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RIP Félix González

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The Mexican Film Bulletin
By David Wilt
December 2017

Félix González, who appeared in numerous Mexican films from the 1950s through the 1980s, died in October  2017. His death was announced on 26 October 2017 by the Asociación Nacional de Intérpretes (ANDI) but no details were provided. González was 87 years old. Félix Jesús González Medina was born in Mexico City in October 1930. He studied law at UNAM, then entered the Andrés Soler acting school and also studied with famous stage director Seki Sano. González made his screen debut in Sitting Bull (1954), a U.S.-Mexican coproduction. His ability to speak English earned him roles in a number of other co-productions and Hollywood films shot in Mexico, including Villa!, Ten Days to Tulara, the "Daniel Boone" TV series, The Candy Man, and Missing. Among the Mexican films in which González had major roles were La furia del ring, Secuestro en Acapulco, La Sombra Blanca, La otra mujer, and Soy chicano y mexicano. He also worked on the stage and on television.In the mid-1980s González retired from acting and moved to Tijuana. He was married twice and had five children and numerous grandchildren.


GONZALEZ, Félix
Born: 10/20/1930, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico
Died: 10/26/2017, Ciudad de Mexico, Mexico

Félix González’s westerns – actor:
Sitting Bull – 1954 (Young Buffalo)
Ten Days to Tulara – 1958 (Marco)
Villa!! – 1958 (Don Octavio)
La carcel de Cananea – 1960 (Rosendo)
Jalisco Gals are Beautiful – 1961
La moneda rota - 1962
Muerte en la feria – 1962  (Pedro)
Daniel Boone (TV) – 1966 (Judd)
Daniel Boone: Frontier Trail Rider – 1966 (Judd)
Pacto de sangre – 1966
La forestero vengador - 1967
La vuelta de Mexicano - 1967
The Phantom Gunslinger – 1970
Los tres compadres – 1975
Soy chicano y mexicano – 1975
El mexicano (TV) - 1977

RIP Dominic Frontiere

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Los Angeles Times
December 23, 2017

December 21, 2017 Dominic Carmen Frontiere, 86, Emmy and Golden Globe winning film and television composer, former head of music at Paramount Pictures, has passed away in Tesuque, New Mexico on December 21, 2017. He is survived by his wife Robin and their children Emily, Joseph, Nicholas and Sofia, as well as daughter Victoria. Memorial donations may be made in Dominic's name to The Mr. Holland's Opus Foundation or Little Kids Rock.


FRONTIERE, Dominic (Dominic Carmen Frontiere)
Born: 6/17/1931, New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.A.
Died: 12/21/2017, Tesuque, New Mexico, U.S.A.

Dominic Frontiere’s westerns – producer, composer, conductor, producer, musician:
River of No Return – 1954 [musician]
Many Rivers to Cross – 1955 [musician]
The Last Hunt – 1956 [musician]
The Last Wagon – 1956 [musician]
The Proud Ones – 1956 [musician]
One Foot in Hell – 1960 [composer]
Rawhide (TV) – 1961 [composer]
Stoney Burke (TV) – 1962-1963 [producer, musical director, musician]
Branded (TV) – 1965-1966 [composer]
The Iron Horse (TV) – 1966-1968 [composer]
Hang ‘Em High – 1968 [composer]
Barquero – 1970 [composer]
Chisum – 1970 [composer]
John Wayne and Chisum – 1970 [composer]
The Train Robbers – 1973 [composer]
The Mark of Zorro (TV) – 1974 [conductor]
The Young Pioneers – 1978n [composer]

RIP Jerry Greenberg

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Jerry Greenberg, Oscar-Winning Editor Of 'The French Connection,' Dies at 81

The Hollywood Reporter
By Carolyn Giardina
12/22/2017

The renowned editor is also known for films such as 'Kramer vs. Kramer' and 'Apocalypse Now.'

Editor Gerald B. Greenberg, whose work on 1971 crime thriller The French Connection produced one of the most famous car chases in cinema history, earning him an Oscar for editing in 1972, died on Dec. 22. He was 81.

Jerry Greenberg, as he was known by his friends, earned two additional Oscar nominations — twice in the same year (1980) for Kramer vs. Kramer and Apocalypse Now. In 2015, he was honored by American Cinema Editors with its Career Achievement Award.

He began his career in 1960 in his native New York, where he learned how to edit music and began familiarizing himself with the Moviola, splicers, synchronizers and recorders.  His big break came when he was offered an apprenticing job for the legendary Dede Allen on Elia Kazan’s America America.

By 1967, when Greenberg and Allen were working closely together and on Bonnie and Clyde, Greenberg was given the task of editing a couple of the shootout scenes and worked closely with Allen and director Arthur Penn on them. He cut his first solo feature Bye Bye Braverman for director Sidney Lumet in 1968 and won the Oscar and BAFTA for editing William Friedkin’s The French Connection a year later.

Greenberg is known for his work on many of the films of the American New Wave working for directors like Arthur Penn, Francis Ford Coppola, Sidney Lumet, Michael Cimino, Brian De Palma and William Friedkin. His filmography includes Bye Bye Braverman, Dressed To Kill, Alice’s Restaurant, The Boys in the Band, They Might Be Giants, Scarface, Still of the Night, Reds, Heaven’s Gate, Wise Guys, The Untouchables, The Accused, Awakenings, Trapped, Get Carter, Inspector Gadget and American History X.

Presenting the ACE Career Achievement Award to Greenberg in 2015, editor Carol Littleton spoke of his work on Apocalypse Now, saying “Jerry masterly edits the taking of a Vietnam village using Wagner’s Ride of the Valkyries, which Robert Duvall’s character plays to inspire his troops and horrify the enemy. This iconic scene—nothing better captures the apocalyptic madness of the war in Vietnam, a picture of the American dream turned nightmare.”

She continued: “Jerry takes great pride in his approach to editing, vigorously working a scene for its maximum psychological and kinetic effect. He controls the emotions, never letting sentiment fall into sentimentality. He lines the actors takes, finding gold nuggets, polishing a performance until it shines. He examines every take for the right camera move, a spark of brilliance when the actor becomes the moment. His action sequences are tight, controlled, focused and always suffused with character. Never gratuitous; never chaotic or lacking in psychological impact."

Speaking of the editors that Greenberg has mentored, Littleton said during that presentation, “Not only has Jerry contributed to the success of directors' films, but also to the success of many editors' careers as well. Generosity is the bedrock of Jerry’s character,”


GREENBERG, Jerry (Gerald B. Greenberg)
Born: 7/29/1936, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 12/22/2017, U.S.A.

