Monday, July 13, 2026

RIP Rui Resende

 

Rui Rezende, actor of "Roque santeiro", dies at the age of 88

Information was confirmed through a statement from Retiro dos Artistas, where the actor had lived since 2019

VOGUE

By Redação Vogue

7/12/2026

 

Rui Rezende died this Sunday (12.07), at the age of 88. According to information from the Retiro dos Artistas, where the actor had lived for 7 years, he had been hospitalized for ten days at the São Francisco Hospital in Providência de Deus, in Tijuca, Rio de Janeiro.

The institution mourned the loss in a statement shared on official social networks. "It is with deep regret that we say goodbye to Rui Rezende, one of the great names in Brazilian dramaturgy. Throughout his decades-long career, Rui thrilled the public with his talent on stage, in cinema and on television, building a trajectory marked by dedication to art and characters that will remain alive in the memory of generations.

"Since 2019, I was part of the family at Retiro dos Artistas, where she found a home surrounded by affection, respect and care. Hospitalized since July 2 at the São Francisco Hospital in Providência de Deus, in Tijuca, Rui left, leaving an immense miss among friends, collaborators and admirers. His story will live on in his work, in his legacy and in the hearts of all who had the privilege of knowing him, on and off stage. The Artists' Retreat pays its solidarity to family, friends and all who today feel the departure of this great artist. Rest in peace, Rui. 🖤.".

The cause of death was not disclosed.

Rui was born in Araguari, Minas Gerais, in 1938. The actor gave life to numerous characters in film and TV. One of the most striking was Professor Astromar Junqueira, a werewolf, in the 1985 soap opera Roque Santeiro, by Dias Gomes and Aguinaldo Silva.

Other successful characters in Rui Resende's career were Bob Lamb from "The Story of Ana Raio and Zé Trovão", produced by Rede Manchete in 1990 and reprised by SBT in 2010, and Menandro Olinda" from the miniseries Incident in Antares, produced by Rede Globo in 1994.

His most recent work on TV was participating in the series "Bom Dia, Verônica", in 2022, with the character Seu Tomé. He also made small appearances in other series, such as "Turma do Didi", "A Grande Família" and "Zorra Total". The actor also stood out in the theater with the plays "This World Is a Hospice", from 1985, "The Elephant Man", from 1990, and the most recent: "Paixão Segundo Nelson", from 2016.

RESENDE, Rui (José Pereira Rezende Filho)

Born: 11/18/1938, Araguari, Minas Gerais, Brazil

Died: 7/12/2026, Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

 

Rui Resende’s western – actor:

Bang Bang (TV) – 2005-2006 (Jack Label)

RIP Sam Neill

 

Sam Neill, Jurassic Park Star, Dies at 78

The New Zealand actor also appeared in ‘The Piano’ and ‘Peaky Blinders’

People

By Victoria Edel, Kirsty Hatcher

July 13, 2026

 

Sam Neill has died at the age of 78. Neill was best known for his role in 1993’s Jurassic Park as Alan Grant, the film’s hero. He also had starring roles in The Hunt for Red October and The Piano and appeared in TV shows like The Tudors and Peaky Blinders.

In a statement shared on Instagram on Monday, July 13, the actor’s family said that his death was “sudden and unexpected.”

“It is with immense sadness that the whānau [extended family] of Sam Neill share the news of his passing on Monday 13th July, in Sydney, Australia,” the statement began.

“Sam was surrounded by family and passed with the dignity that has characterized his whole life,” the statement continued. “The loss was sudden and unexpected but blessed by the fact that Sam remained cancer free. They would like to express their deepest gratitude to the staff at St Vincent’s Private Hospital for their incredible care. More details will be shared later, but for now, on behalf of the family, we ask that you respect their privacy as they navigate this immeasurable loss.”

