller published only two weeks before Elvis' death on Aug. 16, 1977, that documented the singer’s drug dependency and unhealthy lifestyle,. West and his co-authors, fellow “Memphis Mafia” members and Elvis bodyguards Sonny West (a cousin) and David Hebler, assisted by Steve Dunleavy, a journalist, said the book was an attempt to encourage Elvis to give up his dangerous ways, but some outraged fans said the memoir was written out of spite, since the three men only a year earlier had been fired from Elvis’ employ by Elvis’ father, Vernon Presley.

As Elvis' friend, driver and bodyguard, West was among Presley's closest associates during the singer's meteoric rise, Army tour of duty, Hollywood stardom, late 1960s so-called comeback and 1970s decline. West's father, Newton West, died the same day as Elvis' mother, Gladys Presley, which only strengthened the men's bond. When Elvis was in the Army, West traveled to Germany to be nearer the singer, at Presley's request.

West, Elvis and others would frequently spar at the old Tennessee Karate Institute in Midtown, co-owned by West. "He was a tough son of a gun," said former kickboxing world champion Bill "Superfoot" Wallace, one of the studio's co-owners.

Prior to being fired, West and some of Presley's other bodyguards had received criticism for what the reference book "Elvis: His Life from A to Z" describes as "heavyhanded tactics" involving "too much physical persuasion," in an attempt "to keep the weirdos away from Elvis." West always defended his work for Elvis, while Vernon Presley said the firings were an attempt to cut Presley's expenses.

Post-Elvis, West became a full-time actor, earning a regular role opposite star Robert Conrad in the late 1970s series “Black Sheep Squadron" (originally titled "Baa Baa Black Sheep"), about a squadron of World War II fighter pilots.

West's most famous role was in the 1989 Patrick Swayze cult classic “Road House,” but major critical acclaim eluded him until late in life, when he landed his first top billing and the first lead role of his career in the acclaimed independent drama “Goodbye Solo” (2008), which critic Roger Ebert labeled "a masterwork" and The New York Times called "a near perfect film." 

“It took me 59 years to be an overnight success,” West told The Commercial Appeal, in a 2009 interview timed to the local release of the movie, in which he portrayed a taciturn old-timer contemplating suicide.

“I started out in this business as a stuntman, and it’s taken its toll on me,” West added. “I’ve had knee replacements, and I’ve got big calcium deposits in my neck from falling on my head so many times. So this is just in time.”

According to The Commercial Appeal, the mature West onscreen was “a sort of deglamorized Robert Mitchum -- a weary but tolerant tough guy, with Sad Sack saucer eyes that try but fail to conceal a lifetime of hard-won wisdom and painful lessons." Said “Goodbye Solo” director Ramin Bahrani of West: "I wish Clint Eastwood would quit casting himself and realize that this guy's better." 

Eastwood never called, but others did. West appeared in such movies as Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Rainmaker” and Ira Sachs’ “Forty Shades of Blues,” both shot in Memphis, as well as Robert Altman’s made-in-Mississippi “Cookie’s Fortune,” Oliver Stone’s “Natural Born Killers,” Bahrani’s “At Any Price” (with Dennis Quaid), the horror sequel “I Still Know What You Did Last Summer” and the true-sports story, “Glory Road.” 

On TV, he could be found in episodes of “Mannix,” “The Six Million Dollar Man,””Magnum P.I.” and  “The A-Team.” A 2015 appearance in the series “Nashville” was his final credit.

In a 2011 episode of "Memphis Beat," a TNT crime series set but not shot in Memphis, West played a cancer-stricken inmate serving time for the murder of the father of the series' star, an Elvis-impersonating police detective played by Jason Lee.

Red West and his wife, acting coach Pat West, had celebrated their 56th wedding anniversary on July 1. A Messick graduate who met her husband while she was working as a secretary for Elvis, Pat West said Red had complained of pains Sunday afternoon and was taken to Baptist Hospital. Early in the evening, he died after suffering what she described as an abdominal aortic aneurysm.

“From the very start, we had a bond that was just unusual,” Pat West said of her husband. “He was just a straight shooter.”

Pat West said she and her husband usually skipped "Elvis Week," but they had been planning to participate in some activities organized this year by friend and longtime Elvis associate George Klein. "We wanted to go this year, this special year," she said, referring to the 40th anniversary of Presley's death.

According to most sources (including Wikipedia and the Internet Movie Database), Red West was born on Nov. 20, 1936, which would make him 80 at the time of his death. But Pat West said his actual birthday was March 8, 1936.

In addition to his wife, West is survived by two sons, actor John Boyd West, of Tampa, Florida, and Brent West, of Memphis; a brother, Harold West of Olive Branch; and six grandchildren.
Memorial Park Funeral Home will handle services.


WEST, Red (Robert Gene West)
Born: 3/8/1936, Bolivar, Tennessee, U.S.A.
Died: 7/18/2017, Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.A.

Red West’s westerns – actor:
Flaming Star – 1960 (Indian)
Bonanza (TV) – 1960 (townsman)
Maverick (TV) – 1960 (hotel doorman)
The Rebel (TV) – 1960 (townsman)
Tickle Me – 1965 (Mabel’s boyfriend)
Hondo (TV) – 1967 (townsman)
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1967, 1968, 1969 (pistolero, guitar player, hooded attacker, Carl, 
     henchman
Something for a Lonely Man (TV) – 1968 (townsman)
The Wild Wild West Revisited (TV) – 1979 (barfly)
The Alamo: Thirteen Day to Glory (TV) – 1987 (Cockran)
Once Upon a Texas Train (TV) – 1988 (Bates Boley)
Billy the Kid - 1989
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