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RIP Blake Heron

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Variety
By Dave McNary
September 8, 2017

‘Shiloh’ Star Blake Heron Dies at 35

Blake Heron, who gained fame as a teen actor during the 1990s, has died at his home in La Crescenta, Calif. He was 35.

The Los Angeles County Department of Medical Examiner-Coroner and his former manager confirmed his death. Heron was found unresponsive at his residence on Friday morning. Paramedics pronounced him dead at the scene. His cause of death has not been determined yet.

Heron was discovered by a friend who told authorities that he had been sick with the flu for the last few days.

Heron, a native of Sherman Oaks, Calif., made his film debut in the 1995 Disney movie “Tom and Huck,” playing Ben Rodgers, and in the TV series “Reality Check” as Bud McNeight. In 1996, he starred in the Warner Bros. family drama “Shiloh,” portraying an adolescent who rescues an abused hunting dog in a small town. Michael Moriarty, Ann Dowd, and Scott Wilson co-starred in the pic. The film was based on Phyllis Reynolds Naylor’s book by the same name.

Heron starred in several mid-1990s television movies, including “Trilogy of Terror II” and “Nick Freno: Licensed Teacher.” He appeared in the HBO movie “Cheaters” in 2000, and had credits on the TV series “Boston Public,” “Family Law,” and “The Guardian.”

He appeared as Specialist Galen Bungum in Mel Gibson’s “We Were Soldiers” in 2002 and also had a role in “Dandelion.” Funeral services are pending.


HERON, Blake
Born: 1/11/1982, Sherman Oaks, California, U.S.A.
Died: 9/8/2017, La Crescenta, California, U.S.A.

Blake Heron’s westerns – actor:
Tom and Huck – 1995 (Ben Rodgers)
Wind River – 2000 (Nick Wilson/Yagaichi)

RIP Dave Saunders

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Cowboy who portrayed Red Ryder dies at 84

Albuquerque Journal
By Ollie Reed Jr.
September 10, 2017

Dave Saunders was best known for bringing comic-strip cowboy hero Red Ryder to life in countless public appearances, ranging from Ed Sullivan’s TV show to the New Mexico State Fair.

But Saunders, who was 84 when he died Wednesday at an Albuquerque rehabilitation center, was not just another make-believe cowboy. He was the real deal.

Back in the late 1940s and early ’50s, when he was teenager, Saunders helped drive cattle into the New Mexico cowtown of Magdalena, and he rode rough stock – bulls, saddle and bareback broncs – in rodeos.

In 2004, Saunders told a reporter about the cattle, shorthorn-Hereford-Brahma crosses, he used to herd into Magdalena.

“They were a little bit snuffy,” he said. “With that Brahma blood in them, they would turn around and snort at you and try to hook your feet. It was definitely cowboying. It wasn’t like running milk cows.”

Saunders’ widow, Florence Jeanette “Jan” Saunders, said Dave was rodeoing when she met him.

“And he made money at it when most (rodeo contestants) made just enough to pay their doctors’ bills – if they were lucky,” she said. “But he injured himself pretty good (a smashed ankle) and a friend of his, who was a bullrider, was paralyzed, and Dave stopped.”

Saunders was born in Indiana in 1933 but moved to Albuquerque with his family when he was still young. A significant turning point in his life happened when he met Fred Harman, creator of “Red Ryder,” a newspaper comic strip about a good-guy Colorado rancher (Ryder) and his young American Indian sidekick, Little Beaver.

Harman split his time between his ranch in Pagosa Springs, Colo., and a house in Albuquerque. In newspaper interviews in the 1990s, Saunders said he was still a youngster when friends dared him to knock on Harman’s Albuquerque door. He did it.

“He opened the door and he was real fierce looking. He had these big, bushy eyebrows,” Saunders said of Harman in a 1996 interview. “I couldn’t think of a thing to say.”

But Harman invited Saunders in, showed him his studio and the two became friends. When Harman started planning an Old West-themed amusement park for Albuquerque, he asked Saunders to portray Red Ryder.


“I told him I didn’t know anything about acting,” Saunders said in that 1996 interview. “I told him I was just a cowboy and a rancher. He said, ‘That’s all Red Ryder is.’ ”


When the park, called Little Beaver Town, opened in the summer of 1961, on a 44-acre site southeast of what is now the intersection of Central Avenue and Tramway Boulevard, Saunders, auburn-haired and a trim 6 feet 2 inches tall, was Red Ryder.

Saunders’ son, Jim, was just a few years old that summer, but he remembers Little Beaver Town.

“I remember the stagecoach and the Indian village and my dad squaring off in the main street and shooting the bad guy,” Jim said.

Jan Saunders said Dave had a lot of fun at Little Beaver Town and met a lot of visiting acts, including Montie Montana, a popular rodeo trick rider and trick roper. She said it was at Little Beaver Town that Montana taught Saunders to swing a lariat loop big enough to ride his horse through.

Little Beaver Town survived a couple of tourist seasons, but Saunders, recruited by the Daisy Manufacturing Co. to portray Ryder in promotions for its Red Ryder BB gun, left the park after its first year.

He worked for Daisy for several years, doing quick draws and rope tricks at personal appearances around the country and pitching Daisy products on TV shows such as Ed Sullivan’s popular variety program. Saunders moved the family to Southern California in the 1960s.

“We lived out in California for nine and a half years,” Saunders’ son John said. “I remember riding out there on my mother’s lap. Dad got an agent and did some stuff.”

The stuff he did was bit parts in movies and TV Westerns such as “The Rifleman,” “Wagon Train,” “Cheyenne” and “The Virginian.”

“When we got out there, Westerns were still in,” Jim Saunders said. “Mostly Dad hung around the Westerns. But I remember him talking about being in (the sitcom) ‘Leave It to Beaver.’ ”

Saunders never made the big time in Hollywood.

“What hurt my dad was that he was so damned good looking,” Jim Saunders said. “No (stars) wanted him standing next to them in the movies.”

The family returned to New Mexico in 1970. Dave kept horses on 10 acres Jan owned south of Albuquerque, and for a time the family lived on 200 acres in Chili.

“We had a goat dairy in Chili,” John Saunders said. “At one time, we had 200 goats, some horses, a burro, ducks, geese, chickens, turkeys and lots of dogs. It was hard conditions in Chili – cold, very cold. It was good for character building.”

Through it all, Dave Saunders never stopped being Red Ryder. He portrayed the character at Western-themed events such as Geronimo Days in Truth or Consequences and throughout much of the 1990s at the New Mexico State Fair. He continued to wear his white hat, red cowboy shirt, chaps, boots and six-shooter long after the name Red Ryder failed to register with any but the oldest people he encountered.

During the 1999 New Mexico State Fair, police stopped Saunders, who was in his Red Ryder role, in the fair’s Indian Village. The police asked him why he had a gun.

The gun, an Italian-made .22-caliber pistol designed to look like an Old West Colt revolver, was real but unloaded. Things finally got straightened out, and the police let Saunders keep the gun.

“I autographed some pictures for them,” Saunders said at the time. “Gosh, I’d feel half naked without my gun.”

More than a year ago, Saunders went to live at Albuquerque’s Bear Canyon Rehabilitation Center, joining Jan, who was already in residence there.

“The horse of his life, Hot Stuff, a beautiful chocolate-colored mare, had passed about the time he came in here,” Jan said.

She said losing the horse took some steam out of Dave.

“He was just a cowboy,” Jan said. “He enjoyed horses, and he could do anything with a rope. He sure fought up to the end. He just didn’t want to leave. He had been having so much fun.”

