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RIP Gabriel Gascon

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Actor Gabriel Gascon dies at age 91

Le Journal de Quebec
May 30, 2018

The man of the theater Gabriel Gascon is dead.He was 91 years old.
 
He was a legend of the boards, but also of the cinema and the television which has just been extinguished.
 
The cause of his death was still unknown Wednesday late morning.
 
Brother of comedian Jean Gascon, Gabriel Gascon has a long track record with the public.
In recent years, he has notably starred in the films The Marsh , March and April and The Guide to Little Revenge .It has also been seen in Cap Tourmente and Bonheur d'occasion.
 
On TV, we saw it among other things in Montreal PQ , the major lawsuits and Chartrand and Simonne .In addition, he was of the credits of series like the Russian dolls , The volcano tranquilizes , Marguerite Volantand the beautiful stories of the countries of above , in which he was the first interpreter of Alexis Labranche, from 1956 to 1965.
 
Gabriel Gascon began his career with the Compagnons de Saint-Laurent, a troupe of father Émile Legault.
 
It was the very first show at the Théâtre du Nouveau Monde in 1951.
 
From 1965 to 1980, he lived in France, where he multiplied the roles in the theater and in front of the camera.

 
GASCON, Gabriel
Born: 1/8/1927, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Died: 5/30/2018, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Gabriel Gascon’s westerns – actor:
Étienne Brûlé gibier de potence – 1952 (Janedo)
The Leatherstocking Tales (TV) – 1969 (Dr. Battius)

RIP Gerard Baldwin

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Artist and animator Gerard Baldwin dies

MySantaAna.com
By Andrew Dansby
April 19, 2018

An artist and animator whose career spanned nearly 70 years, Gerard Baldwin died in Houston Wednesday at age 89.

Baldwin worked on a number of iconic cartoon characters including Rocky and Bullwinkle, the Smurfs, Mr. Magoo and others. Two years ago the Emmy-winning artist published a book about his career titled "Mr. Magoo to Papa Smurf."

He had lived in Houston since moving here with his family in 1989.

Baldwin was born in New York in 1929 and grew up in Los Angeles. His first paying job as an artist was drawing Mr. Magoo as a cartoonist's apprentice in 1950.

"It seemed like an interim thing to do while the world found out I was a great painter," he told the Chronicle. "The world never did find that out. But it turned out I was perfectly suited for animation. The technical craft and art ability, the whole thing suited me just fine."

By 1959, Baldwin was doing more than animating, directing episodes of "Rocky & Bullwinkle." He worked for Hanna-Barbera. His work earned him three Emmys.

Baldwin planned to retire upon arriving in Houston. Instead he continued to draw and paint, while holding a teaching job at Kingwood College.

In 2010, he exhibited his work at Domy Bookstore, some of which put familiar characters from his past into surrealist settings.

"Sometimes I paint or draw in my sleep, but that doesn't mean when I wake up a drawing pops out," he said. "Sometimes I solve graphic problems in my sleep. Sometimes I dream I'm one of the characters. I dreamed I was Mr. Magoo, being chased by Army types, and I kept running away.
"I guess most of my dreams are normal. But once in a while, one will make me go, 'Oooh,' like that one."


BALDWYN, Gerard
Born: 1/7/1929, New York City, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 4/18/2018, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.

Gerard Baldwin’s westerns – animator:
Quick Draw Mc Graw (TV) – 1959-1962
Santo Bugito – 1995

RIP Tom Bernard

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The San Diego Union Tribune
May 31, 2018

Thomas Joseph Bernard March 21, 1932 - May 22, 2018 Santa Ynez Thomas Joseph Bernard passed away May 22, 2018 after fighting multiple health issues. He was born on March 21, 1932 in Los Angeles, CA. Tom was a child actor starting at age nine performing in theater, radio, TV and movies. In 1958 he changed career paths and moved to San Diego. He spent 21 years with Rohr Industries where he held various positions primarily in systems development. His last appointment was in 1979 where he was named President and General Manager of the Rohr Flxible Bus Co. in Ohio. When Tom returned to San Diego he joined Linkabit and served as Vice President of Communication Networks. Shortly after the initial founders started QUALCOMM, Tom joined as Vice President of Commercial Programs, later to hold the positions of VP and General Manager of OmniTRACS and eventually Sr. VP and General Manager of the Infrastructure Products Division. Tom helped spin off Leap Wireless as Vice Chairman and Executive VP in 1998 and retired in 2001. Tom had a very adventuresome spirit. He loved flying, golfing, fishing, swimming, skiing, horseback riding and traveling the world. His love for life was contagious. After retirement Tom and his wife moved to the Santa Ynez Valley where he totally embraced his last twelve years of life. He left behind a wife Teresa, children Dustin, Cydney, Tom and Allan. He had five grandchildren Sophie, Charlie, Kit, Awna and Scarlett. There will be a Celebration of Life held on June 9th at 4 PM at the Alisal River Course in Solvang, CA.


BERNARD, Tom (Thomas Joseph Bernard)
Born: 3/21/1932, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
Died: 5/22/2018, Santa Ynez, California, U.S.A.

Tom Bernard’s westerns – actor:
Yankee Fakir – 1947 (Tommy Mason)
The Cisco Kid (TV) – 1953 (Danny Whitacre)

RIP Jomarie Ward

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Los Angeles Times
June 1, 2018

September 10, 1935 - April 30, 2018 Jomarie Ward died on April 30th, 2018, after a heroic battle of 24 months with ovarian cancer, her beloved son-in-law holding her hand. She died as she lived; brave, strong, and larger than life. Jomarie was born in Portland, Oregon, on Sept. 10th, 1935. She exhibited a remarkable singing talent at a young age, and was given her own local radio show when she was thirteen. When she was 18 she came to Los Angeles to attend Pasadena City College and study acting. Her first professional job was on The Donna Reed Show. That led to fifty-five more years of being in a career that she loved. Her film and television credits include a funny recurring role on Betty White's 'Off Their Rockers,' and the Oscar-nominated 'El Norte,' playing a clueless Beverly Hills housewife. Her vast theater credits include 'The Music Man,' playing the part of Marian opposite Eddie Albert; playing the title role in 'Fanny' opposite Walter Slezak; and more recently playing Hannah Ferguson in 'The Spitfire Grill' at the Laguna Playhouse. She also made many singing appearances throughout her life. Her last performance was at The Catalina Grill last October singing 'If Love Were All,' her favorite song. She sang the hell out of it. She was founder and co-owner with Paul Kent of the much acclaimed Melrose Theater for over thirty years. She produced as well as starred in many productions there. Her greatest passion, besides performing, was working tirelessly for The Actors Fund. She gave decades of her life devoting herself to helping her fellow industry brothers and sisters, and she was a past Chair of their Western Council. The final Actors Fund project for which she strongly advocated will break ground next year in Hollywood, providing affordable housing for working artists, as well as rehearsal and performance space for community arts groups. She leaves behind more "adopted family" and dear friends than seems possible. Many folks call her their second mom or spiritual sister. We all remember her as the woman who gave the very best parties, was an amazing chef, always treating people – especially those who had less – with fierce kindness; and she could definitely embarrass us all by singing in public with her "opera voice." Singing in the Ralph's comes to mind. She was cheap as dirt when it came to herself, and generous to a fault when she could help others. Jomarie was predeceased by her husband of 35 years, John Ward, and her sister-in-law Dorothy Ward-Hoffman. She is survived by her loving companion of 23 years, H. David Moss, her daughter Kate Ward-Rosenstock, her son-in-law Marty Rosenstock, David's daughter Rebecca Moss, David's brother Dann Moss, her sometimes well behaved cats, and all of her wonderful chosen family. Her private memorial will be in June. In lieu of flowers, please donate to The Actors Fund.


WARD, Jomarie
Born: 9/10/1935, Portland, Oregon, U.S.A.
Died: 4/30/2018, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Jomarie Ward’s westerns – actress:
Stoney Burke (TV) – 1962 (Francie Adams)
Laredo (TV) – 1965 (Renee)

RIP Robert Mandan

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Robert Mandan, the Womanizing Chester Tate on ‘Soap,’ Dies at 86

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes
6/3/2018

He played white-collar types on other shows including ‘Three’s Company,’ ‘Private Benjamin’ and ‘The Facts of Life’

Robert Mandan, the veteran television actor who starred as Chester Tate, the philandering husband of Katherine Helmond's character, on the ABC daytime-serial spoof Soap, has died. He was 86.

Mandan died April 29 in Los Angeles after a long illness, his friend, playwright and screenwriter Gary Goldstein, told The Hollywood Reporter. Mandan starred in Goldstein's first play, Just Men, at the Stella Adler Theater in Hollywood in 1996.


Mandan, who often played suits and white-collar types during his long career, also portrayed the wealthy investment banker James Bradford at the end of ABC's Three's Company and on its 1984-85 spinoff, Three's a Crowd.

Mandan also was the bombastic Col. Lawrence Fielding on the CBS adaptation of Private Benjamin, and his doctor character married Mrs. Garrett (Charlotte Rae) on NBC's The Facts of Life and whisked her away to the Peace Corps.