Neill was born Nigel Neill in Northern Ireland in 1947. His family moved to New Zealand, where his father was from, when he was 7 years old. “I’ve often thought that was the genesis of me becoming an actor,” he told The Irish Times in 2022 about adapting to a new country. “I think I had to learn how to act and sound like a New Zealander to avoid getting bullied at school.”

Neill did not like his birth name. “I was christened Nigel Neill — that’s like my parents giving me a disadvantage from the start,” he told Kelly Clarkson in 2024. When Clarkson said she liked it, he said, “No, no, you never want to be called Nigel. It’s also called ‘Nigel No Mates,’ you know, ‘Nigel No Friends.’ ” He had a best friend also named Nigel, and when they started watching westerns together, they picked new names. He became Sam at age 11.

He began acting during his college years and graduated from Wellington’s Victoria University with a degree in English. His earliest professional roles came in New Zealand productions.

In 1977, he had his breakthrough in Sleeping Dogs. The film was not only seminal for him, but for the entire New Zealand film industry, as it was the first local production to receive international attention.

He also began acting in Australian films; 1979’s My Brilliant Career, from director Gillian Armstrong, also found international success. In 1981, he had his biggest role yet, in Omen III: The Final Conflict. He also starred in Possession, which became a cult classic; in a 2024 interview with Decider, he called it “the most intense thing I’ve ever done.” Other film and TV roles included 1982’s Ivanhoe, 1987’s Amerika, 1988’s A Cry in the Dark (with Meryl Streep) 1989’s Dead Calm (with Nicole Kidman) and 1983’s Reilly, Ace of Spies, which earned him a Golden Globe nomination. In 1990, he appeared in The Hunt for Red October.

But his biggest role came in Jurassic Park. The lead part in Steven Spielberg’s dinosaur epic was hotly contested; he beat out Harrison Ford for the part. “I like playing villains and bad guys, characters with moral ambiguity, because, in a way, they are easier to play,” he told the Los Angeles Times when the film was released in 1993. But he was ready to step into the spotlight as the good guy, telling the outlet, “I see a bit of a place for myself here now.”

Along with Jeff Goldblum and Laura Dern, Neill helped make Jurassic Park a major success. He eventually returned to the franchise for 2001’s Jurassic Park III and 2022’s Jurassic World: Dominion.

Neill also continued to act in New Zealand films, including 1993’s The Piano, 2003’s Perfect Strangers and 2009’s Under the Mountain. In 2016, he appeared in Taika Waititi’s Hunt for the Wilderpeople, and the director would also give him roles in some of the Thor films.

Neill also began to appear more often on television. He starred in the miniseries Merlin and shows like The Tudors and Alcatraz. He starred in Peaky Blinders with Cillian Murphy as the Chief Inspector Chester Campbell. Murphy praised him in a 2013 interview with The Huffington Post, explaining, “Chester Campbell is such a bastard in the series, but Sam Neill has got such a lovable quality, you can’t help but root for the character.” In 2024, Neill starred in the Peacock drama Apples Never Fall.

Neill reunited with his son Andrew, who he fathered when he was in his 20s but did not have a relationship with, in 2014. He shared another son, Tim, with his Omen III costar Lisa Harrow.

In 1989, he married Noriko Watanabe, a makeup artist. He adopted her daughter Maiko and they also shared daughter Elena. The couple separated in 2017.

In 1993, Neill opened a vineyard, Two Paddocks that has continued to be successful; he often shared scenes from the vineyard and his farm on his Instagram and X (formerly Twitter) accounts. He was passionate about the environment and a trustee of New Zealand’s National Parks and Conservation Foundation.

“It doesn’t matter how popular an actor you are, nobody will remember you forever,” he told Esquire UK in 2016. “Acting is ephemeral so it’s nice if you can leave something behind, like a great wine or a beautiful house that has a legacy.”

In 2007, Neill was appointed a Distinguished Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit. In 2022, he was redesignated as a Knight Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, giving him the title “Sir.” In 2020 he received the Arts Foundation of New Zealand Icon Award; honorees are limited to 20 living people at a time.

