Monday, February 16, 2026

RIP Robert Duvall

 

Actor Robert Duvall has died — he brought a compassionate center to edgy hard roles

NPR

By Glen Weldon

February 16, 2026

 

Over his long career, Robert Duvall brought a wide range of characters to life, from tough Marines to wistful, tender-hearted cowboys.

Duvall died on Sunday. His wife Luciana posted on Facebook on Monday, "Yesterday we said goodbye to my beloved husband, cherished friend, and one of the greatest actors of our time. Bob passed away peacefully at home, surrounded by love and comfort."

He was 95 years old.

In his first major movie role, in 1962, Robert Duvall appeared in only a handful of scenes. He didn't have a single word of dialogue. Yet the actor managed to make an indelible, star-making impression. The film was To Kill a Mockingbird. The role was Boo Radley.

Boo is the small town's recluse; he spends the movie as little more than a mysterious shape, cloaked in shadows. But in the film's final moments, he steps out nervously, into the light.

Duvall's features soften, he smiles slightly — and the menacing presence of Boo Radley transforms before our eyes into a figure radiating kindness and concern. The pure, elegantly nuanced physicality of that moment launched his career.

Robert Duvall came from a military family. He told NPR's All Things Considered in 2010 that he didn't so much discover acting as have it thrust upon him by his parents.

"I was at a small college in the Midwest," he said. "It was the end of the Korean war. I did go in the army eventually but [only] to get through college, to find something that would give me a sense of worth, where I got my first 'A'. It was my parents I had to thank for that."

As a young actor, he ended up in New York City, where he palled around with Gene Hackman, James Caan and his roommate Dustin Hoffman. It was over many coffees and conversations with them at Cromwell's Drug Store on 50th and 6th Avenue that he struck upon his personal philosophy of acting. His approach was direct and unpretentious, as he explained to the TV series Oprah's Masterclass in 2015: "Basically just talk and listen, and keep it simple. And however it goes, it goes."

After Mockingbird, his parts grew bigger: Films like Bullitt, True Grit, and M*A*S*H, in which he originated the role of the uptight Major Frank Burns.

But it was his role in 1972's The Godfather, as Tom Hagen, the Corleone family lawyer, that changed everything. Amid the film's operatic swirl of emotion, Tom Hagen was an island of calmness and restraint, so it might seem odd that Duvall often said it was one of his favorite roles of his career.

But his strength as an actor was always how unforced he seemed, how true. Others around him emoted, showily and outwardly — he always directed his energy inward, to find a character's heart. This was true even when he played roles with a harder edge.

In two films that came out in 1979 — The Great Santini and Apocalypse Now, both of which earned him Oscar nominations — Duvall played military men. In Santini, he was a bluff, belligerent Marine who bullied his sensitive son in an attempt to harden him into a man.

In Francis Ford Coppola's epically trippy Vietnam War film Apocalypse Now, Duvall was all charismatic swagger as Lieutenant Colonel Kilgore, who calls down an airstrike and delivers one of the most quotable lines in film history: "I love the smell of napalm in the morning. ... It smells like ... victory."

As he told Terry Gross on Fresh Air in 1996, the words followed him for the rest of his life.

"Yeah, that was a wonderful line," he said. "People come up to me and quote it to me like it's this in thing between me and them. Like they're the only ones who ever thought of it, but it happens with everyone in the same way."

He finally won the Oscar for 1983's Tender Mercies. He played a recovering alcoholic country singer trying to start his life over. Duvall did his own singing in that film.

He directed 1997's The Apostle, which he also wrote, produced and starred in, as an evangelical preacher on the outs with God. It earned him his fifth Oscar nomination for acting.

Over the course of an acting career that spanned decades, Duvall appeared in over 90 films. He took traditional, old Hollywood archetypes of masculinity — soldiers, cops and cowboys — and imbued them with notes of melancholy, a vulnerability that made them come alive onscreen.

DUVALL, Robert (Robert Selden Duvall)

Born: 1/5/1931, San Diego, California, U.S.A.

Died: 2/15/2026, Middleburg, Virginia, U.S.A.