Jerry Greenberg’s westerns – film editor:
The Missouri Breaks – 1976
Heaven’s Gate - 1980

RIP Manolo Bolgonini

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Manolo Bolognini died in Rome, he was 92 years old

A great film producer, brother of director Mauro, he was born in Pistoia and often returned to the city to attend cultural events.

Il Terreno
December 23, 2017

He died of cardiac arrest in his house on the street of Cassia in Rome, Manolo Bolognini, 92, film producer and brother of director Mauro, both from Pistoia. Died a sudden death, as reported by his daughter Carlotta: "Until the last he spoke of work and film."

Manolo Bolognini left Pistoia at the age of 26, moved to Rome to follow his brother Mauro, quickly becoming a successful producer. His work includes films such as "Django" by Sergio Carbucci, "Teorema" and "Il Vangelo secondo Matteo" by Pier Paolo Pasolini, "Senilità" and "Il bell'Antonio" by his brother Mauro.

Although he lived in Rome, Manolo Bolognini was often in Pistoia, where he always participated with great willingness to initiatives born to remember the artistic history of his brother Mauro. And in November 2014, Manolo received the honorary presidency of the Mauro Bolognini Center in Pistoia.


BOLOGNINI, Manolo
Born: 10/26/1925, Pistoia, Tuscany Italy
Died: 12/23/2017, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Manolo Bolognini’s westerns – producer:
Django – 1966
Little Rita in the West - 1968
Texas, Adios - 1968
Viva Dango! – 1968
Boot Hill – 1969
The Forgotten Pistolero – 1969
Keoma – 1976
California - 1977

RIP Heather Menzies

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Variety
By Dave McNary
December 25, 2017

Actress Heather Menzies-Urich, best known for portraying Louisa von Trapp in the 1965 film “The Sound of Music,” died Sunday night. She was 68.

Menzies-Urich, the widow of actor Robert Urich, had been recently diagnosed with cancer, according to her son Ryan Urich.

Urich said his mother died on Christmas Eve, surrounded by her children and family members.

“She was an actress, a ballerina and loved living her life to the fullest,” Urich said. “She was not in any pain but, nearly four weeks after her diagnosis of terminal brain cancer, she had enough and took her last breath on this earth at 7:22 pm.”

Born in Toronto, Menzies-Urich’s first screen credit came in the TV series “The Farmer’s Daughter” in 1964. She was 15 when she was cast as the third-oldest of the seven von Trapp children in “The Sound of Music,” a box office smash that went on to win five Academy Awards, including Best Picture.

Her other feature films credits included “Hawaii,” “The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes,” “Piranha,” and “Endangered Species. Her TV credits included “Dragnet,” “Bonanza,” “Marcus Welby M.D.,” “The Bob Newhart Show,” and starring as Jessica 6 in the TV series “Logan’s Run.”

Menzies-Urich’s family moved from Canada to the Los Angeles area when she was a teenager. She was 14 when she landed the part of Louisa in the landmark 20th Century Fox production, directed by Robert Wise that starred Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer.

Menzies-Urich met her future husband while filming a commercial for Libby’s Corned Beef Hash in the mid-1970s. Urich died in 2002 of a rare form of cancer. Menzies-Urich created the Robert Urich Foundation and spent most of her time in recent years to the organization that raises money for cancer research and support for cancer patients.


MENZIES, Heather
Born: 12/3/1949, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Died: 12/24/2017, Park City, Utah, U.S.A.

Heather Menzies’ westerns – actress:
The High Chaparral (TV) – 1969 (Beth Roberts)
Bonanza (TV) – 1970 (Martha Thornton)
Alias Smith and Jones (TV) – 1971 (Annabelle)

RIP Jack Blessing

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Jack Blessing, Actor on ‘Moonligthing’ and ‘George Lopez,’ Dies at 66

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
12/26/2017

He also had a regular role on ‘The Naked Truth’ and did voice work on animated films like ‘Megamind’ and ‘ParaNorman’

Jack Blessing, an actor who had recurring roles on such series as The Naked Truth, Moonlighting and George Lopez, has died. He was 66.

Blessing died Nov. 14 at his home in Chatsworth, California, after a battle with pancreatic cancer, his son Ian told The Hollywood Reporter.

Most recently, Blessing was seen as Jack Powers, who with his brother Mel (Mark Tymchyshyn) owned the Powers Aviation business that employed Lopez's character, on the comic's eponymous 2002–07 ABC sitcom.

In 1986, the Baltimore native joined the stylish ABC drama Moonlightingin its third season as MacGillicuddy; he worked at the Blue Moon Detective Agency run by Maddie Hayes (Cybill Shepherd) and David Addison (Bruce Willis) and tussled often with Curtis Armstrong's Herbert.
On The Naked Truth, the 1995-98 ABC-NBC sitcom that starred Tea Leoni as a tabloid reporter, Blessing portrayed her unbalanced building manager, Mr. Donner.

Early in his career, Blessing starred as Chip Frye opposite Darren McGavin (as Nick Small) on the 1983 Disney-CBS comedy Small & Frye. Both characters were private eyes, and Blessing's could shrink in size to six inches.

Blessing also provided voices for characters in Antz (1998), Open Season (2006), Bee Movie (2007), Megamind (2010), ParaNorman(2012) and Planes (2013) and appeared on the big screen in Heaven's Gate (1980), Galaxy of Terror (1981), Thirteen Days(2000) and Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (2006).

Blessing played Det. Seybolt on the Steven Bochco 1997 miniseries Murder One: Diary of a Serial Killer, then reprised the role for the ABC drama that followed. He also played a cop on another Bochco series, Brooklyn South.

His TV resumé included work on M*A*S*H, Family Ties, thirtysomething, The Golden Girls, Northern Exposure, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Touched by an Angel, Mike & Molly, The X-Files and CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.

In addition to Ian, survivors include his wife of 32 years, Lora Staley Blessing — an actress who appeared in such films as Risky Business and on a 1989 episode of Moonlighting with his husband (they met while working as understudies on a comedy at the Ahmanson Theatre in L.A.) — and son Christopher.

BLESSING, Jack
Born: 7/29/1951, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.
Died: 11/14/2017, Chatsworth, California, U.S.A.

Jack Blessing's westerns – actor, crew:
Heaven’s Gate – 1980 (emigrant boy)
The Last of His Tribe (TV) – 1992 (Tom Waterman)
Rango – 2011 [ADR group]

RIP Stewart Moss

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StarTrek.com
November 27, 2017

StarTrek.com is saddened to report the passing of Stewart Moss, a veteran actor, writer and director who twice guest starred on Star Trek: The Original Series. Moss, who played Joe Tormolen in “The Naked Time” and Hanar in “By Any Other Name," died of a heart attack in September, though word of his death has just now been made public. He was 79 and would have turned 80 today, November 27.