Survivors include his wife, Jan; sons Jim and John; a sister; five grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.

Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Monday at French Mortuary, 7121 Wyoming NE. Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Albuquerque Revival Church, 124 Texas NE.


SAUNDERS, Dave (David Saunders)
Born: 3/28/1933, Marion, Idaho U.S.A.
Died: 8/7/2017, Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A.

Dave Saunders’s westerns – actor:
The Roy Rogers Dale Evans Show – 196?
The Rifleman (TV) – 196?
Wagon Train (TV) – 196?
Cheyenne (TV) – 196?
The Virginian (TV) – 196?

RIP Hans Alfredson

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Hans "Hasse" Alfredson is dead

The author, entertainer and director Hans Alfredson is dead.  He was 86 years old.


By Fanny Edstem
September 10, 2017

 
Hans "Hasse" Alfredson was a popular personality with many merits on the list.  A real multifaceted player. He was 86 years-old and was a comedian, filmmaker, writer, actor, dramatist, director and translator.

 Hans Alfredson's son, director Daniel Anderson, tells TT that his father left quietly. “He died a couple of hours ago. He spent the last couple of days at Danderyd Hospital.

 "Very sad message"

Hans Alfredson was born in Malmö on June 28, 1931, and grew up in Helsingborg.  He debuted as a writer in 1948 in Helsingborgs Post under the signature Simson.  As a student in Lund, he participated in student plays.  After graduating in 1956, he graduated after four years at Sveriges Radio, where he met Tage Danielsson. In 1961 they formed together with Tage Danielsson Svenska Ord AB.

"It was really a very, very sad message.  I thought well of him.  We worked together very much and had much fun together," said Mona Haskel, secretary of the production company AB Svenska Ord.

HasseåTage became a concept in Swedish culture and entertainment.  Together they wrote a series of revues with Green Dog from 1962 as the first.  The last, Miss Fleggman's mustache, came in 1982. The figure Lindeman who clutched the gill with the West was a recurring improvisation, performed about 150 times.

Together, Hasse and Tage produced and participated in several films, of which the 1971 “Äppelkriget från” was a Golden Baggevinner. After Tage Danielsson's death in 1985, Svenska Ord was terminated.

Award winning films

Hans Alfredson continued his business with the company Skrivtugan.  As a film director he wrote scripts and directed six films. “Den enfaldige mördaren”, after a chapter in Alfredson's book En ond man, was awarded a number of awards.

In the movie “Den enfaldige mördaren” from 1982, actor Cecilia Walton Agrell worked with Hasse Alfredson and remembers him as caring.

 "What I'm thinking about is that he was very generous. One felt he wanted everyone to feel good.  He made a nice party. It was good food and home-baked buns, you felt red-hot.

- Otherwise, he was a shy person, not so loud as well, a little reserved.  But while working on the film, he was open and a fantastic improviser and appreciated when trying something in a scene that was repeated, Cecilia Walton Agrell told TT.

He also wrote fictional books, dancers and children's books.  A serious note is in the family story. Tiden är ingenting.  He also wrote drama, was a scenographer, translated books, wrote limericks and even participated in the operetta scene.

HasseåTage Museum in Tomelilla

In 1992 he received a PhD honorary doctorate at Lund University. Hans Alfredson also served as head of Skansen (1992-1995). In 2006, HasseåTage museum was opened in Tomelilla. In the fifteen-square-meter room, Svenska Ord's activities are summarized.

"We talk a lot about Hasse and the Tage-spirit. And the amazing values ​​he created, I hope, we can manage as a nation. Hasse represents humanism, social commitment and keeping in touch with high quality films, yet with the ability to be popular, film producer Helene Granqvist, chairman of the museum's friends association to TT, continues;

"I think about how important Hasse and Tage have been for our identity.

Hans Alfredson was married to Gunilla Alfredson and father of Tomas, Sofi and Daniel.  Even great humorists get old and tired. In several interviews in recent years, Hasse Alfredsson told about his sorrow that the previously infinite creativity began. It did not prevent him from tearing down the most warmest applause during the Guldbaggegalan, when he received the honorary Guldbaggegalan in January 2013 with the evening's longest, most intricate and funniest speech.

He was 86 years old.


ALFREDSON, Hans (Hans Folke Anderson)
Born: 6/28/1931, Malmö, Skåne län, Sweden
Died: 9/10/2017, Stockholm, Sweden

Hans Alfredson’s westerns – actor:
The Emigrants – 1971 (Jonas Petter)
The New Land – 1972 (Jonas Petter)

RIP Xavier Atencio

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Francis Xavier Atencio dies; Disney animator who co-wrote 'Yo, Ho (A Pirate's Life for Me)' was 98

Los Angeles Times
By Alene Tchemedyian
September 11, 2017

Francis Xavier Atencio, a longtime Disney animator and Imagineer who co-wrote the tune for the “Pirates of the Caribbean” ride, one of Disneyland’s most popular park attractions, has died.

Atencio died Sunday at age 98, the Disney Parks Blog announced Monday. No cause of death was given.

A Colorado native, Atencio moved to Los Angeles in 1937 to attend the Chouinard Art Institute. At the time, he thought a job at Disney was unattainable, but an art instructor encouraged him to submit his portfolio.

The following year, he got a job. That kicked off a nearly half-century career with the company.

Atencio, known to his friends and colleagues as “X,” first saw his work on screen during the 1940 premiere of “Pinocchio,” on which he worked as an apprentice animator. He also worked as an assistant animator for “Fantasia.”

He left Disney temporarily to join the U.S. Army Air Corps and returned five years later as an animator, receiving his first on-screen credit for the Oscar-winning film “Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Boom.”

He also contributed stop-motion sequences for the films “The Parent Trap,” “Mary Poppins” and “Babes in Toyland.”

Atencio was transferred in 1965 to WED Enterprises, which later became Walt Disney Imagineering, to work on the Primeval World diorama for Disneyland.

A month after his reluctant transfer, Atencio got a phone call from Walt Disney, who asked him to write the script for Pirates of the Caribbean ride.

“So I said OK, and I put on my pirate hat,” Atencio told The Times in 2003. “I researched what I could — ‘Treasure Island’ and stuff like that — to get the feeling and the jargon of pirates. By the time I finished scripting it, I thought, why not a song?”

Atencio proposed the tune, though he’d never actually written a song before.

“Walt told him to go and do it,” Bob Weis, president of Walt Disney Imagineering, told the Disney Parks Blog.

So Atencio co-wrote the lyrics to the ride’s theme song, “Yo, Ho (A Pirate’s Life for Me).”

“That was how X worked — with an enthusiastic, collaborative attitude, along with a great sense of humor,” Weis said. “His brilliant work continues to inspire Imagineers and bring joy to millions of guests every year.”

At the beginning of the attraction, which has been one of the park’s most popular attractions since it opened in 1967, riders can also hear his voice on a talking skull. Since it opened, Pirates seen seen about 400 million riders.

Atencio retired from Disney in 1984, but continued to consult for Walt Disney Imagineering for many years, according to the Disney Parks Blog. He was inducted as a Disney Legend in 1996.

He is survived by his wife, three children, three stepchildren and eight grandchildren.


ATENCIO, Xavier (Francis Xavier Atencio)
Born: 9/4/1919, Walsenburg, Colorado, U.S.A.
Died: 9/10/2107, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Xavier Atencio’s western – layout stylist:
A Cowboy Needs a Horse - 1956

RIP Hansford Rowe

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The Signal
September 13, 2017

Hansford H. Rowe Jr., 93, died in a car accident on Tuesday, September 5, 2017 in Newhall, CA. Hansford grew up in Richmond, VA.