 

Robert Duvall’s westerns - producer, director, writer, actor:

Stoney Burke (TV) - 1963 (Jody Pierce)

The Virginian (TV) 1963 (Johnny Keel)

Shane (TV) - 1966 (Tom Gary)

Cimarron Strip (TV) - 1967 (Joe Wyman)

The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1967 (Dr. Horace Humphries)

True Grit – 1969 (Ned Pepper)

Lawman (TV) – 1971 (Vernon Adams)

The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid – 1972 (Jesse James)

Joe Kidd – 1972 (Frank Harlan)

Lonesome Dove (TV) – 1989 (Augustus 'Gus' McCrae)

Convicts – 1991 (Soll Gautier)

Geronimo: An American Legend – 1993 (Al Sieber)

Open Range – 2003 (Boss Spearman)

Broken Trail (TV) – 2006 (Prentice Ritter) [producer]

A Night in Old Mexico – 2013 (Red) [producer]

Wild Horses – 2015 (Scott Briggs) [producer, director, writer]

In Dubious Battle – 2016 (Bolton)

 

Sunday, February 15, 2026

RIP Dolores Munoz Ledo

 

Dolores Muñoz Ledo Ortega, icon of Mexican dubbing, dies at 107

The ANDA confirms the death of Dolores Muñoz Ledo Ortega, dubbing icon, at 107 years of age

Municipios Puebla

February 13, 2026

 

The artistic community of Mexico mourns the departure of Dolores Muñoz Ledo Ortega, known in the world of dubbing as "Marcela Septien", who died at the age of 107. The news was confirmed by the National Association of Actors (ANDA), which expressed its condolences to the actress's family and friends. So far, the cause of his death is unknown.

Dolores Muñoz Ledo Ortega will be remembered for her extensive career in dubbing films and radio soap operas, both in Mexico and in New York. Her career dates back to the 1940s, when she was hired by Metro Goldwyn Mayer to participate in the first dubbing of Spanish-language films.

Her most notable roles include the Spanish-language voice of Swedish actress Signe Hasso in productions such as Dangerous Partners, The Seventh Cross and Assignment in Brittan. In addition, she voiced characters such as Adrian Pennino in Rocky IV (1985), Mary in Gold in the Mud (1946), and Sandy Davyss in We Were the Sacrificed (1945), as well as numerous roles in films of the 1940s, including The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945) and Marie Antoinette (1938).

Her talent also stood out in the field of radio soap operas, where he obtained great recognition in the 1960s for her participation in Kalimán: El juego de la muerte, one of the most emblematic productions of the medium.

On social networks, followers and colleagues of the media expressed their sorrow for the loss of a figure who marked the history of entertainment in Mexico, both in dubbing and radio, leaving a legacy that will be remembered for generations.

Dolores was married to Luis Rodríguez del Río, a radio producer for XEW, and was the mother of two sons: Luis Fernando and Sergio Alberto Rodríguez Muñoz Ledo. His zodiac sign was Aries, a reflection of the energy and determination that characterized his career.

LEDO, Dolores Muñoz (Maria Dolores Muñoz Ledo Ortega)

Born: 4/14/1918, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico

Died: 2/13/2026, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico

 

Dolores Muñoz Ledo’s western – voice dubber:

The Harvey Girls – 1946 [Spanish voice of Deborah Andrews]

RIP Sergio Lucchetti

 

Il mondo dei doppiatori

January 27, 2026

 

Farewell to Sergio Lucchetti, one of the great voices of Italian dubbing.

He voiced characters in films such as "Pirates of the Caribbean," "The Bourne Ultimatum," Steve Coogan in "Tropic Thunder," and many others.

Among his latest highly watched series, he voiced "Evil," in which he lent his voice to Michael Emerson (Leland Townsend).

LUCCHETTI, Sergio

Born: 6/9/1958, Genoa, Liguria, Italy

Died: 1/27/2026, Rome, Lazio, Italy

 

SergioLucchetti’s westerns – voice dubber:

Comanche Moon (TV)- 2008 [Italian voice of Karl Urban]

Westworld (TV) – 2020 [Italian voice of Tommy Flanagan]

Yellowstone (TV) 2020-2022 [Italian voice of Will Patton]

 

RIP Pino Colizzi

 

The voice actor Pino Colizzi has died. He is the voice of De Niro in "The Godfather 2" and Disney Robin Hood

He was 88 years old. He had also been an actor for Zeffirelli

La Republica

February 15, 2026

 

Pino Colizzi, actor, voice actor and director of Italian dubbing, has died at the age of 88.

Born in Rome in 1937, Colizzi began working in cinema with a small part that Luchino Visconti entrusted to him in Uno sguardo dal Ponte, with Paolo Stoppa and Rina Morelli. In the same year he made his television debut as the protagonist of the Tom Jones drama. His family had the art of the stage in their blood (the Colizzi and Ferzetti were cousins) and so the young Pino graduated from the Silvio D'Amico Academy of Dramatic Art where Orazio Costa teaches. In the theater he had good teachers such as Elena Cotta and above all Franco Zeffirelli (Romeo and Juliet) and Giuseppe Patroni Griffi. But his talent fully emerges at the beginning of the 70s when Bolognini calls him for Metello and Sandro Bolchi entrusts him on TV with the complex role of Vronsky in Anna Karenina alongside Lea Massari (1974).