Moss's life and career intersected with everyone from Marilyn Monroe, John Wayne, Alfred Hitchcock and Frank Sinatra to Rock Hudson, Robin Williams, Hugh Hefner and more than a few Playboy Playmates, that last fact courtesy of his directing shows for the then-fledgling Playboy Channel, as well as Marianne McAndrew, his wife of 50 years.

As an actor, Moss counted among his film and TV credits Raise the Titanic, Topaz, In Harm's Way, The Bat People (with his wife), The Missiles of October, Hogan's Heroes, Bonanza: The Return, Mannix, Quincy, Ironside, Cagney and Lacey, Rockford Files, T.J. Hooker, The Six Million Dollar Man, Perry Mason, Punky Brewster and The Fall Guy. He also acted in a total of 64 stage productions on Broadway, off-Broadway, regionally and in dinner theater.

On Star Trek, Moss portrayed two very different characters. As Tormolen in "The Naked Time," he was the Starfleet officer who pulled a knife -- a butter knife -- on Sulu and Riley, and died after falling on it.

Later, in "By Any Other Name," his character Hanar was part of an alien species, the Kelvan, that assumed human form to commandeer the Enterprise. StarTrek.com spoke to Moss in 2015, when he released his autobiography, My Trek. He clearly preferred the second of his two Trek experiences.

"We started out as very pale, almost whitish in complexion and stiff, somewhat robotic," Moss recalled of the Kelvan in our interview. "As the story went on, we became more human-looking and behaving, which eventually did us in. As an actor, the progression in playing Hanar was interesting to deal with. As I remember it, I worked through the entire shooting of “By Any Other Name” and only three days on “The Naked Time,” but the latter was my best experience. It was a juicier part. I had scenes with Bill, Leonard and DeForest Kelley, who was my favorite Star Trek cast member."

As that 2015 interview concluded, Moss marveled at the fact that Star Trek remained a part of his life nearly 50 years on. "The whole Star Trek phenomenon is mind-blowing," he said. "Who would’ve thunk that almost 50 years later it’s still going strong? I haven’t done any conventions in six years, but I get a request now and then in the mail from fans from all over the world asking for an autograph, to which I happily comply. All in all, being a part of the Star Trek world is something of which many actor friends of mine, who have more impressive resumes, are envious."

Please join StarTrek.com in offering our condolences to Moss's family, friends, colleagues and fans.


MOSS, Stewart
Born:11/27/1937, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died: 9/13/2017, Walla Walla, Washington, U.S.A.

Stewart Moss – westerns – actor:
Rawhide (TV) – 1964 (Felipe)
Bonanza (TV) – 1966 (Aaron Bornstein)
The Loner (TV) – 1966 (Hank)
Cade’s County (TV) – 1972 (Jarvis)
Bonanza the Return (TV) – 1993 (Preston McAdam)
Gunsmoke: The Long Ride (TV) – 1993 (Dr. Strader)

RIP Rose Marie

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Rose Marie, Wisecracking Star on ‘The Dick Van Dyke Show,’ Dies at 94

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
12/28/2017

The beloved actress was a co-headliner on opening night at Bugsy Siegel’s Flamingo Hotel in Vegas in 1946 and later a regular on ‘The Hollywood Squares.’

Rose Marie, the actress who went toe-to-toe in a man’s world as wisecracking comedy writer Sally Rogers on the legendary 1960s CBS sitcom The Dick Van Dyke Show, has died. She was 94.
Marie died at 2 p.m. Thursday at her home in Van Nuys, California, according to her website.

The comedienne-vocalist, who started her career at age 3 in some of the earliest talking films, co-headlined on the opening night of Bugsy Siegel’s Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas in 1946 and was a regular on the game show The Hollywood Squares.

Readily identifiable by the bow in her hair and her raspy voice, Marie was a member of one of the most popular ensemble casts in TV history. Along with Dick Van Dyke, Mary Tyler Moore, Morey Amsterdam and, occasionally, Carl Reiner (the series' creator), she appeared in all five seasons of the sitcom and received Emmy nominations in 1963, 1964 and 1966.

“We were always changing lines, even right up to the very minute of going on the air,” she recalled in a 2004 interview. “If something didn’t work, it didn’t work. Sometimes guest stars would panic because they weren’t used to this. We were a tight-knit, hard-working crew. I couldn’t wait to get to the set each day.”

The man-needy Rogers’ verbal jousts with Amsterdam — whom she had known in real life since she was 11 — were among the show’s highlights. At the time, the sight of a single woman in the workplace was novel on TV.

She was hired for the sitcom — the second person cast after Van Dyke himself — for $1,000 an episode by executive producer Sheldon Leonard, who had played her brother on the radio on The Phil Harris Show.

Marie had cultivated her persona as a husband-hunter in a number of comic guest appearances on the shows of such luminaries as Jimmy Durante, Jackie Gleason, Red Skelton, Garry Moore, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Dinah Shore, Dean Martin, Merv Griffin and, frequently with Johnny Carson, on The Tonight Show.

She also played secretary Myrna Gibbons, who worked with Doris Day’s character in a magazine office, on the CBS sitcom The Doris Day Show; was Hilda, the sandwich delivery lady, on the ABC action series S.W.A.T.; appeared as Frank Fontana’s (Joe Regalbuto) mom on Murphy Brown; portrayed a baseball owner, not unlike Marge Schott of the Cincinnati Reds, on the Fox sitcom Hardball; and was the voice of Norma Bates in Gus Van Sant’s remake of Psycho (1998).

Marie also was a 14-year participant on The Hollywood Squares, where her comic cackle delighted audiences, and she appeared in such films as Dead Heaton a Merry-Go-Round (1966), Don’t Worry, We’ll Think of a Title (1966) and Lunch Wagon (1981).

“I play me in almost everything I do,” she once said. “I play a part to the best of my ability to get a joke out, to sell it and to do it best.”

Rose Marie Mazetta was born in New York on Aug. 15, 1923, her name inspired by the popular Broadway musical Rose-Marie. She entered show business as a 3-year-old toddler when she appeared at New York’s Mecca Theater and belted out a torch ballad.

The precocious performer, known as "Baby Rose Marie the Child Wonder," won a spot on a national radio show and became one of the hottest stars on the NBC Radio Network.

During the 1930s, Marie also toured in vaudeville and had small parts in movies, including International House (1933), which starred W.C. Fields. She was so talented, many people thought she was a midget dressed in kids' clothes.

