Tuesday, May 31, 2022

RIP Charles Siebert

 


'Trapper John, M.D.' Actor Charles Siebert Dies at 84

 

Extra TV

May 31, 2022

 

Charles Siebert, an acclaimed stage actor most famous to TV audiences for "Trapper John, M.D.," died May 1 of COVID pneumonia, THR reports. He was 84.

He made TV appearances in the '60s, including playing Dr. Peter Murphy on the soap "Search for Tomorrow" (1969-1971). He was later Dr. Wally Matthews on "As the World Turns" (1972-1974).

SIEBERT, Charles

Born: 3/9/1938, Kenosha, Wisconsin, U.S.A.

Died: 5/1/2022, San Francisco, California, U.S.A.

 

Charles Siebert’s western – actor:

Wild and Wooly (TV) – 1978 (Sean)

 

Sunday, May 29, 2022

RIP Ronnie Hawkins

 Ronnie Hawkins Dies: ‘Father Of Canadian Rock ‘N Roll’ Was 87

 

Yahoo News

By Bruce Hawkins

May 29, 2022

Ronnie Hawkins, a Southern rockabilly artist widely credited with inspiring the Canadian music scene, died Sunday morning at age 87. His wife, Wanda, confirmed his death after an unspecified illness.

“He went peacefully and he looked as handsome as ever,” she told The Canadian Press news outlet.

 

HAWKINS, Ronnie (Ronald Hawkins)

Born: 1/10/1935, Huntsville, Arkansas, U.S.A.

Died: 5/29/2022, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada

 

Ronnie Hawkins’ westerns – actor:

Heaven’s Gate – 1980 (Major Wolcott)

Sodbusters (TV) – 1994 (cattle baron)

RIP Marino Mase'


 Farewell to Marino Masè, lead actor of Fists in the Pocket, then to Hollywood and character actor

Marino Masè , actor from Trieste starring in Marco Bellocchio 's Fists in the Pocket and one of the most popular young performers of the 1960s, died, then landed in Hollywood and also a character actor in arthouse and genre films

Spettacolo

By Ivan Zingariello

May 29, 2022

 

The Trieste actor Marino Masè , one of the most popular young performers of the 1960s, starring in Marco Bellocchio 's Fists in the Pocket , died in his home in Rome .

He was 83 years old and was seized by a sudden illness, as his daughter Rachele told Il Piccolo: « It was a completely unexpected illness. Now we are waiting for the autopsy exam to find out the causes, then there will be a commemoration in Rome and one in Trieste, after which his ashes will remain in his city, Trieste ".

After several theatrical experiences, in 1960 he began his cinematographic activity by participating in the film The Rape of the Sabine Women by Richard Pottier. He had a small role in Luchino Visconti's Il Gattopardo , released in 1963, he was the protagonist in Jean-Luc Godard's Les Carabiniers and Marco Bellocchio 's Fists in Pocket , released in 1965. In the same year he was directed by Ettore Scola in La conjuncture and had a secondary role in the film Three Gendarmes in New York directed by Jean Girault. He was then put under contract by MGM for the television series Jericho , made in Hollywood, where he relocated.

He also worked in Italian and international cinema in numerous films, obtaining small roles also with important directors: in The cannibals and The night porter by Liliana Cavani (1974), in Tenebre by Dario Argento (1982), in Il pentito by Pasquale Squitieri (1985), in Giuseppe Tornatore's debut film Il camorrista (1986), in The Belly of the Architect by Peter Greenaway (1987) and in The Godfather - Part III by Francis Ford Coppola (1990). But there were also genre films, in which he often played inspectors and policemen, from Goliath to the conquest of Baghdad to Lovers from beyond the grave , from… To all the police cars… to Il boss , from The red lady kills seven times to Contamination , from Assassinio sul Tevere to Play Motel .

In 2006 he starred in the single act Piazzale Loreto , written and directed by Pasquale Squitieri, with Ottavia Fusco. On television he participated in several episodes of Italian and foreign television series and telefilms: among the latter Codex Jericho (1966), La piovra 4 (1989), an episode of the first season of the soap opera Vivere (in 1999), in the second season of the television series Valeria medico-legal (2002) and in Un posto al sole .