As a voice actor he has given voice to actors such as Michael Douglas, Jack Nicholson, James Caan, Richard Dreyfuss, Omar Sharif, Franco Nero, Robert Powell in the role of Jesus of Nazareth by Zeffirelli (in which Colizzi is also an actor in the role of the good thief), Christopher Reeve in the first three film episodes of Superman, Robert De Niro in The Godfather - Part II, Patrick McGoohan in the second edition of the dubbing of The Prisoner, the famous English science fiction series of the seventies, and above all Martin Sheen in Francis Ford Coppola's masterpiece Apocalypse Now. In 1973 he voiced Robin Hood in the famous Disney cartoon while in 1999 Zeffirelli chose him for Tea with Mussolini, with Maggie Smith, Cher and Judi Dench and in 2001 Colizzi participated in the television series Il bello delle donne in the role of Count Gabriele De Contris. As a dubbing director, in addition to all of Zeffirelli's films since The Champion (1979), his works include Pulp Fiction, The English Patient, the 007 films starring Pierce Brosnan and the Matrix trilogy.

He was married to his colleague Manuela Andrei, with whom he had two children: Carlo and Chiara.

COLIZZI, Pino (Giuseppe Colizzi)

Born: 11/12/1937, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Died: 2/15/2026, Rome, Lazio, Italy

 

Pino Colizzi’s westerns – voice actor, dubber, sound department:

Blood at Sundown – 1965 [Italian voice of Hugo Blanco]

The Sheriff Won’t Shoot – 1965 [Italian voice of  Sancho Gracia]

Djurado – 1966 [Italian voice of Goyo Lebrero]

Death Rides Along – 1967 [Italian narrator]

Kill the Wicked – 1967 [Italian voice of Rod Dana]

A Minute to Pray a Second to Die – 1967 [Italian voice of Alex Cord]

Poker With Pistols – 1967 [Italian voice of George Eastman]

Rick and John, Conquerors of the West – 1967 [Italian voice of Piero Leri]

Ace High – 1968 [additional Italian voices]

Garter Colt – 1968 [Italian voice of Yorgo Voyagis]

I Want Him Dead – 1968 [Italian voice of Rick Boyd]

The Nephews of Zorro – 1968 [Italian voice of Dean Reed]

Blood and Guns – 1969 [Italian voice of José Torres]

Boot Hill – 1969 [Italian voice of Leslie Bailey]

The Forgotten Pistolero – 1969 [Italian voice of Leonard Mann]

The Price of Power – 1969 [Italian voice of Ralph Neville]

The Beast – 1970 [Italian voice of Steven Tedd]

Gunman in Town – 1970 [Italian voice of Salvatore Borghese]

The Twilight Avenger – 1970 [Italian voice of Pietro Torrisi]

A Fistful of Death – 1971 [Italian voice of Benito Pacifico]

Guns for Dollars – 1971 [Italian voice of Paolo Gozlino]

McCabe & Mrs. Miller – 1971 [Italian voice of Warren Beatty]

They Call Him Cemetery – 1971 [Italian voice of Gianni Garko]

The Deserter – 1972 [Italian voice of Wade Brown]

Stay Away from Trinity... When He Comes to Eldorado – 1972 [Italian voice of Stelvio Rosi]

Thunder Over El Paso – 1972 [Italian voice of Chris Avram]

Two Sons of Trinity – 1972 [Italian voice of Franco Ressel]

One Little Indian – 1973 [Italian voice of James Garner]

Tequila – 1973 [Italian voice of Anthony Steffen]

Those Dirty Dogs – 1973 [Italian voice of Simón Andreu]

Westworld – 1973 [Italian voice of James Brolin]

Days of Heaven -1978 [Italian voice of Richard Gere]

Buddy Goes West – 1981 [Italian voice of Joe Bugner]

North Star – 1996 [Italian voice of James Caan]

 

Friday, February 13, 2026

RIP Lory Patrick

 

Lory Patrick, ‘Tales of Wells Fargo’ Actress and Widow of Disney Star Dean Jones, Dies at 92

She and the Disney actor known for ‘That Darn Cat!’ and ‘The Love Bug’ were married for 42 years until his 2015 death.

