Monday, April 22, 2024

RIP Bob Ellison

Bob Ellison was an American consultant, screenwriter and television producer. He was born in 1933 and worked on television programs including “Dear John”, “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” and “Wings”. Ellison won two Primetime Emmy Awards and five nominations for Outstanding Writing Variety or Music from 1971 to 1977. Ken Levine mentioned bob died in April 2024, at the age of 91 on his podcast "Hollywood and Levine".

ELLISON, Bob (Robert Ellison)

Born: 1933, U.S.A.

Died: 4/18/2024, U.S.A.

 

Bob Ellison’s western – executive script consultant:

Best of the West (TV) - 1981

Sunday, April 21, 2024

RIP Antonio Cantafora

 

Crotone in mourning, painter-actor Antonio Cantafora dies in Rome

Gazzetta del Sud

April 20, 2024

 

The actor Antonio Cantafora, originally from Crotone where he was born on February 2, 1944, died today in Rome at the age of 80.

Cantafora, after studying acting with the renowned Alessandro Fersen, made his debut on the big screen in 1967, but it was in the 1970s that he reached the peak of his fame, thanks to his uncanny resemblance to actor Terence Hill. Paired with Paul L. Smith, he embodied the role of the "handsome" in a series of films inspired by the duo Bud Spencer and Terence Hill. But his career has not been limited to leading roles. Cantafora was also a character actor, working with some of the most important directors of Italian cinema, including Federico Fellini, Alberto Lattuada, Mauro Bolognini. Films such as Lattuada's "The Cicada", Fellini's "Interview" and Carlo Vanzina's "A Spasso nel Tempo" are testament to his versatility and talent for bringing a wide range of characters to life.

Cantafora was also a prolific artist, with a passion for painting that he developed over the years. He has created hundreds of works of art, which have achieved success not only in Italy, but also abroad. Despite his success and prestige, Cantafora has always remained tied to his homeland, finding inspiration in his Calabrian roots for many of his works. For some time, he had been thinking of giving life to a new project inspired by the figure of Pythagoras, which he hoped to bring to life with the help of the Calabria Film Commission

Mayor Vicenzo Voce expressed condolences for the actor's passing: "Our fellow citizen - he wrote - was an appreciated film and television actor. Despite being far from Crotone, he has never broken his bond with the city. I express to the family - concluded Voce - the condolences of my family, of the administration and of the Crotone community".

CANTAFORA, Antonio

Born: 2/2/1944, Crotone, Calabria, Italy

Died: 4/20/2024, Rome, Lazio, Italy

 

Antonio Cantafora’s westerns – actor:

The Dirty Outlaws – 1967 (Bill Flannigan)

Joe Dakota – 1967 (Tab)

And God Said to Cain – 1969 (Dick Acombar)

Black Killer – 1971 (Ramon O’Hara)

Shoot Joe, and Shoot Again - 1971 (Jack’s henchman)

A Bounty Hunter for Trinity – 1972 (town council member)

Carambola – 1973 (Coby/Toby/Trinity) [as Michael Coby]

The Crazy Adventures of Len and Coby - 1974 (Toby) [as Michael Coby]

We Are No Angels - 1975 (Angel) [as Michael Coby]

Buck and the Magic Bracelet - 1997 (Sergeant O'Connor)

 

RIP Josef Laufer

 

Famous actor and singer Josef Laufer has died, after four years in artificial sleep 

Refle

By Viliam Buchert

April 21, 2024

 

Josef Laufer was born Don José José Francisco Pérez Rodriguez de Montagnes de Laufer in 1939.

Actor, director, singer and screenwriter Josef Laufer has died at the age of 84. The information was confirmed by the director of the Broadway Theatre, Oldřich Lichtenberg. "According to Ester Pep, he died of cardiac arrest," he said, referring to Laufer's daughter. The singer has been in artificial sleep for the past four years.

He was in artificial sleep

Doctors put him into it after a complication from heart valve surgery in March 2020.

Josef Laufer was born Don José José Francisco Pérez Rodriguez de Montagnes de Laufer in 1939. He was born in France to a father of Jewish origin and native Spaniards. His parents met in Spain during the Civil War, where Dr. Maximilián Laufer worked as an interbrigadist in the lazareth.