Mandan had worked on such soap operas as The Edge of Night, From These Roots and Search for Tomorrowwhen he was hired to play Chester, a conniving Wall Street stock broker, on Soap.

Susan Harris created the sitcom, which aired for four seasons, from 1977-81, and spawned the Robert Guillaume-starring Benson. The show, always a critical darling, was a top 10 hit in its first season but suffered in the ratings as it was moved around the schedule.

Mandan and Helmond reunited for two episodes of her next series, Who's the Boss?, and for a 2002 production of A Twilight Romance at the Falcon Theatre in Burbank. He also returned to the soap opera world with gigs on Santa Barbara, Days of Our Lives and General Hospital.

His other notable TV work included playing an unctuous attorney on All in the Family and a homosexual friend of Bea Arthur's character on Maude, and he appeared on Sanford and Son, Barney Miller, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and Married … With Children as well.

A native of Clever, Missouri, Mandan grew up in Southern California and majored in theater at Pomona College. He got a big break when veteran actor Edward Arnold pushed for him to star alongside him in a production of All My Sons in Palm Springs.

Mandan made his Broadway debut in 1956 in Speaking of Murder, directed by Delbert Mann, and he worked with Lauren Bacall in the original 1970 production of the Betty Comden-Adolph Green musical Applause.

On the big screen, Mandan played a senator in The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (1982) and appeared in other films including Hickey & Boggs (1972), MacArthur(1977) and, as a principal, in Zapped! (1982).

He did lots of local theater late in his career, Goldstein noted.

Survivors include his wife, Sherry.


MANDAN, Robert
Born: 2/23/1932, Clever, Missouri, U.S.A.
Died: 6/2/2018, California, U.S.A.

Robert Mandan’s western – actor:
Sara (TV) – 1976 (Clarkson)

RIP William Phipps

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William Phipps, Voice of Prince Charming in 'Cinderella' and Sci-Fi Movie Star, Dies at 96

Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
6/3/2018

His lengthy career included roles in the film noir classic 'Crossfire,''The War of the Worlds,''Cat-Women of the Moon' and 'The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp.'

William Phipps, the prolific character actor who starred in sci-fi movies of the 1950s and provided the voice of Prince Charming in the Disney classic Cinderella, has died. He was 96.

Phipps died Friday night at UCLA Medical Center in Santa Monica after a battle with lung cancer, his friend, noted showbiz author Tom Weaver, announced.

A contract player at RKO Radio Pictures, Phipps made his big-screen debut in the Oscar best picture nominee Crossfire (1947), Edward Dmytryk's film noir classic that revolves around an investigation into the hate-crime murder of a Jewish man.

Weaver pointed out that as Hollywood began to pump out science-fiction films in the 1950s, Phipps became one of the genre's first regulars.

He starred as a young poet, one of the five people on Earth to survive a nuclear explosion, in Five (1951), then fought martians in The War of the Worlds (1953) and Invaders From Mars (1953), a giant spider in Cat-Women of the Moon (1953) and the Abominable Snowman in The Snow Creature (1954).

Walt Disney himself heard Phipps' audition tape and hired him to play Prince Charming opposite Ilene Woods in Cinderella (1950). The actor said he was paid about $100 for two hours' work on an afternoon in January 1949.

Later, when Disney promoted the animated movie with a nationwide contest for young women — the winner would be brought to Hollywood for a date with the voice of Prince Charming — Phipps, in white tie and tails and top hat, and the lucky lady met in front of a live audience on the stage of the Pantages during a coast-to-coast radio broadcast of Art Linkletter's show.

According to Phipps, "They gave me (I think) $100 pocket money and a limousine and a driver so we could go anywhere we wanted. We went to Ciro's and the Mocambo, which were the two most famous places on the Sunset Strip at the time, and we went to the Trocadero, too.

"At the end of the night, around midnight, the limousine driver and I took her back to the Roosevelt Hotel, where she was staying. And then the chauffeur took me back home — a rooming house we called the House of the Seven Garbos, a home for fledgling actresses, where I lived in a room in the basement for seven dollars a week! The next day I went to the tuxedo rental place and turned in my stuff."

Phipps was born on Feb. 4, 1922, in Vincennes, Indiana. He and his older brother, Jack, were raised in farm country in nearby St. Francisville, Illinois, and learned to swim in the Wabash River.

Phipps performed in plays in high school and at Eastern Illinois University, where he studied to become an accountant. He then decided to pursue acting, heading to California in 1941.

After his brother was killed in World War II when his plane was shot down in the South Pacific, Phipps enlisted in the U.S. Navy and served as a radioman.

He returned to Hollywood following his discharge in 1945 and and used the G.I. Bill to enroll at the Actors Lab. To make ends meet, he drove a three-wheeled motorcycle as the delivery boy for Schwab's Pharmacy, the famed hangout on Sunset Boulevard for young actors and movie execs.

Phipps starred in an Actors Lab production of Men in White, and in the audience were actor Charles Laughton and Helene Weigel, wife of playwright Bertolt Brecht, who were casting a Little Theater production of Brecht's Galileo.

Phipps appeared in the Laughton-directed Galileo as well as other Laughton stage productions, remaining friends with the actor and his wife, Elsa Lanchester, until their deaths. (Weaver noted that it was Phipps who convinced Laughton to cast Robert Mitchum as the homicidal Southern preacher Harry Powell in the only credited movie he would direct, 1955's The Night of the Hunter.)

After working with Mitchum, Robert Young and Robert Ryan in Crossfire (he played the quiet soldier from Tennessee), Phipps became a regular in low-budget Westerns at RKO, among them The Arizona Ranger and Desperadoes of Dodge City, both released in 1948.

Phipps left the business in the late 1960s to live in Maui but returned to portray Theodore Roosevelt in the 1976 ABC miniseries Eleanor and Franklin, winner of 11 Emmy Awards. He then reprised the role in a commercial for Maxwell House coffee.

Phipps portrayed a servant to Marlon Brando's Antony in Julius Caesar (1954), was the French Impressionist painter Emile Bernard in Kirk Douglas' Lust for Life (1956) and portrayed the old man Quentin in Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey (1993).

He had a recurring role as Curly Bill Brocius on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp and showed up on other TV shows like The Twilight Zone (the 1960 episode "The Purple Testament"), Perry Mason, Rawhide, 77 Sunset Strip, Gunsmoke, F Troop, Batman, The Virginian and Mannix. IMDb lists him with 226 acting credits.

Phipps' first wife died in an automobile accident, and his second marriage ended in divorce. He spent his final years living in Malibu.


PHIPPS, William (William Edward Phipps)
Born: 2/4/1922, Vincennes, Indiana, U.S.A.
Died:6/1/2018, Santa Monica, California, U.S.A.

