Tuesday, January 31, 2023

RIP Kevin O'Neal

 

Kevin O’Neal, Actor on TV’s ‘No Time for Sergeants,’ Dies at 77

The younger brother of Oscar-nominated star Ryan O'Neal also appeared alongside Elvis Presley in 'The Trouble with Girls.'

 

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

January 31, 2023

 

Kevin O’Neal, the younger brother of Oscar-nominated actor Ryan O’Neal and a regular on the 1960s ABC comedy No Time for Sergeants, has died. He was 77.

O’Neal died Saturday in his sleep of natural causes in Thousand Oaks, a family spokesperson told The Hollywood Reporter.

O’Neal also appeared as the character Yale in one of Elvis Presley’s final films, The Trouble with Girls (1969).

O’Neal portrayed Private Ben Whitledge on No Time for Sergeants, which lasted one season. The 1964-65 comedy was produced by George Burns’ production company and Warner Bros.

Based on a novel by Mac Hyman, No Time for Sergeants premiered on Broadway in 1954 and was adapted a year later for an ABC U.S. Steel Hour production and then for a 1958 feature. All three starred Andy Griffith.

Geoffrey Garrett O’Neal was born in Los Angeles on March 26, 1945. His parents were novelist-screenwriter Charles “Blackie” O’Neal (The Three Wishes of Jamie McRuin) and actress Patricia Callaghan. He was born four years after Ryan.

O’Neal appeared on TV for the first time in 1961 on episodes of The Deputy, The Danny Thomas Show and The Donna Reed Show.

He would also show up on The Twilight Zone, My Three Sons, Wagon Train, Gidget, Perry Mason, The Fugitive, Gunsmoke, Please Don’t Eat the Daises, Bonanza, Mod Squad, Daniel Boone and Lancer.

O’Neal also had bit roles in his brother’s films The Big Bounce (1969), Love Story (1970), What’s Up Doc? (1972) and The Thief Who Came to Dinner (1973) before he quit acting in the mid-’70s.

In addition to his brother, survivors include his son, Garrett; niece Tatum O’Neal, the Oscar-winning actress; nephew Griffin O’Neal, also an actor; and nephew Patrick O’Neal, a broadcaster for Bally Sports West.

O’NEAL, Kevin (Geoffrey Garrett O’Neal)

Born: 3/26/1945, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Died: 1/28/2023, Thousand Oaks, California, U.S.A.

 

Kevin O’Neal’s westerns – actor:

The Deputy (TV) – 1961 (Johnny)

Young Fury – 1964 (Curley)

Wagon Train (TV) – 1965 (Efram)

Gunsmoke (TV) – 1966 (James Kyle)

Bonanza (TV) – 1967 (Reb)

Daniel Boone (TV) – 1969 (Adam Webster)

Lancer (TV) – 1969 (Pinkie)

Monday, January 30, 2023

RIP Ginger Stanley

 

Legacy Remembers

January 28, 2023

 

Ginger Stanley Hallowell of Orlando died January 19, 2023 at the age of 91. She lived a full and wonderful life and is well known among movie history fans for her roles in the underwater scenes with Ricou Browning in Creature from the Black Lagoon and then Revenge of the Creature. Ginger grew up in Walhalla, South Carolina before moving to Florida as a teenager. She was an underwater mermaid and professional swimmer at the Florida attractions Weeki Wachee and Silver Springs for many years doing underwater performances that have been photographed by Bruce Mozert. Ginger appeared on The Garry Moore Show in New York where she performed in an underwater tank and presented the underwater weather report for guest host Dick van Dyke when Barbara Walters thought of adding a map inside the tank and called her back. After her underwater roles in the Creature movies and in Jupiter's Darling, Ginger moved to Orlando where she lived ever since and hosted a local television show, Browsing with Ginger. She married Al Hallowell, originally of Philadelphia, and had three children, Dawn, Heather, and Shannon. Ginger then worked as a fashion model for many years and taught modeling and image for twenty years at the Lisa Maile Image Modeling and Acting School. Ginger loved being with people and went on many ski trips with the Orlando Ski Club until recently. She was happy to have visits from her many friends and her children and grandchildren in the last few months. Ginger is survived by daughters Heather Hallowell Bodiford and Shannon Hallowell Schemmer, her granddaughter Courtney Gaba, and grandsons Andrew and Brett Bodiford and Zane, Slade, and Case Schemmer. She is well loved for her marvelous sense of humor and for all of her stories of movies and swimming as a mermaid at Weeki Wachee and Silver Springs. Her service will be held on Friday, February 3, 2023 at 2:00 PM at Woodlawn Memorial Park and Funeral Home at 400 Woodlawn Cemetery Road, Gotha, Florida, west of Orlando.