After the defeat of France by Germany, the family moved to Great Britain, and after 1947 to Czechoslovakia. After his apprenticeship, Josef Laufer worked at a research institute, but during his military service he began acting and directing amateur theater. After returning from the war, he made guest appearances at the ABC Theater and prepared for exams at the theater faculty, where he was recruited.

During his studies at DAMU, he founded the theater company RADAR, performed in films, musicals, and also began to appear on the television screen. He was fluent in English, Spanish and German.

In addition to acting, he also sang, recorded several records, among his most famous compositions are, for example, Goodbye love, I go further or Give me a belt.

Collaborator of the ŠtB

And he also drew attention to himself with the controversial song Letter to Free Europe, in which he celebrated the return of a State Security agent who carried out a bombing on the radio station Free Europe in Munich.

The song was not an initiative of the secret service, as was speculated in the 70s, but an artist's initiative. Laufer was registered by the ŠtB in the category of confidant with the code name Vostrý.

Thanks to his exotic appearance, Josef Laufer was a sought-after film actor, we saw him in films such as Night on Karlštejn, Gentlemen Boys, Old Men on Hops, Day for My Love, Virgin and Monster or the series Kameňák. He also starred in the series Engineering Odyssey and Circus Humberto.

He was married to costume designer Irena Greif, with whom he had a daughter, Esther. Greif died last year at the age of 83.

LAUFER, Josef (Don José Francisco Pérez Rodriguez de Montagnes Laufer)

Born: 8/11/1939, Sables d'Ollone, Vendée, France

Died: 4/20/2024, Prague, Czech Republic

 

Josef Laufer’s western – actor:

Starosta má starosti (TV) – 1989 (sheriff)

Saturday, April 20, 2024

RIP Roman Gabriel

 

Rams legend Roman Gabriel dies at age 83

Rams Wire

By Cameron DaSilva

April 20, 2024

 

Los Angeles Rams legend Roman Gabriel died at the age of 83 on Saturday morning, his son announced on social media.

Gabriel spent the first 11 years of his NFL career with the Rams after being drafted second overall in 1962. During his 11 seasons in Los Angeles, he made the Pro Bowl three times and was a first-team All-Pro in 1969 – the same year he was voted league MVP. He went 74-39-6 as the team’s starting quarterback, throwing 154 touchdown passes and 112 interceptions.

Gabriel finished his career with the Eagles, playing five years in Philadelphia from 1973. He was a Pro Bowler once as a member of the Eagles, his first season with the team.

He put together a decorated collegiate career at NC State, too, earning first-team All-American honors in 1960 and 1961, as well as being voted a two-time ACC Player of the Year. He had his No. 18 jersey retired by the Wolfpack, one of just eight players to receive that honor.

NC State shared the following message on social media remembering the great quarterback.

GABRIEL, Roman (Roman Ildonzo Gabriel Jr.)

Born: 8/5/1940, Wilmington, North Carolina, U.S.A.

Died: 4/20/2024, Calabash, North Carolina, U.S.A.

 

Roman Gabriel’s western – actor:

The Undefeated – 1969 (Blue Boy)

Friday, April 19, 2024

RIP Barbara O. Jones

 

Barbara O. Jones, ‘Daughters of the Dust’ Actress, Dies at 82

Part of the L.A. Rebellion film movement of the 1970s, she also was memorable in ‘Child of Resistance,’ ‘Diary of an African Nun,’ ‘Bush Mama’ and, opposite Muhammad Ali, ‘Freedom Road.’

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

April 18, 2024

 

Barbara O. Jones, the admired actress who emerged from the L.A. Rebellion movement of Black filmmakers at UCLA in the 1970s to star in Haile Gerima’s Bush Mama and Julie Dash’s Daughters of the Dust, has died. She was 82.

Jones died Tuesday at her home in Dayton, Ohio, her brother, Raymond Minor, told The Hollywood Reporter.

“Rest In Peace & Power,” Dash wrote on Instagram.

For Gerima, Jones portrayed an imprisoned woman fighting for social justice in the 36-minute short film Child of Resistance (1973) — the character was inspired by activist Angela Davis — and a welfare recipient in Watts who undergoes an ideological transformation in the filmmaker’s feature debut, Bush Mama (1979). Both films were made at UCLA.