William Phipps’ westerns – actor:
Arizona Ranger – 1948 (Ranger Mac)
Belle Starr’s Daughter – 1948 (Yuma Talbott)
Desperadoes of Dodge City – 1948 (Ted Loring)
Station West – 1948 (sergeant)
The Outriders – 1950 (union guard)
Rider from Tucson – 1950 (Tug Bailey)
The Red Badge of Courage – 1951 (Union officer)
The Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok (TV) – 1951 (Yellow Haired Kid)
Fort Dobb – 1952 (Nathan Godspeed)
Rose of the Cimarron – 1952 (Jeb Dawley)
Northern Patrol – 1953 (Frank Stevens)
Red River Shore – 1953 (Ned Barlow)
Savage Frontier – 1953 (Johnny Webb)
Jesse James vs the Daltons – 1954 (Bill Dalton)
Two Guns and a Badge – 1954 (Dick Grant)
The Violent Men – 1954 (Bud Hinkleman)
The Cisco Kid (TV) – 1954 (Jake, McNulty)
The Adventures of Kit Carson (TV) – 1954
Rage at Dawn – 1955 (Bill Peterson Jr.)
The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin (TV) – 1955 (Wesley Parish)
Annie Oakley (TV) – 1955, 1956, 1957 (George Wessel, Dan Carter, Earl Wallace)
The Far Horizon – 1955 (oarsman/camp sentry)
The Indian Fighter – 1955 (Lieutenant Blake)
Smoke Signal – 1955 (Private Porter)
Indian Agent (TV) – 1955 (Zack)
The Desperadoes Are In Town – 1956 (bit man)
The First Texan – 1956 (Lieutenant Jack LeBlanc)
Great Day in the Morning – 1956 (Ralston)
The Vanishing Westerner – 1956 (Bud Thurber)
The Adventures of Champion (TV) – 1956 (Dr. James Powell)
Broken Arrow (TV) – 1956, 1957 (Frank Krohl, Frank Summerfield)
Cheyenne (TV) – 1956, 1961 (Jim Clements, Smiler Jones)
Johnny Moccasin (TV) – 1956 (Fletcher)
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (TV) – 1958-1961 (Curly Bill Borcius)
Badlands of Montana – 1957 (Walt Branton)
Escape from Red Rock – 1957 (Arky Shanks)
Circus Boy (TV) – 1957 (Dirk Keyes)
Colt .45 (TV) – 1957 (Trumbull
Trackdown (TV) – 1957 (Bud Crome)
The Restless Gun (TV) – 1957 (Heber Grant)
Wagon Train (TV) – 1957, 1964 (Bill Hammond, Hank Watts, Sergeant Reardon)
Cimarron City (TV) – 1958 (Rand Scoville)
Maverick (TV) – 1958 (Hazelton)
Sugarfoot (TV) – 1958, 1959 (Mack, Bob Hoyt, Edgar Hoyt)
Tombstone Territory (TV) – 1958, 1960 (Neal Weaton, Kyle Dodge)
Bat Masterson (TV) – 1959 (Ken Wills)
The Rifleman (TV) – 1959 (Asa Manning)
Riberboat (TV) – 1959 (Abner Crane)
Wanted: Dead or Alive (TV) – 1959, 1960 (Fred Teton, Mr. Jennings, Art Hemp)
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1959, 1962, 1963 (Lou, Hody Peel, Ham Owen, Joe Stark, drifter)
Union Pacific (TV) – 1959 (Clay Morgan)
Black Saddle (TV) – 1960 (Barney Dawson)
Johnny Ringo (TV) – 1960 (Paul Connell)
Laramie (TV) – 1960 (Roy Allen)
The Rebel (TV) – 1961 (Ben Mowbrie, Morton Bishop)
Stagecoach West (TV) – 1961 (Tom Coogan)
The Tall Man (TV) – 1961 (Bert)
Bronco (TV) – 1962 (Madden)
Frontier Circus (TV) – 1962 (cowboy)
Rawhide (TV) – 1962, 1963 (Floyd Peters, Joe Leeds)
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1963 (Ben Marshall)
Showdown – 1963 (deputy)
Stoney Burke (TV) – 1963 (Gene Yates)
Temple Houston (TV) – 1964 (Sandy Dale)
Daniel Boone (TV) – 1965, 1968 (Dink, Horn)
Laredo (TV) – 1965, 1966 (Hollen, Spurs Maguire)
The Legend of Jesse James (TV) – 1965 (Buck)
The Virginian (TV) – 1962, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1969 (Jock Wheeler, Hank, ranch hand, Hans, Hank, Ritt, stable owner)
Incident of Phantom Hill – 1966 (trader)
Branded (TV) – 1966 (Captain Brooks)
F Troop (TV) – 1966 (scout)
The Road West (TV) – 1966, 1967 (Cleary, Charlie)
Gunfight in Abilene 1967 (Frank Norton)
Dundee and the Culhane (TV) – 1967 (Turpin)
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1967 (marshal)
Cimarron Strip (TV) – 1968 (Odell)
The Guns of Will Sonnett (TV) – 1968, 1969 (jury foreman, Marcus Moore, Craig)
Bonanza (TV) – 1970 (Burgess)
The Invaders (TV) – 1970
Sara (TV) – 1976 (Claude Barstow)
Oregon Trail (TV) – 1977
The Secret Empire (TV) – 1979 (Maxwell)
Little House on the Prairie (TV) – 1982 (Myron Hicks)

RIP Melinda Byron

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RIP Melinda Byron

Ithaca Journal
June 4, 2018

Bethesda, MD - Charline Newman Rossi, 81, passed away peacefully on May 30th, 2018, in Bethesda Maryland. She was born on October 20, 1936, in Evanston, Illinois, the daughter of Therese and Hugh Maxwell Newman.

She is survived by her husband of 55 years Faust F. Rossi; her children Christopher (Anna), Matthew (Maureen), and Paul; her grandchildren Bridget, Owen, and Nora; her sister Millicent Werbickas; and many nieces and nephews. Charline grew up in Los Angeles, California, where she attended Immaculate Heart High school. In Hollywood, she had a career as an actress in radio, film and TV, appearing in The Red Pony, Teenage Thunder, The Donna Reed Show, and The Lone Ranger. She met her husband Faust in Washington, D.C. and they married on August 25, 1962. They moved to Ithaca, New York, where they raised their children and where Faust became the Samuel S. Leibowitz Professor of Trial Techniques at Cornell Law School. After Faust's retirement, they moved to Bethesda, Maryland, to be near their grandchildren.

Charline was a loving wife and mother. She was a devoted Catholic, an avid reader, history buff, gardener, dog owner, and Washington Nationals fan. She enjoyed traveling with Faust, spending time in Paris, London, Italy, Austria and Hungary. To all who knew her, she was an outgoing, active, cheerful, quick-witted presence who made friends easily and spread kindness wherever she went. She will forever be remembered as a bright, loving light with a terrific sense of humor who put others before herself.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 10:00am on Tuesday, June 5th at Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Bethesda, Maryland preceded by a 9:00am viewing. The burial will be at Gate of Heaven cemetery in Silver Spring, Maryland, following the mass.


BYRON, Melinda (Charline Newman)
Born: 10/20/1936, Evanston, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died: 5/30/2018, Bethesda, Maryland, U.S.A.

Melinda Byron’s westerns – actress:
The Red Pony – 1949 (Jinx Ingals)
The Long Ranger (TV) – 1957 (Sally Walker)
The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin (TV) – 1958 (April Lawrence)
Death Valley Days (TV) – 1960 (Mary Lou)
Zane Grey Theater (TV) – 1960 (Paula Cartwright)

RIP Tony Morphett

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TV Tonight
By David Knox
June 4, 2018

Prolific screenwriter Tony Morphett, whose vast body of work includes Blue Heelers, Water Rats, The Shiralee, The Last Wave has died, aged 80.

He reportedly died of a heart attack in Katoomba on Saturday, surrounded by family.

Morphett was a titan of Australian storytelling having written or co-written 7 feature films, 10 telemovies, 12 miniseries, 3 stage plays and hundreds of TV episodes. He created or co-created seven TV series including Blue Heelers, Water Rats, Certain Women & Rain Shadow, winning 14 industry awards including several AWGIE Awards.

He started as a copy-boy and cadet reporter for the Daily Telegraph in 1956, moving to the ABC in 1957 where he worked in the ABC Talks Department for 10 years.

In 1968 he left the ABC to become a freelance writer, which led to a lifetime of acclaimed credits, spanning generations of Australian drama.

Morphett’s television credits include A Place to Call Home, Serangoon Road, Packed to the Rafters, Sea Patrol, Rain Shadow, Blue Heelers, MDA, Young Lions, Water Rats, Above the Law, Heartbreak High, Sky Trackers, Secrets, G.P., Tracks of Glory, Sky Trackers, Bangkok Hilton, The Dirtwater Dynasty, The Flying Doctors, The Shiralee, My Brother Tom, Robbery Under Arms, Winners, The Flying Doctors, A Country Practice, Patrol Boat, Skyways, Against the Wind, Chopper Squad, Glenview High, The Sullivans, Luke’s Kingdom, Elephant Boy, Boney, Certain Women, The Evil Touch, Dynasty and more.

Film credits included The Last Wave, Dark Age & Robbery Under Arms.

His official website includes a “Bottom Drawer” of other unproduced projects.

Morphett was also on the board of the Children’s Television Foundation, the Australia Council, Australian Writers’ Guild and the Australian Writers’ Foundation.

Writer Bevan Lee told TV  Tonight, “Tony was a true gentleman of the industry, a role model for me as I made my way up the ladder. It was a thrill to finally work with him and to discover the man and the professional both lived up to the reputation.”

“Very sad to hear of passing of Tony Morphett legend of Aus screen industry Goliath of writers” – Dave Warner.

In 1973 Tony Morphett told TV Times, “There’s an old showbiz saying, ‘You’re only as good as your last script.’ I’m not Superman and if I take on too much work, the quality will go down and I will lose the reputation I have in the industry.”

He never did.


MORPHETT, Tony (Anthony David Morphett)
Born: 3/10/1938, Granville, New South Wales, Australia
Died: 6/2/2018, Katoomba, New South Wales, Australia

Tony Morphett’s westerns – writer:
Robbery Under Arms – 1985
Snowy River: The McGregor Saga - 1995

RIP Kent McCray

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‘Little House on the Prairie’ Producer Kent McCray Dies at 89

Variety
By Ellis Clopton
June 4, 2018

“Little House on the Prairie” producer Kent McCray died of natural causes in Los Angeles on Sunday. He was 89.

McCray was born on June 7, 1928, the second son of Thomas Chapman McCray — an executive with the NBC Radio Network — and singer Dorothy Baldwin McCray. A Hartford, Conn., native, McCray found his passion for entertainment early on during his time at the Kimball Union Academy prep school in New Hampshire. While at Kimball, McCray built sets, directed, acted, and sang in several school theatrical productions.

Three years after graduating from the University of Hartford, McCray began his television career at NBC in L.A. as a production coordinator on the “All Star Revue” and “The Colgate Comedy Hour.” Other assignments followed quickly, including “The Red Skelton Show,” “The Ralph Edwards Show,” “This Is Your Life,” and “You Bet Your Life” starring Groucho Marx.

When NBC announced its shift away from live television into filmed entertainment, McCray took a crash course in film production and became an associate producer on “Philip Marlowe,” later becoming a production manager on the NBC dramas “The High Chaparral” and “Bonanza.”