When she was 11, she dropped the “Baby” from her name. The following year, her family moved to New Jersey and she was sent to a convent school, not resuming her career until age 17, when she was billed as “Miss Rose Marie.”

Beginning in the '40s, she performed in nightclubs and theaters. Her deep, throaty voice won her fans at the leading nightclubs of the day, including the Copacabana, and she toured in the musical revue 4 Girls 4 with Rosemary Clooney, Helen O’Connell and Margaret Whiting for eight years.

Marie was one of the headliners, along with comedian Jimmy Durante and bandleader Xavier Cugat, to open Siegel’s Flamingo, the first such modern hotel and casino, on Dec. 27, 1946.

During her onstage engagements, Marie perfected her comic timing and won notice on Broadway for her acting and pizzazz. She co-starred with the top comic stars like Milton Berle in Spring in Brazil, Zero Mostel in Lunatics and Lovers and Phil Silvers in Top Banana. Her Top Banana turn brought her back to the movies, when she and Silvers headlined a film version for director Alfred E. Green in 1954. (Many of here scenes were cut, however, she told THR recently.)

During the 1950s and ’60s, she garnered guest-star roles on TV in such shows as The Adventures of Jim Bowie, Gunsmoke, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, The Monkees and My Three Sons.

During a visit to CBS affiliate WJW in Cleveland to promote the Van Dyke Show, Marie met Tim Conway, then a local actor doing skits for the station. She became his manager and got the comic his first big job, as a regular on ABC’s The Steve Allen Show.

Marie was married to Bobby Guy, at one time the lead trumpeter for the NBC Orchestra, which performed nightly on The Tonight Show. He died in 1964 of a blood infection. The couple had one daughter, Georgiana, who survives her.

Throughout her life, Marie was active in many causes, most notably animal welfare. Her memoir, Hold the Roses, was published in 2002, and a documentary about her, Wait for Your Laugh, premiered in November.


Rose Marie (Rose Marie Mazetta)
Born: 8/15/1923, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 12/28/2017, Van Nuys, California, U.S.A.

Rose Marie’s westerns – actress:
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1957 (Mrs. Monger)
The Adventures of Jim Bowie (TV) – 1958 (Honey

RIP Chief Leonard George

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Leonard George, Tsleil-Waututh elder, actor and community leader, dies

George, 71, was the son of Chief Dan George and his wife Amy

CBC News
12/7/2017

Leonard George, a beloved leader of the Tsleil-Waututh Nation, has died at the age of 71.

Born in North Vancouver on Aug. 18, 1946, George was the son of the late Chief Dan George and his wife Amy.

Like his father, George was an accomplished actor and shone on screen in classics such as as Smoke Signals and Call of the Wild.

As an elder and chief of the Tsleil-Waututh Nation, he was known for his wisdom, wit and work to protect First Nation's land, water, resources and culture.

He also made economic strides for his community, initiating Takaya Developments, a real-estate development company majority owned by the Tsleil-Waututh Nation.

Charlene Aleck, George's niece and an elected councillor for the Tsleil-Waututh Nation, said the family is grieving.

"The magnitude of the loss is great for our family as well as for everybody else," Aleck said.

"He changed the way people looked at First Nations in doing business. He really upheld a lot of our culture and teachings. He broke new ground and had a space for us to carry our traditions and bring it into a new space."

In 2013, George was honoured with Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee Medal for his work as an economic development visionary and as a spiritual leader.

George was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2005 and had to re-learn how to speak, eat and even sing.

He is survived by his wife Susan and three sons Justin, Gabriel, and Zac. Two other sons, Quatsame and Issac, predeceased him.

Outpouring of condolences

This morning, Federal Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould tweeted she was "very saddened to hear of the passing of Leonard George. My thoughts and prayers go out to his friends, family and Nation."

B.C. Regional Chief Terry Teegee expressed his heartfelt sympathies and condolences to George's family, describing him in a statement as a significant leader.

"I've known Chief Leonard George since I was young; he was a close friend to me and my family, and was always an inspiration for me. We are so grateful to have had such a strong community leader and advocate within our circles for all these years," Teegee wrote.


GEORGE, Chief Leonard
Born: 8/18/1946, North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Died: 12/6/2017, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Chief Leonard George’s westerns – actor:
Little Big Man – 1970 (Crow scout)
Smoke Signals – 1998 (Lester Fallsapart)
Call of the Wild (TV) – 2000 (Far Cloud)
Skins – 2002 (Captain Eagleman)
DreamKeepers (TV) – 2003 (Crosses Father)
Peacemakers (TV) – 2003 (Chief Red Owl)
Klondike (TV) – 2014 (older Tingit hunter)

RIP Thomas Stanford

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The Santa Fe New Mexican
December 29, 2017

Thomas G. Stanford peacefully departed a long and happy life on December 23, 2017 at the age of 93. He is survived by his beloved partner Sherry Bendickson, cherished daughter and husband Nina and Brendt Mullan, their adored children Julian and Denis, and cherished son and wife Adam and Lyn Stanford. Born in Germany and educated in Switzerland and England, he moved to Santa Fe in 1987 after a long career as a film editor in Hollywood. The highlight of his numerous achievements in the film industry was receiving an Oscar in 1962 for editing West Side Story. But the crowning jewels in his life were his loving relationship with Sherry, and his pride in his children and love for them. He leaves behind many friends who will miss his wisdom and humor, and his most engaging presence.


STANFORD, Thomas (Thomas G. Stanford)
Born: 1924, Germany
Died: 12/23/2017, Santa Fe, New Mexico, U.S.A.

Thomas Stanford’s western – film editor:
Jeremiah Johnson – 1972
Hec Ramsey (TV) – 1972-1973
The Legend of the Lone Ranger - 1981

RIP Thomas Hunter

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The Sun Chronicle
December 28, 2017

Thomas O’Driscoll Hunter

Thomas O’Driscoll Hunter died peacefully in his home in Rowayton, Connecticut, on Dec. 27, 2017.

Born in Savannah, Georgia, in 1932, he led a creative and adventurous life. He graduated from the University of Virginia with a degree in art and proudly served as a captain in the United States Marine Corps. In the late ’50s, he embarked on an exciting career as an actor, which led to a 10-year residence in Italy and a number of starring roles in “spaghetti westerns” and other movies shot around the world. In Rome, he formed his own theater company and co-wrote the screenplays for the films “The Human Factor” and “The Final Countdown.” Upon returning to the United States, he wrote and directed plays, ran theater workshops and published a novel, “Softly Walks the Beast,” and an autobiography, “Memoirs of a Spaghetti Cowboy: Oddball Tales of Luck and Derring-Do.”

