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RIP Gianfranco Parolini

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THE NECROLOGIO DEI GIUSTI - FRANK KRAMER ALIAS GIANFRANCO PAROLINI IS DEAD, HIS FILMS HAVE INVOLVED MANY HEROES OF THE WESTERN CINEMA, THE PEPLUM, THE MAC MOVIES WAR MOVIES AND THE 007 AT THE ITALIANA - HE RETURNED TO LICIO GELLI WHEN THINKING OF PRODUCING A FILM ON HIS LIFE. PAROLINI WEMNT TO FIND OUT, BUT IT WAS ONLY ABLE TO SPEAK WITH HIS MACHINE BEFORE ENTERING HIS VILLA. IT IS INCORRECT AND ...

DagoSpia
By Marco Giusti
4/27/2018 

"Hey buddy ... you know I tell you, Frank Kramer is dead! Frank Kramer seemed to be immortal, that is Gianfranco Parolini, born in Rome in 1925, who left yesterday in his city of Rome. He, that created many heroes for the western cinema, the peplum, the macaroni war movies and the Italian 007. Sartana, Sabata, Indio Black, The frantic Three Supermen. With more and more absurd titles, like Indio Black, you know I tell you, that you are a great son of ....

Not to mention the series of Agent Jo Walker with Tony Kendall and Brad Harris protagonists, well known in Germany as Kommissar X. Or “5 for Hell” with Gianni Garko and Klaus Kinski, beloved by Quentin Tarantino. Master of the genre cinema, and of the cinema made with the great Italian stuntmen, like Aldo Canti called Robustino and, in art, Nick Jordan, perhaps the most phenomenal acrobat we have ever had, Parolini was one of the few Italian directors who in the post-war period that could speak English well.

So after h disebut as a script supervisor for Francesco, Rosselli's “Don Camillo di Duvivier”, he found help on the set of films shot in Rome of great importance, such as “Fontana di Trevi”, which he often remembered, but also of “Cleopatra”.

After having made the bones as Vittorio Cottafavi's help on “The Gladiator Revolt”, he broke right into the peplum, which remained his favorite genre, practically turning “Goliath Against the Giants” alone, but attributed to Guido Malatesta, and then throwing himself into “Samson” and “The Fury of Hercules”, who practically revolved together and which were his first real great successes, followed by the phenomenal “The Ten Gladiators” and “The Invincible Three”.

On these sets he met both Brad Harris, an American soldier who will remain his friend for life, but also Roger Browne, Mimmo Palmara, Sal Borgese, Pietro Torrisi, Vassili Karis and all the great Italian actors and stuntmen of the genre. Even a frustrating and insane Serge Gainsbourg that lit his cigars by burning the dinars in Tito's Yugoslavia.

Unlike the old directors like Guido Malatesta or Primo Zeglio, Parolini had an adventurous cinema that was much bolder and more brash, and in a hurry. Often with two titles at a time, as was done then. And full of action comedy ideas when the genre in Italy did not yet exist.

Parolinate, Sergio Leone bubbled, when Parolini took his place at the PEA of Alberto Grimaldi for the western after “Il buono, il ugro, il cattivo”. Parolini, fresh from the success of “If You Meet Sartana, Pray for Your Death” with Gianni Garko, he introduced himself Lee Van Cleef, dressed in the role of “Sabata” and immediately afterwards he turned the sequel, “Return of Sabata”.

His films were seen all over the world, with frightful proceeds. He remembered Sandro Mancori, his great friend and director of photography: "Grimaldi took Parolini after seeing his Sartana. Gianfranco is a bit 'the reverse of the medal of Sergio Leone. He manages with his intelligence to overthrow the most violent situations. Together with our film, Grimaldi was also producing Fellini's “Satyricon” and Pontimorvo's “Queimada”.

On the set you never saw". Even though the Sabata collections were crazy for the time, Leone never forgave Grimaldi for having replaced him with Parolini and his "parolinate". It was a friction that even arose from the set of the peplums, when Leone turned extremely slowly “The Colossus of Rhodes” while Parolini churned out one after the other. Leone saw a degeneration in the western comic of the Sartanas and Sabatas. But for Parolini that was his style. On the third film, however, Lee Van Cleef left, and his place was taken by Yul Brynner, then not so popular. Indio Black was immediately renamed, and the film became “Adios, Sabata”, you know I tell you: you're a great son of ... but Parolini never took to Yul Brynner.

As he himself said: "We were about to shoot the first shot of the film that was actually the final of the film: he came in with the poncho all dressed in black and had to say: 'Where is the gold?'. Then he enters, opens the door and says the joke with his vocation. I was not at all satisfied with his performance, I let out a joke out loud, countering his joke with a '1930 ...' in English, to emphasize his acting too much set, as an old actor ... mortacci, misses a little that kills me ... it was old for me, already there was the setting of the actor passed ... it was left to the magnificent seven and I did it for all the film is beaten ... m ' he did suffer a lot, but I do not know is' shut up!".

Parolini uses Lee Van Cleef in “God’s Gun”, a late and crazy western film shot for Golan and Globus in the Sinai desert in Israel, in the middle of the war. The troupe was left by the two scoundrel producers "in the desert without a lira and above all without water!" Recalls Parolini, 'There was Lee Van Cleef who told me' I'm leaving !? and I: 'No, you have to do all the first floors first, then you can annà ...' So I went with him over 50 close-ups, then I placed the double and worked everything out! (..) But 'I'm making the film with me and Sybil Danning, another beautiful woman, who as I knew made me understand that if I wanted to do ... and in fact after Tel Aviv happened a mess that no longer ended!

At the time she was Bill Foreman's woman who had 600 theaters in the United States and he too had become my friend. I remember that he arrived on the set cò is the hairpiece that he had done she puts her because she was without hair, but she was a good person, caruccio! ". Mancori considered it a good film, like all those of Parolini. "Justice always triumphs in his films. While Leone is always violent, even when he writes, Gianfranco puts intelligence behind violence. It is never direct ".