While working on “Bonanza,” McCray met Michael Landon, whom he would collaborate with several times during his career. In his 2017 memoir, “Kent McCray: The Man Behind The Most Beloved Television Shows,” McCray wrote, “Because of my personal and working relationship with Michael, I had the freedom to run a production as I saw fit. I have always believed that to get the best show, you must have the very best crew and then allow them to do their job without intruding on their expertise. There’s nothing more wonderful than looking forward to going to work every day. Because of the mutual respect and love Michael and I felt for each other and our crew family, that dream came true for me.”

In 1974, McCray was associate producer of the two-hour “Little House on the Prairie” pilot based Laura Ingalls Wilder’s book series. Landon was the executive producer, director, and co-star along with Karen Grassle and 9-year-old Melissa Gilbert. When the pilot became a series, McCray served as producer for the show’s entire nine-season run. From 1981 to 1983, he expanded his collaboration with Landon to produce “Father Murphy” starring Merlin Olsen.

Dean Butler, who played Almanzo James Wilder in “Little House on the Prairie,” said McCray always managed to make him smile while they worked together.

“He was a friend, he was a gentleman, a mentor, and a gifted producer who was always two steps ahead of the curve. His desk was always clean, his boards were perfect, and everyone had fun,” Butler said in a statement. “While Kent’s career spanned more than 60 years, he told me that he never worked a day in his life. I believed him, and I will always be inspired by his memory.”

Kent is survived by Susan Sukman McCray, whom he married in 1984, as well as four children from his first marriage — Deborah Kressin, Scott McCray, Kristen McCray Trent, and Carolyn McCray Montgomery — eight grandchildren, and eight great-grandchildren.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to the University of Hartford’s Hartt Theatre Division.


McCRAY, Kent
Born: 6/7/1928, Hartford, Connecticut, U.S.A.
Died: 6/3/2018, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Kent McCray’s westerns – producer, production manager:
Alias Jesse James – 1959 [producer]
Outlaws – 1960-1961 [producer]       
Little House Years (TV) – 1979 [producer]
Little House on the Prairie (TV) – 1983 [producer, production manager]
Bonanza (TV) – 1965-1973 [production manager]
The High Chaparral (TV) – 1967-1971 [production manager]
Father Murphy (TV) – 1981-1983 [producer]
Little House: Look Back to Yesterday (TV) – 1983 [producer, production manager]
Little House: Bless All the Dear Children (TV) – 1984 [producer, production manager]
Little House: The Last Farewell (TV) – 1984 [producer, production manager]
Bonanza: The Return (TV) – 1993 [producer, production manager]
Bonanza: Under Attack (TV) – 1995 [producer, production manager]
Pistol Pete (TV) – 1996 [producer, production manager]
High Chaparral Reunion (TV) – 2013 [himself]

RIP Jerry Maren

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Wizard of Oz's oldest living munchkin Jerry Maren dead at 98 following battle with dementia

Daily Mail
By Kayleigh Giles
June 6, 2018

The Wizard of Oz's oldest living munchkin Jerry Maren has died at the age of 98.

The late star passed away at a nursing care facility in San Diego, California, last week, following an ongoing battle with dementia.

The actor's family and friends gathered for his funeral at Forest Lawn in Hollywood over the weekend.

Despite landing a number of small parts throughout his 70 years in showbiz, Jerry's most notable role was that of the 'oldest munchkin' in 1939 fantasy phenomenon The Wizard of Oz.

Standing at 4ft 3in, Jerry was just 18-years-old when he starred as a member of The Lollipop Guild, alongside Jakob 'Jackie' Gerlich and Harry Earles, in the movie, which saw the late acting legend Judy Garland play leading lady Dorothy.

He went on to secure a number of uncredited roles, playing a gremlin in supernatural sitcom Bewitched in 1967 and an ape in 1968 cult classic Planet of the Apes.

Jerry bagged his first supporting part in 1971 TV series Lidsville and boasted another title role in 1982 comedy series No Soap, Radio, which also starred Steve Guttenberg.

Jerry also had a walk-on role in an episode of Seinfeld 'The Yada Yada' and played a mime in the 2010-released comedy horror movie Dahmer Vs. Gacy, one of his final acting roles.

The long-time actor was bestowed the honour of a handprint and footprint ceremony at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood in September 2013.

The privilege came six years after he appeared with six other Munchkin actors at the unveiling of a Hollywood Star for the Wizard of Oz Munchkins on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Away from the spotlight, Jerry was married to Elizabeth Barrington for 36 years before she tragically passed away in 2011.

His final Instagram post, shared in May 2017, was a black-and-white snap of the happy couple on their wedding day, alongside which Jerry wrote: 'Happy Aniversary my life long love. Rip.'

Jerry was also forced to use the social media site as a platform to dismiss reports he had died after he was the subject of a death hoax back in 2016.  


MAREN, Jerry (Gerald E. Marenghi)
Born: 1/24/1920, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
Died: 5/?/2018, San Diego, California, U.S.A.

Jerry Maren’s westerns – actor:
The Terror of Tiny Town – 1938 (townsman)
The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1967 (Coco)

RIP Johnny Hagnar

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John G. Hagner – December 6th, 1927 – May 31st, 2018

Moab Sun News
June 7, 2018

In Loving Memory of John G. Hagner

Loving Dad, Granddad, Papa, Friend

Stuntman, Artist, Author, and Founder of the Hollywood Stuntmen's Hall of Fame, Inc.

John was a man of many extraordinary talents. There are also countless facets to his engaging personality. He was born in Baltimore, Maryland to May Veronica & Frank Raymond Hagner on December 6, 1927.

At the age of 7 he started school at St. Paul's Catholic private school. Early in life he recognized that he possessed a strong aptitude in art. He certainly was not born with a silver spoon in his mouth. But he was, undoubtedly, born with a drawing pencil and a paint brush in his hand. And, he consistently used this rare talent throughout his life.

When he was 12 years old, he, along with other kids his age attended the exciting Saturday matinee movie in their local theater. This was the high spot of the week in the life of John Hagner and his pals. The Saturday afternoon matinee also meant the very entertaining serials - the thrilling cliffhangers - from Republic, Universal and Columbia Studios.

Republic Studios seemed to have the best, John thought, as they kept you on the edge of your seat, with tingling excitement, episode after episode.

Even though John, outwardly, was like the other of his friends, actually, he was a little more discerning; he recognized that what made these serials so exciting was the spectacular work of the stuntmen and stuntwomen. And he became familiar with the names of many of them.

The work of the stuntmen became an abiding interest with John. After seeing some of the exhilarating work of these talented men, he and his buddies would try out some of the stunts they saw in the movies. He had two pals with as much enthusiasm for stunts as himself. They acquired some old automobile seats and with these strapped to their backs, the three of them would walk for miles to places like railroad trestles or high trees and place the automobile seats on the ground, at the proper location, and from their high vantage point, would jump and land on the springy auto seats. They did this over and over again, until finally exhausted, they would trudge home with the seats strapped onto their backs. John later realized that this was his first training in doing "high falls".

His interest in stuntmen was so compelling that at the age of 14 he had already began collection all the articles, clippings, stills, photos and artifacts about the stunt profession and its members, the beginning of the enormous collection, no doubt the largest of its kind in the world.

By the time John was 17 his collection was rapidly growing. He knew he would soon be up for the draft. In 1945, he enlisted in the United States Navy. After boot training he was assigned to the newly commissioned aircraft carrier, USS Philippine Sea.

Johns assignment to the Philippine Sea brought him one of the most rewarding experiences of his life. The USS Philippine Sea and its fleet of ships was to make its historic expedition to the South Pole with Admiral Richard E Byrd. Not only that, but the Philippine Sea was the Admiral's flagship. John was elated, he had followed the news of the Byrd Expeditions to the Antarctic with great interest.

For 19,000 miles of sea voyage, John saw, had short conversations with and lived on the same ship as the noted explorer. This was an experience that remained a high spot in his life.

On board the USS Philippine Sea, John's post was that of assistant to the Chaplain. Since this was an assignment that required typing, and he didn't know how to type, he set about with his own indomitable spirit, to learn the trade of typist. For 72 hours, with practically no sleep, he practiced and taught himself the art of typing by the accepted 'touch' method. Of Course, he got the job as Assistant to the Chaplain was able to maintain typing 100 words per minute throughout his lifetime.

John also participated in the entertainment programs on board the Philippine Sea and the activity came natural to him.

Since John was already an experienced collector, it was inevitable that he would collect what he could from this famous expedition. His collection includes the ship's log, newspapers printed on board, bulletins, letters from the Admiral and other memorabilia from this great experience.

John attempted to learn whatever he could about the South Pole in this once in a lifetime visit there. Of course he found that Antarctica is the home of the charming, human like bird, the penguin, with their enthralling and captivating antics. Their numbers are so great that it is impossible to arrive at an estimate. He was intrigued with this fascinating bird and upon arriving home he started yet another collection, that of penguin figurines. He collected many hundreds of them in every shape and size. It may be one of the largest penguin collections in existence.

One of the great benefits, in John's opinion, was getting to know Antarctica, which was an enigma to most of the World at the time. This mysterious place of never never land, although almost unbelievable, is in truth, an enchanted continent lying at the bottom of the World. Both beautiful and sinister, a land of everlasting mystery. It covers 6 million square miles of ice locked and frozen earth. 95% of the World's ice and snow is located there.