Neill was diagnosed with a rare blood cancer in 2022. In 2023, he shared that he was in remission, but would likely have to receive chemo for the rest of his life. But he tried not to be fazed. “I know I’ve got it, but I’m not really interested in it,” he told Australian Story at the time. “It’s out of my control. If you can’t control it, don’t get into it.”

Neill was grateful that despite his acting career, he could have a relatively private life. “I have a number of friends who are real celebrities, you’d know who they are, and I wouldn’t swap my life for theirs for a moment, even though they’re immensely rich and, you know, immensely famous,” he told The Guardian in 2023.

“There’s a complete lack of privacy for one thing, and privacy is very, very, very important, I can walk down the street in Surry Hills and get my coffee, and nobody bothers me, you know? And there’s no paparazzi. My life is my own.”

Neill is survived by his children.

NEILL, SAM (Nigel Neill)

Born: 9/14/1947, Omagh, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland, U.K.

Died: 7/13/2026, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

 

Sam Neill’s westerns – actor:

Robbery Under Arms – 1985 (Captain Starlight)

The Horse Whisperer – 1998 (Robert MacLean)

Sweet Country – 2017 (Fred Smith)

Saturday, July 11, 2026

RIP Antoinette Bower

 

Antoinette Bower, ‘Star Trek,’ ‘Twilight Zone’ and ‘Prom Night’ Actress, Dies at 93

Born in Germany, she started out on the CBC in Canada, appeared with Charles Bronson in ‘The Evil That Men Do’ and had a recurring role on ‘Neon Rider.’

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

July 11, 2026

 

Antoinette Bower, the German-born British actress who starred on an Adam & Eve-like episode of The Twilight Zone and portrayed the seductive catlike alien Sylvia on an installment of Star Trek, has died. She was 93.

Bower died April 30 in an Eagle Rock senior retirement home in Los Angeles, her friend Carlotta Glackin — great niece of famed Golden Age character actor Edward Everett Horton — told The Hollywood Reporter.

On the big screen, Bower got top billing in the Filipino-shot horror film Superbeast (1972), played the wife of Leslie Nielsen and mother of Jamie Lee Curtis in the slasher classic Prom Night (1980) and was kidnapped by Charles Bronson in the action thriller The Evil That Men Do (1984).

For three seasons (1989-92), she recurred as the kind Fox Devlin, an associate of Winston Rekert’s Dr. Michael Terry, on the Canadian TV drama Neon Rider, set on a ranch in British Columbia for troubled and abused teens.

On the Rod Serling-penned, Ted Post-directed Twilight Zone episode “Probe 7, Over and Out,” which premiered in November 1963 during the anthology show’s fifth and final season, the statuesque Bower portrayed Eve Norda, a woman stranded on a distant planet. The only other person around is an astronaut named Adam Cook (Richard Baseheart).

Bower also was memorable as the villainous Sylvia opposite Theo Marcuse as Korob on the second-season Star Trek episode “Catspaw,” which premiered in October 1967.

Antoinette Alexandra Jane Bower was born to a German mother and English father on Sept. 30, 1932, in Baden-Baden, Germany.

Educated in England, she was a field language supervisor and welfare counselor in the late 1940s with the United Nations’ International Refugee Organization, which assisted millions of people left homeless across Europe and Asia following World War II.

Bower rejoined her family in Canada in 1953 and in Toronto landed a job with the fledgling Canadian Broadcasting Corp., where she worked in public affairs, wrote scripts and conducted interviews on live TV. She also did some acting, appearing in a 1958 TV adaptation of The Tell-Tale Heart and in 1959 on the syndicated series Hudson’s Bay.

She visited L.A. and in the early 1960s decided to stick around after landing an uncredited role in Marlon Brando’s Mutiny on the Bounty (1962) and guest-star parts on such shows as Adventures in Paradise, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Hong Kong, Wagon Train, Thriller, Hawaiian Eye and Perry Mason.