He was a U.S. Navy veteran of WWII and a graduate from the University of Richmond with a degree in Theater Arts. Hansford had numerous movies and over 300 commercials to his credit. He had been nominated by Drama Desk for his performance in "Nuts". He performed in numerous stage plays both on- and off-Broadway and toured around the world performing in "Porgy & Bess" and "The Sound of Music". His book entitled Actor, Hansford H. Rowe, written by his wife Mira, was published by Amazon.

Hansford was an avid Bridge player, proudly performed with the Silvertones Singing Group, and he treasured living in the Friendly Valley Resort Club. He loved life, singing and friends. He was a born performer and will continue to do so since he donated his body to science.

He leaves behind his wife Mira, his two sons Hansford H. Rowe III (Lyne) and Blake E. Rowe (Sharon), and son by marriage, Dr. Marc A. Logarta (Marini); his grandchildren Sam and Marilyn Rowe, Julian (Elizabeth) and Eva Rowe; his sister Jane R. List; his brother Dan M. Rowe; nephews, nieces and several great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents Dr. Hansford H and Isabel Willis Rowe; his sister Betsy R. Bennett and his brother Dr. Eugene T. Rowe.

A Memorial Service will be held from 10:00am to 12noon on Friday, September 15, 2017 at the Friendly Valley Auditorium, 19345 Avenue of the Oaks, Santa Clarita, CA 91321. The family requests that in lieu of flowers, donations may be given to Doctors Without Borders(https://donate.doctorswithoutborders.org/)


ROWE, Hansford (Hansfor H. Rowe Jr.)
Born: 5/12/1924, Richmond, Virginia, U.S.A.
Died: 9/5/2017, Newhall, California, U.S.A.

Hansford Rowe’s westerns – actor:
Rascals and Robbers: The Secret Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn (TV) – 1982
     (Colon Beeton)
Dallas (TV) – 1983 (Andrew Forrest)
Dream West (TV) – 1986 (John Floyd)

RIP Terence Harvey

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'We send our love and condolences': Emotional Hollyoaks bosses confirm the death of actor Terence Harvey... as his former co-stars pay tribute

Daily Mail
By Jabeen Waheed
September 12, 2017

    Hollyoaks have confirmed the death of former soap star Terence Harvey
    The actor had appeared on the soap for six years between 2004-2010
    Producer Bryan Kirkwood revealed the news via an emotional post he shared in tribute to the star on Hollyoaks' official Twitter account
    No other details surrounding Terence's death are yet known

Show bosses for Channel 4 soap Hollyoaks have confirmed that former cast member Terence Harvey has passed away.

Producer Bryan Kirkwood shared the sad news of the soap star, who had starred on the show from 2004-2010, in an emotional post via Twitter.

No details surrounding Terence's death are yet known. MailOnline have contacted a representative for Hollyoaks.

The heartfelt statement, posted on Hollyoaks' official account on the social media site, read: 'RIP Terence Harvey, who played Alistair Longford, a fantastic actor and friend of #Hollyoaks…' 

It continued: 'It's with sadness we share the news that friend of Hollyoaks, Terence Harvey, has died.

'Along with many other roles on TV over the years, Terence played Alistair Longford on Hollyoaks, the father of Texas and India, and Cindy's millionaire second husband.

'Hollyoaks sends our love and condolences to Terence's family,' it was concluded. 

The actor had last appeared on the Channel 4 soap seven years ago, having been involved in some very dramatic storylines during his run on the show.

Most noticeably, Terrence, who took on the role of a wealthy pensioner, romanced devious Cindy Cunningham played by Stephanie Waring.

The two married and were meant to have a happily ever after, however Cindy returned to the show to explain that her husband had died in mysterious circumstances during a skiing getaway.

Following news of his passing, Stephanie had taken to Twitter to pay her respects to the star, tweeting: 'Such a sad loss R.I.P Terence.'

She wasn't the only one to send her condolences, as Titanic star Paul Brightwell and Good Will Hunting actress Minnie Driver were seen reminiscing about a time they had worked with Terence on the social media site.

Responding to a tweet director Steve Hughes had posted, Paul said: '@driverminnie do you remember when we kidnapped TH for Pete Howitt? Sad news.'

Minnie replied: 'I do remember . Ah, he was a lovely man.'

Steve's initial tweet had read: 'Sad to hear about the death of character actor Terence Harvey. He starred in the last ep of Doctors I did in 2009. Great actor. Lovely man.'

His tweet also struck a chord with Emmerdale star John Mone, who plays Lawrence White on the ITV soap, responded: 'RIP. Terence Harvey.'

Holby City star Roger Barclay added: 'I had the pleasure to work with him twice. Lovely actor, one from the old school.'

Terence has lent his acting talents to a plethora of other endeavours, as well as Hollyoaks, starring alongside Rowan Atkinson in Johnny English back in 2003.

He has also seen Hollywood success with parts in, From Hell, Basic Instinct 2, Hustle, Waking the Dead and Downton Abbey.

Quite the keen soap lover, Terence has also appeared in BBC's EastEnders, where viewers saw him take on the role of a judge.

His last acting credential was in this year's movie release Viceroy's House, which saw him star alongside Hugh Bonneville, Michael Gambon and Gillian Anderson.


HARVEY, Terence
Born: 1958
Died: 2017

Terence Harvey’s western – actor:
Sky Bandits – 1986 (Canning)

RIP Harvey Levine

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Los Angeles Times
September 13, 2017

March 6, 1939 - September 9, 2017 Harvey Ira Levine, veteran actor, of Ladera Ranch, California, passed away from lung cancer Saturday, September 9, 2017 at 78. Harvey is survived by his children, Sarah Levine and Marc Levine, sister Cheryl Levine and brother Sandy Levine. Harvey was preceded in passing by his wife Anne Levine, his parents Louis and Pauline Levine and his brother Eugene Levine. Funeral services will be held Thursday, September 14, 2017, at 10 am, in the Eternal Light Chapel of Groman Eden Mortuary.


LEVINE, Harvey
Born: 3/6/1939, Bronx, New York, U.S.A.
Died:9/9/2017, Ladera Ranch, California, U.S.A.

Harvey Levine’s western – actor:
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1966 (Hobson)

RIP Frank Vincent

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‘Sopranos’ Star Frank Vincent Dead at 78

The Blast
September 13, 2017

Frank Vincent, best known as Phil Leotardo from “The Sopranos” has died, The Blast has learned.
We’re told fellow mob actor Vincent Pastore sent an email to friends after receiving news of the death.

The message read, “i just received a phone call that frank vincent has passed away… ill let all know about the services…we lost a great character actor and great man ..may he always stay in our memory.”

Pastore also posted a message on Facebook; “rest in peace dear frank,” and reflected on how Frank “became an inspiration” to his “Sopranos” co-star after landing a role on “Raging Bull.”  Pastore says Vincent was his mentor and inspiration.

Vincent was a career “mobster,” and had roles in other classics like, “Goodfellas” and “Casino.”  He’s also had some of the best “whacking” scenes in the mob genre.

His “Sopranos” role was especially praised playing nemesis to James Gandolfini’s, Tony, and eventually rose to the boss of the Lupertazzi crime family.

We’re told Vincent had been sick, but specific details of his death are currently unclear.
Vincent credited his career in film to Robert DeNiro, who spotted him while working on a low-budget mobster movie, and praised his talents to Martin Scorsese.


VINCENT, Frank (Frank Vincent Gattuso)
Born: 8/4/1939, North Adams, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
Died: 9/13/2017, New Jersey, U.S.A.