 

MASE, Marino

Born: 3/21/1939, Trieste, Venezia Giulia, Italy

Died: 5/28/2022, Rome, Lazio, Italy

 

Marino Masé’s westerns – actor:

Questa sera parla Mark Twain (TV) – 1965 (Charles Langdon)

The 5-Man Army – 1969 (train mechanic)

Zorro – 1975 (Miguel de la Serna) [as Marino Mase']

 

Saturday, May 28, 2022

RIP Bo Hopkins

 Bo Hopkins, ‘Wild Bunch’ and ‘American Graffiti’ Actor, Dies at 84

Sam Peckinpah cast him in three films, and he went from bad guys to good during the course of his career.

The Hollywood Reporter

By Chris Koseluk

May 28, 2022

 

Bo Hopkins, the wily actor with the wild-eyed gaze who came to fame portraying thieves and scoundrels in such films as The Wild BunchAmerican GraffitiMidnight Express and White Lightning, died Saturday morning. He was 84.

Hopkins died at Valley Presbyterian Hospital in Van Nuys after suffering a heart attack on May 9, his wife of 33 years, Sian, told The Hollywood Reporter.

With his hair-trigger delivery, Hopkins was a favorite of Sam Peckinpah, who cast him in three features — as Clarence “Crazy” Lee in The Wild Bunch (1969), as a double-crossed bank robber in The Getaway (1972) and as a weapons expert in The Killer Elite (1975).

His turn as Joe Young, the leader of The Pharaohs greaser gang in George Lucas’ American Graffiti (1973), solidified him as a top-notch screen villain. The highlight of his role included coaxing Curt (Richard Dreyfuss) to attach a hook and chain to a police car so that when it gives chase, the back axle flies off.

“I go to car shows because American Graffiti is the national anthem of car shows,” Hopkins Said in a 2012 interview with Shock Cinema magazine. “Graffiti got people out draggin’ and going up, and down streets cruisin’. It got people into cars doing that kind of stuff again. If I told you how many times people have come up to Candy [Clark], Paul [Le Mat] and me at these shows and told us that we’ve changed their lives, you wouldn’t believe it.”

As his career evolved, the sandy-haired South Carolina native segued to the right side of the law, and executive producer Quentin Tarantino tapped him to portray a good guy in Dusk to Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money (1999).

“Tarantino told me that he loved my work and that he had this part,” he said. “Well, I got the script and said, ‘Sure, I’ll do this. This is great.’ Well, they didn’t tell me they were going to shoot in South Africa.”

In The Wild Bunch, Hopkins’ character, a volatile young member of the gang, terrorizes a group of hostages inside a bank before meeting a horrible end in a hail of bullets. Just before his demise, he utters one of the film’s most quotable lines — “Well, how’d you like to kiss my sister’s black cat’s ass?”

“They took me to special effects and had wires runnin’ up my ass, up my legs. I was squibbed up 26 times,” he recalled of his first big movie role. “I fuckin’ thought I was gonna go to the moon if them things ever went off. I’d never worked with squibs. Sam asked me if I wanted a T-shirt. ‘No, sir,’ I said. ‘I want to feel it.’ … Well, see, I didn’t know. I wanted to feel it, experience it, just like we talked about at the Actors Studio. And like a damn fool, I didn’t wear a T-shirt.”

In a short but impactful performance in The Getaway (1972), Hopkins’ Frank Jackson gets his private parts blown off by his partner Rudy (Al Lettieri) during another bank robbery. Rudy, in turn, is shot by Doc (Steve McQueen), who takes off with the stolen loot.

Peckinpah gave Hopkins a more substantial role in The Killer Elite as a weapons expert recruited by James Caan to stop an assassination.

Hopkins added to his criminal mystique as a moonshiner alongside Burt Reynolds in White Lightning (1973) and as Tex, a mysterious man who seals Billy Hayes’ (Brad Davis) fate, in Midnight Express (1978).

William Mauldin Hopkins was born on Feb. 2, 1938, in Greenville, South Carolina. His father worked at a local mill while his mother stayed home with the children. At age 39, his dad had a heart attack and died on the porch of his home in front of his wife and son.