She remained quite busy through the early ’80s, showing up on Combat!, The Man From U.N.C.L.E., Burke’s Law, The Wild Wild West, I Spy, The Fugitive, The Invaders, The Big Valley, Bonanza, Mannix, Hawaii Five-O, Get Smart, Hogan’s Heroes, Mission: Impossible, The F.B.I., Columbo, Kojak and Murder, She Wrote and in the 1983 miniseries The Thorn Birds.

She pretty much left acting after her run on CTV’s Neon Rider.

About 10 years ago, Bower completed a documentary about chuckwagon racing in Canada that she shot, directed, edited and narrated after spending several summers with the participants.

Glackin noted that Bower, who studied carpentry at Santa Monica College, had been a valued Home Depot employee who custom-built cabinets and tall bookshelves at her home in Beverly Glen.

She added that Bower was still getting lots of fan mail from the Star Trek faithful and that William Shatner had emailed his condolences after learning of her death. (She was one of the 20 or so women to kiss Capt. Kirk on the show, according to this post.)

Bower wed Texas-born pop artist James Gill in 1963, but their marriage ended in divorce. She was pre-deceased by her half-brother, Roger.

BOWER, Antoinette (Antoinette Alexandra Jane Bower)

Born: 9/30/1932, Baden-Baden, Baden-Württemberg, Germany

Died: 4/30/2026, Eagle Rock, California, U.S.A.

 

Antoinette Bower’s westerns – actress:

Hudson’s Bay (TV) - 1959 (Dorcas Cobb, Joanna Balfour, Oussitta)

Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) - 1961 (Sybil Lansing)

Wagon Train (TV) - 1961 (Diana Saybrook)

Stoney Burke (TV) - 1963 (Erna Bremen)

The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters (TV) – 1963-1964 (Nellie)

The Wild Wild West (TV) - 1965 (Janet Coburn)

Iron Horse (TV) - 1966 (Angie Bemis)

A Man Called Shenandoah (TV) - 1966 (Lila Morgan)

The Big Valley (TV) - 1968 (Alicia Akers)

Bonanza (TV) - 1968 (Martha Cartwright Dorcas)

Lancer (TV) - 1969 (Angeline Ferris)

The Cowboy and the Ballerina – 1984 (Madame Rostov)

Friday, July 10, 2026

RIP Randolph Mantooth

 

Randolph Mantooth, Firefighter-Paramedic Johnny Gage on ‘Emergency!,’ Dies at 80

He partnered with real-life pal Kevin Tighe (Roy DeSoto) on the popular NBC series, then did lots of soap operas.

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

July 10, 2026

 

Randolph Mantooth, who starred as the goofy but gallant firefighter-paramedic Johnny Gage on Emergency!, the 1970s NBC action show that changed life-saving services as we know it, has died. He was 80.

Mantooth died Thursday at a hospice facility in Ventura, California, his brother, Donald Mantooth, told The Hollywood Reporter. He had been “ill for a number of years and kept getting thinner and thinner,” he said.

Mantooth also had two stints (1987-90 and 1993-95) as Clay Alden/Alex Masters on the ABC soap opera Loving, and he appeared on other daytime serials including ABC’s General Hospital, CBS’ As the World Turns and ABC’s One Life to Live.

Mantooth was just getting started as a contract player at Universal when he was hired in 1971 to play Gage opposite Kevin Tighe as his partner, Roy DeSoto, on Emergency!, created by Dragnet legend Jack Webb and Robert A. Cinader.

When he was told he was going to play a paramedic, the first thing Mantooth said was, “What the hell is a paramedic? At that time, there were only [a handful] in all of California,” he told Amy Harrington in a 2013 interview for the TV Academy Foundation website The Interviews.

He said he initially didn’t want to do it because it meant he would have to get a haircut.