Frank Vincent’s western – actor:
Walker, Texas Ranger (TV) – 1994 (Paul Mancini)

RIP Saby Kamalich

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Premiere actress Saby Kamalich died at age 78

TVNOTAS
September 13, 2017

It was in 2011 when the star actress of Peruvian origin, Saby Kamalich remained in serious condition and in a induced coma after having had a surgical operation on the spine.

This afternoon it transpired that Kamalich lost her life. Her daughter the actress, Luigina Tuccio, said that around 23 hours on September 12 was taken to a hospital in Mexico City, because she had an infection. Already at the hospital he stopped breathing and did not suffer any longer.

The first actress was internationally recognized for melodramas like 'La Colmena', 'Doña Bárbara', 'Simply María', 'When the Children Leave', 'Amor en Silencio', 'I Do Not Believe in Men', inside Televisa.

Her last telenovelas were broadcast on TV Azteca, where she emigrated from 1997, among them 'Loves, Want with Treachery', 'Secrets of the Soul' and 'The Other Side of the Soul'.

She was also seen on Telemundo with 'Corazón Partido' and 'Madre Luna'. And to her resume are added film projects.

She was married to Carlos Tuccio and fathered four children.


KAMALICH, Saby (Sabina Fantoni Kamalich)
Born: 5/13/1939, Lima, Peru
Died: 9/13/2017, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico

RIP Károly Makk

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Award-winning Hungarian director whose best films demonstrate how state oppression damages love and fidelity but cannot kill the human spirit

The Guardian
By Ronald Bergen
September 6, 2017

The glory days of the Hungarian cinema from the mid-1960s to the mid-70s came about mainly because of the relative liberalisation of the communist regime under the Soviet loyalist János Kádár. Károly Makk, who has died aged 91, was among leading Hungarian directors such as Miklós Jancsó, Márta Mészáros, István Szabó, Zoltán Fábri and István Gaál whose films were beginning to be shown and acclaimed more and more in the west.

Because of problems with censorship under the previous, Stalinist puppet regime, Makk, who had been making films since 1955, had to wait until 1971 to gain international recognition with his simply titled masterpiece, Love. “I asked every year for six years for permission to make it. The political elite finally gave in because it was part of a rejection of the Stalin years.”

Love tells the story of Luca (Mari Törőcsik), a young Hungarian woman whose husband is in jail after being arrested by Stalin’s secret police on a trumped up political charge. Left to take care of her old and dying mother-in-law (the celebrated stage actor Lili Darvas), she writes letters purporting to come from America telling of the son’s glittering success as a Hollywood film producer and reads them to the old lady. Whether the mother-in-law believes the letters is left deliberately ambiguous, as is the truth of her extravagant memories of a Viennese girlhood.

An exquisitely wrought film about love, falsehood (political and personal) and illusion, it won the jury prize at Cannes, gained special mentions for the performances of Darvas and Törőcsik and led to Makk’s eclectic career in Hungary and abroad, including a best foreign film Oscar nomination for Cat’s Play (1974). However, his 1982 film about a lesbian romance, Another Way, was initially nominated by Hungary for the Oscar but was later withdrawn on orders from Kádár.

Makk was born in the town of Berettyóújfalu, in eastern Hungary, where his father, Kálmán, owned a cinema, which gave his son the chance to watch many movies. His parents, who like many Hungarians had lost their business after the country came under Soviet rule, initially intended him to become an engineer, a common profession on his mother’s side of the family. Instead, he entered the nationalised film industry, working his way up from assistant to screenwriter and director.

His eventual success with Love enabled him to make Cat’s Play. It tells of an elderly widowed music teacher (Margit Dajka), living in Budapest, who focuses her life on her wealthy but paralysed sister in Germany, with whom she communicates by letter and telephone, and on her old flame, a retired opera singer, who comes to dine every Thursday evening. When a woman from the past appears, the balance and security of her existence are badly disturbed. As in Love, Makk concentrates on the survival mechanisms of the old. Poignant and unsentimental, beautifully photographed by János Tóth, it effectively utilises flashbacks (as in the previous film) to summon up the heroine’s memories of youth.

A Very Moral Night (1977) is set in a small Hungarian town early in the 20th century, where a young student frequents the local brothel. He eventually moves in, and shares a chaste bed with one of the young women. When his puritanical mother turns up to visit him, the madame and the young women encourage her assumption that the brothel is a boarding house. Though rather old-fashioned and missing some of the comic potential, it is nevertheless beautifully shot, again by Töth, and acted.
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Looking at parts of Makk’s filmography, it seems that he was comfortable inhabiting the bittersweet romantic world of Hungary’s most famous playwright, Ferenc Molnár. His connection with Molnár extended to Darvas, the playwright’s widow, who had the co-lead in Love. Makk also adapted Molnár’s previously filmed The Guardsman, a Hungarian-US co-production he retitled Lily in Love (1984), starring Christopher Plummer and Maggie Smith. Other international productions Makk directed were Deadly Game (Die Jäger, 1982) in German, starring Helmut Berger and Barbara Sukova; and The Gambler (1997), adapted from Dostoevsky, in English, with Michael Gambon, Jodhi May and Luise Rainer, making a comeback at 86, in her last film.

Most of these commercial productions received mixed reviews, but Makk’s reputation was sustained by Another Way – about a lesbian love affair between two journalists following the 1956 Hungarian uprising, with the attempted murder of one by her husband and the death of the other.

Based on the semi-autobiographical bestseller by Makk’s co-scriptwriter Erzsébet Galgóczi, the film is politically courageous and a touching and intelligent plea for tolerance. The two Polish leads (Jadwiga Jankowska-Cieślak and Grażyna Szapołowska), as the doomed lovers, give remarkably perceptive performances, with the former winning the best actress award at Cannes.

Makk’s best films demonstrate how living under state oppression affects fidelity, love and faith, and how traces of humanity persist in such difficult circumstances.

Makk married three times, and is survived by his daughter, Lily.


MAKK, Károly
Born: 12/22/1925, Berettyóújfalu, Hungary
Died: 8/30/2017, Budapest, Hungary

Károly Makk’s western – actor:
The Proud Rebel - 1958

RIP Fernanda Borsatti

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Actress Fernanda Borsatti has died

The 86-year-old actress joined the cast of the D. Maria II National Theater between 1978 and 2001 and did several work in film and television.

LUSA e PUBLIC
September 14, 2017

Portuguese actress Fernanda Borsatti died Thursday morning, at the age of 86, at the CUF Hospital in Lisbon, Casa do Artista announced.

Born in Évora on September 1, 1931, Fernanda Borsatti interpreted the most diverse theatrical genres, from comedy skits to dramatic plays.

Throughout her artistic career, she went through more than ten theater companies, among them the Maria Vitória Theater, the Laura Alves Company, the Raul Solnado Company, the Maria Matos Theater and the Casa da Comédia.

The actress joined the cast of the D. Maria II National Theater between 1978 and 2001 and worked with directors such as Henrique Campos, José Fonseca e Costa, Luís Galvão Teles, Artur Semedo, António de Macedo, Jean-Louis Benoît and João Botelho.