In underneath who touches the protagonist is the American and Communist folksinger Dean Reed, who will end up overwhelmed in East Germany in a bizarre story of espionage with a tragic ending. But Parolini had always considered him a good boy. As a good boy, he also believed Aldo Canti, who was executed in a trucid way at Villa Borghese in 1990. He loved difficult characters and crazy actors, such as Klaus Kinski or Serge Gainsbourg.

When Bud & Terence arrived, Parolini, who had largely invented the genre with Sabata, two films very similar to those with the two actors, “Questa volta ti faccio ricco” and “We Are no Angels”, shot with the official double of the two, that is the big Israeli Paul Smith and the thin Michael Coby, that is the italianissino Antonio Cantafora. With the crisis of the genre cinema he tried other ways, like the crazy film “Yeti - The Giant of the Twentieth Century” with special effects not too successful but they were not forgiven even by the most avid fans.

Or the peplum porno Rome, the ancient key of the senses. But Parolini would have shot anything. It was enough that it was cinema. Gelli, the head of P2, turned to him when he thought of producing a film about his life. Parolini went to see him, but slammed into his car before entering his villa.

He got angry and did not do anything, even tried to sue Gelli for the damage of the car. Why did he call Parolini as a director and at the same time actors like Sean Connery remains a beautiful mystery. Every time I saw him he raised a couple of peplums to be filmed in co-production with China. Always imminent. A man of great sympathy, full of verve even as an old man, he went for fun and cheerful as he had always been.


PAROLINI, Gianfranco (aka Frank Kramer)
Born: 2/20/1925, Rome, Lazio, Italy
Died:4/26/2018, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Gianfranco Parolini’s westerns – director, assistant director, writer, film editor, actor:
River Pirates of the Mississippi – 1963 [assistant director]
The Tall Women – 1966 [director]
Left Handed Johnny West – 1967 [director, writer]
If You Meet Sartana… Pray for Your Death – 1968 [writer, actor]
Sabata – 1969 [director]
Adios, Sabata – 1970 [director, writer, film editor]
Return of Sabata – 1971 [director, writer, film editor]
We Are No Angels – 1975 [director, writer]
God’s Gun – 1976 [director, writer]


RIP Paul Junger Witt

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Paul Junger Witt, 'Partridge Family' Producer, Dies at 77

The Hollywood Reporter
By Ryan Parker
April 27, 2018.

Along with an accomplished TV career, he was also a producer on a number of movies, including 'Dead Poets Society,''Three Kings' and 'Insomnia.'

Paul Junger Witt, who produced such classic TV shows as The Partridge Family, Soap and Golden Girls has died, his publicist stated. He was 77.

Witt died following a hard fought battle with cancer. Along with his accomplished TV career, Witt was also a producer on a number of movies, including Dead Poets Society, Three Kings and Insomnia.

Beyond his work on the big and small screen, Witt had a passion for the environment which he channeled by being on the California State Park and Recreation Commission for 16 years in the roles of chairman, vice chairman and commissioner. He also served on the board of ecoAmerica, among his involvement with other similar organizations.

Witt was born in New York City March 20, 1941. A 1963 graduate of the University of Virginia, Witt had a seat on the school's council of the arts as well as a membership on the USC School of Cinematic Arts board of councilors.

Witt would meet his future wife, TV writer Susan Harris, in 1973 after he left Columbia Pictures to work with Tony Thomas At Danny Thomas Productions. In 1975, the two men formed Witt/Thomas Productions, then Witt/Thomas/Harris Productions.

Witt and Harris would marry in 1983 and have five children together: Christopher, Anthony, Genevieve, Oliver and Sam.


WITT, Paul Junger
Born: 3/20/1943, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 4/27/2018, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Paul Junger Witt’s westerns – producer:
Here Come the Brides (TV) – 1968-1970
The Gun and the Pulpit (TV) - 1974

RIP Michael Anderson

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Legendary British film director dies aged 98

A legendary British director has sadly passed away aged 98.

The Daily Star
By Sasha Morris
April 28, 2018

The 98-year-old was best known for his hit 1976 film Logan's Run, which starred Michael York and Farrah Fawcett, and later won a Special Academy Award for special effects.

Michael's glittering career spanned more than six decades, with other notable productions such as The Dam Busters and Around The World in 80 Days.

Before his death, Michael was the oldest living person to receive a Best Director nomination at the Oscars for Around the World in 80 Days.

His career began with acting, as he appeared in In Which We Serve, 1936 and Housemaster, 1938.

Michael then took a break from acting to serve in the British Army's Royal Signal corps for the Second World War.

He went onto direct box office successes such as The Dam Busters and 1984, in 1956.

Michael's success grew as he was called in to direct Around the World in 80 Days, starring Frank Sinatra and Shirley MacLainem and was quickly nominated for Golden Globe and an Academy Award for his work - with the film winning best picture.

Michael went onto win Lifetime Achievement Award from the Directors Guild of Canada.

The director was married three times — to Betty Jordan, Vera Carlisle, and Adrienne Ellis.

His son Michael Anderson Jr works as an actor and also appeared in Logan's Run and the Martian Chronicles.

Michael's other son David is a film producer, while his step-daughter Laurie Holden has appeared in The X Files and The Walking Dead.


ANDERSON, Michael
Born: 1/30/1920, London, England, U.K.
Died: 4/25/2018, Canada

Michael Anderson’s western – director:
Rugged Gold (TV) - 1994

RIP Kris Harmon

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Classic Images
By Laura Wagner
April 27, 2018

R.I.P., KRISTIN HARMON NELSON (June 25, 1945 – April 26, 2018), actress and painter. She was the daughter of football star Tom Harmon and actress Elyse Knox and sister of actor Mark Harmon and actress-model Kelly Harmon. From 1963 to 1982, she was married to actor-singer Ricky Nelson; they had four children: actress Tracy Nelson, Sam Nelson, and twin singers Matthew and Gunnar Nelson. Her second husband (1988-2000) was TV producer-writer-director Mark Tinker. Kris had a recurring role on THE ADVENTURES OF OZZIE AND HARRIET (1963-66) and ADAM-12 (1975). She and Ricky headlined the film LOVE AND KISSES (1965). News here: “My mother, Kristin Harmon Nelson, passed away suddenly and unexpectedly last night. Love and light are welcome.”