STANLEY, Ginger

Born: 12/19/1931, Sandersville, Georgia, U.S.A.

Died: 1/19/2023, Orlando, Florida, U.S.A

 

Ginger Stanley’s western – actress:

Distant Drums – 1951 (woman)

Sunday, January 29, 2023

RIP Vyacheslav Nazaruk

 

Animator Vyacheslav Nazaruk has died. He created the images of the cat Leopold and the Mammoth

 

RTVI

1/29/2023

 

Yesterday, on January 28, at the 82nd year of life, production designer Vyacheslav Nazaruk, who created such popular cartoon characters as Mammoth, Baby Raccoon and Cat Leopold, died. The death of the Soviet and Russian animator RTVI was reported in the press service of Soyuzmultfilm.

Farewell to Nazaruk will be held on February 1 at 14:00 in the Church of Tsarevich Dmitry at the First City Hospital in Moscow. The cause of death is not specified.

Nazaruk was involved in the creation of such cartoons as "Leopold the Cat", "Baby Raccoon", "Once a Cowboy, Two Cowboys", "Puss in Boots", "Devil with a Fluffy Tail", "Mother for a Mammoth" and others. He also took part in the creation of films-performances ("Snow Maiden", "Free Wind", "Egmont", etc.).

Vyacheslav Nazaruk was born on March 4, 1941 in Moscow. In 1965 he graduated with honors from the Moscow State Pedagogical Institute named after V.I. Lenin, becoming a certified drawing teacher. In 1966-1967 he worked as an artist-designer in the "Rostorgreklam" of the Ministry of Trade of the RSFSR. In 1969-1970 he worked in the main editorial office of musical television programs of the Central Television of the USSR. In 1970-1989 he was a production designer of the studio "Multtelefilm" of the creative association "Ekran" of the USSR State Television and Radio.

For a series of cartoons about the cat Leopold in 1985, Nazaruk was awarded the USSR State Prize. In the early 1990s, the Disney film studio invited the artist to the United States, where he gave a course of lectures on the theory of drawing, painting and composition. There, Nazaruk held master classes on the topic "Russian folklore and fairy-tale characters in folk tales".

Nazaruk was also engaged in sculpture, book illustration and painting. The editor-in-chief of Soyuzmultfilm, Sergey Kapkov, said on Facebook (owned by Meta*) that in recent years the artist has been painting paintings dedicated to the events of ancient Russian history ("The Battle of Kulikovo", "Ice Battle", "Baptism", triptych "The Word about Igor's Regiment", etc.). According to TASS, some canvases are in the collections of the State Historical Museum, the State Museum of the History of Religion and in private collections.

NAZARUK, Vyacheslav

Born: 3/4/1941, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R.

Died: 1/28/2023. Moscow, Russia

 

 Vyacheslav Nazaruk’s western – art director:

Raz, kovboy, dva kovboy - 1981

Diego Reggente

 

Il Mondo Dei Doppiatori

January 28, 2023

 

Italian film actor and voice dubber Diego Reggente died in Rome, Ialy on January 28, 2023. He was, 78. Born in Rijeka in October 1944, he was an actor, dubber and dubbing director. He was the voice-over of several documentaries for television, but above all he is the voice of Al Pacino in “People I Know”, “Two for the Money”, “88 minutes”, “The Humbling” and many other great foreign actors.