Galvão Teles, who directed the actress in A Vida É Bela ?!  , 1982 film, and before that worked with her in the theater, explained to the PUBLIC that Fernanda Borsatti "was the life".  As for the film he did with her, he recalls: "She performed absolutely amazingly, bringing life with her into the picture."  The news of her death was a surprise: "I am deeply shocked, sad, it is a great loss of a generation that has marked the theater, magazine theater and cinema in an extraordinary way. Life goes on, time passes, but memory and the memory of Fernanda will always be with her laughter and with her taste of playing with life. "

At the Teatro D. Maria II, she participated in the plays O Bicho , O Tempo Feminino , O Fidalgo Aprendiz (with Ruy de Carvalho), Pass for Me in Rossio , The Furies , The Crime of the Old Village and Say Nothing , among others.

 Among the feature films he made in the movies are Blood Toureiro , Pão, Amor ... and Totobol a , Sunday Afternoon , The Devil Was Another , The Thief Who Talks , The Woman Next , The Beloved Lilacs and The Northern Court .

In the television he integrated series, sitcoms and telenovelas, like the Private Life of Salazar , Sweet Fugitive , Inspector Max , Residencial Tejo , There in Casa Tudo Bem , Fine People Is Another Thing , I Show Nico or The Lady of Camellias .  He also participated in    Zip-Zip, with Raul Solnado.

In 2007, Fernanda Borsatti received the Municipal Merit Medal, in her Grau Ouro, from the Lisbon City Hall.

In a message shared on the website of the Presidency of the Republic , Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa presents condolences to the family of the actress and refers to him as "versatile actress" and "face familiar to all Portuguese", underlining the "active presence in the heroic times of the theater filmed in RTP "and" the diversified television career "that he maintained" throughout the decades ", and emphasizing cinematographic works like Sunday afternoon , The Woman of the Near one and the Court of the North , as well as the passage by the Company Laura Alves, the National Theater D. Maria II, Maria Vitória and the Casa da Comédia.  "His artistic personality, empathetic, affirmative, effervescent, is in our memory," he concludes.


BORSATTI, Fernanda (Fernanda Borsatti da Fonseca)
Born: 9/1/1931, Évora, Portugal
Died: 9/14/2017, Lisbon, Portugal

Fernanda Borsatti’s western – actress:
Deguello – 1966 (Danger City woman) [as Eve Neill]

RIP Harry Dean Stanton

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Harry Dean Stanton, ‘Big Love,’ ‘Twin Peaks’ Star, Dies at 91

Variety
By Carmel Dagan
September 15, 2017

Harry Dean Stanton, the actor with a gaunt, bedraggled look who labored in virtual obscurity for decades until a series of roles increased his visibility, including his breakthrough in Wim Wenders’ “Paris, Texas,” died of natural causes Friday in Los Angeles. He was 91.

The actor was also known for his roles in “Twin Peaks,” “Big Love,” “Pretty in Pink,” and “Repo Man.”

He had a high-profile role as manipulative cult leader Roman Grant on HBO polygamy drama “Big Love,” which ran from 2006-11, and recently appeared as Carl Rodd in the “Twin Peaks” revival on Showtime.

His most recent film, “Lucky,” about an atheist who comes to terms with his own mortality, is set to be released by Magnolia on Sept. 29.

In 1984, when he turned 58, he not only starred in the Wenders’ “Paris, Texas” — his first role ever as leading man — but in Alex Cox’s popular cult film “Repo Man.” (That year he also had a small role in John Milius’ “Red Dawn,” shouting “Avenge me! Avenge me!” to his sons, played by Charlie Sheen and Patrick Swayze, after being captured by Soviet troops invading America.)

“Paris, Texas,” penned by Sam Shepard, was the darling of the Cannes Film Festival, capturing not only the Palme d’Or, but other juried awards as well. Stanton played Travis, who reconnects with his brother, played by Dean Stockwell, after being lost for four years. Stanton’s performance in the film was not so much powerful as it was intriguingly, sometimes hauntingly, absent.

Roger Ebert said, “Stanton has long inhabited the darker corners of American noir, with his lean face and hungry eyes, and here he creates a sad poetry.”

In the cheerfully bizarre “Repo Man,” he played the boozy repo-biz veteran who takes young punk Emilio Estevez under his wing but provides at-best nebulous guidance: “The life of a repo man is always intense.”

In 1986, Stanton hit the mainstream when he played Molly Ringwald’s unemployed father in “Pretty in Pink.” Later in the 1980s he played a fiery Paul/Saul in Martin Scorsese’s controversial 1988 effort “The Last Temptation of Christ,” but the actor was among those in the film criticized by many as miscast.

Later film roles included a pair of David Lynch films in the early 1990s, “Wild at Heart” and “Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me”; Bob Rafelson’s “Man Trouble,” with Jack Nicholson; “The Mighty,” with Gena Rowlands and Sharon Stone; “The Green Mile”; Sean Penn’s “The Pledge”; Nick Cassavetes’ “Alpha Dog”; and Lynch’s “Inland Empire.”

Stanton was close friends with Nicholson — Stanton was best man at Nicholson’s 1962 wedding, and they lived together for more than two years after Nicholson’s divorce — and the character actor’s first step in emerging from obscurity was a part written by Nicholson for him in the 1966 Western “Ride the Whirlwind.” Stanton played the leader of an outlaw gang; Nicholson told him to “let the wardrobe do the acting and just play yourself.” “After Jack said that, my whole approach to acting opened up,” Stanton told Entertainment Weekly.

In the early ’70s Stanton appeared in films including “Kelly’s Heroes” and “Two Lane Blacktop”; he also had a small role in “The Godfather: Part II.”

On the shoot for 1976’s “The Missouri Breaks,” starring Marlon Brando and Nicholson, Stanton made a long-term friend in Brando when he courageously dissuaded the increasingly eccentric actor from making a foolish choice in his performance.

The actor played one of the doomed crewmen in Ridley Scott’s “Alien” and a crooked preacher in John Huston’s “Wise Blood,” and he had a fairly significant role in John Carpenter’s “Escape From New York” as Brain, who keeps the machines running in the high-security prison Manhattan has become.

In 1983, Shepard got to talking with Stanton at a bar in Sante Fe, N.M., and later offered him the lead role in “Paris, Texas.” “I was telling him I was sick of the roles I was playing,” Stanton told the New York Times. “I told him I wanted to play something of some beauty or sensitivity. I had no inkling he was considering me for the lead in his movie.” He also worked with Shepard in the 1985 “Fool for Love.”

In a 2011 review of Paolo Sorrentino’s “This Must Be the Place,” Variety said, “Like all great directors who make a road movie, Sorrentino captures the physical location as well as the inner transformation, and in keeping with the genre, he also knows Harry Dean Stanton has to be included.”

Stanton did voice work for the Johnny Depp animated film “Rango” in 2011. In a 2010 episode of NBC’s “Chuck,” Stanton reprised his “Repo Man” character.

Stanton was born in West Irvine, Ky. After serving in the Navy during WWII, he attended the University of Kentucky, studying journalism and radio, and performing in “Pygmalion.” He then pursued an interest in acting by heading to California to study at the Pasadena Playhouse.

He made his small-screen debut in 1954 in an episode of the NBC show “Inner Sanctum.” In another early TV role, he was directed by Alfred Hitchcock in an episode of “Suspicion” called “Four O’Clock.” (The actor was credited as Dean Stanton in most of his early roles to avoid confusion with the actor Harry Stanton, who died in 1978.)

On the big screen, Stanton’s earliest, mostly uncredited work was in Westerns and war pics, debuting in 1957’s “Tomahawk Trail” and appearing in 1959 Gregory Peck-starrer “Pork Chop Hill.” (He also guested on many TV Westerns, including “The Rifleman,” “Have Gun — Will Travel,” “Bonanza,” and “Gunsmoke”).