HARMON, Kris (Sharon Kristin Harmon)
Born: 6/25/1945, Burbank, California, U.S.A.
Died: 4/26/2018, California, U.S.A.

Kris Harmon’s westerns – actress:
The Over-the-Hill Gang (TV) - 1969 (Hannah Rose)
The Resurrection of Broncho Billy – 1970 (the girl)

RIP Jack Regas

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RIP Jack Regas

Ventura County Star
May 1, 2008

Jackson Regas, 92, of Thousand Oaks, television director, died 4/25/2018. Arrangements by Rose Family Funeral Home


Regas, Jack(Jackson Regas)
Born: 8/30/1925, Alameda, California, U.S.A.
Died: 4/25/2018, Ventura, California, U.S.A.

Jack Regas’ western – choreographer:
The Roy Rogers & Dale Evans Show (TV) - 1962

RIP John ‘Jabo’ Starks

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Jabo Starks, Drummer for James Brown, Dies at 79

The New York Times
By Daniel E. Slotnik
May 1, 2018

Jabo Starks, a drummer steeped in blues whose steady groove became the backbone for many of James Brown's hits, died on Tuesday at his home in Mobile, Ala. He was 79.

His manager, Kathie Williams, confirmed the death. He had leukemia and myelodysplastic syndromes and had been in hospice care for about a week, she said.

Mr. Starks, whose first name was John and whose nickname was sometimes spelled Jab’o, was one of two drummers closely identified with Brown during his heyday in the 1960s and ’70s. The other was Clyde Stubblefield, remembered for his indelible drum solo on Brown’s “Funky Drummer,” perhaps the most sampled drumbeat of all time. (Mr. Stubblefield died last year).

Both drummers played on some of Brown’s best-known albums, including “Sex Machine,” “I Got the Feelin’,” “Say It Loud — I’m Black and I’m Proud” and “Cold Sweat.” Mr. Starks drummed on singles like “Get Up I Feel Like Being a Sex Machine,” “Super Bad” and “The Payback.”

All those songs, like most of Brown’s work, have had long afterlives. They have been sampled in songs by hip-hop artists like L. L. Cool J, Kendrick Lamar, A Tribe Called Quest, the Roots, the Black Eyed Peas and Kool Moe Dee.

Mr. Starks and Mr. Stubblefield appeared together onstage and on records, seeing each other as partners and not competitors, they said.

“You have to understand this, we’re two different drummers,” Mr. Starks said in an interview with NPR in 2015.

Mr. Starks came from a blues background, while Mr. Stubblefield came up playing soul and funk. Mr. Starks’s style was more straightforward, without some of Mr. Stubblefield’s flourishes, but it drove Brown’s songs and got audiences on their feet.

“If you can’t pat your feet and clap your hand to what I’m doing, then I’m not doing anything worthwhile,” Mr. Starks said.

Brown was a demanding boss, known to fine his musicians for errors. But according to both Mr. Starks and Mr. Stubblefield, Mr. Starks was never fined. By his account, he sometimes caught Brown in a mistake.

“Sometimes James would miss a change or a cue, but I wouldn’t,” he was quoted as saying in a profile in Mobile Bay magazine in 2015. “He’d turn around and say, ‘You got me, Jab!’ ”

John Henry Starks was born in Jackson, Ala., on Oct. 26, 1938. His father, Prince Starks, worked in a lumberyard, and his mother, Ruth Starks-Watkins, worked in food services at a public school.

Mr. Starks, who acquired his nickname as a baby, grew up listening to gospel and blues. He became enamored with drums while watching a marching band in a Mardi Gras parade in Alabama.

“You could tell when that drummer stopped playing and when he started playing, he had that much command over the band,” Mr. Starks said in 2015. “I must have walked two miles with that band, watching and listening to him. And I made up my mind and said, ‘I’d sure like to be able to play just like that.’ ”

He taught himself to play on an improvised drum kit — a bass and snare drum tied to a chair, and cymbals on a stand — but received little formal instruction. After graduating from high school in the mid-1950s he started playing with blues artists like John Lee Hooker, Smiley Lewis, Howlin’ Wolf and Big Mama Thornton at the Harlem Duke Social Club in Prichard, Ala., a famous venue on the so-called chitlin’ circuit.

Mr. Starks joined Bobby (Blue) Bland’s band in 1959 and played on some of his hits, including “Turn On Your Love Light,” “I Pity the Fool” and “That’s the Way Love Is.” He left to join Brown’s band in 1965 and stayed with him until the mid-1970s, when he began touring and recording with B. B. King.

He is survived by his wife of 58 years, Naomi Starks (formerly Taplin); two sisters, Ruth Brown and Sally Bumpers; a daughter, Sonya Starks; a son, Mark; and two grandchildren.

Mr. Starks and Mr. Stubblefield played together again years after they parted ways with Brown. They formed a duo called Funkmasters, which released music and recorded instructional videos, and also worked together on the soundtrack for the 2007 movie comedy “Superbad.”

Ms. Williams, his manager, said that Mr. Starks last performed in March, at the Red Bar in Grayton Beach, Fla., where he had played since the mid-1990s.

Mr. Starks said that even after decades onstage he never lost the joy of playing music.

“When I’m playing music, man, let me tell you one thing: There ain’t nobody in the world higher than I am,” he said. “I get so high playing music, it scares me.”


STARKS, John (John Henry Starks)
Born: 10/26/1938, Jackson, Alabama, U.S.A.
Died: 5/1/2018, Mobile, Alabama, U.S.A.