REGGENTE, Diego

Born: 10/3/1944, Fiume, Croatia

Died: 1/28/2023, Rome, Lazio, Italy


Diego Reggente’s westerns voice actor, dubber:

Daniel Boone (TV) – 1964-1970 [Italian voice of Ed Ames]

Sam il ragazzo del West (TV) – 1973-1974 [voice of Big Stone]

White Fang 2: Myth of the White Wolf – 1994 [Italian voice of Al Harrington]

Tall Tale – 1995 [Italian voice of Scott Glenn]

Friday, January 27, 2023

RIP Sylvia Syms


 Sylvia Syms: Veteran British actress dies at 89

 

BBC News

January 27, 2023

 

British actress Sylvia Syms, a star of stage and screen for six decades, has died at the age of 89.

She shot to fame in the 1950s in Ice Cold in Alex, and was nominated for Bafta Awards for Woman in a Dressing Gown and No Trees in the Street.

Later, she was in TV shows like Peak Practice and EastEnders, and in 1991 played the former prime minister in ITV's Thatcher: The Final Days.

In 2006, she played the Queen Mother in The Queen opposite Dame Helen Mirren.

A statement from her children, Beatie and Ben Edney, said: "Our mother, Sylvia, died peacefully this morning.

"She has lived an amazing life and gave us joy and laughter right up to the end. Just yesterday we were reminiscing together about all our adventures. She will be so very missed."

They also thanked the staff at Denville Hall, a care home in London for those in the entertainment industry, for "the truly excellent care they have taken of our Mum over the past year".

Syms was born in London on 6 January 1934. At the age of five, she became one of thousands of children evacuated from London, moving first to Kent and then, in 1940, to Monmouthshire.

She later recalled the trauma of being separated from her mother, who was to die of a brain tumour when Sylvia was just 12.

"Sending me away from home gave me the impression I was not loved, which was unfair but it's the truth," she said. "It's why I became a performer and never stopped working."

At 16, she suffered a nervous breakdown and contemplated suicide but, at the insistence of her stepmother, had psychotherapy which helped her through the crisis.

Her ambition to act led her to drama school Rada, where she received the Gerald Lawrence Scholarship and an HM Tenants Award.

Like many aspiring actors, she cut her teeth in the West End, where she understudied roles in a variety of plays as well as being part of the Apple Cart Company with Noel Coward.

But she became a victim of the British studio system, which sucked in young actors on long contracts, paid them peanuts and hired them out at exorbitant rates.

She earned just £30 a week for her first major film role, playing the part of Jane Carr in My Teenage Daughter, a gritty tale of delinquent behaviour.

A year later, she appeared in The Woman In A Dressing Gown, where she played a woman having an affair with an older man.

By now she was married to her childhood sweetheart Alan Edney and balancing her film career with the demands of domesticity.

She later said marriage gave her the the stability she had missed as a child, and allowed her to use a wedding ring to fend off unwanted advances in the studio.

She purported to be unaware of her growing reputation as an actress, remarking later that the praise showered on her by directors was "because they wanted to get into your knickers".

"There was an assumption that because you were blonde and an actress you were available."

Powerful

She showed she was as adept at handling dramatic roles as she was at playing in fluffy comedies.

In 1958, still contracted at £30 per week, she appeared in Ice Cold In Alex alongside John Mills, Anthony Quayle and Harry Andrews, all of whom were earning far more than her.

The film later gained cult status, particularly after one famous scene with three dusty soldiers and her attractive blonde nurse in a bar in Alexandria was used in a commercial for a certain Danish lager.

It was not until 1960, when her co-star in The World of Suzie Wong, William Holden, discovered how little she was being paid and lobbied the studio, that her earnings increased.

She gave a powerful performance as the wife of a condemned prisoner in the screen version of Brendan Behan's The Quare Fellow in 1962 and played Tony Hancock's wife in The Punch & Judy Man.

Syms appeared in some controversial films including the role as the bigot's daughter in Flame In The Streets, which earned her a ban by the apartheid government in South Africa.

But too many of her films in the 1960s were in run-of-the-mill studio fillers, denying her the chance to show her full ability as an actress.

She had already turned down the chance to go to Hollywood, preferring to stay in England with her husband and two children.

The 1974 film The Tamarind Seed saw her playing the wife of a gay diplomat, a role that earned her another Bafta nomination.

While she continued to appear in a host of films, this was the high-water mark of her cinema career.