Stanton also led his own band, first known as Harry Dean Stanton and the Repo Men and later simply as the Harry Dean Stanton Band, and would play pickup gigs in L.A. area clubs. Bob Dylan, with whom he worked on Sam Peckinpah’s 1973 film “Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid,” was a friend. Another friend was Hunter S. Thompson, and Stanton sang at his funeral.

The character actor was the subject of two documentaries: 2011’s “Harry Dean Stanton: Crossing Mulholland” and Sophie Huber’s 2013 “Harry Dean Stanton: Partly Fiction,” which featured interviews with Wenders, Shepard, Kris Kristofferson, and Lynch.

He never married, though he has said he has “one or two children.”


STANTON, Harry Dean
Born: 7/14/1926, West Irvine, Kentucky, U.S.A.
Died: 9/15/2017, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Harry Dean Stanton’s westerns – actor, narrator:
Revolt a Fort Laramie – 1956 (Rinty)
Tomahawk Trail – 1957 (Private Miller)
The Proud Rebel – 1958 (Jeb Burleigh)
The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin (TV) – 1958 (Clint Dirkson)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1958, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1968  Alvie, Harley, Leroy Parker, Nate, young man, Rainey Carp, Hodge
The Texan (TV) – 1958, 1959 (Frank Kaler, Chad Bisbee)
Zane Grey Theater (TV) – 1958, 1960, 1961 (Robert MacPherson, Toby, Private Brock, Fletcher)
A Dog’s Best Friend – 1959 (Roy Jenney)
The Jayhawkers! – 1959 (Deputy Smallwood)
Bat Masterson (TV) – 1959 (Jim Simms)
Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) – 1959, 1962 (Stoneman, Slim Wilder)
Laramie (TV) – 1959, 1961, 1962, 1963 (Vern Cowan, Virgil, Amos Kerrigon, Moss
Rawhide (TV) – 1959, 1962, 1963, 1965 (Bartlow, Jess Hobson, Dexter, Joe Spanish)
The Rifleman (TV) – 1959 (Clemmie Martin)
U.S. Marshall (TV) – 1959 (Robby Crane)
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn – 1960 (slave catcher)
Johnny Ringo (TV) – 1960 (Frank Brogger)
The Man from Blackhawk (TV) – 1960 (Sonny Blakey)
Bonanza (TV) – 1961, 1963, (Billy, Stiles)
Gunslinger (TV) – 1961 (Stacey)
Stoney Burke (TV) – 1962 (Dell Tindall)
Empire (TV) – 1963 (Nick Crider)
Daniel Boone (TV) – 1964, 1969 (Jeb Girty, Crane)
A Man Called Shenandoah (TV) – 1965 (Quince Logan)
Ride in the Whirlwind – 1966 (Blind Dick)
The Dangerous Days of Kiowa Jones (TV) – 1966 (Jelly)
The Big Valley (TV) – 1966 (Swain)
A Time for Killing – 1967 (Sergeant Dan Way)
Cimarron Strip (TV) – 1967 (Luther Happ)
The Guns of Will Sonnett (TV) – 1967 (J.J. Kates)
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1967 (Lucius Brand)
Day of the Evil Gun – 1968 (Sergeant Parker)
The High Chaparral (TV) – 1968 (Johnny Faro)
The Virginian (TV) – 1968 (Clint Daggert)
The Intruders (TV) – 1970 (Whit Dykstra)
Cry for Me, Billy – 1972 (Lake Todd)
Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid – 1973 (Luke)
Zandy’s Bride – 1974 (Songer)
Rancho Deluxe – 1975 (Curt)
The Missouri Breaks – 1976 (Calvin)
Young Maverick (TV) – 1979, 1980 (Pokey, Tindal)
Dead Man’s Walk – 1996 (Shadrach)
Rango – 2011 (voice of Balthazar)
Fishtail – 2014 [narrator]

RIP Frank Capp

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Los Angeles Times
September 15, 2017

It is with deep and heavy sadness that we announce the death of Frank W. Capp. Frank was born in Worcester, MA and was a graduate of Boston University's School of Music. His success in the music business, and particularly the jazz world that he loved so much, has been chronicled by many over the years. He has left us a legacy of recorded music that will continue to let us feel his presence each time we turn up the volume. Nobody could swing a big band the way he could and the music world has lost a true treasure. He leaves a loving daughter, son-in-law and grandson as well as a niece, three nephews and a large extended family. We grieve his passing and will miss his constant love, mischievous smile, gentle spirit and endless good humor.


CAPP, Frank (Francis Cappuccio)
Born: 8/20/1931, Worcester, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
Died: 9/12/2017, Studio City, California, U.S.A.

Frank Capp’s westerns – music supervisor, coordinator:
Texas (TV) – 1994 [music supervisor]
Gunfighters Moon – 1995 [music coordinator]

RIP Joel Schiller

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Joel Schiller, Craftsman on 'The Graduate' and 'The Muppet Movie,' Dies at 86

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
9/19/2017  

A painter, art director and production designer, he also brought his fine-arts sensibility to 'Rosemary's Baby,''Nuts' and 'The Man in the Glass Booth.'

Joel Schiller, the respected production designer and art director known for his work on such films as Rosemary's Baby, Murphy's Romance and The Muppet Movie, has died. He was 86.

Schiller died Jan. 17 at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, his friend of 40 years, Al Heintzelman, told The Hollywood Reporter. His death had not been previously reported.

A skilled painter who studied with John Groth and William de Kooning, Schiller served as assistant production designer under the legendary Richard Sylbert on The Graduate (1967), where he created the conceptual fish-bowl environment for Dustin Hoffman's Benjamin Braddock.

Schiller then worked again alongside Sylbert on Rosemary's Baby (1968), designing the interior of Rosemary and Guy's (Mia Farrow and John Cassavetes) apartment in the Dakota, and on The Illustrated Man (1969), for which he came up with the body tattoos for Rod Steiger's character in the Ray Bradbury science-fiction film.

Earlier, costume designer-art director Cecil Beaton commissioned Schiller to draw the production sketches for him to use on My Fair Lady (1964). Beaton won two Oscars for his work on the famed musical, winner of best picture.

On his own as production designer, Schiller also teamed with Martin Ritt on Murphy's Romance (1985), Nuts (1987) and Stanley & Iris (1990) and with James Frawley on Kid Blue (1973), The Big Bus (1976) and The Muppet Movie (1979).

Adept in a wide variety of genres, Schiller also worked on Mark Rydell's The Reivers (1969), Bob Fosse's Lenny (1974), Arthur Hiller's The Man in the Glass Booth (1975), Donald Wrye's Ice Castles (1978), Hal Needham's Megaforce (1982), Jerry Schatzberg's Misunderstood (1984), Peter Hyams' Narrow Margin (1990) and Tom Holland's The Temp (1993).

In the 1970s, Schiller was the art director on features including The Sporting Club (1971), A Reflection of Fear (1972) and Rafferty and the Gold Dust Twins (1975).

A native New Yorker, Schiller attended the Art Students League in Manhattan and then studied at Cal. His work was found in the collections of actress Cybill Shepherd and the late Jim Henson, and in August 2016, he appeared at an exhibit in a North Hollywood gallery that showcased his artwork.


SCHILLER, Joel
Born: 11/24/1930, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 1/17/2017, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Joel Schiller’s westerns – production designer:
The McMasters – 1970
Kid Blue - 1973

RIP Bernie Casey

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Bernie Casey, Football Star Turned Actor, Poet and Painter, Dies at 78

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
9/20/2017

His film résumé includes 'Boxcar Bertha,''Never Say Never Again,''Brothers,''Revenge of the Nerds' and 'Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure.'