Tom was an avid tennis player, cartoonist, storyteller and, as a longtime member of the Screen Actors’ Guild, film lover.

He wrote original songs as well as lyrics to music composed by his father-in-law, Eddy Courts. He even designed two energy-efficient homes for his family in Massachusetts.

With his kindness, humor, imagination and love, he transformed friends and family, including his wife Isabelle Hunter, daughters Kaki Hunter and Georgia Farinholt, sister Susan Hunter, many nieces and nephews, and grandsons Boody Springer and Wyatt and Ransom Farinholt.


HUNTER, Thomas (Thomas O’Driscoll Hunter)
Born: 12/19/1932, Savannah, Georgia, U.S.A.
Died: 12/27/2017, Rowayton, Connecticut, U.S.A.

Thomas Hunter’s westerns – actor:
The Hills Run Red – 1966 (Jerry Brewster/Jim Houston)
Death Walks in Laredo – 1967 (Whitey Selby)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1969 (Frank Corey)
Carlos (TV) – 1971 (Pedro)   
Showdown at O.K. Corral (TV) - 1972 (Ike Clanton)

RIP Pedro Osinaga

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The actor Pedro Osinaga dies at 81

The burning chapel by the Navarrese interpreter will be installed in the funeral parlor of the M-30 in Madrid

El Pais
12/29/2017

Navarrese actor Pedro Osinaga died this afternoon at 81 years old in Madrid, the theater impresario Jesus Cimarro, personal friend of the artist, told Efe. The burning chapel with the mortal remains of the actor will be installed in the funeral home of the M-30 in Madrid, according to the same source.

Pedro Osinaga, who was born on December 15, 1936 in Pamplona, ​​has been one of the most popular Spanish actors to have toured with his company in numerous theater comedies, as noted by the jury of the XV Pepe Isbert Theater Award that was granted in June 2011.

Proof of this is that the actor starred in the comedy Sé infiel y no mires con quién, by English playwright Ray Cooney, for 14 years (1971 and 1985), a period in which he was seen by more than eight million viewers in more than 10,000 representations. Osinaga also worked under the command of Gustavo Pérez Puig in Estudio 1 of TVE in the mythical Twelve Men without Mercy (1973, in the then UHF channel), and was the only one of those twelve performers who was still alive. He appeared in films such as Don Juan (1974), Cuentos de las sábanas blancas (1977) and Réquiem por un empleado (1978).

He was always very close to his hometown, where he studied music and from where, after obtaining a scholarship, he moved to Madrid to start his artistic career in the world of zarzuela, mainly as a baritone. Between its last works figure the strange pair, of Neil Simon, that he carried out next to Joaquín Kremel.

Osinaga, who tried not to miss the Sanfermines, received the Gold Medal for Merit of the Fine Arts in 1999, and was awarded by the Association of Journalists of Navarre in 2010, among other professional recognitions. The actor confessed in 1988 that his professional career was possible because he left the position in the regional soccer team of Pamplona where he played to go to Madrid to make a career as an interpreter.


OSINAGA, Pedro (Pedrito Osinaga)
Born: 12/15/1936, Pamplona, Spain
Died: 12/29/2017, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

Pedro Osinaga’s western – actor:
Murieta – 1965 (Claudio 'Cucaracha')

RIP Peggy Cummins

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Peggy Cummins, Legendary Femme Fatale of 'Gun Crazy,' Dies at 92

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
January 2, 2018

She starred in the film noir classic after being brought to the U.S. for the lead in 'Forever Amber,' only to be replaced.

Peggy Cummins, the petite blond actress who played the carnival sharpshooter turned murderous bank robber in the sexually charged 1950 film noir classic Gun Crazy, has died. She was 92.

Cummins suffered a stroke and died Friday in a London hospital surrounded by her family, her longtime friend Dee Kirkwood, a fellow trustee of Stars Foundation for Cerebral Palsy, told The Hollywood Reporter.

The Irish actress also starred in the western Green Grass of Wyoming (1948) with Charles Coburn and in Jacques Tourneur's British horror classic Curse of the Demon (1957) opposite Dana Andrews.

Cummins came to America in 1945 when, as a virtual unknown, she was cast for the lead in the highly anticipated 20th Century Fox period drama Forever Amber. She was eventually replaced by Linda Darnell in what could have been a tremendous career setback.

In something of a twist, it was Cummins who late in the game stepped in for Veronica Lake to play "Annie" Laurie Starr in the low-budget noir Gun Crazy. She practiced on a shooting range to brush up for her career-defining role as a traveling performer who picks Barton Tare (John Dall) out of a crowd and engages him in a shooting competition.

Before long, the manipulative Laurie marries Barton — an ex-Army marksman who has been obsessed with guns since he was a child — and they go on a crime spree.

"Peggy's performance, her Hollywood swan song, would galvanize the Gun Crazy production and earn her lasting fame as the tiniest, but most ferocious, femme fatale in the history of film noir," author Eddie Muller said in July as he introduced the film on Turner Classic Movies. (He wrote Gun Crazy: The Origin of American Outlaw Cinema, published in 2014.)

In its original review, The Hollywood Reporter raved about Cummins and her "commanding performance of the twisted girl."

Gun Crazy was directed by B-movie kingpin Joseph H. Lewis off a crackling script rewritten by the recently blacklisted Dalton Trumbo, who used Millard Kaufman as a front. MacKinlay Kantor made the first attempt at the screenplay, adapting it from a story he did for The Saturday Evening Post. Russell Harlan (To Kill a Mockingbird) provided the brilliant cinematography.

A clear precursor to Arthur Penn's Bonnie and Clyde (Cummins even sported a beret long before Faye Dunaway did), Gun Crazy is also known for its three-minute-plus tracking shot from the backseat of the car that Laurie and Barton use to rob a small-town bank and make their getaway.

"We made up the dialogue as we went along [during that scene]. Joe Lewis let us do that," Cummins revealed during a 2013 Film Noir Foundation appearance in San Francisco.

Muller noted that Gun Crazy, released through United Artists under its original title Deadly Is the Female, was the only film from prolific producers Frank and Maurice King to lose money. "Today, it's seen as their crowning achievement," he said. Experts say it also inspired a host of French New Wave filmmakers.

Cummins was born on Dec. 18, 1925, the youngest of three. Her mother, Margaret Tracy, was an actress; her father was a journalist and music teacher. She appeared on stage and in radio plays as a teenager and worked in such films as Dr. O'Dowd (1940) and Welcome, Mr. Washington (1944).