Gage and the more buttoned-down DeSoto worked out the Los Angeles County Fire Department’s Station 51, interacting often with Rampart General Hospital personnel Dr. Kelly Brackett (Robert Fuller), nurse Dixie McCall (Julie London) and Dr. Joe Early (Bobby Troup, London’s real-life husband).

Emergency! aired for six seasons, from January 1972 through May 1977, then tacked on seven telefilms over the next couple of years. There even was a Saturday morning animated series in 1973-74.

When the show premiered, there were 12 paramedic units in all of North America. In the next three years, 46 states enacted laws that allowed paramedics to practice emergency medicine. Within 10 years, more than half of all Americans were within 10 minutes of a paramedic rescue or ambulance unit.

Experts say that growth simply would not have occurred without Emergency!

“When you take life-saving services out of the hospital and into the field, the number of lives that are saved is incalculable,” Mantooth said. “The stars just lined up with this show perfectly for a purpose, for a greater purpose.

“I could be remembered for driving a car that has a name like the General Lee, not that there’s anything wrong with that show. Instead I’m remembered for something that changed emergency medicine, forever. How lucky can any one person be?”

Randy DeRoy Mantooth was born on Sept. 19, 1945, in Sacramento. He lived in 24 states before he turned 18 because his father, Buck, was a pipeline construction engineer whose job kept the family on the move.

“I was never in any town long enough to really cultivate long-lasting relationships with people, so I was always living in my own little fantasy world,” he said.

His mother, Sadie, was a waitress. After she and Buck divorced, she made good on her promise to give each of her four kids a car when they graduated high school.

Mantooth acted for the first time at San Marcos High in Santa Barbara, then followed his acting friends to Santa Barbara City College and then to New York’s American Academy of Dramatic Arts, where he changed his first name to the more formal-sounding Randolph.

Famed Universal talent scout Eleanor Kilgallen spotted him in the play Philadelphia, Here I Come — he shared a best actor award with Brad Davis in that — and got him signed to a contract, bringing him to Los Angeles in 1970.

A scene he did that year with Hal Holbrook on an episode of NBC’s The Bold Ones: The Senator, where his character breaks down during courtroom testimony, was seen by Cinader. Said Mantooth, “From what I was told, he went, ‘That is my Johnny Gage.'”

Put to work on Emergency! alongside such seasoned performers as Fuller, London and Troupe, he and the similarly inexperienced Tighe “were in the same boat,” Mantooth said. “It was more like us against them.”

The pair took paramedic classes, where they learned how to insert an IV, and trained with the fire department. Cinader wanted the show to be funny but told his actors that “when the [station alarm sounds], funny is left at the door. You are now a professional,” Mantooth noted. “We never got away from that.”

He added: “We never went home with Johnny Gage, we never went home with Roy DeSoto, we didn’t hear about Johnny Gage’s drunk father beating his mother. Who cared about that? [The show] was about the job.”

Cinader insisted every rescue on the series had to have been done in real life, so writers combed firefighters’ logs for storylines. Meanwhile, NBC executives made sure that no one would die and no blood would be shown during the first couple of seasons.

Mantooth said that “if I fell off my roof cleaning the gutters, I’d want [Gage] to be there because he knows what he is doing.”

He and Tighe had the same agent, shared a motor home during the entire run of their show and became great friends. The series ended, Mantooth said, because his and Tighe’s original seven-year contracts had expired, Tighe didn’t want to continue and Mantooth didn’t want to go on without him.

When Mantooth raced home in 1978 to find his ranch in the Lobo Canyon area of Agoura Hills engulfed in flames, Tighe was already there, trying to get the animals safely off the property. Tighe later served as the best man at Mantooth’s 2002 wedding to actress Kristen Connors.

Mantooth followed Emergency! by joining the second season of the ABC comedy Operation Petticoat in 1978, followed by work the next year on the ABC comedy Detective School and on the HBO miniseries The Seekers, produced by Cinader.