Actor Bernie Casey, who appeared in such films as Boxcar Bertha, Never Say Never Again and Revenge of the Nerds after a career as a standout NFL wide receiver, has died. He was 78.

Casey, who also starred in Cleopatra Jones and several other blaxploitation movies of the 1970s, died Tuesday after a brief illness at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, his representative told The Hollywood Reporter.

In the Warner Bros. drama Brothers (1977), Casey distinguished himself by portraying a thinly veiled version of George Jackson, a member of the Black Panther Party who was killed in what officials described as an escape attempt from San Quentin in 1971. His writings had inspired oppressed people around the world, and Bob Dylan recorded a song as a tribute to Jackson in 1971.

Casey also wrote, directed, starred in and produced The Dinner (1997), centering on three black men who discuss slavery, black self-loathing, homophobia, etc. while sitting around the dinner table.

Casey played a heroic former slave and train robber in Martin Scorsese's Boxcar Bertha (1972), was CIA agent Felix Leiter (a recurring character in Bond films) in Never Say Never Again (1983) and portrayed U.N. Jefferson, the president of the Lambda Lambda Lambda fraternity, in Revenge of the Nerds (1984) and two follow-up telefilms.

In Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure (1989), Casey played schoolteacher Mr. Ryan ("Who was Joan of Arc?" he asks, and Keanu Reeves' Ted guesses, "Noah's wife?"), portrayed a detective opposite Burt Reynolds in Sharky's Machine (1981) and stood out as the prisoner who protects Eddie Murphy in jail in the sequel Another 48 Hrs. (1990).

And not long after he unexpectedly retired from the Los Angeles Rams, Casey portrayed Chicago Bears player J.C. Caroline in the 1971 ABC telefilm Brian's Song, the heart-wrenching tale about the friendship between Brian Piccolo (James Caan) and Gayle Sayers (Billy Dee Williams).

A true Renaissance man, Casey also was a published poet as well as a painter whose work was exhibited in galleries around the world.

Bernard Casey was born on June 8, 1939, in Wyco, W.Va. He was raised in Columbus, Ohio, and attended Bowling Green on a football scholarship (he returned to the school years later to earn a master's in fine arts).

An elegant 6-foot-4 halfback and flanker, Casey led the Falcons to the national "small college" championship in 1959 and was named to the Little All-American team. He also excelled in the high hurdles for the track team and competed in the 1960 U.S. Olympic trials.

The San Francisco 49ers made Casey the ninth overall pick in the NFL Draft, and he spent six seasons with the team (1961-66) as quarterback John Brodie's favorite receiver. In one game in his final year with the team, he caught 12 passes for 225 yards.

Casey then spent two solid years with the Rams but shockingly retired in his athletic prime before the 1969 season, finishing his pro career with 359 catches for 5,444 yards and 40 touchdowns. Just 30, he wanted to concentrate on acting, painting and poetry.

"When that sojourn is over and you're 32 or something, when most people are just beginning to understand who they are, what they can do and what life is all about, you have been considered in the world of sports a dinosaur," he once said in a piece for NFL Films. "From that point on, it's a downward spiral into the abyss of non-consideration and obscurity and a lot of other things that they never recover from. I want to think in my instance, it's the beginning. There's a lot of life left after 32."

Casey made his movie debut in the sequel Guns of the Magnificent Seven (1969) and then starred opposite Jim Brown, another recently retired NFL star, in ...tick... tick... tick... (1970).

Casey received top billing in Hit Man (1972) as the title character, a no-nonsense guy who investigates his brother's death at the hands of mobsters, and then played Reuben Masters, Tamara Dobson's lover, in Cleopatra Jones (1973).

His other blaxploitation work included Black Chariot (1971), Black Gunn (1972) and Dr. Black, Mr. Hyde (1976), and years later, he appeared in the genre parody I'm Gonna Git You Sucka (1988), directed by Keenen Ivory Wayans.

Casey portrayed basketball star Maurice Stokes, who spent the last 10 years of his life paralyzed, in Maurie (1973), was a cop in Cornbread, Earl and Me (1975) and played Col. Rhumbus in Spies Like Us (1985). He also appeared in The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976), John Carpenter's In the Mouth of Madness (1994), The Glass Shield (1994) and Once Upon a Time … When We Were Colored (1995).

On television, Casey played a minor-league baseball coach who could still hit on the short-lived Steven Bochco drama Bay City Blues and was in Roots: The Next Generations and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.

Casey received an honorary doctorate degree from The Savannah (Ga.) College of Art and Design, where he served for years as chairman of the board and advocated for arts education.

He had many fans of his paintings.

"I cannot see what Bernie Casey sees," Maya Angelou said in 2003 to promote an exhibit of his work. "Casey has the heart and the art to put his insight on canvas, and I am heartened by his action. For then I can comprehend his vision and some of my own. His art makes my road less rocky, and my path less crooked."


CASEY, Bernie (Bernard Terry Casey)
Born: 6/8/1939, Wyco, West Virginia, U.S.A.
Died: 9/19/2017, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Bernie Casey’s western:
Guns of the Magnificent Seven – 1968 (Cassie)

RIP George Englund

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Los Angeles Times
9/21/2017

June 22, 1926 - September 14, 2017 Producer, Director, Screenwriter and Author passed away on September 14th following complications from a fall. George was known for such films as The Ugly American, The Shoes of the Fisherman, Zachariah and Challenger. His literary works include, The Way It's Never Been Done Before: My Friendship with Marlon Brando, and Cloris: My Autobiography. The son of actress Mabel Albertson and Harold Austin Ripley, and nephew of actor Jack Albertson, he was born George Howe Ripley in Washington D.C. After his parents divorced, Mabel married screenwriter, Ken Englund; who adopted George and his sister, Patsy Ripley. His early education was at Black-Foxe Military Institute. As an English/Philosophy major at UCLA, he was a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity and captain of the basketball and tennis teams. George was married to actress Cloris Leachman from 1953-1979. They had five children: Adam, Bryan (died 1986), George Jr., Morgan and Dinah. George was then married to Bonnie Graves from 1980-1992; and had two children: Max (died 1993) and Graves. George spent the last decade of his life with his loving friend Frances Bowes; writing, travelling and enjoying life. A man of eloquence and wit, George was known for his towering intellect and legendary sense of humor. He had a tremendous store of poetry and song in him, and he gave beautiful voice to both. His mind was curious, caring and massive. George was in the process of completing his autobiography (to be published). A movie about his life and friendship with actor Marlon Brando is also in development. George's loving family and friends surrounded him when he died at his home in Palm Springs, with the beautiful view of the mountains he cherished. George's sister, two ex-wives, five children, seven grandchildren and one great-grandson survive him. Services are pending and a Memorial in George's honor is being planned for November. In lieu of flowers, please donate to SMA.org, in memory of Max Englund.


ENGLUND, George (George Howe Ripley)
Born: 6/22/1926, Washington, DC, U.S.A.
Died: 9/14/2017, Palm Springs, California, U.S.A.

George Englund’s western – producer, director:
Zachariah - 1971

RIP Ben Hammer

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New York Times
September, 21, 2017

Well-known actor of stage, film and TV for 70 years, died September 18, 2017 at 92, survived by two daughters, predeceased by wife Dorothea, Long Island artist and potter.


HAMMER, Ben (Benjamin Hammer)
Born: 12/8/1924, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 9/18/2017, New York, U.S.A.