John Starks’ western – songwriter:
Django Unchained - 2012

RIP Tony Cucchiara

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Tony Cucchiara, protagonist of the Cantagiro, has died

The artist, who with his wife Nelly Fioramonti had formed a folk duo, would have turned 81 on October 30th

Corriere Della Serra
May 3, 2018

Tony Cucchiara is dead.  The artist would have turned 81 on October 30th.  Protagonist of the Cantagiro of 1962 and of the Sanremo Festival of 1972, he had gained popularity with the song "Annalisa" and had then formed a folk duo with his wife Nelly Fioramonti.  The singer died prematurely in 1973, a few days after her 34th birthday, for the consequences of a difficult birth, in which her second child was born.

Innovator

As well as being a singer - he was the one who innovated the genre of the musical -, he was also the author of television programs as well as a man of the theater.  Born in Agrigento, Cucchiara had written numerous musical comedies including "Storie di periferia", "Tragicomica con musiche", "The Baroness of Carini", "Swing", "The Count of Montecristo" and "Pippin the Short" of which was protagonist Tuccio Musumeci in the role of the king of France, produced by the Teatro Stabile di Catania and also represented abroad.  For 15 years he was one of the authors of "In famiglia", the Rai transmission of the director Michele Guardi 'with whom he had constituted - together with another agrigentino, the maestro Pippo Flora -, a long artistic association and friendship.


CUCCHIARA, Tony (Salvatore Cucchiara)
Born: 10/30/1977, Agrigento, Sicily, Italy
Died: 5/3/2018, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Tony Cucchiara’s western – performer:
A Fistful of Songs – 1966

RIP Lynn Ready

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RIP Lynn Ready

Born December 3, 1944 • Died February 26, 2018

The San Fernando Valley Sun
March 14, 2018

Born Lowrey Lynn Ready to Robert and Myrtle Ready, in Dallas, Texas, he began dancing and singing lessons at an early age, and soon was winning amateur contests in the Dallas and Ft. Worth areas. Lynn, who was always billed by his middle name, sang on local radio and television shows from age three on, and later learned to play piano and the steel guitar. Lynn's first professional engagement was in February 1957, on a local Dallas television program, The Curt Massey Show. Shortly afterwards, Lynn took part in a regional audition for replacement Mouseketeers, and became the only Mouseketeer ever hired whose family wasn't already living in California.

Lynn's family, including his older brother Jack, moved to Canoga Park, California in 1957, after Lynn won a spot on the show. He was with the Mouseketeers for six months and then went on to do feature spots on the Ozzie and Harriett Show, The Spin and Marty Show as well as a dancing spot in the movie Bye Bye Birdie.  He continued in show business for several years as an actor, singer, songwriter and musician. 

Lynn is survived by his only child and son, Richard Ready, and Granddaughter Meredith Ready as well as Nieces, Marilyn Kinman, Carolyn Simpson, Donna Martin, Nancy Maurice, Linda Martin and Nephews David Jackson and Aaron Jackson and several Great Nieces and Nephews.  He passed away on Monday, February 26, 2018 from Cancer.  He will be remembered as a person who could make you smile and laugh with his entertaining personality and stories.  He will be sorely missed by his family who loved him very much.  He will be interred at Oakwood Memorial Park in Chatsworth with his Mother and Father.


LYNN, Ready (Lowery Lynn  Ready)
Born: 1231944, Dallas, Texas, U.S.A.
Died: 2/26/2018, Canoga Park, California, U.S.A.

Lynn  Ready’s western – actor:
The New Adventures of Spin and Marty (TV) – 1957 (Lynn)

RIP Wolfgang Völz

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The legendary "Captain Blue Bear" is dead!

Bunte
May 4, 2018

The actor and voice actor Wolfgang Völz is dead. The voice of "Käpt'n Blaubär" was 87 years old.

He was the voice of "Captain Bluebearer." Now the popular actor and dubbing actor Wolfgang Völz died at the age of 87. The "Berliner Morgenpost" reports.

 Völz was born August 16, 1930 in Gdansk.  In the 1950s, he starred opposite stars such as Hans Albers and Gert Fröbe in several movies.  He also celebrated great successes in the TV series "Count Yoster gives himself the honor." There he was seen in 78 episodes as a chauffeur Johann, who together with his boss, a noble crime novelist and hobby detective, all sorts of criminal cases the "better society" solves.

His grandson is the "Bachelor"

 Völz was also known as a voice actor: he was, inter alia, the German voice of Sir Peter Ustinov and was heard in "The Lord of the Rings: The Companions" and in "Pirates of the Caribbean - Strange Tides".  His most famous voice, however, was that of the "Captain Bluebeard".

Wolfgang Völz was married since 1955 to the Berlin dancer Roswitha Völz, the two have a daughter and a son. His grandson Daniel Völz (33) was "Bachelor" in the eighth season of the eponymous RTL broadcast .

BUNTE.de wishes the family a lot of strength in these difficult hours.


VOLZ, Wolfgang
Born: 8/16/1930, Free City of Danzig
Died: 5/2/2018, Berlin, Berlin, Germany

Wolfgang Völz’s western – actor, voice actor:
For a Few Dollars More – 1965 [German voice of Luigi Pistilli]
Mexikanische Revolution TV – 1966 (Randolfo Fierro)
Dove si spara di più – 1967 [German voice of Piero Lulli]
The Dirty Outrlaws – 1967 [German voice of Dino Strano]
Boot Hill – 1969 [German voice of Enzo Fiermonte]
Lucky Luke - Daisy Town – 1971 [German voice of Mayor]
Return of Sabata – 1971 [German voice of Günther Stoll]
Vengeance Trail – 1971 [German voice of Salvatore Billi]
Chato’s Land – 1972 [German voice of Richard Basehart]
Son of Zorro – 1973 [German voice of Fernando Sancho]
Lucky Luke – Ballad of the Daltons (1978) [German voice of Joe Dalton]
Lucky Luke’s Great Adventure – 1983 [German voice of Joe Dalton]
Lucky Luke TV – 1990 [German voice of Jolly Jumper]
Renegade - 2004 [German voice of Ernest Borgnine]

RIP Marcello Verziera

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Spencer / Hill Databank

Word has come from the Carlo Pedersoli family, that on May 3, 2018 middleweight boxer, stuntman, actor Marcello Verziera had died in Rome. He was 83. Verziera was a boxer before starting his career in films. His first film was in 1968’s “If You Meet Sartana Pray for Your Death”  as a Tampico henchman. His first appearance in the Spencer / Hill universe came in 1970 “They Call Me Trinity”, where he played one of the three bandits Bud shoots during his first appearance in the film. Verziera's roles with Bud and Terence were always rather small, but very numerous. A total of 20 times he appeared Bud and Terence, the last time in 1988 in the series “Big Man”. Rest in peace, Marcello!