But she kept working, with roles on stage, film and television, including her memorable performance as Margaret Thatcher.

Her other film roles included 2003's What A Girl Wants, starring Amanda Bynes, while on TV she made occasional appearances as dressmaker Olive Woodhouse in EastEnders between 2007 and 201

She also appeared in an episode of BBC One drama series Gentleman Jack in 2019, and was in ITV's family drama At Home with the Braithwaites and BBC Two's gentle religious comedy Rev.

Syms was a gifted actress who, unlike many of her contemporaries, possessed the drive and talent to maintain her career for more than 60 years.

Some felt she deserved more recognition for her achievements. She did get an OBE, but that was for her charity work rather than her acting.

"I'm not dame material really," she said in an interview with the Guardian. "An Oscar's very useful if you want to be a dame."

If she had not turned down the opportunities to experience the bright lights of Hollywood, she might have achieved the international fame that eluded her.

SYMS, Sylvia (Sylvia May Laura Syms)

Born: 1/6/1934, Woolwich, London, England, U.K.

Died: 1/27/2023, Northwood, Hillingdon, London, England, U.K.

 

Sylvia Syms western – actress:

The Desperados! – 1969 (Laura Galt)

Thursday, January 26, 2023

RIP Wolfgang Draeger

 

Wolfgang Draeger: voice actor from “TKKG” died

 

24 Hours Worlds

William

January 25, 2023

 

A lot of people grew up with Wolfgang Draeger’s voice: with Bibo on children’s television, with the inspectors in European radio plays and all the Hollywood stars that the man from Hamburg spoke. He turned 95.

Millions of people knew his voice, but hardly anyone knew his face: The radio play star and dubbing speaker Wolfgang Draeger is dead. The Hamburger was 95 years old. This was announced by his children Sascha Draeger and Kerstin Draeger on Instagram on Tuesday evening. The radio play label Europa confirmed Draeger’s death on Wednesday to the German Press Agency.

Wolfgang Draeger has died

He was the German dubbing voice of US actor Woody Allen. The star’s special way of speaking was never a problem for him, Draeger said in a dpa interview in 2015. “Because part of me is that way. I’m a stutterer and I have a penchant for psychopaths and lunatics. If I had to play the roles instead of just speaking, I would do them the same way. James Cagney, who I also voiced, was a lot harder. It took a lot of acting and effort to make that boiler. But Woody Allen, that’s pretty much me in a lot of ways.” He also voiced other stars, such as Dudley Moore, and once Roman Polanski.

On the ARD children’s television “Sesame Street”, Draeger lent his voice to the big yellow bird Bibo. But the man from Hamburg is also very well-known from radio plays for children and young people on the Europa label. His most prominent role may have been Commissioner Glockner from the “TKKG” series. In the radio play series “The three ???” Draeger succeeded Horst Frank as Commissioner Reynolds in the late 1980s.

Actor and voice actor

“With Wolfgang Draeger, a really great, wonderful actor and friend has left us,” said Europe boss Heikedine Körting. “He leaves us all an incredible number of great memories – both in film and on television, dubbing and in radio plays. Last year we made great recordings together in the studio for “The Three ???”. Farewell, dear Wolfgang Draeger!”

Celebrity Documentary “6 Mothers”

As an actor, Draeger appeared in the ZDF series “The Legacy of the Guldenburgs”. Again as commissioner. “With his gentlemanly looks and his distinctive voice, he was an excellent fit for roles of respected people,” says non-fiction author Björn Akstinat. The cartoon character Inspector Gadget was also part of the repertoire.

As Draeger’s children wrote on Instagram, their father died on Monday. “Now we were up in your beloved mountains for your 95th birthday… and now you just wanted to get even higher,” says Kerstin Draeger.