Hopkins was sent to live with his grandparents when his mom remarried the following year, then learned when he was 12 that he was adopted at nine months old. He eventually met his birth mother and got to know his half-siblings.

Quite the handful growing up, Hopkins said he used to steal money from family members to treat his friends to the movies. He was headed to reform school after a botched robbery when he enlisted in the U.S. Army just before his 17th birthday.

“I don’t know how my mother and grandmother put up with me,” Hopkins remembered. “Later, I went back home and took them to see The Wild Bunch and my second movie, [1969’s] The Bridge at Remagen. And that’s when everybody who said I was gonna end up in prison said they always knew Billy was going to make something of himself.”

After the service, which included nine months in Korea, Hopkins returned to Greenville and landed a role in a production of The Teahouse of the August Moon in a local theater, then received a scholarship to Kentucky’s Pioneer Playhouse. “I think there were 180 people trying out for summer stock,” he said. “I didn’t even know what summer stock was.”

Hopkins’ Pioneer Playhouse experience led to an opportunity to perform in a play in New York, and he was in an off-Broadway production of Bus Stop when the producers asked him to change his name. He took his character’s first name, and Bo Hopkins was born.

After just a few months in the city and another stint back home, Hopkins decided to try his luck in Hollywood and received a scholarship to an acting school at the Desilu-Cahuenga Studios and then a spot as an observer at the L.A. outpost of the Actors Studio.

With Diane Davis as his agent, Hopkins made his onscreen debut in 1966 on an episode of The Phyllis Diller Show. “After the Phyllis Diller thing, I did a Gunsmoke, then The Andy Griffith Show, playing Goober’s helper,” he said. “George Lindsey always said he was the one who started my career.”

Other early TV appearances came on The VirginianThe Wild Wild WestJudd for the Defense and The Rat Patrol.

Hopkins’ time at Desilu also led to his breakthrough role. Wild Bunch actor William Holden heard about his performance in a stage production of Picnic and recommended him to screenwriter Roy N. Sickner, who convinced Peckinpah to give Hopkins a shot as Crazy Lee.

Two of Hopkins’ favorite outlaw gigs came in 1975 when he played Turner, a high-strung, would-be Mafioso who liked to dress like a cowboy, in the independent neo-noir film The Nickel Ride and as gangster Pretty Boy Floyd in the ABC telefilm The Kansas City Massacre.

As a go-to guy for lawmen, he portrayed sheriffs in A Small Town in Texas (1976), Sweet Sixteen (1983), Mutant (1984), Trapper County War (1989), The Bounty Hunter (1989), The Final Alliance (1990), Fertilize the Blaspheming Bombshell (1992), Texas Payback (1995) and A Crack in the Floor (2001).

Hopkins’ other features included The Moonshine War (1970), Monte Walsh (1970), The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing (1973), Posse (1975), Tentacles (1977), The Fifth Floor (1978), Big Bad John (1990), Radioland Murders (1994) and U Turn (1997).

 

HOPKINS, Bo (William Mauldin Hopkins)

Born: 2/2/1942, Greenville, South Carolina, U.S.A.

Died: 5/28/2022, Van Nuys, California, U.S.A.

 

Bo Hopkins’ westerns – actor:

Gunsmoke (TV) – 1967 (Harper Haggen)

The Virginian (TV) – 1967 (Will)

The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1967 (Zack Garrison)

The Guns of Will Sonnett (TV) -1968 (Ben Merceen, Wes Redford)

The Wild Bunch – 1969 (Clarence ‘Crazy’ Lee)

Bonanza (TV) – 1969 (Stretch Logan)

Macho Callahan – 1970 (Yancy)

Monte Walsh – 1970 (Jumpin’ Joe Joslin)

Cat Ballou (TV) – 1971 (Clay)

The Culpepper Cattle Company – 1972 (Dixie Brick)

Nichols (TV) – 1972 (Kansas)

The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing – 1973 (Billy Bowen)

Posse – 1975 (Wesley)

The Invasion of Johnson County (TV) – 1976 (George Dunning)

The Busters (TV) – 1978 (Chad Kimbrough)

The Last Ride of the Dalton Gang – 1979 (Billy Doolin)