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

February 11, 2026

 

Lory Patrick, who portrayed a neighbor of Dale Robertson’s character on NBC’s Tales of Wells Fargo and appeared on such other shows as Wagon Train, Dr. Kildare and Bonanza, has died. She was 92.

Patrick died Jan. 26 in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, a publicist announced.

Patrick was married to Dean Jones, the star of such classic Disney family films as That Darn Cat!, The Love Bug and The Shaggy D.A., for 42 years until his September 2015 death from Parkinson’s disease at age 84.

Her first husband was late science-fiction writer Harlan Ellison; they were married and divorced in 1966, and she was the third of his five wives.

Soon after signing a contract with Universal in 1961, Patrick appeared on an episode of The Loretta Young Show, then was hired to play schoolteacher Tina Swenson on Tales of Wells Fargo. Her character lives with her sister (Mary Jane Saunders) and their widowed mother, Ovie (Virginia Christine), on a San Francisco ranch next to one owned by Robertson’s Jim Hardie.

Patrick appeared on 15 episodes during the Western’s sixth and final season, when the show had been expanded to an hour.

Loretta Basham was born on April 8, 1933, in Beckley, West Virginia. After graduating from nearby Oak Hill High School, she worked as a model in Detroit and New York, where she landed a gig on the NBC game show Split Personality, before coming to Los Angeles.

Patrick also showed up on other shows including The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, It’s a Man’s World, General Electric Theater and Laramie and in such films as Surf Party (1964) and How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying (1967).

She appeared on an episode of Bonanza in 1967 and did some writing for that NBC show. After retiring from acting in the late ’60s, she continued writing for TV and films, was a columnist for a writers’ magazine and as Lory Basham Jones wrote the 1993 book Hearing God.

After she married Jones in June 1973 (she was his second wife), they established a counseling ministry, served as elders for The Church on the Way in Van Nuys and founded the Christian Rescue Committee (now called Christian Rescue Fund), an organization that “provides a way of escape” to Jews, Christians and others persecuted for their faith.

In 1984, she directed the one-man play St. John in Exile that starring her husband. Jones then reprised the role of the disciple for a 1986 film. After his death, she moved from Tarzana to Gettysburg to spend time with family and to continue her writing and passion for art.

Survivors include her three children, Caroline (and her husband, Steve), Deanna (Tom) and Michael (Dion); eight grandchildren; nine great-grandchildren; her brothers, Richard, Tom and Paul; and her sister, Carol. She was preceded in death by two other brothers, Charles and David.

A memorial service is set for 11 a.m. on April 25 at Mossy Living World Church in Scarbro, West Virginia. Donations in her name can be made to that church, Pentecost Walk or the Christian Rescue Fund.

PATRICK, Lory (Loretta Basham)

Born: 4/8/1934, Beckley, West Virginia, U.S.A.

Died: 1/26/2026, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.

 

Lory Patrick’s westerns – actress:

Gunfight at Black Horse Canyon (TV) – 1961 (Tina)

Tales of Wells Fargo (TV) – 1961-1962 (Tina Swanson)

Wagon Train (TV) - 1962 (Laura, Nancy Davis, Rachel Levy)

Wide Country (TV) – 1962 (Georgina)

Laramie (TV) – 1963 (Laurie McGovern)

Death Valley Days (TV) – 1964 (Winifred Sweet)

Bonanza (TV) – 1967 (Rita)

Thursday, February 12, 2026

RIP Vangie Labalan

 

Actress Vangie Labalan passes away at 83

Manila Bulletin

By Robert Requintina

February 12, 2026

 

Actress and acting coach Vangie Labalan (Maria Cristina Labalan in real life) has passed away. She was 83.

This was confirmed by her daughter Van-van Aligam in a Facebook post on Feb. 12.

Van-van said her mother passed on surrounded by family. No other details were provided.

"Ma, how is this because the stone is not yours? I'm glad you passed peacefully. surrounded by family. Acta at the end, you're going to be a bit too late. We love you, Mom. Rest easy,' wrote Van-van on social media.

Vangie has appeared on television and movie projects, including the critically acclaimed "Himala" with Nora Aunor. She last appeared in the Kapamilya series "Batang Quiapo."

Van-van also paid tribute to her mom in a separate post.

"If there's a lot of sadness in my life, there's only one Sabbath. You made me talk. Period. I am proud to act because it bleeds in my blood. Has a right!

"Thank you, Ma. Because of you, we are not able to control actors and showbiz life "Because of you I earned my voice. The workshops were worth it.

"You are the promoter of Australia to all of us. That's why we're here.