Jones starred as a Ugandan nun questioning her faith in Dash’s 13-minute student film Diary of an African Nun (1977), adapted from an Alice Walker short story. She then reunited with Dash to play Yellow Mary, a granddaughter who returns one final time in 1902 to her Gullah family’s island home off the coast of Georgia in Dash’s acclaimed feature debut, Daughters of the Dust (1991).

A critical darling, Daughters of the Dust played at Sundance and was the first American feature by an African American woman to receive a general theatrical release. It is on Sight & Sound‘s latest list of the greatest films of all time.

Also billed as Barbarao, Barbara-O and BarbaraO during her career, Jones appeared alongside Muhammad Ali in the 1979 NBC miniseries Freedom Road. He played a former slave and Union soldier elected to the U.S. Senate, and she was his wife.

And she starred as a grandmother and mother of Nicole Ari Parker’s character in Patrice Mallard’s Mute Love (1999).

“Barbara O was a brilliant actor who illuminated the screen for many Black independent filmmakers,” Dash told THR in an email. “She was wildly talented and a force to be reckoned with both on and off the screen.”

Born Barbara Olivia Minor in Dayton Ohio, Jones went to Roosevelt High School — her mother, Alberta, was a business teacher there — and was a radio personality who went by the name Bobbie Montgomery on local station WDAO in the late 1960s. She also attended Antioch College before making her way to California.

Her résumé also included the Bernie Casey-starring Black Chariot (1971), the science fiction/horror movie Demon Seed (1977) and Maangamizi: The Ancient One (2001) and TV appearances on The Quest, The Powers of Matthew Star, Laverne & Shirley, Wonder Woman and Lou Grant.

In addition to Raymond and another brother, Marlon, survivors include her children, Gina, William and D’hati.

JONES, Brabara O. (Barbara Olivia Minor)

Born: 12/?/1941, Dayton, Ohio, U.S.A.

Died: 4/16/2024, Dayton, Ohio, U.S.A.

 

Barbara O. Jones’ western – actress:

The Quest (TV) – 1976 (Hannah Factor)

Thursday, April 18, 2024

RIP Dickey Betts

 

Dickey Betts, Allman Brothers Band Singer-Guitarist, Dead at 80

The co-founder of the Southern rock institution was known for “Ramblin’ Man,” a countryfied guitar style all his own, and inspiring a character in Almost Famous

The Rolling Stone

By David Browne

April 18, 2024

 

Dickey Betts, the singer, songwriter, and guitarist of the Allman Brothers Band whose piercing solos, beloved songs and hell-raising spirit defined the band and Southern rock in general, died Thursday morning at the age of 80. The cause was cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, Betts’ manager David Spero confirmed to Rolling Stone.

“It is with profound sadness and heavy hearts that the Betts family announce the peaceful passing of Forrest Richard ‘Dickey’ Betts (December 12, 1943 – April 18, 2024) at the age of 80 years old,” Betts’ family announced in a statement to Rolling Stone. “The legendary performer, songwriter, bandleader, and family patriarch was at his home in Osprey, Florida, surrounded by his family. Dickey was larger-than-life, and his loss will be felt worldwide. At this difficult time, the family asks for prayers and respect for their privacy in the coming days. More information will be forthcoming at the appropriate time.”

Although he was often overshadowed by Gregg and Duane, the brothers who gave the Allmans their name, Betts was equally vital to the band. His sweetly sinuous guitar style introduced elements of Western swing and jazz into the band’s music, especially when he was duetting with Duane. As a singer and writer, Betts was responsible for the band’s biggest hit, 1973’s “Ramblin’ Man,” as well as some of their most recognizable songs: the moody instrumental “In Memory of Elizabeth Reed,” the jubilant “Jessica,” and their late-period comeback hit “Crazy Love.”

From his trademark mustache to his badass demeanor, Betts was so iconic that he inspired the character of Russell (played by Billy Crudup) in Cameron Crowe’s Almost Famous. “Goddamn, that guy looks like me!” Betts told Rolling Stone of his first reaction to the movie. “I didn’t do the jumping off the roof or the ‘golden god,’ but I knew Cameron.”