VERZIERA, Marcello
Born: 1/22/1935, Rome, Lazio, Italy
Died: 5/3/2018, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Marcello Verziera’s westerns – actor, stuntmn:
If You Meet Sartana Pray for Your Death - 1968 (Tampico henchman)
They Call Me Trinity - 1970 (bandit)
Trinity is STILL My Name – 1971 (gunman)
It Can be Done Amigo – 1972
Life Is Tough, Eh Providence? - 1972 (James henchman)
Man of the East – 1972 (brawler)
The Crazy Adventures of Len and Coby – 1974 (man holding ladder)
Macho Killers – 1977 (poker player)
Buddy Goes West – 1981 (Colorado Slim henchman) [stunts]
Arizona Road – 1990

RIP Robbie Little

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Robbie Little, British Producer, Dies En Route to Cannes

Variety
By Pat Saperstein
May 5, 2018

Robbie Little, a British producer and familiar figure at film markets who founded the Little Film Company with his wife Ellen, has died.

Little had been traveling to the Cannes Film Festival from London when he died unexpectedly, according to Screen International.

He was working on the drama “Mrs. Lowry & Son” with Timothy Spall and Vanessa Redgrave, as well as on “The More You Ignore Me.”

Little, together with his wife, has worked on financing, producing and distributing more than 300 films, including “Waking Ned Devine,” “The Secret of Roan Inish,” “Mrs. Dalloway” and “Before Night Falls.”

After moving from Italy to Los Angeles, he founded Overseas Film Group, and later First Look Media. As a founding member of the Independent Film and Television Alliance, he was active at the American Film Market since its beginning in the 1980s.

Together with his wife, Little was also a founding member of The Archive Council, the industry support group for the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) Archive Film Preservation Program, and served on the Board of Directors of the Antonio David Blanco Scholarship Fund, which annually benefits deserving stud


LITTLE, Robbie (Robert Little)
Born:  19??, Liverpool, Merseyside, England, U.K.
Died: 5/5/2018, London, England, U.K.

Robbie Little’s western – executive producer:
Toonstone - 2014

RIP Paolo Ferrari

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Paolo Ferrari has died: a great actor in theater, cinema and television

RAI News
May 6, 2018

Paolo Ferrari, a great actor in theater, cinema and television, has died in Rome. He had worked with directors such as Blasetti, Zeffirelli and Petri. He was also a famous voice actor.

Born in Brussels, where his father was a consul, on February 26, 1929, Ferrari was married twice. A first marriage with Marina Bonfigli and later with Laura Tavanti, both were his companions on the silver screen. He has three sons, Fabio and Daniele from his first wife, and Stefano, son of Tavanti.

Paolo Ferrari was a very famous face on black and white TV. The general public remembers him especially for such TV series as "Nero Wolfe" and for the commercials of a detergent ("Madam wants to change his Dash's tin with two of another brand?") Entered the history of Carosello.

Ferrari was also an excellent voice actor. He had left the radio, just 9 years old, with a program in which he played Paolo. In the same year he made his debut at the cinema in "Ettore Fieramosca" directed by Alessandro Blasetti. Other films followed, including "Gian Burrasca" in 1943, up to the tragedy of his eldest brother, Leopoldo, executed by the partisans after he refused to take off the fascist uniform.

After the war he returned to the cinema with "Fabiola" in 1949 directed by Alessandro Blasetti and "Una lettera alba" by Giorgio Bianchi. Then come radio and television. With Nino Manfredi and Gianni Bonagura in 1955, Ferrari participated in the radio variety show "Rosso e nero n 2" while he began his career as a voice actor and would make it one of the most famous and beautiful voices in Italian cinema. Among the many Hollywood actors dubbed there was also Humphrey Bogart. Eclectic and brilliant, he interprets films of every kind, from "Toto 'cerca pace" by Mario Mattoli (1954) to "Il conte Aquila", from "Susanna tutta Panna" by Steno (1957) to "Camping" by Franco Zeffirelli (1958) ); Adorabili and bugiarde, directed by Nunzio Malasomma (1958).

His first TV success was in 1959 with his wife Marina Bonfigli in the program "Il Mattatore", with Vittorio Gassman. Mel 1960 leads the Sanremo Festival together with Enza Sampò and in the 1960s the cinema continues, with at least a dozen films including "The Shortest Day" by Sergio Corbucci (1962) and "Le voci bianche" by Pasquale Festa Campanile (1964). In the seventies, on the small screen, the screenplay and mini-series went crazy: Ferrari plays in "Nero Wolfe" with Tino Buazzelli (as Archie Goodwin, the diligent assistant investigator) and in "Accadde in Lisbon" alongside Paolo Stoppa. The advertising-smashing of the Dash that "does not change" makes him universally known but at the same time marks his decline on TV. He returns only in 1997 when he plays a pensioner in the series in 40 episodes of "Disokkupati". After 2000, in addition to the theater, he is called on for many TV dramas: he is the Marquis Giuseppe Obrifari in the series "Orgoglio", then recites in "Incantesimo" 9 and 10 where he recites alongside Delia Boccardo.

In 2008 he received the Gassman Award for his career and in January 2013 announced his retirement from the scene. In recent years he had retired to the Roman countryside and was returned only rarely to Rome, mostly to go and see his Lazio.