John, as a young sailor from Baltimore and as an artist, was most impressed with the beauty of Antarctica. It is a place of lofty mountain ranges, rugged and majestic, covered with intricate formations of ice crystals. The sun's rays, glancing off these crystals causes them to sparkle like diamonds and bring jewel like colors of glorious iridescent purples, green, pinks and gold. They are then thrown up, promiscuously, against the distant horizon, in an ever changing panorama of rainbow colors. Its grandeur is infinitely more impressive than our own Grand Canyon. Its immensity is so great that man feels like an insignificant speck in eternity. The Glory and the Power and the Majesty of nature has been created here that is incomparable with any other place on earth. These are the things John saw when he was in Antarctica; the emotions he felt; and he was touched with the greatness that it was. This unforgettable experience is part of the life of John Hagner.

When John was honorably discharged from the United States Navy, and returned to Baltimore, three things happened, simultaneously. 1) John fell in love with his first love Eleanore Alther and they were married Nov. 3, 1947 in Ellicott City, Maryland. 2) He resumed his interest in the stunt profession. 3) He enrolled in the Maryland Institute of Art, to polish up his art talents. John worked as a clerk & typist for various companies including Bethlehem Steele in Baltimore. In 1955 John and Eleanore started their family when they adopted a little blond hair, blue eyed boy they named Donald Carter Hagner.

John grew tired of his routine life and decided to move the family to California so he could pursue his lifelong dream of becoming a stuntman. So in the spring of the following year they sold everything they owned and got on a Greyhound bus for 3 days and headed west to West Los Angeles. They stayed in a motel for about a month as he looked for jobs as an artist to get them by until he could get interviewed for upcoming stunt jobs.

In June of 1967 John and Eleanore finally got the call they had been waiting for, they drove to downtown Los Angeles ready to pick up and meet their new baby girl. This little 6lb bundle of joy was named Desiree Clarice Hagner. Now the family was complete.

John continued getting stunt jobs and collecting memorabilia. His big dream was to work as a stuntman and open up a museum for the stuntmen.

It was with David Sharpe that he developed a strong friendship. David, doubling for Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. in the swashbuckling type of stunt work, was to John, the example of the highest type of stunts, which David Sharpe, not only became a warm friend of John's, but he was also the inspiration that led John into stunt work, striving always for the perfection of his friend, and later into the development of the Hollywood Stuntmen's Hall of Fame for the stunt profession. John had many long talks with David about the development of such a Hall of Fame.

John doubled for Gardner McKay in the television series called "Adventures in Paradise". From then on he appeared in one movie after another, including, "The Great Race", "The Greatest Story Ever Told", "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea", "Captain Newman, MD", "Police Woman", and others. He also appeared in TV movies and on regularly scheduled television programs. These included "Bus Stop", "Felony Squad", "Outer Limits", "Hank", "Batman", "Steve Allen Tonight Show", "Truth and Consequences", and others. He had also done live-action appearances and commercials.

Although he had much diversification in stunt work, his specialties remained in High Falls and Fight Sequences. After several years in the stunt profession, he required two major operations not connected with stunt work, and this took him out of the business for a time. After recuperation, he did many portrait drawings of major personalities for the Motion Picture and TV Studios, and for public relation firms of the Stars. He also developed a clientele in commercial art and so was able to make a comfortable living form his art talents. But his heart remained with the stunt profession and he eventually got back to it. 

During the course of the years his collection had grown from stills to weapons, costumes, saddles, stunt equipment, all of which had a modest evaluation of one- half million dollars. This was all literally pouring out of his ears, his house and his garage.

During this same time he was realizing that the stunt field was the only segment of the motion pictures industry not recognized or honored. John did not think this was right, since these talented people risked life and limb to make the Stars look good. He resolved to do something about it. Obstacles had never been much of a concern to John Hagner. Nor was it a major anxiety to set the wheels in motion and to undertake a job of such magnitude in order to correct such an obvious oversight. To him, this was a job he had to do and he was confident that obstacles and roadblocks would all fall away as progress was made.

He held a meeting of stuntmen, some Stars and other personnel of the motion picture industry. He had his attorney present as well. Outlining his thoughts on establishing a Stuntmen's Hall of Fame, his message was enthusiastically received. In a nutshell, the idea and the purpose of such a Hall of Fame was to honor the stunt profession and its members and to preserve history as any such establishment dedicates itself to. And that remains the overall purpose today. All present at this meeting felt it was a great idea and offered their moral support. John was willing to use his own collection as a nucleus of a Stunt Museum.

In 1973 john incorporated the Hollywood Stuntmen's Hall of Fame, and he became its President and Founder, and Chairman of the Board - all positions which he retained throughout his lifetime. In fact it is impossible to imagine anyone else with the same dedication, talent as a historian, and with knowledge of the stunt profession, spending hours on end to develop this Hall of Fame.

The Hollywood Stuntmen's Hall of Fame is the world's only hall of fame dedicated to the stunt profession.

In 1975, after obtaining the first building for the Hall of Fame in Palmdale, California, John felt it was time to start 'footprint' ceremonies and to footprint the stunt performers for posterity, thus further honoring them. And for public interest, also the footprints of the Stars they doubled for and other entertainment personalities.

Invitations were sent out to a carefully selected list of personalities. 33 of them responded with acceptances. And these included Burt Reynolds, Lee Majors, Dale Robertson, Yvonne de Carlo, Anne Francis and many more. As time and other footprint ceremonies have been held, more prestigious personalities have been foot-printed by the Hall of Fame. These included Darth Vader, Charlson Heston, Johnny Weissmuller, Buddy Hackett, Isabel Sanford, George Montgomery, Eddie Fisher, and many, many more. The Hall of Fame Museum now has 120 footprint blocks containing footprints, handprints and signatures of the world’s greatest entertainment figures; including many stunt performers, whose names, because of the very nature of their work, is mostly unknown to the public.

When John, with hammer, nails and a saw, together with considerable sweat, constructed a false front set at one side of the Hall of Fame building - Simulated Western Street - he saw this as a perfect place in which to teach students the art and skill of stunt work for the purpose of performing for the Hall of Fame. Stunts Galore Academy was established. John taught many students and they often did live stunt shows.

After the move to Mojave Airport where more of John's artwork was displayed in the museum, he was convinced that his portrait drawings of famous personalities should go into 'Limited Edition'. Registers were organized and each print sold was numbered, registered and signed by him.

John as an author had a special niche of his own. His authoritative book, "Falling For Stars", was one of the first books ever written on the stunt profession. Ready to go into its third printing, it is found today, in the libraries of Universities throughout the world. He also authored "The Greatest Stunts Ever", a pictorial of the world's most complicated stunts...also a best seller.

Another quirk to John's inventive mind was the creation of the character, CAPTAIN ACTION. Captain Action appears as a masked figure with a flying red cape. His entire costume embodies the patriotic colors of red, white, blue and gold trim. Captain Action is a mystery character who stands for good over evil. He is slanted toward children of all ages, and they are encouraged by him, to law and parent obedience, respect for authority and for our Country, and are taught by him to live good, clean lives.

John had a very complex personality. Everything in his mind was geared toward the successes of the Hollywood Stuntmen's Hall of Fame. He was a member of the Screen Actors Guild, and of the Academy of Motion.

In 1988, John moved the Hollywood Stuntmen's Hall of Fame to Moab, Utah. Soon after his arrival and opening of the facilities, he met and married Dorothy (Holyoak) McBeth. At that time he added more members to his family.

At this time his family consisted of his son Don and wife Joanne, and their twin boys, Aaron & Nate; Daughter Desiree and husband Jeff, with two children, Chase and Lacy; Step Daughter Doricca and husband Curt and their three boys, Christopher, Michael, and Austin.

John stayed busy running the Stuntmens' Hall of Fame, drawing and painting portraits of the celebrities. He had the opportunity of working in the movies that were being filmed here in Moab. In the movie "Geronimo" he played the part of a miner. John doubled for John Ireland in the movie "Sundown Vampires in retreat". While movies were being filmed here in Moab many celebrities came to the museum to be foot-printed and donated items to John to put on display.

As the years flew by. John spent most of his mornings playing in the band "The Happy Notes" with Ginger Clark at the Grand Center. John looked forward to every Monday, Wednesday and Friday playing his drums and singing while Ginger played the piano.

In May of 2016 John was invited to participate in the Utah Honor Flight and fly to Washington, DC. John was one of 48 veterans from World War II and operation High Jump to attend the war memorials and receive their very own medal.

In September of 2016 John received the horrible news that he had pancreatic cancer. He was a very strong and proud man and decided only immediate family members were to know. John privately fought this horrible disease with all the strength he had.

he worked on his last movie in December of last year at the ripe age of 90. The movie "Astro" was just release and is now playing in movie theaters.

He was able to get his final wish "To be the oldest working stuntman".

John passed away in his home on May 31st, 2018.

John leaves behind his brother Frank Hagner and wife Beverly; Daughter Desiree and husband Jeff Sexton; Step Daughter Doricca and Husband Curt Brewer. Grandsons Nate and wife Elsa; Aaron Hagner; Chase Sexton; Christopher Brewer and wife Maggie; Michael Brewer; Austin Brewer and fiance BreAnne. Granddaughter Lacy Sexton. Great Granddaughters Avery & Devin Hagner. Great Grandsons Easton & Rawling Brewer.