Rodeo Girl (TV) – 1980 (Will Garrett)

Louis L’Amour Down the Long Hills (TV) 1986 (Jud)

Houston: The Legend of Texas (TV) – 1986 (Colonel Sidney Sherman)

Big Bad John – 1990 (Lester)

The Ballad of Little Jo – 1993 (Frank Badger)

The Legend of Wolf Mountain – 1994 (Ranger Steven Haynes)

Cheyenne Warrior (TV) – 1994 (Jack Andrews)

Wyatt Earp: Return to Tombstone (TV) – 1994 (Rattlesnake Reynolds)

Riders in the Storm – 1995 (Billy Van Owen)

Shaughnessy (TV) – 1996 (Rip Bartlett)

The Newton Brothers – 1998 (K. P. Aldrich)

South of Heaven West, of Hell – 2000 (Doc Angus Dunfries)

Cowboy Up – 2001 (Ray Drupp)

Thursday, May 26, 2022

RIP Andy Fletcher

 

Depeche Mode Keyboardist Andy ‘Fletch’ Fletcher Dead at 60

Rock Hall of Fame musician co-founded the group in 1980 and remained with them for more than 40 years

Rolling Stone

By Daniel Kreps

May 26, 2022

 

Andy “Fletch” Fletcher, the co-founder and keyboardist of beloved synth-pop and New Wave stalwarts Depeche Mode, died at the age of 60.

Fletcher’s bandmates announced his death Thursday on social media; Rolling Stone has confirmed that the cause of death was natural causes. “We are shocked and filled with overwhelming sadness with the untimely passing of our dear friend, family member and bandmate Andy ‘Fletch’ Fletcher,” the band said in a statement.

“Fletch had a true heart of gold and was always there when you needed support, a lively conversation, a good laugh or a cold pint.”

Fletcher was a member of Depeche Mode for over 40 years, from their official formation in 1980 and their 1981 debut album Speak and Spell up through their most recent LP, 2017’s Spirit. 

In 2020, Fletcher and his Depeche Mode bandmates — longtime members Dave Gahan and Martin Gore and former members Vince Clarke and Alan Wilder — were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for their pioneering role in the synth-pop, new wave and electronic music movements; the band has also played an influential role in heavy metal.

“The beauty of using electronics is that music can now be made in your bedroom,” Fletcher told Rolling Stone in 1990. “You don’t need to get four people together in some warehouse to practice. You don’t have to have four excellent musicians fighting among themselves. You can do it in your bedroom, and it’s all down to ideas.”

While Gahan served as the band’s frontman and Gore their main songwriter, the band (and Fletcher himself) often joked about Fletch’s role in the group. “Dave is the singer, Martin is the songwriter, Alan is the great musician and I just bum around,” he joked in the band’s 1989 documentary 101, co-directed by D.A. Pennebaker.

Beyond his admittedly ambiguous musical contributions, Fletcher is credited with playing on all 14 of the band’s studio albums and countless stadium-filling concert performances; Fletcher also had the unofficial title of tiebreaker in the event of Gore and Gahan coming to creative loggerheads.

“Most of the time we sort of agree with each other,” Fletcher told Rolling Stone France in 2017. “But we also have this golden rule that if Martin, Dave or myself really is against something, we would agree with that [tiebreaker]… It’s a team thing.”

Fletcher also said of his role in shaping Depeche Mode’s sound in a 2009 interview, “Within the band, I contribute the element of pop. (Gore), who writes most of the songs, loves American blues and country. And Dave has discovered jazz for himself. I, however, will probably eternally feel loyal to the simple pop melodies and the lightness they stand for.”

The Cure’s Lol Tolhurst tweeted Thursday, “Very sad news today. Andy Fletcher of Depeche Mode has passed. I knew Andy and considered him a friend. We crossed many of the same pathways as younger men . My heart goes out to his family, bandmates, and DM fans. RIP Fletch.”

 

FLETCHER, Andy (Andrew John Leonard Fletcher)

Born: 7/8/1961, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England, U.K.

Died: 5/26/2022

 

Andy Fletcher’s western – musician:

Bullfighter – 2000 [Depeche Mode]