DRAEGER, Wolfgang (Wolfgang Herbert Kurt Draeger)

Born: 1/9/1928, Berlin, Berlin, Germany

Died: 1/23/2023, Hamburg, Hambuerg, Germany

 

Wolfgang Draeger’s westerns – voice actor:

Frisco Kid – 1933 [German voice of James Cagney1996]

Vigilantes are Coming – 1936 [German voice of John O’Brien 1990s]

Shepard of the Hills – 1941 [German voice of Tom Fadden 1990s]

Gun Belt – 1953 [German voice of Tab Hunter 1990s]

Wichita – 1955 [German voice of Peter Graves 1990s]

The Brave One – 1956 [German voice of Carlos Fernández 1990s]

Man from Del Rio – 1956 [German voice of Carl Thayler 1990s]

Thunder Over Arizona – 1956 [German voice of John Clapton 1990s]

Tomahawk Trail – 1956 [German voice of Harry Dean Stanton 1990s]

Tales of Wells Fargo (TV) – 1957-1962 [German voice of Norman Leavitt]

Bravados – 1958 [German voice of Jason Wingreen]

Buchanan Rides Alone – 1958 [German voice of L.Q. Jones]

Cowboy – 1958 [German voice of Don Reardon]

Ride a Crooked Trail – 1958 [German voice of Frank Chase]

Yancy Derringer (TV) – 1958-1959 [German voice of Gene Collins, James Fox, Stuart Randall]

Frontier Rangers – 1959 [German voice of Rayford Barnes]

Bonanza (TV) – 1959-1973 [German voice of George Brenlin, Robert Colbert, Lou Frizzell, Paul

     Lukather, Art Metrano, Arnold Stang

Cattle King – 1963 [German voice of Robert Ivers]

Four for Texas – 1963 [German voice of Dave Willock]

Bullets Don’t Count – 1964 [German voice of Angel Aranda]

The Last Gun – 1964 [German voice of Ugo Fangareggi]

Oklahoma John – 1964 [German voice of Georg Herzig]

Cat Ballou – 1965 [German voice of Erik Sorenson]

Fistful of Dollars – 1965 [German voice of Fernando Sánchez Polack]

The Tramplers – 1965 [German voice of Franco Balducci]

The Big Valley (TV) – 1965-1969 [German voice of Christopher Cary, Don Knight, Dennis

      Safren

My Name is Pecos – 1966 [German voice of Gino Barbacane]

The Dirty Outlaws - 1967[German voice of Giuseppe Castellano]

Killer Caliber .32 [German voice of Alberto Dell’Acqua]

Pecos Cleans Up – 1967 [German voice of Piero Vida]

Professionals for a Massacre – 1967 [German voice of Milo Quesada]

The Ruthless Four – 1967 [German voice of Klaus Kinski]

7 Pistols for a Massacre – 1967 [German voice of Eduardo Fajardo]

The High Chaparral (TV) – 1967-1971 [German voice of James Gammon]

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer – 1968 [German voice of Jim turner]

And God Said to Cain – 1970 [German voice of Antonio Cantafora]

Catlow – 1971 [German voice of Angel del Pozo]

The Grissom Gang – 1971 [German voice of Scott Wilson]

Halleluja für Camposanto – 1971 German voice of Gildo Di Marco]

Halleluja für Spirito Santo – 1971 [German voice of Ettore Arena, Federico Boido]

McCabe and Mrs. Miller – 1971 [German voice of Rene Auberjonois]

A Time for Dying – 1971 [German voice of Audie Murphy]

Vengeance Trail – 1971 [German voice of ?]

Yuma – 1971 [German voice of Robert Phillips]

Alias Smith & Jones (TV) – 1971-1973 [German voice of Billy ‘Green’ Bush, Dennis Fimple,

     L.Q. Jones, Joaquín Martínez

Ben and Charlie – 1972 [German voice of Vittorio Congia]

The Culpepper Cattle Co. – 1972 [German voice of Matt Clark]

The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean – 1972 [German voice of Matt Clark, Jack Colvin]

The Great Northfield, Minnesota Raid – 1972 [German voice of Matt Clark]

Junior Bonner – 1972 [German voice of Bill McKinney]

Nigger Charley – 1972 [German voice of D'Urville Martin]

Bad Kids of the West – 1973 [German voice of Gaetano Scala]

Burning Daylight (TV) – 1975 [German voice of ?]