Ben Hammer’s westerns – actor:
The Virginian (TV) – 1967 (Quincey King)
Bonanza (TV) – 1969 (Quinn)
Barbary Coast (TV) – 1976 (Hendricks)

RIP Judy Parker

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Entertainment Industry Mourns The Death Of Judy Parker Gaudio, Songwriter-Actress

Married 45 Years To Songwriter-Producer Bob Gaudio, Founding Member of The Four Seasons & Jersey Boys Fame

PR Newswire
September 19, 2017

NASHVILLE, Tenn., Sept. 19, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Judy Parker Gaudio (age 79), writer of Billboard chart-topping songs and Broadway hits, passed away peacefully from respiratory complications on Thursday, her husband ‪Bob Gaudio confirmed. Among her most well-known songs are "December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)" and "Who Loves You," which were recorded by ‪Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons.

Judy Parker was introduced to ‪Bob Gaudio, a founding member of The Four Seasons, in 1973 at the Motown Studios in Los Angeles, while Bob was recording a ‪Marvin Gaye/Diana Ross duet. They dated for 8 years and were married on April 5,1981. In their 45 years together, they co-wrote a number of top 5 songs for ‪Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons. Some of those were prominently featured in the Tony, Grammy, and Olivier Award-winning musical, Jersey Boys, which became the 12th longest-running musical in Broadway history.

Born and raised in Michigan, Judy was one of seven children and the daughter of an Army Colonel; she also attended Michigan State University. Before her songwriting career began, Judy pursued a career in acting and modeling, including four years working in Rome, Italy. This young Michigander adopted the Italian language and culture quite quickly.

When she moved back to the U.S. in the late 1960's, Judy secured featured roles in a number of television shows, including Batman, Bonanza, and My Three Sons. Additionally, her work in commercials included United Airlines, and a wide variety of hair products such as Breck, Halo, Prell and Lilt Home Permanent.

Of all her successes, a significant moment came for Judy when she co-wrote, with her husband, the title song for ‪Neil Diamond's 1977 NBC TV special, "Glad You're Here with Me Tonight."

Judy was an incredibly entertaining storyteller with a wicked sense of humor. Songwriting, interior decorating, and family were her loves, along with the Sunday New York Times' crossword puzzle. A woman of strong faith and philanthropic spirit, she gave generously to Samaritan's Purse and Wounded Warrior Project. Judy and Bob made homes at the San Remo on Central Park West and Montauk, NY, however, they always maintained their primary residence in Nashville, TN.

Judy Parker Gaudio passed away at Vanderbilt University Hospital in Nashville, TN ‪at 4:55 pm on her birthday. It was, ironically, within 10 minutes of her time of birth. Now, is that style or what?

Judy was preceded in death by parents, Dorothy and Wilbur Small, sister Janice McKinley, and brother, Bill Small.

She is survived by a cast of thousands.


PARKER, Judy (Judith Parker)
Born: 9/14/1938, Westland, Michigan, U.S.A.
Died: 9/14/2017, Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.A.

Julie Parker’s western – actress:
Bonanza (TV) – 1967 (Julie)

RIP José Salcedo

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The editor José Salcedo, Almodóvar's collaborator and winner of three Goya awards dies

El Mundo
September 19,2017

José Salcedo, filmmaker Pedro Almodovar and winner of three Goyas for Women on the verge of a nervous breakdown , No one will talk about us when we are dead and Everything about my mother , has died on Tuesday in Madrid at 68 years, according to informed the Film Academy.

 "The Film Academy deeply regrets the loss of José Salcedo, one of the most powerful Spanish assemblers," said the institution, which this year awarded him the Gold Medal for his career.

 Formed as an auxiliary and assistant to Pablo del Amo and Pedro del Rey, Salcedo "was one of the few proper names that, in an office as determinant for the cinema as the assembly, was always synonymous with excellence, " said the president of the Academy, Yvonne Blake.

 Blake has advanced that what should be the ceremony of delivery of the Gold Medal will become "a tribute for him and his."

 Almodóvar counted on him in all his films, from Pepi, Luci, Bom and other girls from the heap (1980) to Julieta (2016), and among his more than 150 credits, he also featured films for other directors such as Eloy de la Iglesia, Agustín Díaz Yanes, José Luis Borau, Jaime Chávarri, Pedro Olea and Gonzalo Suárez.

 He also worked for Manuel Gómez Pereira, Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón, Santiago Tabernero, Juan Luis Iborra, Yolanda García Serrano, Josetxo San Mateo, Daniel Calparsoro and Luis Buñue , with whom he began as an assistant in Tristana .

 José Salcedo (Ciudad Real, 1949) mounted his first film at age 23.  It leaves two earrings of premiere: Oro , of Díaz Yanes and No one dies in Ambrosia , of Héctor Valdez.

 "I ride from the heart," said this technician who did not stop reinventing the medium from his desk and to which the Academy dedicates this month a cycle with some of the films in which he worked.

Salcedo José (José Salcedo Palomeque)
Born: 1949, Mestanza, Ciudad Real, Castille-La Mancha, Spain
Died: 9/19/2017, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

José Salcedo’s western – film editor:
A Night in Old Mexico - 2013

RIP Allen McCarty

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Seagrove Baptist Church
September 17, 2017

R. Allen McCarty, age 76, passed away Saturday, September 16, 2017. He was born January 22, 1941 in Pampa, Texas to William and Etta Choate McCarty. Mr. McCarty was a resident of Walton County. He was Baptist by faith and a member of Seagrove Baptist Church. He was a devoted husband, father and grandfather. As a lifelong media professional, Mr. McCarty was on-air talent in both radio and television, a lifetime member of the Screen Actors Guild, advertising agency owner, Past Governor of American Advertising Federation District 7 and on camera host of the Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy Telethon for over 20 years in Baton Rouge La. Allen's love of people shown beyond jobs and titles. His greatest joy was meeting strangers and in minutes finding someone they knew in common and leaving them with big smiles and warm hearts as only Allen could do. Allen was preceded in death by his parents and his brother William Dyke McCarty. Allen is survived by his best friend and wife of 29 years Jeanne M. Carter of Santa Rosa Beach, Florida; children; Scott Allen McCarty, Casey Reed McCarty and Melissa Marie McCarty Wieczorek and husband Ben; step-children; Kristi J. Stevenson and husband John, and Gary C. Schrang; aunt, Audry Nell Waits; grandchildren; Judah Wieczorek, Maxwell Wieczorek, Cayden Denney, John Carter Stevenson, Catherine Stevenson and Savannah Stevenson. Receiving of friends will be from 10:30-11:00 AM, Tuesday, September 26, 2017 at Seagrove Baptist Church; 4915 E County Highway 30A, Santa Rosa Beach, Florida 32459. Celebration of life services will be held 11:00 AM, Tuesday, September 26, 2017 at Seagrove Baptist Church at 4915 E County Highway 30A, Santa Rosa Beach, Florida 32459, with Reverend Gary Wiggins officiating. Attire is exactly what Allen would expect, very casual, Hawaiian shirts preferred. Flowers are being accepted or donations in Allen's memory to Seagrove Baptist Church Building Fund (address above) or Westonwood Ranch, 4390 Hwy 20 W, Freeport, FL 32439 www.westonwood.org Your gifts, your helpful actions, your thoughts and your prayers are all appreciated by the family. You may go online to view obituaries, offer condolences and sign guest book at www.clary-glenn.com.


Mc CARTY, Allen(Roy Allen McCarty)
Born: 1/22/1941, Pampa, Texas, U.S.A.
Died:  9/16/2017, Walton County, Florida, U.S.A.]

Allen McCarty’s western – actor:
Louisiana (TV) 1983 (auction bidder)
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