FERRARI, Paolo
Born:2/26/1929, Brussels, Belgium
Died: 5/6/2018, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Paolo Ferrari’s western – actor:
A Coffin for the Sheriff  - 1965 [Italian voice of Anthony Steffen]
Raise Your Hands Dead Man, You're Under Arrest - 1972 [Italian voice of Espartaco Santoni]
It Can Be Done Amigo – 1972 [Italian voice of Francisco Rabal]
Another Try, Eh Providence? – 1973 (rifle salesman)
Zorro - 1975 [Italian voice of Stanley Baker]

RIP Adolfo Lastretti

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Farewell to Adolfo Lastretti: theatrical, cinematographic and television actor.  He was 80 years old.

RB Casting
May 6, 2018

Theatrical, cinematographic and television actor Adolfo Lastretti died of heart failure on May 5, 2018 in Loiano, Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy. He was 80.  His daughters, Viola and Ariadne, announced that their father died peacefully, surrounded by the affection of friends and relatives, due to a heart condition.

Born in Tempio Pausania, Sardinia on November 18, 1937, he soon moved to Liguria, in Rapallo, with his family for work related reasons. Here he completed his studies and, in 1957, he played in the short “La spiaggia”. Wanting to be an actor, in 1959 during the university period in Genoa, he enrolled in a national competition for actors, and won.

In the beginning of his artistic career; he settled in Rome, where he enrolled at the Silvio D'Amico National Academy of Dramatic Arts, obtaining a scholarship in 1960. Two years later he passed an audition for a show created by Giancarlo Menotti Album Sheets, with a young Tomás Milián, which was developed for the Spoleto Festival. In the same year he left the academy to follow the project.

From the 1960 and 1970s on he continued his career playing in various films, with character and supporting roles and sometimes being billed using the aliases Peter Lastrett and Guy Ranson, alongside such great actors as James Coburn, Alain Delon, Jean-Paul Belmondo and Richard Roundtree, until he withdrew from the scene in 2003 with a final appearance in the soap opera Vivere.

According to his will, explain the daughters, "no funeral will be celebrated, to accompany him on this wonderful journey next week a Buddhist ceremony will be organized".

LASTRETTI, Adolfo
Born: 11/18/1937, Tempio Pausania, Sardinia, Italy
Died: 5/5/2018, Loiano, Bologna, Emilia- Romagna, Italy

Adolfo Lastretti’s westerns - actor
Find a Place to Die - 1968 (Reverend Riley) [as Peter Lastrett]
Massacre at Fort Holman – 1972 (Will Fernandez/Will Culder) [as Guy Ranson]
Deaf Smith & Johnny Ears - 1973 (Williams)
The Four of the Apocalypse - 1975 (Reverend Sullivan)

RIP Jerzy Jogałła

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The actor Jerzy Jogałła is dead

ONET
May 8, 2018

Jerzy Jogałła is dead.  The actor at the turn of the 1950s and 1960s played, among others  in 'Popiele i diament', 'Tarpany' and 'Death of the Provincial'.  He died at the age of 78.

Jerzy Jogałła was born in 1940 in Krakow.  He was an actor and director.  In 1962 he graduated from the PWST in Krakow.  In 1974 he graduated from the Directing Department of the PWSFTviT in Łódź.

He was an actor and director.  In the years 1962-67 he performed at the People's Theater in Krakow - Nowa Huta, in the years 1967-70 at the Stary Theater in Krakow.

Andrzej Wajda spotted him in the Krakow theater school, who was currently preparing the screening of Monika Kotowska's story "We are alone in the world".  The film, however, was not realized due to its "moral ambiguity".  He was to partner Grażyna Staniszewska.

He played, among others  in "Popiele i diament", "Meeting in Bajka", "Witch's Wall", "Last Days", "Victory" and "first Polish western" - "Rancho-Texas" by Wadim Berestowski.  At the end of the 1970s, he completely disappeared from the screen.  His last role was the role of the priest in "Ballada o rozścywach szyb" in 1998, directed by Peter Del Monte, in which he appeared alongside km.in Agata Buzek and Grażyna Wolszczak.

In 1979, he directed a film about the election of Karol Wojtyla as Pope.  Ten years later, he made a film about Wawel, but according to the producer, the tapes were stolen.

The actor died on May 7, 2018.  He was 78 years old.  His father-in-law was Jerzy Turowicz.

JOGALLA, Jerzy
Born: 4/2/1940, Kraków, Malopolskie, Poland
Died: 5/7/2018, Kraków, Malopolskie, Poland

Jerzy Jogalla’s western – actor:
Rancho Texas – 1959 (Stefan)

RIP Norman Rosemont

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Norman Rosemont, Producer Who Translated Stage, Film Classics for TV, Dies at 93

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
5/8/2018

Norman Rosemont, an Emmy-winning producer who brought such classics as Carousel, Brigadoon, All Quiet on the Western Front and The Red Badge of Courage to television, has died. He was 93.

Rosemont died April 22 at his home in Scottsdale, Arizona, his son, TV producer David A. Rosemont, announced.

Norman Rosemont won an Emmy in 1988 for producing the CBS telefilm The Secret Garden, honored as outstanding children's program, then guided a 2001 sequel for Hallmark Entertainment.

In 1984, Rosemont produced the seven-hour CBS miniseries Master of the Game, based on the best-selling novel by Sidney Sheldon and starring Dyan Cannon, and produced 1991's Long Road Home, which won a WGA award and was nominated for two acting Emmys.

He also produced entertainment specials including the Emmy shows in 1976 and '79.

Early in his career, Rosemont served as executive vp and GM of the company run by Alan Jay Lerner and Fritz Loewe, the lyricist and composer, respectively, behind such Broadway classics as My Fair Lady, Gigi, Camelot and Brigadoon.

He was executive producer on a 1962 special, The Broadway of Lerner and Loewe, directed by Norman Jewison and featuring Julie Andrews, Richard Burton and Maurice Chevalier, then produced a version of Brigadoon that starred Robert Goulet and collected five Emmys in 1967.

Rosemont followed by producing TV adaptations of Carousel, Kiss Me Kate and Kismet.