After guest-starring on such shows as Battlestar Galactica, Charlie’s Angels, The Fall Guy, Diagnosis Murder and L.A. Law, Mantooth was in the middle of getting separated from his wife and wanted out of Los Angeles, so he moved to New York to work on Loving and said he had a blast.

On As the World Turns, he stepped in to play Oakdale chief of detectives Hal Munson after actor Benjamin Hendrickson died by suicide in 2006

Later, he appeared in such films as He Was a Quiet Man (2007) and Bold Native (2010) and on episodes of FX’s Sons of Anarchy in 2011. A year later, he and Tighe were named honorary fire chiefs by the L.A. County Fire Department.

In addition to his brother, he’s survived by his sister, Tonya.

In his TV Academy Foundation interview, Mantooth got emotional talking about how in the ’70s he was saved by paramedics who figured out he had carbon monoxide poisoning caused by a malfunctioning house furnace and how other emergency personnel brought his sister back from the dead after she was injured in a car accident in the ’80s.

“Do I respect paramedics? Do I respect firefighters?” he asked. “There’s a debt I owe them that I probably can’t ever pay back. But I’m gonna try.”

MANTOOTH, Randolph (Randy DeRoy Mantooth)

Born: 9/19/1945, Sacramento, California, U.S.A.

Died: 7/9/2026, Ventura, California, U.S.A.

 

Randolph Mantooth’s westerns – actor:

Alias Smith and Jones (TV) - 1971 (Dan Loomis)

The Virginian (TV) - 1971 (Lieutenant Dorn)

The Bravos (TV) – 1972 (2nd Lieutenant Lewis)

The Seekers (TV) – 1979 (Abraham Kent)

Walker, Texas Ranger (TV) – 1997 (James Lee Crown)

 

Thursday, July 9, 2026

RIP Harris Katleman

 

Harris Katleman, Former Top Television Executive at MGM and Fox, Dies at 97

He got his start with Lew Wasserman at MCA, where he repped Jackie Gleason and John Michael Hayes.

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

July 9, 2026

 

Harris Katleman, a onetime protégé of mogul Lew Wasserman who went on to head the television departments at MGM and 20th Century Fox, died Wednesday in Los Angeles of natural causes, his family announced. He was 97.

Born on Aug. 19, 1928, in Omaha, Nebraska, Katleman moved with his family to Beverly Hills when he was 8. He dropped out of UCLA at age 19 to join MCA, where he became an “office boy” and protégé of Wasserman. Four years later, he was named to head the agency’s television department in New York.

At MCA, he represented talent including Jackie Gleason and Oscar-nominated screenwriter John Michael Hayes (Rear Window, Peyton Place) and was involved in signing Clark Gable and Howard Keel.

Katleman exited MCA to join Goodson-Todman Productions, which under his watch initiated the network series The Web, The Rebel, Branded and The Richard Boone Show. He also packaged and executive produced the 1966 film Ride Beyond Vengeance, starring Branded lead Chuck Connors, under a joint venture between Goodson-Todman and Columbia Pictures.

Katleman in 1972 was hired as president of MGM Television and senior vp of MGM Inc., where he was instrumental in developing the 1975 CBS telefilm Babe, starring Susan Clark as superstar athlete Babe Didrikson, and the TV shows How the West Was Won and CHiPs.

He resigned in 1977 to launch Bennett Katleman Productions at Columbia and helped shepherd the 1979 NBC miniseries From Here to Eternity and the 1979 ABC series Salvage 1, starring Andy Griffith.

In 1980, Katleman was named president/CEO of Fox Television. In addition to overseeing production on Trapper John, M.D. and the final four years of M*A*S*H, he developed and sold L.A. Law, The Simpsons, Anything But Love, In Living Color, Doogie Howser, M.D., Civil Wars, NYPD Blue, Hooperman, The Tracey Ullman Show and Mr. Belvedere. He resigned in 1992.