Born Forrest Richard Betts in West Palm Beach, Florida, on December 12, 1943, Betts began playing ukulele around age five, followed by banjo and mandolin. “When I finally got to about seventh grade,” he told RS, “I learned about girls and rock & roll and Chuck Berry.” As a teenager, he put together his own band while earning a living as a house painter and mail carrier.

I n the mid-Sixties, a member of a Midwestern band named the Jokers heard Betts and recruited him for out-of-state tours. Back home in Florida later that decade, Betts formed the Second Coming, a band that also included bass player Berry Oakley. The two ended up meeting and jamming with Duane Allman, who asked both to join the newly formed Allman Brothers Band in 1969. “It took a lot of talking and getting along,” Betts told Rolling Stone in 2017, “but we all knew this was something we had heard in our heads for a long time. We had to talk Duane into calling Gregg because they were having a brotherly fight, and Duane didn’t want Gregg. Oakley and I said, ‘Come on, Duane, the band is too goddamn powerful. We need Gregg’s voice in there.’”

Although his initial role in the band was co-lead guitarist along with Duane, Betts made his mark as a writer thanks to his exuberant “Revival” on the band’s first album, 1969’s The Allman Brothers Band. During the band’s first few years, he and Duane took rock-guitar improvisation and two-guitar dueling to new heights, as heard on the 13-minute version of “In Memory of Elizabeth Reed” on the band’s At Fillmore East live album from 1971. Right before Duane Allman’s death, the band recorded Betts’ “Blue Sky,” a country-influenced gallop inspired by his first wife, who is Native American; the song that became one of the band’s signature songs.

After Duane Allman’s death in a motorcycle accident in 1971, Betts became the band’s de facto lead guitarist and frontman, a role he wasn’t always comfortable with. Featuring both “Ramblin’ Man” and “Jessica” — the latter named after Betts’ daughter — the band’s 1973 album, Brothers and Sisters, album crossed over into pop. Betts’ 1974 solo album, Highway Call — one of the best of the Allmans offshoot projects — incorporated country, jazz, bluegrass, and gospel.

The bond between the Allmans and Jimmy Carter, whose 1976 presidential campaign they supported by way of benefit concerts, also applied to Betts personally. “I remember going to a jazz concert at the White House [1978],” Betts told Rolling Stone last year. “Of course, I got there and I left my damn ID at home. But the Marines said, ‘Oh, go ahead in.’ They knew me very well and knew I wasn’t going to do any harm. Jimmy was walking around the premises and someone said to me, ‘Go over and talk to him,’ but I didn’t want to bother him. Then I went to use the men’s room in the White House, and as I was coming out, I ran into Jimmy with a group of people and he said, ‘Ladies and gentlemen, this is Dickey Betts, one of the best songwriters around nowadays.’ That just floored me.”

But after Gregg testified in a drug trial involving a band employee, which infuriated Betts, the Allman Brothers Band fell apart for the first time. Betts recorded two albums with his own band, Great Southern, which didn’t replicate his Allmans success. In 1979, the Allman Brothers regrouped, broke up again a few years later, and reunited again in 1989.

In the Nineties, the Allmans experienced a musical and career rebirth, and Betts became its driving force especially after Gregg relapsed in the middle of the decade. But Betts could also be moody and volatile; in 1976, he was arrested for drinking and clashing with police. That side of him resumed; in 1993, he was arrested in Saratoga Springs, New York, after getting into a shoving match with cops, and his drinking led to fights with band members and missed shows. In 2000, he parted ways with the Allmans. Betts always insisted he was fired, while drummer John Lee “Jaimoe” Johnson told Rolling Stone in 2017 that Betts quit. “Dickey was always sort of the guy who was — I don’t want to say troubled, but was more of a loner,” Allmans manager Bert Holman told RS in 2017. “More separate than the rest of the guys.”

Although his falling out with the Allmans left a bitter taste in his mouth for years, Betts told RS that, in the end, he looked back fondly on his decades with them. “I would’ve done something,” he said. “I would have worked for somebody landscaping. I was very pragmatic and industrious. But it wouldn’t have been as nice as what happened when I met up with that bunch of guys.”