Rosemont went on to produce TV versions of The Man Without a Country, Miracle on 34th Street, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, The Count of Monte-Cristo, The Man in the Iron Mask, Captains Courageous, The Four Feathers, Les Miserables, A Tale of Two Cities, Little Lord Fauntleroy, Ivanhoe, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Witness for the Prosecution, The Tenth Man and Shadow of a Doubt.

Born in Brooklyn on Dec. 12, 1924, Rosemont left home at age 17 to serve in World War II with the U.S. Air Force. He then began his career as a press agent and public relations counsel for Samuel Goldwyn before going to work for Lerner and Loewe.

Survivors include his children David, Romy and Francesca; his brother, Alvin; and five grandchildren. His wife, Barbara, died March 3.


ROSEMONT, Norman
Born: 12/12/1924, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 4/22/2018, Scottsdale, Arizona, U.S.A

Norman Rosemont’s westerns – executive producer:
The Red Badge of Courage (TV) – 1974
Big Bend Country (TV) - 1981

RIP Tom E Lewis

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Katherine actor-musician Barlang Lewis dies

Katherine Times
By Chris McLennan
May 11, 2018

Prominent Katherine actor-musician Barlang Lewis has died overnight.

The Arnhem Land-born actor  burst onto the entertainment scene for his role in the 1970’s movie ‘The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith’.

Mr Lewis was named a finalist in the NT Australian of the Year in 2016.

From Jimmie Blacksmith to King Lear, Mr Lewis delivered critically-acclaimed and thought-provoking acting performances during his 40-year career.

Born in Ngukurr on the banks of the Roper River in South Eastern Arnhem land, Balang is the son of a Welsh father and an Indigenous mother.

Brought up traditionally, he left school at 12, working as a bricklayer and stockman before he was discovered for the role of Jimmy Blacksmith while waiting at an airport.

His documentary film, Yellow Fella, is an exploration of his mixed race heritage, and was the first Australian Indigenous documentary selected to screen at the Cannes Film Festival.

Mr Lewis’ retelling of Shakespeare’s King Lear transformed the mad king into an Aboriginal elder, challenging Australians to examine Indigenous culture in new ways.

A unique singer-songwriter, Mr Lewis pioneered the use of didjeridu in contemporary music, and runs an arts centre and cultural festival called Walking with Spirits.

Most recently he won the best actor prize (international) at this month’s Canberra Short Film Festival for the three-minute UK-produced film “They Live in Forests, They are Extremely Shy”.

The short film tells the fictionalised story of an Indigenous Australian man invited to London for the Colonial Exhibition of 1886.

Out of respect, Mr Lewis’ family has asked he be referred to with his traditional name.


LEWIS, Tom E (Barlang Lewis)
Born: 8/25/1958, Ngukurr, Northern Territory, Australia
Died: 5/10/2018, Katherine, Northern Territory, Australia

Tom E. Lewis’ westerns – actor:
Robbery Under Arms – 1985 (Warrigal)
The Proposition – 2005 (Two Bob)
Red Hill – 2010 (Jimmy Conway)

RIP Baadur Tsuladze

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Actor and filmmaker Baadur Tsuladze has died

Sputnik-Georgia
5/13/2018

The actor was struggling with a hard sensen that caused his death.


Actor and filmmaker Baadur Tsuladze died at the age of 83, reports GPB's First Channel .

The actor recently struggled with the hard senses.

Baadur Tsuladze was born on March 5, 1935 in Batumi and graduated from the directing faculty of the Moscow State Union of Cinematography.

 He appeared in about 50 films.  His debut film was "Wedding" which was followed by the films "Giorgobis", "Dinosaurs", "Do Not Give Up!", "Transfiguration", "Melodies of Veri District", "Butterfly", "First Swallow""Don Quixote and Sanchois", "Roots", etc.

Since 1969 he has been a member of the Cinematographers' Union and has made more than fifty films. He has received prizes at the Rigi Sports Films Third Union Festival (1970).  XIV International Film Festival of CIS and Baltic Countries "Kinoshok", Anapa (2005) - Jury Special Prize for Best Performance in Men's Motion Picture "Tbilisi-Tbilisi".

 Since 1961 he has worked as a director in the Georgian film studio.


TSULADZE, Baadur (Baadur Sokratovich Tsuladze)
Born: 3/5/1935, Batumi, Transcaucasian, U.S.S.R.
Died: 5/13/2018, Tbilisi, Georgia

Baadur Tsuladze’s western actor:
Alaska Kid (TV) – 1993 (Carlucci)

RIP Margot Kidder

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Margot Kidder, ‘Superman’ Actress, Dies at 69

Variety
By Rebecca Rubin
May 14, 2018

Margot Kidder, the actress best known for playing Lois Lane opposite Christopher Reeve in the original “Superman” films, has died. She was 69.

The actress died in her sleep at her home on Sunday in Livingston, Mont., her publicist Camilla Fluxman Pines confirmed to Variety.

Born Oct. 17, 1948 in Canada, Kidder got her start in low-budget Canadian films and TV shows before landing a role in 1970’s “Quackser Fortune Has a Cousin in the Bronx” opposite Gene Wilder. She later appeared in 1973’s “Sisters,” “The Great Waldo Pepper” with Robert Redford, and 1979’s “The Amityville Horror.”

She rose to prominence as Lois Lane, the award-winning Daily Planet journalist and Clark Kent’s love interest in all four “Superman” films from 1978 to 1987.

Kidder, who was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, suffered some career setbacks after a public nervous breakdown in 1996. She continued acting in smaller roles on TV series including “Smallville,” “Brothers & Sisters,” and “The L Word” in the 2000s. Kidder also acted on stage, including Broadway’s 2002 production of “The Vagina Monologues.”

Kidder became a U.S. citizen in 2005 and lived in Montana until her death. With her citizenship, Kidder was an activist and challenged the Iraq War. She was arrested at the White House in 2011 during a protest against the construction of an oil pipeline from Alberta to Texas.

She won a Daytime Emmy Award in 2015 for her role on the children’s TV show “R.L. Stine’s The Haunting Hour.”