Katleman served a two-year term as president of the Hollywood Radio & Television Society, sat on a board of governors for Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles and served on the board at Brentwood Country Club and The Lakes Country Club in Palm Desert.

His memoir, You Can’t Fall Off the Floor: And Other Lessons From a Life in Hollywood, was published in 2018. (Read excerpts from the book here).

Survivors include his children, Steve (an entertainment lawyer), Michael (a TV producer) and Lisa; seven grandchildren (one, Maddie Katleman, works at WME; another, Nick Katleman, co-wrote his memoir); and 14 great-grandchildren; and his beloved dog, Noel.

His family described him as “a deft businessman who never — no matter how the cards were stacked — gave up.”

KATLEMAN, Harris (Harris L. Katleman)

Born: 8/19/1928, Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.A.

Died: 7/8/2026, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

Harris Katelman’s westerns –

The Rebel (TV) –1960 (Colonel Marshall)

Branded (TV) - 1965 [producer]

The Legend of the Golden Gun (TV) – 1970 [producer]

Go West, Young Girl (TV) – 1978 [producer]

RIP Joanna Pettet

 

Joanna Pettet, Actress in ‘The Group’ and ‘Casino Royale,’ Dies at 83

The London native, portrayed by Rumer Willis in 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,' also had three turns on Broadway and recurring roles on 'Dr. Kildare' and 'Knots Landing.'

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

July 9, 2026

 

Joanna Pettet, the London-born actress who played one of the eight Vassar graduates in Sidney Lumet’s The Group and a spy put to work by her father, David Niven’s James Bond, in Casino Royale, has died. She was 83.

Pettet died Tuesday at Temecula Valley Hospital in California, her friend and former manager Pam DuBois told The Hollywood Reporter. Her death came exactly 31 years after her son, Damien Cord, whom she had with actor Alex Cord, died at age 26 in 1995 of a heroin overdose.

Pettet also fell for Tom Courtenay’s German officer in Anatole Litvak’s The Night of the Generals (1967); portrayed the wife of Stanley Baker’s crook in Peter Yates’ crime caper Robbery (1967); and was the spirited love interest of Terence Stamp‘s bandit in Blue (1968).

She began her film career after acting in three Broadway comedies in the early 1960s.

On television, Pettet turned up on four episodes of Rod Serling’s NBC anthology series Night Gallery in the early 1970s and had a recurring role spanning the fourth and fifth seasons of CBS’ Knots Landing in ’83 as Janet Baines, a homicide detective investigating the murder of singer Ciji Dunne (Lisa Hartman).

On Aug. 8, 1969, she and fellow actress Barbara Lewis shared a poolside lunch at the Topanga Canyon home of actress Sharon Tate, hours before Tate and four others were murdered there by devotees of Charles Manson.

Her visit that day is re-created in Quentin Tarantino’s 2019 film Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, with Rumer Willis as Pettet as Margot Robbie at Tate.

In The Group (1966), adapted from Mary McCarthy’s novel, Pettet portrayed Kay Strong, who marries an alcoholic, abusive and philandering playwright (Larry Hagman) before meeting an untimely end.

The story of her character bookends the drama, which featured Candice Bergen, Joan Hackett, Elizabeth Hartman, Shirley Knight, Jessica Walter, Kathleen Widdoes and Mary-Robin Redd as her classmates.

The lithe Pettet then sparkled as Mata Bond, the product of a love affair between Niven’s 007 and the spy Mata Hari, in the Bond spoof Casino Royale (1967). In one of the film’s most memorable set pieces, she performs a dance in a Buddhist-themed temple before connecting with her daddy.

Joanna Jane Salmon was born in London on Nov. 16, 1942. After her father, Harold, a British Royal Air Force pilot, was killed during World War II, her mother, Cecily, remarried and settled in Montreal.