Funeral arrangements will be Sunday June 10th, family only gathering 6:00 pm to 6:45 pm. General viewing at Spanish Valley Mortuary 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm.

Funeral, Monday June 11th at the LDS Chapel on 400 N, 10:00 am viewing, 11:00 am service.

Interment will be at the Grand Valley Cemetery, luncheon to follow.

Anyone wishing to make donations in lieu of flowers may do so to the Grand County Hospice.


HAGNAR, Johnny (John Gilbert Hagnar)
Born: 12/6/1927, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.
Died: 5/31/2018, Moab, Utah, U.S.A.

Johnny Hagnar’s westerns – stuntman:
The Wild Westerners – 1962
Sundown: The Vampire in Retreat – 1989
Geronimo: An American Legend – 1993

RIP Frank Bresee

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Noted Radio Actor and Historian Frank Bresee Dead at 88

“Golden Days of Radio” show aired on AFRN from 1967 to 1995

Radio World
Tom Vernon· 
June 7, 2018

You just never know where a nickel tour of a radio station may take you. On a 1939 school field trip, 10-year old Frank Bresee visited KFAC, a classical music station in Los Angeles. It must have made quite an impression, because later that year, he asked to be on the air. And thus began the career of one of the best known radio historian in the U.S. Bresee passed away on June 5 at the age of 88. Through his long tenure in broadcasting, he touched many lives. His friend and co-host of the “Friday Night Live” show on the Yesterday USA Radio Networks, Walden Hughes, shared his recollections of Frank Bresee with me.

In 1941, Bresee auditioned for the “Red Ryder” radio show and was runner up to his long-time friend, Tommy Cook. This show began in 1942. While Cook was busy acting in movies, Bresee played Red’s sidekick, “Little Beaver,” on the show.

In 1942 Bresee was Alvin on the radio show “Major Hopalong” also starring Mel Blanc and Arthur Q. Bryan. Bryan was perhaps better known as the voice of Elmer Fudd. Arthur later became a second father to Frank. The two often collaborated on projects.

Bresee was probably one of the first dumpster divers. As a little boy, he took his wagon, went behind radio stations and retrieved from the trash various radio broadcast transcription discs. He also collected radio scripts after attending many of the broadcasts. What began as a childhood past time grew into an important private collections of radio memorabilia. In addition to the discs and scripts, Bresee’s tape archive of around 3,900 reels is held at the Thousand Oaks Library

In August of 1949, Bresee began the “Golden Days of Radio” show with his large collection of transcription discs. He played early discs from current radio shows while new shows were being broadcasting. At the same time, Bresee spun records for Johnny Grant’s radio show. Grant hosted a late night DJ show, and Bresee would host the last hour of the show so that Grant could grab a nap. The broadcast took place at the Ham and Eggery.

Grant also recommended Bresee to Bob Hope. Bresee owned one of the first mobile tape recorders in town, and he would go over to Hope’s dressing room at Paramount and record a Hope radio spot or special materials. At the outbreak of the Korean War, Bresee was scheduled to join the armed forces. He was relieved of his duties when Hope wrote a letter requesting Bresee be a part of his staff. He travelled with Hope and was part of the radio team that traveled to Ohio when Hope starred in “My Favorite Spy” with Hedy Lamarr. Bresee also helped with Hope’s weekly radio show.

Bresee was one of the first people in Hollywood in the late 1950s to have a movie theater in his home. The theater had around 30 seats and a projector purchased from a local movie theater. Mel Torme, Elvis Presley and Natalie Wood were some of the celebrities who came over to watch films. Many autographed the wall inside the theater and later the chalk board.

This theater became the home where TV shows would have their first run though. Monty Hall and Steve Hadeck ran “Let’s Make A Deal” for six months in Bresee’s theater before they sold it to the network.

Around this time, Bresee’s “Golden Days of Radio” was being featured on KGIL and KMPC. In 1966 “The Golden Days of Radio” began to play in Germany over the Armed Forces Radio Network. It went on the full network in 1967, and became one of the main features for the next 29 years. Bresee played highlights from shows and interviewed people who worked in radio. Some of his guest included Mae West, Bob Hope, Jack Benny and George Burns.

During KFI’s celebration of its 50th birthday, Bresee produced a 12-hour special hosted by many of the stars heard over KFI in the golden days of radio. Some of the hosts were Rudy Vallee, Jim Jordan (Fibber McGee from “Fibber McGee and Molly”), Edgar Bergen and Hal Parry (the Great Gildersleeve).

Bresee had his own radio studio at the Hudson House. There, he displayed transcription discs and the handrail that Cecil B. DeMille created for the Lux Radio Theater. It was displayed next to a picture taken at a Lux Radio Theater rehearsal from 1946. Bresee regularly took pictures on Sundays at the radio rehearsal of Lux which included Lana Turner, John Hodiak and many others.

Throughout his long career, Bresee received numerous awards, including recognition from Pacific Pioneers, the Diamond of Circle, The Society to Preserve and Encourage Radio, Drama, Variety, and Comedy’s Byron Kane Award.


BRESEE, Frank
Born: 8/20/1929, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.  
Died: 6/5/2018, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Frank Bresee’s western – radio actor:
Red Ryder – 1942-1946 (Little Beraver)
Cisco Kid - 1955
Gunsmoke - 1956

RIP Georgann Johnson

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RIP Georgann Johnson

Los Angeles Times
June 14, 2018

Georgann Johnson Prager Tenner
August 15, 1926 - June 4, 2018 An actress whose professional career lasted 65 years and spanned Broadway, live television, Oscar-winning films, soap operas, and more, has died at 91. Ms. Tenner, whose professional name was Georgann Johnson, was born August 15th, 1926 in Decorah, Iowa to George and Helene Johnson. She graduated from Decorah High School, received her BA from Luther College, and a Master's Degree in Oratory from Northwestern University. After at stint at Alvina Krause's theater in Bloomsburg, she moved to New York City in 1950. Georgann liked to say that the only non-acting job she ever held was the two weeks she spent selling gloves at Lord & Taylor's. Throughout the 1950's she worked in the new medium of television, appearing on episodes of the Goodyear Playhouse, Kraft Theatre, and Alfred Hitchcock Presents and many others. She appeared with actors such as James Dean in "Life Sentence", and as Paul Newman's wife in the original television production of "Bang the Drum Slowly". She also starred as Tony Randall's wife in the television show "Mr. Peepers" and in the movie "Shortcut to Hell" directed by James Cagney. In 1954, she was on Broadway in "Reclining Figure" directed by Abe Burrows. It was in a revival of "Room Service" that she met the actor Stanley Prager. They married in 1956 while Prager was starring as Prez in the original production of "The Pajama Game". It was the McCarthy era and Prager had already been called to testify in front of HUAC. They went to Rhode Island to marry in hopes that it would not make the papers. Prez was one of his last roles and, after decades as an actor, Prager switched to directing. "Of course it was in the papers," Georgann would say but the couple survived the blacklist and both continued to work in show business. In the 1960's, Georgann was on Broadway, starring opposite Henry Fonda in "Critic's Choice" directed by Otto Preminger. On television she appeared in episodes of "Dr. Kildare", "The Doctors", and "The Fugitive", among others. In 1969, she had a role in "Midnight Cowboy" which won the Oscar for Best Picture. In the 1970's it was soap operas, with long running roles on both "Another World/Somerset" as Ellen Grant and "As the World Turns" as Jane Spencer. Throughout the next 35 years, Georgann continued her work, with recurring roles on such television shows as "Our Family Honor", "Wiseguy", "The Trials of Rosie O'Neill", and "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman", and in movies directed by, among others, Hal Ashby, Robert Altman, and Martin Ritt. Some years after Stanley's death in 1972, she relocated to Los Angeles and, in 1981, married the Honorable Jack Tenner, a Superior Court Judge and civil rights activist. She said some of her happiest times as an actor were the improvisations she and Jack did to raise funds at the many events they attended. They remained married until his death in 2008. Georgann is survived by her four daughters: Carol Prager, Annie Prager, Sally Seymour (Ralph), and Molly Boyll (David), and three grandchildren, Hannah Seymour, Gabriel Seymour, and Caroline Boyll. She will be greatly missed.


JOHNSON, Georgann
Born: 8/15/1926, Decorah, Iowa, U.S.A.
Died: 6/4/2018, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Georgann Johson’s western – actress:
Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (TV) – 1993-1997 (Elizabeth Quinn)

RIP Stanislav Govorukhin

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Film Director, Politician Stanislav Govorukhin Dead at 82

The Moscow Times
June 14, 2018

Stanislav Govorukhin, an actor, celebrated film director, screenwriter and political figure, died on Thursday after a long illness, as reported in Russian media. He was 82 years old. At the time of his death he was a deputy in the State Duma from the United Russia Party.

Born in the Urals, he began work in television in Kazan, but then moved to Moscow to study filmmaking. He was one of the most popular directors of films for movie theaters and television in the late Soviet period, most renowned for the television series starring Vladimir Vysotsky, “The Meeting Place Can’t Be Changed (1979) and “Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn” (1981).