After appearing for many months on a London stage in Junior Miss, she was spotted by a Fox talent scout. Producer Darryl F. Zanuck then cast her as the immoral Amber St. Clair in an adaptation of Forever Amber, Kathleen Winsor's romance novel that's set in 17th century England. Execs had looked at more than 200 actresses for the part.

"Fox made a big splash for me when I came over. I weighed 98 pounds and had an 18-inch waist," Cummins said at the 2012 TCM Classic Film Festival. "I went to Zanuck's party [at his home]. All these people were there, [Ernst] Lubitsch, Tyrone Power, Joan Crawford. I said hello as though I knew them. It was awesome. They were stars; I was an actress."

"The tendency, if you were a bit short, blonde and rather pretty, was for a conventional role, but this was quite a meaty part. An actor wants to play against type."

However, after filming began in 1946 on the Monterey Peninsula in California, Zanuck found that his discovery was "not sexy enough," in Cummins' words, and production was suspended after a few weeks. Cummins got the boot, with the full-figured Darnell taking her place, and Otto Preminger's Forever Amber bowed in November 1947.

"I can't deny it was like having a lovely jewel or some other wonderful gift and then having to give it back," Cummins told Photoplay of the experience. "It's hard, but you have a choice. You can let yourself ache over your loss — or you can think instead of how wonderful and exciting it was while you had it."

Cummins went on to make her Fox debut in the Joseph L. Mankiewicz comedy The Late George Apley (1947), starring as the daughter of Ronald Colman's wealthy Bostonian, and then had lead roles in Moss Rose (1947), playing a Cockney singer-dancer opposite Victor Mature; Green Grass of Wyoming; and Escape (1948) with Rex Harrison before the end of her Fox contract.

She left the U.S. in 1950 — she would not return for decades — and starred in such films as Operation X (1950) with Edward G. Robinson; Hell Drivers (1957), directed by the blacklisted Cy Endfield; and Curse of the Demon, in which she and Andrews' psychologist character investigate a mysterious death.

Cummins retired from acting in the mid-1960s.

She married the late London businessman Derek Dunnett in 1950. Survivors include her son David and daughter Diana.


CUMMINS, Peggy (Augusta Margaret-Diane Fuller)
Born: 12/18/1925, Prestatyn, Denbighshire, Wales, U.K.
Died: 12/29/2017, London, England, U.K.

Peggy Cummins’ western – actress:
Green Grass of Wyoming – 1948 (Carey Greenway)

RIP Wolf C. Hartwig

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Wolf C. Hartwig, Producer of Sam Peckinpah’s ‘Cross of Iron,’ Dies at 98

War drama starred James Coburn, Maximilian Schell and James Mason

Variety
By Jamie Lang  
January 2, 2018    

German producer Wolf C. Hartwig, best known for Sam Peckinpah’s 1977 blockbuster “Cross of Iron,” has died in Paris at the age of 98. He was a controversial figure within the Teutonic film biz given his role as the mogul behind a series of sexploitation movies.

Hartwig’s career as a producer began in 1953 with a controversial WWII documentary and, while the style and subject-matter of his projects would change markedly over the next three decades, controversy remained at the core of most of his work. He truly believed there was no such thing as bad publicity.

In the early ’60s Hartwig saw profit in the Near and Far East, where he would use European funding to bankroll international co-productions with projects shot in Asian countries. These films where often Westerns or based on popular pre-war pulp-fiction characters.

Starting in the late ’60s, the bulk of his career catalog reads like a glossary of Penthouse Forum stories, and in 1970 the producer hit it big with the salacious, not-quite pornographic, “School Girl” film series. The first film racked up more than six million admissions in its theatrical lifetime, and inspired 11 further instalments in the series.

Although his films were often suggestive, Hartwig adamantly defended his “sex report” films, a genre he is largely credited with initiating, while condemning what he considered pornography. In a 2010 interview with Zeit Online, he clarified the differentiation and betrayed some old-world homophobic views: “No coitus in close-up, no naked man from the front, no homosexuality, disgusting. Otherwise I had no taboos.”

In 1977 Hartwig produced his first big-budget blockbuster, Sam Peckinpah’s only war film, “Cross of Iron,” starring James Coburn, Maximilian Schell and James Mason. The picture was the most expensive German post-war film up to that point. And, although U.S. admissions were hampered by the concurrent release of “Star Wars,” the film took in Germany’s largest box-office returns since 1965’s “The Sound of Music.”

At the time, Variety said of the film, “’Cross of Iron’ more than anything else affirms director Sam Peckinpah’s prowess as an action filmmaker of graphic mayhem.” A sequel, “Breakthrough,” was released in 1979, directed by Andrew McLaglen, and starring Richard Burton and Rod Steiger.

Hartwig worked another eight years, producing 11 more films before retiring in 1985 to spend his later life in Paris with his wife, French actress Véronique Vendell.


HARTWIG, Wolf C.
Born: 9/8/1921, Düsseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Died: 12/18/2017, Paris, Île-de-France, France

Wolf C. Hartwig's westerns - producer:
River Pirates of the Mississippi - 1963
Massacre at Marble City - 1964
Black Eagle of Santa Fe - 1965

RIP Tom Heaton

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The Coast Reporter
January 5, 2018

It is with sorrow that we announce the passing of Thomas Heaton, our husband, father, and grandfather.

An actor, singer/songwriter and artist, Tom was born in 1940 and raised in the Bronx, NY when it was still a rural community. After a stint in the US Army, stationed overseas in Europe, Tom attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, and found his true calling. With over 150 film and television credits (Guess Who's Coming to Dinner as his first film), Tom worked throughout the US and Canada, making Gibsons his home after years in Los Angeles, Nelson, Rock Creek, and Vancouver.

Adoring and proud of his family, Tom leaves to mourn his loss, and cherish his life, his wife Janet Hodgkinson, his four children, Willow, Beau (Kess), Sam (Jenna) and Jack, and his four grandchildren, Raven, Lily, Maleka and Makeo.

A celebration of Tom's life will be held on Sunday, January 7, 1:30 pm at Eric Cardinall Hall, 930 Chamberlin Road, Gibsons.