Joanna took the surname of her stepfather and had $1,000 with her when she moved to New York at age 16. “I thought it would last me up to two years,” she said in a 1967 interview. “I’d never really fended for myself before and didn’t realize how fast money could go. The whole nest egg was gone in three months.”

Pettet studied acting at Neighborhood Playhouse and made her Broadway debut in the 1961-62 Hal Prince-produced comedy Take Her, She’s Mine, starring Art Carney and Elizabeth Ashley and directed by George Abbott.

She was back on Broadway in 1964 in the comedies The Chinese Prime Minister and, opposite Alan Bates and Gene Hackman, Poor Richard, for which she received a Theatre World award for her efforts. In the latter, she served as a last-minute replacement for Knight, who quit shortly before the production was to open in New York.

Also in 1964, Pettet appeared on an episode of ABC’s Route 66 and began a stint as a nurse on the NBC daytime serial The Doctors. Two years later, she played a dancer whose life and career is threatened by a rare neuromuscular disease on NBC’s Dr. Kildare, starring Richard Chamberlain.

She posed in Playboy in 1968 to promote Blue.

In the 1970s, Pettet starred in lots of telefilms, in the horror films Welcome to Arrow Beach (1974) and The Evil (1978) and on the NBC miniseries Captains and the Kings (1976).

She appeared as herself in a 1984 episode of ABC’s Lee Majors-starring The Fall Guy alongside fellow Bond actresses Britt Ekland and Lana Wood. (The trio are hired to appear in a movie that’s titled Always Say Always.)

Her final role came in the Roger Corman-produced Terror in Paradise (1990), after which she retired from acting.

She was romantically involved with Stamp and, when they were in Poor Richard, with Bates. Soon after she and Bates rekindled their relationship in 2002, he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. Upon his death in December 2003, he bequeathed her a reported £95,000 (that’s about $265,000 in today’s dollars).

“It was a very touching gesture because he had done everything while he was in hospital to make sure I would be looked after following his death,” she told The Daily Mail.

PETTET, Joanna (Joanna Jane Salmon)

Born: 11/16/1942, London, England, U.K.

Died: 7/7/2026, Temecula, California, U.S.A.

 

Joanna Pettet’s westerns – actress:

A Man Called Shenandoah (TV) - 1966 (Julia Riley)

Blue – 1968 (Joanne Morton)

Pioneer Woman – (TV) 1973 (Maggie)

Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (TV) – 1982 (Meg Palmer)

The Yellow Rose (TV) - 1984 (Lane Roberts)

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

RIP Johnny Ginger

 

Galen Grindle, better known as Johnny Ginger from WXYZ children's show, dies at the age of 92

WXYZ

July 7, 2026

 

Galen Grindle, better known as Johnny Ginger, the star of the Johnny Ginger Show on WXYZ in the 1960s, has died at the age of 92.

That's according to an obituary posted on a funeral website in Ohio. Born June 16, 1934, the obituary says he passed away on Sunday, July 5.

According to the obituary, Grindle began performing on Toledo at the wage of 17 as part of a comedy duo with Jimmy Nickles.

"The Johnny Ginger Show" launched on WXYZ-TV, and a 1991 report on Channel 7 called Ginger one of the kings of children's TV in Detroit, alongside Soupy Sales and Marv Welch.

"He would get guest roles on The Real McCoys and The Rifleman, also playing Billy the Kid in the Three Stooges motion picture titled The Outlaws is Coming. He also appeared in Meet Monica Velour (2010) and Alleged (2010)," the obituary reads.

GINGER, Johnny (Galen Grindle)

Born: 6/16/1934, Toledo, Ohio, U.S.A.

Died: 7/5/2026, Genoa, Ohio, U.S.A.

 

Johnny Ginger’s westerns – actor:

The Rifleman (TV) - 1962 (Ted)

The Outlaws is Coming – 1964 (Billy the Kid)