His 1990 documentary, “We Can’t Live Like This,” drew audiences of millions across the country and became the most famous symbol of glasnost. Two years later his films “Alexander Solzhenitsyn” and “The Russia That We Lost” continued to criticize the Soviet period and gave a positive if romanticized view of pre-Revolutionary Russia.

Although Govorukhin continued to write scripts, direct and produce films for the big and small screen, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union he became active as a politician. In 2000 he ran for President (getting less than 1 percent of the vote), and was a deputy in the State Duma since 1993.

In the early thoughts his political views appeared to change, and in 2005 he joined the United Russia Party. In 2011 Govorukhin was chosen to be head of Vladimir Putin’s campaign in the 2012 elections. Govorukhin received dozens of awards over his career, including several Nika awards, the highest cinema prize in Russia.

He held the title of People’s Artist of the Russian Federation.


GOVORUKHIN, Stanislav (Stanislav Sergeevich Govorukhin)
Born: 3/29/1936, Berezniki, Russia, U.S.S.R.
Died: 6/14/2018, Bravikha, Moscow, Russia

Stanislav Govorukhin’s westerns – director, writer:
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn  (TV) – 1981 [director, screenwriter]
Mark Twain’s Tom Sawyer – 2001 [director]

RIP Béla Paudits

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Béla Paudits has died

Euro News
June 13, 2018

Bela Paudits, 68, was transported to the hospital last Friday after having a stroke in his home. His caretaker informed the Story magazine of his death.

Béla Paudits was born on 19 August 1949 in Budapest. Between 1968 and 1972 he studied at the College of Theater and Film, and in 1986 he completed the College of Catering.

From 1972 to 1974, Attila József Theater, from 1974 to 1983, member of the Madách Theater; Between 1983 and 1985, and since 1997 he was freelancer. Between 1993 and 1997 he lived in Toronto. In 1993 he was awarded the Mari Jászai Prize.

He has seen audiences in several TV shows, major stage performances: Osrick (Shakespeare: Hamlet); Antal Fusz (Molnár: One, Two, Three); Charley (Thomas: Charley's sister); Barber Assistant (Molnár: Harmony); Charles (Hubay-Vas-Ránki: Three nights of love); Moncrief Algernon (Wilde: Bunbury); Giliszta Jack (Brecht-Weill: Awakening and Fall of the Mahagonny); Borracchio (Shakespeare: A lot of cool for nothing); Mr. Oxenby (Harwood: The Dressup); Quaxo (Rice-Webber: Cats); Puppet (Sobol: Ghetto); József (Rice-Lloyd Webber: József and the color widescreen sleeping coat); Conferences (Kander: Kabaré).


PAUDITS, Béla
Born: 8/19/1949, Budapest, Hungary
Died: 6/13/2018, Budapest, Hungary

Béla Paudits’s western – actor:
Hol colt, hol nem colt (TV) – 1980 (cowboy)

RIP Pab Schwendimann

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RIP Pab Schwendimann

Santa Fe New Mexican
June 15, 2018

Paul (Pab) Frederick Schwendimann peacefully passed away on March 13, 2018 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Paul was born on October 4, 1968 in Dallas, Texas to Frederick W. Schwendimann and Carol Reichelt Schwendimann. The famiy moved to Santa Fe in 1980 and Paul attended Acequia Madre Elementary, Capshaw Middle School and Santa Fe High School. Following graduation in 1986, Paul spent a year in Australia as an exchange sttudent. He then entered Rice University. Paul was a creative and multi-talented individual. He was a member of the Screen Actors Guild and had parts in movies and television. Following in the footsteps of his maternal grandfather and paternal great grandfather, Paul was a member of the Masonic Lodge. Paul is survived by his father Fred Schwendimann and his wife Phillipa of Albuquerque, his mother Carol Schwendimann of Santa Fe, and sister Amy Roe, her husband, Josh and their daughter, Maya of Sonora, California. Paul will be remembered by the family in a private gathering in June.


SCHWENDIMANN, Pab (Paul Schwendimann)
Born: 10/4/1968, Dallas, Texas, U.S.A.
Died: 3/13/2018, Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A.

Pab Schwendimann’s western – actor:
Longmire (TV) – 2014 (Bryant)

RIP William Beaudine Jr.

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Remembering William Beaudine, Jr.

Directors Guild of America
February 14, 2018

Former DGA Secretary-Treasurer and 1983 Frank Capra Achievement Award recipient William Beaudine, Jr. recently passed away.
The son of director William Beaudine, Bill Jr. got his start in small roles in some of his father’s films before becoming a 2nd AD on Beaudine Senior’s Philo Vance Returns in 1947, joining the DGA that same year. He worked as an AD throughout much of the 1950s on films such as Frank McDonald’s Yukon Gold and Don Siegel’s Invasion of the Body Snatchers before becoming a UPM for the series Lassie. Some of his other credits include Tom Laughlin’s feature The Trial of Billy Jack, Steven Hilliard Stern’s movie-for-television Miracle on Ice; and episodes of the television series Quantum Leap. He also received Emmy nominations for producing Paul Bogart’s mini-series Dress Gray and Glenn Jordan’s mini-series Nutcracker: Money, Madness & Murder.

An active Guild member during his career, Beaudine served as a member of the National Board from 1960-1985 and was elected as the DGA Secretary-Treasurer from 1979-1981. He also served on the Western AD/UPM Council from 1967-1982 and 1991-1996; and was a longtime Trustee of the Directors Guild Foundation. In recognition of his service to the industry and to the DGA, in 1983 Beaudine was presented with the Frank Capra Achievement Award.


BEAUDINE Jr., William
Born: 4/28/1921, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
Died: 2/?/2018, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

William Beaudine Jr’s, westerns – production manager, assistant director:
Sierra Passage – 1950 [assistant director]
The Titled Tenderfoot – 1950 [assistant director]
Yukon Manhunt – 1951 [assistant director]
Adventures of Wild Will Hickok (TV) – 1951-1952 [assistant director]
Behind Southern Lines – 1952 [assistant director]
The Ghost of Crossbone Canyon – 1952 [assistant director]
Yukon Gold – 1952 [assistant director]
Border City Rustlers – 1953 [assistant director]
Born to the Saddle – 1953 [assistant director]
Secret of Outlaw Flats – 1953 [assistant director]
Six Gun Decision – 1953 [assistant director]
Son of Belle Starr – 1953 [assistant director]
Two Gun Marshal – 1953 [assistant director]
Yukon Vengeance – 1954 [assistant director]
Canyon Crossroads – 1955 [assistant director]
Phantom Trails – 1955 [assistant director]
Westward Ho, the Wagons – 1956 [assistant director]
The Further Adventures of Spin and Marty (TV) – 1956 [assistant director]
Casey Jones (TV) – 1957 [assistant director]
Escort West – 1959 [assistant director]
Fury (TV) – 1959-1960 [production manager]

RIP Maria Rohm

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RIP Maria Rohm

Spettacola
By Ivan Zingariello
June 22, 2018

Austrian actress Maria Rohm has died, a muse of Jesus Franco and interpreter of many of his cult movies, from 99 Women to Justine, from Paroxismus to Il conte Dracula.

Another heroine of the cinema has been silenced, Maria Rohm. The muse of Jesus Franco and widow of his producer Harry Alan Towers, died in Toronto on Monday 18 June at the age of 72, as announced on his Facebook profile by his friend actress Hunter Phoenix: "Dear friends, it is with great sadness that I share the news that our dear friend Maria Towers / born Maria Rohm has disappeared. I'm sure you all have many questions and I'm happy to answer you in due time, but I ask you to respect the privacy of those closest to you in this difficult moment. We will miss him not only for his work, but above all for his kindness and compassion ".

Maria Rohm (Helga Grohmann) was born in Vienna in 1945 (but some sources report 1943) and since she was a child she stages the stages, in classics taken from Shakespeare, Tolstoy and working with great actors. At 18, the beautiful and blonde aristocratic Maria gives an audition for producer Harry Alan Towers, who loses his head over her and, after having married her in 1964, launched her in international films directed by Jeremy Summers, The 5 dragons d'oro (1967) and Le faire vergini (1968) with Vincent Price. Almost all of the films interpreted by Rohm will be produced by her husband (often also as a screenwriter), including The Blood of Fu Manchu which in 1968 marks the beginning of the association with the Spanish b-movie master Jesus Franco, where she will become a muse like the ill-fated Soledad Miranda.

With Franco, Maria Rohm shoots her most famous films, nine in just five years. In most of them there is a high rate of eroticism, frequent lesbian scenes, perversions, sadism and, often, even hard core insertions, as the tradition of the Spanish director. After the aforementioned Fu Manchu with Christopher Lee and the adventurous Sumuru queen of femina, the first W.I.P. Francoist 99 women, in which she is a victim of prison violence with Maria Schell, Luciana Paluzzi and the sensual Rosalba Neri. Following the "de sadiano" Justine or the misadventures of virtue, in which is Juliette, sister of the very young Justine / Romina Power, with Klaus Kinski in the role of the famous and perverse Marquis.