HEATON, Tom (Thomas Heaton)
Born: 1940, Bronx, New York, U.S.A.
Died: Gibsons, British Columbia, Canada

Tom Heaton’s westerns – actor:
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1967, 1968, 1969 (Billy the Kid, Jim Riley, Johnny McDonald)
Iron Horse (TV) – 1967 (Billy Pardew)
Bandolero! – 1968 (Joe Chaney)
Monte Walsh – 1970 (Sugar Wyman)
The Grey Fox – 1982 (Tom)
Eureka – 1983 (man blowing off head)
Bordertown (TV) – 1989, 1990 (Charles Stuart Ashley, William ‘Skip’ Vickers)
Call of the Wild (TV) – 1992 (Asa)
White Fang 2: Myth of the White Wolf – 1994 (miner)
Convict Cowboy (TV) – 1995 (Lon)
Lonesome Dove: The Outlaw Years (TV) – 1996 (Amos)
Dead Man’s Gun (TV) – 1997 (Wilbur Portsmouth)
Goldrush: A Real Life Alaskan Adventure (TV) – 1998 (Dow)
The Jack Bull (TV) – 1999 (Whitaker)
The Secret of Giving (TV) – 1999 (News Carver)
Shanghai Noon – 2000 (saloon bartender)
The Johnson County War (TV) – 2002 (Sheriff Sine)
Mail Order Bride – 2008 (Willy)

RIP Wilbur Plaugher

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Rodeo legend Wilbur Plaugher passes away at 95

FOX26 News
January 3, 2018

Sanger's rodeo legend Wilbur Plaugher has passed away. He was 95.

The Sanger Herald reports Plaugher, who was a member of every cowboy and rodeo hall of fame in the world and cofounder of the Fellowship of Christian Cowboys, died Tuesday evening.

Plaugher was in a nursing home recovering from surgery, his daughter told the Sanger Herald.

Until recently, the Sanger Herald reports Plaugher worked his cattle ranch just outside Sanger almost every weekday and frequently served as a guest preacher on Sunday at Sanger area churches.

According to the Sanger Hearld, Plaugher is in the chamber of commerce's hall of fame, was honored by the city council in 2012, was the Christmas parade grand marshal and the grand marshal of the 92nd Annual Clovis Rodeo parade in 2006. He held two world records for the fastest time in steer wrestling and was the All-Around Champion Cowboy in 1946 at Madison Square Garden, which was the same year he began his long, storied career as a bullfighter.

Plaugher also acted in Walt Disney movies and appeared in one movie with Marilyn Monroe.


PLAUGHER, Wilbur (Wilbur Preston Plaugher)
Born: 3/13/1922, Lima, Ohio, U.S.A.
Died:1/2/2018, Sanger, California, U.S.A.

Wilbur Plaugher’s westerns – actor:
Run, Appaloosa, Run – 1966 (clown)
Daniel Boone (TV) – 1969, 1970 (Carl Cowles, Oxy Grace)

RIP Giovanni Di Clemente

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Farewell to Giovanni Di Clemente, he was the producer of Placido and Monicelli

He died at the age of 69.  Winner of the David di Donatello for "We hope it's a girl".  Among his most famous films "I picari", "Parenti serpenti" and "Pacco doppio pacco e contropaccotto"

Yesterday, in Rome, at the San Giovanni Hospital, the producer and distributor Giovanni Di Clemente died.

Born in the capital in 1948, he arrived as a producer in the second half of the '70s.  He made dozens of films, and various fiction, exploring genres: from his debut with Poliziaotto sprint by Stelvio Massi, in 1977, to Segni particular: beautiful of Castellano and Pipolo with Adriano Celentano;  but it has also created lasting artistic partnerships, such as those with Mario Monicelli and Michele Placido.  Precisely with one of Monicelli's masterpieces, Speriamo che sia donna , in 1986 he won the David di Donatello as best producer and for the best film.

Ten years later, in 1996, he also received a special David di Donatello for all his production activities.  With his Clemi Cinematografica, Di Clemente has always produced for Monicelli also the picari (1987), Il male oscuro (1990), Parenti serpent i (1992), Facciamo paradiso (1995) and Panni sporchi (1999).  Di Placido, on the other hand, has created the second work as director Le amiche del cuore (1992) and in 1998 Del perduto amore , as well as many films and fiction with Placido, such as Giovanni Falcone by Giuseppe Ferrara (1993) or A Gentleman by Maurizio Zaccaro (1999) on Enzo Tortora.

 Among his other productions are O 're by Luigi Magni (1988), Scugnizzi (1989) and Pacco, double packet and counterattack (1992) by Nanni Loy, up to the fiction for Rai1 Joe Petrosino (2006), played by Beppe Fiorello.  From distributor (field to which Di Clemente   it was more dedicated in recent years), however, with the Cdi brought in the movie rooms of Orion as the silence of the innocent and of Medusa as In the bedroom .

The funeral will take place on Friday, January 5 in Rome in the Church of San Saba.


Di CLEMENTE, Giovanni (Antonio Di Clemente)
Born: 1948, Rome, Lazio, Italy
Died: 1/2/2018, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Giovanni Di Clemente’s western – production secretary:
Beyond the Frontiers of Hate - 1972

RIP Zeljko Senečić

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Zeljko Senecic was a prominent Croatian film and theater director, stage designer, painter, interior designer and screenwriter.

He was born in Zagreb and studied painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb. He graduated in the class of Professor Marijana Detoni in 1956, and by 1960 he was an associate of the master workshop Krste Hegedušić. The stage design at the Academy of Fine Arts ended in 1960.

His first painting was Autoportret , oil on canvas from 1950. The first exhibition was realized with Julius Knifer in the Salon of the Association of Fine Artists of Croatia (ULUH, today HDLU) in Prague Street in Zagreb, and since 1957 he has been exhibiting at numerous exhibitions of ULUH at the Art Pavilion in Zagreb (in all shows from 1958 to 1966) He has exhibited at several hundred independent and collective exhibitions at home and abroad, publishing graphic maps Why, Zagreb, Dubrovnik, Zadar, Istria, Rab and the last independent exhibition Kritička from March to May 2017 he had an anthology in the Klovićevi dvori gallery.  He is one of the founders of the Josip Račić Gallery in Zagreb (1976).  He was a member of HDLU since 1956.

He was a screenwriter of numerous Croatian and foreign films, television shows and television series.  Some of the most famous films in which Senečić signed the set design are Rondo (1966) directed by Zvonimir Berkoović, Breza (1967) Ante Babaja, Fourth Companion (1967) directed by Branko Bauer, I Have Two Moms and Two Dads (1968) Kreže Golika 1968) Antuna Vrdoljaka, The First Command (1969) Vanče Kljaković, The Road to a Crash (1970) Zvonimira Berković, Who Makes Evil Thoughts (1970) Kreže Golika, Hamlet's Performance in the Village of Mrduša Donja (1972). ) Antuna Vrdoljaka, Glembajevi (1988) Antuna Vrdoljaka, Warrior Time (1990) Dejana Čoraka, Čaruga (1990) Rajka Grlić and Gospa (1994) Jakova Sedlara.  From the list of numerous TV films and series for which he has signed the set design, the 1982 edition of the Unknown Series, Eduardo Galić, should be listed.