"Thank you for being our automatic pulian sa Manila.

"Thank you for helping us get where we are. In support. For the encouragement that someone brings hikay.

"If it's dawn, it's the end.

"We miss you already. We love you."

Friends in showbiz and netizens offered their condolences to Vangie's family. Among them were the Film Development Council of the Philippines Chairman Jose Javier Reyes, Roderick Paulate, I.C. Mendoza, Darius Razon, and Marissa Delgado.

"Thank you for all the years we worked together and provided Filipino cinema with the brilliance of your talent, hard work, and professionalism. You shall never be forgotten, as you will forever be missed. Have a safe journey home to the waiting arms of Our Father, dearest Vangie Labalan," wrote Reyes.

Labalan, Vangie (Maria Cristina Labalan)

Born: 1/20/1943, Bago, Negros Occidental, Philippines

Died: 2/12/2026, Australia

 

Vangie Labalan’s western – actress:

Long Ranger and Tonton: Shooting Stars of the West – 1989 (Lovely Nest)

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

RIP Bud Cort

 

Bud Cort, ‘Harold and Maude’ Star, Dies at 77

Variety

By Pat Saperstein

February 11, 2026

 

Bud Cort, who personified the role of Harold in the 1971 Hal Ashby classic “Harold and Maude,” died Wednesday in Connecticut after a long illness. He was 77.

His longtime friend Dorian Hannaway reported his death.

Cort also starred in Robert Altman’s “Brewster McCloud” and had roles in numerous other films and TV shows.

In “Harold and Maude,” which became a beloved and enduring cult classic despite a rocky start at the box office, Cort played a 20-year-old man obsessed by thoughts of suicide whose life changes when he meets Maude, a 79-year-old Holocaust survivor played by Ruth Gordon.

Born Walter Edward Cox in Rye, N.Y., he changed his name to avoid confusion with character actor Wally Cox. He went to school in New Rochelle, N.Y. and enjoyed going to Broadway shows.

Cort moved to Los Angeles to work in film and was cast by Altman in a small part in “MASH.” Altman then selected his to star in the quirky “Brewster McCloud” about a young man who yearns to fly, with Sally Kellerman as a guardian angel.

“I was only fourteen when I met Bud at the backstage door at my sister’s play,” Roslyn Kind recalled in a statement. “He was majoring in art at the time in high school. We became close friends who shared our interest in entertainment. When I got married, Bud and our songwriter friend, Bruce Roberts, wrote a special song that was performed at the ceremony. His unique spirit will always be with me.”

“We were in the line for lunch when I spotted him,” she later recalled. “Although I didn’t know who he was, I said ‘Oh, boy. We’re going to be best friends.’”

His chemistry with Gordon while auditioning for the part of Harold convinced Ashby and writer Colin Higgins to cast him in “Harold and Maude,” which has endured as a repertory screening favorite for more than 50 years. He was nominated for a BAFTA award as most promising newcomer and for a Golden Globe for best actor in a musical or comedy.

“A young man obsessed with death falls in love with an old woman obsessed with life. She dies and teaches the kid how to live,” Cameron Crowe described it for AFI in 2011. “And it’s done with music [by Cat Stevens] that scratches at your soul. . . . that movie holds up — to this minute.”

His other roles included films “She Dances Alone,” “Electric Dreams” and “The Life Aquatic,” as well as “Heat,” “Dogma,” “Coyote Ugly” and “Pollock.”

He also voiced the character Toyman in “Superman: The Animated Series,” “Static Shock” and “Justic League Unlimited.” He co-wrote, starred in and directed the 1991 film “Ted and Venus.”

In 1979, Cort narrowly survived a devastating car accident, which necessitated numerous surgeries and affected his career.

He is survived by his brother Joseph Cox and his sister-in-law Vickie and their daughters, Meave, Brytnn, and Jesse of Rye, N.Y.; his sister Kerry Cox of Larchmont, N.Y.; his sister and brother-in-law, Tracy Cox Berkman and Edward Berkman, and their sons, Daniel and Peter. He is also survived by his sister, Shelly Cox Dufour and brother-in-law Robert Dufour, and nieces Madeline and Lucie.

A memorial will be held at a future date in Los Angeles.

CORT, Bud (Walter Edward Cox)

Born: 3/29/1948, Rye, New York, U.S.A.

Died: 2/11/2026, Connecticut, U.S.A.

 

Bud Cort’s westerns – actor:

The Travelling Executioner – 1970 (Jimmy)

South of Heaven, West of Hell – 2000 (Agent Otts)