For much of the 2000s, Betts tried kick-starting his own career and music, although he was overshadowed again by the Allman Brothers Band, who continued without him (with guitarist Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks). In 2014, Betts quietly announced his retirement and told Rolling Stone in 2017 that he decided to stop recording music.

Despite the turbulence inside the Allman Brothers Band, Betts said he and Gregg had spoken right before Allman’s death, in 2017. After Allman’s death — and after Betts talked about retirement — he was coaxed into returning to the road in 2018, with his own son (also named Duane) joining his band. In August of that year, though, Betts suffered and then recovered from a mild stroke. Last December, Betts attended an 80th-birthday concert in his honor by the Allman Betts Family Revival band, near Betts’ longtime Florida home.

In 2017, Betts looked back at his life with no regrets, telling Rolling Stone: “I’ve had a great life and I don’t have any complaints,” he says. “If I could do it again, I don’t know what I could do to make it different. There are lawsuits I probably could have dealt with better. But so what? You have to get in there and fight and do the best with your amount of time.”

BETTS, Dickey (Forest Richard Betts)

Born: 12/12/1943, West Palm Beach, Florida, U.S.A.

Died: 4/18/2024, Osprey, Florida, U.S.A.

 

Dickey Betts’ western – song writer, performer:

The Cowboy Way – 1994 [writer “No One to Run With”] [performer]

Monday, April 15, 2024

RIP Robin Browne

 

Robin Browne obituary

The Guardian

By Michael Mansfield

April 14, 2024

 

My friend Robin Browne, who has died aged 82, was a cinematographer specialising in aerial photography and special effects. His was not a name in lights, but he consistently excelled without the razzmatazz of Hollywood. I doubt there is anyone who has seen one of his films and not marvelled at the skills and dangers involved.

He started out as a clapper boy in the late 1950s, and worked on dozens of distinguished films over the next five decades, as camera assistant, operator and as director of photography leading specialist units. A few titles give a flavour: Battle of Britain (1969); Catch 22 (1970); the television series The Adventures of Black Beauty (1972-74), on which he was camera operator for all 52 episodes; three Bond movies in the 1970s; A Bridge Too Far (1977); Krull (1983); A Passage to India (1984); The Jewel of the Nile (1985); King Kong Lives (1986); Gorillas in the Mist (1988); and Gifted Hands: The Ben Carson Story (2009).

For me, the one that takes the breath away, and is truly described as an epic, is the award-winning biopic Gandhi (1982), produced and directed by Richard Attenborough and starring Ben Kingsley, on which Robin was in charge of aerial photography. Robin’s bywords – “go easy on the lighting and not too much camera movement” – imbued the crowd scenes often shot from above with special impact.

He and I were friends from boyhood. Robin was born, just a month after me, in Aylesbury, and later moved to north London, where we went to Highgate school and grew up together. In those days there were more open fields than houses and we joined with another friend to form the three musketeers. All our holidays were preoccupied with adventures plotting the course of the Dollis brook through its many manifestations until it reached the Thames and setting challenges for each other to conquer known and imagined fears.

Robin’s mother, Diana (nee Mannering), was a well-known fashion model under the name Diana Jones. His father was Bernard Browne, a director of photography who worked with Alexander Korda at Denham studios; Robin was clearly talented and destined for the film world. He joined it as soon as he could, at 16, with an apprenticeship at Merton Park Studios in south London before moving to work at Shepperton. Unusually he had a tiny dark room at his home and I was able to witness the mysteries of photography, development, and editing at close quarters. At school he ran the photography club.

He ended up settling in the US, moving in 1991 to Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, with his wife Judy (nee Doetze), whom he had married in 1978. This meant that he and I would meet less often, but we never lost touch. He was respected and well known for his unassuming manner, his caring generosity of spirit, his thoughtful and considerate intellectual approach at work and at home.

Latterly he turned his hand to research into historic documents in preparation for a book about to be completed relating to Shakespeare authorship and Francis Bacon. Undoubtedly Robin would have had plans to turn it into a novel film.

He is survived by Judy, and their children, Justin and Debbie.

BROWNE, Robin (Michael Robin Graham Browne)

Born: 11/24/1941, Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, England, U.K.

Died: 3/28/2024, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, U.S.A.

 

Robin Browne’s western – model unit director, cameraman:

Sky Bandits - 1986