Since 1965, Senecic has also worked on theatrical scenography (Who is afraid of Virginia Woolf?, The Hail on the Roof , Koriolan , Sonata Saber , Tango , Idiot , Abduction , Richard III) for theaters throughout Croatia, from the Croatian National Theater in Zagreb, Rijeka, Split Summer and Dubrovnik Summer Games.  In the genre of documentary and short films since 1969 he has worked in about thirty films, more than half of them as screenwriters and directors.  A special group is his films dedicated to artists, especially visual artists - Julie Knifer, Dušan Džamonja, Josip Vanište, Josip Račić.  One of the films he has done in the last years of his film is Dori Maar.

He directed the full length films of Pont Neuf (1997), Zavaravanje (1998) at the Berlin Film Festival and Film Festival in Geneva, Dubrovnik Suton (1999), in the selection of the World Film Festival in Munich and Crveno i Crno (2005).

Senečić is the winner of the Golden Octavian Lifetime Achievement Award for the scenography in Croatian Cinematography (2015), Vladimir Nazor's Award for Lifetime Achievement for Film Art (1996), the Four Golden Arena for the Scene at the Yugoslav Film Festival (1964, 1985) Pula Festival (1992, 2001), Dr.  Branko Gavella for theatrical scenography (1980), the prestigious Grand Prix for painting, the paintings on glass, the Salon des Nationas - Paris in 1984 and many others.

On January 2, 2018, he lost his battle with severe illness at 85 years of age.

The last fever will be in the narrow circle of the family.


SENECIC, Zeljko
Born: 1/18/1933, Zagreb, Croatia, Yugoslavia
Died: 1/2/2018, Zagreb, Croatia

Zeljko Senečić s western - art director:
The Hellhounds of Alaska – 1973

RIP Harry Landers

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Harry Landers Dies: ‘Ben Casey’ Co-Star Appeared On Many TV Classics, Was 96

Deadline Hollywood
By Bruce Haring
January 4, 2018

Landers was born in New York City in 1921 as Harry Sorokin, the son of Russian immigrants and one of seven children. His Hollywood career began at Warner Brother Studios in the mid-1940s as a laborer. While there, an article ran in the company’s newsletter that mentioned his heroism during his time as a Merchant Marine. Bette Davis heard about it and asked to meet him. Ultimately, Davis arranged for Landers to get his SAG card and personally paid his initiation fee into the union, thus allowing him to work as a film extra.

That big break was followed by an invitation to join the Actor’s Lab, one of Hollywood’s most storied acting groups.

In the late 1940s into the ‘50s, Landers returned to New York City and started doing theater and live television. He was a contemporary of and friends with Marlon Brando, Wally Cox, Murray Hamilton, Ralph Meeker, Tige Andrews and Red Kullers, among others. It was a period he would later speak of with reverence, calling it the best time of his life.

Landers moved back to Los Angeles in the mid-1950s and started to hit his acting stride, booking roles regularly. While working on Medic with Richard Boone, he got to know Jim Mosher, the series’ head writer, who went on to pen the pilot for Ben Casey.He was cast as Ted Hoffman and also directed three episodes. Following the series’ successful five-year run (1961-1966), Landers continued to work in film and television.

His extensive resume includes episodes of such classic television series as Quincy M.E., Star Trek, Mannix, The Virginian, The Rat Patrol, Combat! Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Dennis the Menace, The Untouchables, Have Gun-Will Travel and The Roy Rogers Show, among many others.

Landers is survived by his sons, Scott and Logan; his daughter-in-law Katherine; grandson Christopher; and numerous nieces, nephews and extended family members. His wife, Jeanne Vaughn Thompson, an actress and runner-up Miss America, preceded him in death.


LANDERS, Harry (Harry Sorokin)
Born: 9/3/1921, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 10/?/2017, Calabasas, California, U.S.A.

Harry Sanders’ westerns – actor, director:
Jack Slade – 1953 (Danton son)
The Indian Fighter (TV) – 1955 (Grey Wolf/Captain Trask Attach)
The Black Whip (TV) – 1956 (fiddler)
Cavalry Patrol (TV) – 1956 (Private Danny Quintana)
The Roy Rogers Show (TV) – 1956 (King Keady)
Broken Arrow (TV) – 1957 (Takulli)
Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) – 1957, 1960 (cowboy, Lieutenant Harvey)
U.S. Marshal (TV) – 1958, 1960 Greg Hogan, Don
Lawman (TV) – 1959 (Wes Blaine)
Mackenzie’s Raiders (TV) – 1959 (Strable)
Black Saddle (TV) 1960 (Rand Buckley)
Johnny Ringo (TV) – 1960 (Arch Ganzer)
Law of the Plainsman (TV) 1960 (Kid Remick)
Wanted: Dead or Alive (TV) – 1960 (Lafe)
Iron Horse (TV) – 1966 (Yancey)
The Virginian (TV) – 1967 (Walter Verig)
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1968 [director]
Charro! (TV) – 1969 (Heff0

RIP Münir Özkul

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Veteran Turkish actor Münir Özkul dies at age 93

Daily Sabah
January 5, 2018

Veteran Turkish actor Münir Özkul, one of the iconic names of Turkey's Yeşilçam cinema scene, died Friday at the age of 93 at his Istanbul home.

Born on Aug. 15, 1925 in Bakırköy, Istanbul, Özkul started his acting career in the late 1940s. Throughout the 1950's and 1960's, his main focus was theater, whereas he also played minor roles in movies that brought him overall recognition by Turkish audiences.

Özkul rose to fame in the 1970's with major roles in Yeşilçam comedy and family drama movies, which also featured some of his most famous peers at the time. Along with actress Adile Naşit, another iconic figure of Turkish cinema, they formed an unforgettable duo in family dramas, whereas his most famous role in that period was "Mahmut Hoca" in "Hababam Sınıfı" (The Chaos Class) series, in which he portrayed a strict but compassionate vice principal admired and respected by his students.

Özkul continued acting, although less frequently, until the early 2000's. Since 2003, he has been away from the public scene due to dementia and old age.

In 1998, Özkül was awarded with the honorary title of "State Artist of Turkey."

He married four times and had three children.


OZKUL, Münir
Born: 8/15/1925, Bakırköy, Istanbul, Turkey
Died: 1/5/2018, Istanbul, Turkey

Münir Özkul’s western – actor:
Çifte tabancali damat - 1967 (Frank Fuat)
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