Kidder was married and divorced three times. She only had a child with her first husband, novelist Thomas McGuane. Her daughter, Maggie, was born in 1976. Kidder wed actor John Heard in 1979 for six days. She later was married to French director Philippe de Broca from 1983 to 1984. Kidder has two grandchildren.

DC Comics’ Twitter account paid tribute, writing, “Thank you for being the Lois Lane so many of us grew up with. RIP, Margot Kidder.”

Mark Hamill wrote, “On-screen she was magic. Off-screen she was one of the kindest, sweetest, most caring woman I’ve ever known. I’ll miss you Margo Kidder. Your legacy will live on forever.”


KIDDER, Margot (Margaret Ruth Kidder)
Born: 10/17/1948, Yellowknife North West Territories, Canada
Died: 5/13/2018, Livingston, Montana, U.S.A.

Margot Kidder’s westerns – actress:
Adventures in Rainbow Country (TV) – 1969, 1970 (Dr. Janet Rhodes, sports car driver)
Nichols (TV) – 1971-1972 (Ruth)
The Bounty Man (TV) – 1972
Honky Tonk (TV) – 1974 (Lucy Cotton)
Louisiana (TV) – 1984 (Virginia Tregan)
Maverick – 1994 (Margaret Mary)
Redemption: For Robbing the Dead – 2011 (Marlys Baptiste)

RIP William Vance

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Belgian comic book artist William Vance dies: publisher

Agence France-Presse
May. 15, 2018

Belgian comic book artist William Vance, whose action adventure series XIII was popular in the French-speaking world, died late Monday, his publisher announced.

"My friend the artist William Vance died this evening," Yves Schlirf, editorial director at Dargaud Benelux, tweeted. "I will really miss you my old lion."

Vance, the pen name of William Van Cutsem, was born in the Brussels region and drew for the Tintin series before striking it big with XIII, a contemporary action adventure series.

Media accounts said the bespectacled and mustachioed Vance was 82 years old and was suffering from Parkinson's disease.

The Belgian news outlet L'Echo said Vance, who also produced Bob Morane and Bruno Brazil, was "one of the last masters of Belgian comic strips."

Parkinson's disease forced him to abandon XIII in 2010 after he created it with script writer Jean Van Hamme in 1984, L'Echo said.

He launched his career by drawing for Tintin, translated into English and other languages, in the 1960s. In 1967, he worked with Gerald Forton to sketch Bob  Morane.

In 1969, he sketched the adventures of US secret agent Bruno Brazi


VANCE, William (William van Cutsem)
Born: 9/8/1935, Anderlecht, Belgium
Died: 5/14/2018, Belgium

William Vance’s western comic book artist:
Ringo – 1966-1969
Marshal Blueberry – 1991-1992

RIP Tom Wolfe

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Tom Wolfe Dies: New Journalism Pioneer & ‘The Right Stuff’ Author Was 87

Deadline Hollywood
By Greg Evans
May 15, 2018 8:26am

Tom Wolfe, the master prose stylist, journalist and novelist whose use of fiction techniques like dialogue, scene-setting and point-of-view energized non-fiction in the 1960s and ’70s, died Monday in New York. He was 87.

Wolfe, perhaps the preeminent practitioner of what would come to be called the New Journalism, authored the non-fiction The Right Stuff and the novel Bonfire of the Vanities, both of which became major Hollywood films.

His death was confirmed by his agent Lynn Nesbit. She told The New York Times that Wolfe had been hospitalized with an infection.

Unfailingly attired in a dandy’s uniform of three-piece white suits and high-collared shirts, Wolfe belonged to a generation of writers – Truman Capote, Norman Mailer, Gore Vidal – whose celebrity was as bright as the stars they covered.

In Wolfe’s case, those stars were sometimes literal: His 1979 nonfiction account of America’s pioneering astronauts and the Mercury space program quickly took a place alongside Capote’s In Cold Blood and Mailer’s The Executioner’s Song as prime, acclaimed examples of the “nonfiction novel,” with impeccable research and scrupulous attention to detail fueling a story that had all the narrative drive and emotional power of an entirely imagined work.

Hollywood couldn’t resist, and the book became a film in 1983, with Philip Kaufman directing a cast that included Ed Harris, Scott Glenn, Sam Shepard, Fred Ward, Dennis Quaid and Barbara Hershey. The film won four Oscars: Best Sound Effects Editing, Best Film Editing, Best Original Score and Best Sound.

Wolfe’s first major turn at fiction writing also found its way to Hollywood, though the 1990 adaptation of 1987’s The Bonfire of the Vanities was considerably less successful than The Right Stuff. Directed by Brian De Palma and starring a woefully miscast Tom Hanks, The Bonfire of the Vanities was such a flop that its failures made up an entire book: Julie Salamon’s 1991 The Devil’s Candy: The Bonfire of the Vanities Goes to Hollywood.

The disappointment hardly dented Wolfe’s reputation, though, with the author’s groundbreaking books and articles already a staple of college reading lists and journalism anthologies. The titles alone are classics of their eras: The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, Radical Chic & Mau-Mauing the Flak Catchers, The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby.

Such was Wolfe’s skill with a turn of phrase that some of his wordplay took cultural root and became part of our standard vocabulary: Radical chic, The Me Decade, the right stuff. His 1981 take-down of modern architecture, From Bauhaus to Our House, resurrected the German word and early 20th Century school of design in the popular consciousness, even if the architectural world was neither pleased nor won over by Wolfe’s arguments.

Wolfe’s other works include The Pump House Gang, Mauve Gloves & Madmen, Clutter & Vine, A Man in Full, I Am Charlotte Simmons and Back to Blood.

Wolfe is survived by his wife Sheila, daughter Alexandra and son Tommy.


WOLFE, Tom (Thomas Wolfe)
Born: 3/2/1931, Richmond, Virginia, U.S.A.
Died: 5/14/2017, Manhattan, New York, U.S.A.

Tom Wolfe’s western – writer:
Almost Heroes - 1998
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