It is then she turn out the Francoist masterpiece, Paroxismus - Can a dead relive for love ?, where the ghost of a murdered girl persecutes the protagonist, seeking justice towards those who killed her. We then move on to the costume movie with The throne of fire, which sees Rohm intent on revenging her sister Margaret Lee, burnt as a witch by the inquisitor Christopher Lee, who in the next film, De Sade 70, will instead lead a sect of sadists to whom Rohm will try to procure girls. The most famous of those films directed by Jesus Franco and produced by Towers is, however, The Count Dracula, which brings the stainless Christopher Lee to dress the clothes that made him famous at the time of Hammer, flanked by the inevitable Kinski / Renfield, while Rohm is the beautiful Mina. The partnership with Franco ended in 1972 with the unknowable Sex Charade, with the maniac Paul Muller who keeps the unfortunate Soledad Miranda in captivity (who prematurely died in an accident two years later).

For Maria Rohm she did little else in the post Franco: in 1970 she shoots Dorian Gray by Massimo Dallamano, The God called Dorian, in which she is impaled by Helmut Berger, while two years later she is in the cast of troubled Treasure Island with Orson Welles and de The Call of the Wild with Charlton Heston. The last important role is instead that of the maid Elsa Martino, second "little Indian" to die in ... and then, there remained none (1974) by Peter Collinson. The last film by Rohm is instead the erotic post Emmanuelle set in Hong Kong The end of innocence, still directed by Dallamano, after which the actress decides to retire from the scene ending her career with a scarce thirty titles.

Maria Rohm then joined her husband Harry Alan Towers to become independent film producers, including the adventurous Black Arrow (1985) with Oliver Reed and Donald Pleasence, and the horror Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde on the edge of madness (1989) with Anthony Perkins and Dorian (2004) with Malcolm McDowell, until the summer of 2009, when she was widowed after 45 years of marriage.


ROHM, Maria (Helga Grohmann)
Born: 8/13/1945, Vienna, Austria
Died: 6/18/2018, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Maria Rohm’s western – actress:
The Call of the Wild – 1972 (Mercedes)

RIP Bill Lignante

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Chronicle Chamber
May 17, 2018

Here at ChronicleChamber we are more than a little ashamed it has taken us this long to pay our respects to a wonderful artist in Bill Lignante who has left a HUGE imprint and legacy on the character we all love.

Mega-phan and personal phriend of Lignante, William Higgins, has confirmed that Bill Lignante passed away on the 27th February 2018, about three weeks before his 92nd birthday.

While his Sunday reign was short lived most phans would be aware of his work, if only because of the infamous 1962 Sunday story: Queen Samaris XII. Bill sensationally drew the ears and eyes on his Phantom in the story, which remains the only time The Phantom's eyes in particular have been depicted in the newspaper strip.
Undfortunately some nasty untruthful rumours started in Australia surrounding the story, namely that Bill was actually sacked from the newspaper strip by Lee Falk and King Features as a result 

The rumour was first published in a Mallon Diary and has been quoted several times, including in Frew comics.

It is worth noting that if King Features had an issue with the eyes and ears they could have done what Frew did and edited the panels, as they had their own artist and editorial team on staff back in the 1960's .
In our Sy Barry interview Sy helped further clear up the mess by stating that he never took the job off Bill but from Wilson McCoy, and as he was doing assistant work for Flash Gordon at the time, Bill came to the rescue as a temporary replacement.

In a Friends of the Phantom interview (Winter 1998) Bill Lignante explained it to readers personally, via interviewer Ed Rhoades.

Apart from his brief tenor as a Phantom newspaper artist, Lignante also drew more than 45 Phantom comic book stories, authoring several of them, including the Girl Phantom which we recently saw in the 2017 Frew Annual. He also created three covers for Charlton.
In the Winter 1998 Friends of the Phantominterview Bill expressed that the greatest highlight of his time creating Phantom stories was doing the Girl Phantom and was "..an excellent character and should be continued..".

Outside comics, Bill's greatest legacy would probably be his courtroom art for ABC for many famous cases including Sirhan Sirhan, Charles Manson, Rodney King and many more. He covered more than 50 major trials in a 26 year period. On top of that he created six Palm restaurants and an Adelphi Inn which featured some original Wilson McCoy art on a wall.
You can read Bill Lignante's full Phantom bio here.

From everyone from team ChronicleChamber and every Phantom phan, we thank you Bill Lignante for your huge impact and work you have put into the hero we adored over the many years. Our thoughts are with his widow and family left behind.


LIGNANTE, Bill (William Lgnante)
Born: 3/20/1925, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.
Died: 2/27/12018, Carlsbad, California, U.S.A.

Bill Lignante’s western – layout artist:
Butch Cassidy - 1973

RIP Deanna Lund

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Deanna Lund Actress on ‘Land of the Giants’, dies at 81

The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
6/25/21018

Earlier, she appeared in films ‘Johnny Tiger’ and ‘Tony Rome’ and as ‘The Riddler’s moll on ‘Batman’.

Deanna Lund, who played one of the seven castaways trying to survive in a world of large, unfriendly people on the 1960s ABC series Land of the Giants, has died. She was 81.

Lund died Fridayat her home in Century City of pancreatic cancer,her daughter, actress and novelist Michele Matheson, told The Hollywood Reporter. She was diagnosed in September.

Lund starred as Valerie Scott, a selfish party girl, on the Irwin Allen-created series, which aired for two seasons, from September 1968 until March 1970.

Set in the year 1983, 20th Century Fox's Land of the Giantsrevolved around the crew and passengers of the spaceship Spindrift, which on the way to London crashed on a planet whose humanoid inhabitants were hostile and unbelievably huge. The show was extremely expensive to make, costing a reported $250,000 an episode.

The sexy Lund had appeared as a redheaded lesbian stripper opposite Frank Sinatra in Tony Rome (1967) and as Anna Gram, a moll working for The Riddler (John Astin), on ABC's Batman, leading to her being cast on the s
how.

The "little people" did many of their own stunts, and Lund hung from ropes over flames and was carried off by an ape, dropped into specimen jars, taped to tables and used as a pawn on a giant chessboard.

In 1970, the actress married the late Don Matheson, who portrayed tycoon Mark Wilson on Land of the Giants, shortly after the series was canceled. Their marriage ended in divorce in 1980, but her daughter told THRin 2014 that they remained the best of friends.

"They talked several times a day, laughed and drove each other nuts and lived across the street from one another or within a couple blocks for the last 35 years," said Michele, who played Angela Shostakovich on the 1985-90 ABC sitcom Mr. Belvedere.

Born on May 30, 1937, in Oak Park, Illinois, Lund was raised in Daytona Beach, Florida. Her father, Arnold, ran a beach motel, The Surf and Sand, where the family lived. Lund studied acting at Rollins College in Winter Park, and, after a brief marriage to a rodeo rider, worked as a weather girl on a TV station in Miami.

A single mother with two young children, Lund came to Hollywood, then appeared as a beautiful robot in Norman Taurog's Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine (1965), starring Vincent Price, Frankie Avalon and Dwayne Hickman.

In 1966, she could be seen in The Oscar as "Bikini Girl"; in the Elvis Presley films Paradise, Hawaiian Style and Spinout as a nurse and a "redheaded beauty," respectively; and in Johnny Tiger, playing Chad Everett's slutty girlfriend.

While waiting for Land of the Giants to begin shooting, Roman Polanski offered her the part of Rosemary's (Mia Farrow) friend Terry in Rosemary's Baby (1968).

"Even though Roman promised he'd finish with me in time for Giants, Irwin didn't trust him and said no. My first obligation was with Irwin, so I couldn't do it," Lund said in Tom Lisanti's 2001 book, Fantasy Femmes of Sixties Cinema. "I really didn't fight for it. I wimped out. Roman somehow got my home phone number and just read me the riot act. It was stupid on my part for passing on it. I should have fought harder." (Victoria Vetri got the job.)

"Land of the Giants was not an actors' show," she continued. "We were always upstaged by the special effects. At the time I was embarrassed because it wasn't Chekhov, it was Land of the Giants! I thought then, 'My God, is this what I studied acting for?'"

She changed her mind a bit after coming across the series in reruns.

Later, Lund worked on programs like Love, American Style; The Waltons; The Incredible Hulk and General Hospital; and in the films Hustle (1975) opposite Burt Reynolds; Hardly Working(1981), written, directed and starring Jerry Lewis; and Transylvania Twist(1989). She taught acting as well.
Lund also wrote a 1992 novella, Valerie in Giantland, based on Land of the Giants but set 10 years later.

In addition to Michele, survivors include daughter Kimberly; son Randy; grandchildren Phyllis, Elizabeth, Shawn, Tyler, Ryan, Jack and Jolene; and great-grandchildren Ellie, Charlotte and Quinn. A celebration of her life will take place in July.


LUND, Deanna (Deanna P. Lund)
Born: 5/30/1937, Oak Park, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died: 6/22/2018, Century City, California, U.S.A.

Deanna Lund’s westerns – actress:
The Loner (TV) – 1966 (Susan Dichter)
The Road West (TV) – 1966
Laredo (TV) – 1966 (Cherry)
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