The Last Day – 1975 [German voice of Richard Jaeckel]

The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez – 1982 [German voice of Michael McGuire]

Walker, Texas Ranger (TV) 1993-2001 [German voice of Clu Gulager, Paul Williams

 

RIP Claudio Da Passano

 

He worked in "Chiquititas", "Poliladron" and "Frecuencia 04"

Claudio Da Passano, actor of "Argentina, 1985", with a long career in theater and TV died

He was 65 years old and his death caused shock in the acting world. In "Argentina, 1985" that this Tuesday was nominated for the Oscar Awards he put himself in the shoes of Carlos Somigliana. The emotional farewell of Víctor Hugo Morales.

Pagina 12

January 26, 2023

 

Actor Claudio Da Passano died Wednesday at age 65, according to the Argentine Association of Actors. With a long career in theater, film and television, one of his last roles was in "Argentina, 1985", the film about the Trial of the Military Juntas that this Tuesday was nominated for the 2023 Oscar Awards. The touching messages of Ricardo Darín, Alejandra Flechner, Peter Lanzani and Víctor Hugo Morales, with whom Da Passano worked throughout his career.

"It is with great sorrow that we bid farewell to actor Claudio Da Passano, who has been a member of our union since 1985. He carried out a wide and outstanding work in theater, film and television, "said from the Argentine Association of Actors, which also sent condolences to his partner, actress Malena Figó.

Born in May 1957, Da Passano had a very long career in the world of acting, especially in the theater, where he worked in more than 30 plays throughout his career, including "Romeo and Juliet", "Toc Toc", "Hamlet and Earthly".

In the cinema, Da Passano gave life to dozens of roles since the 1980s, one of the last was in "Argentina, 1985", where he put himself in the shoes of Carlos Somigliana, the playwright who was part of the team that worked on the investigation with Julio César Strassera and Luis Moreno Ocampo in the trial of the Military Juntas.

"When the dictatorship ended, at the same time I realized that freedom is the absence of fear and being able to go out on the street. We lived ten years terrified, my parents were threatened by Triple A and, later, by the military. They were very hard years and what I aspire to is that the film is the beginning of a great debate that we Argentines owe ourselves so that certain things are not touched, regardless of the political ideology that each one has, "said Da Passano months ago in an interview, after the premiere of "Argentina, 1985".

But in addition, Da Passano worked on films such as "Papá se volvó loco", "Yo nena, yo princesa" and "Abierto día y noche", among many others. On television he also had a long career, where he composed roles in "Amor prohibido", the remembered series "Frecuencia 04", "Los secretos de papá", "Chiquititas", "Poliladron" and "El tigre Verón", among many others.

The message of Ricardo Darín and Peter Lanzani for the death of Claudio Da Passano

Through social networks, actor Ricardo Darín was moved by the death of Da Passano. "Dear Claudio, how can you endure this sadness of having to say goodbye so early? I hope the excitement of celebrating our work will accompany you on this trip... I am destroyed and grateful to have met you, great companion. Until I find my hug again.

Peter Lanzani, who played Luis Moreno Ocampo in "Argentina, 1985," also fired him via social media. "You are going to be missed so much dapa dear. That's how I remember you forever," along with a photo of Da Passano smiling.

For his part, the director of the Oscar-nominated film, Santiago Mitre, also dismissed him on social networks: "Dapa dear. So tipazo, so actorazo. We're going to miss you."

Alejandra Flechner, who played Silvia Strassera in the 2023 Oscar-nominated film, posted via Instagram: "Dapa, always in our hearts and scenarios."

Another actor who fired Da Passano was Felipe Colombo. "It is with great sadness that I have just learned of the very unfortunate death of Claudio Da Passano. I am and will always be so grateful! Admired and loved Claudio!! A huge loss. What immense sadness...", he said on Twitter.

The pain of Victor Hugo Morales

In his AM750 program, Víctor Hugo Morales was dismayed by the death of Da Passano, with whom he had a close relationship, since Da Passano was one of the protagonists of the play "El reproche", which the journalist wrote and premiered in 2022.

"I'm destroyed, I was very young, I had great vitality. You can not understand, it is news that has reached me so deeply, as to everyone, he is a beloved person, adored in the world of theater, recently he was in Cuba with "Terrenal", where he was one of the figures of that work, "added Victor Hugo.

Finally, he recalled the "magnificent moment that the film "Argentina, 1985" lives, where he has an outstanding performance. There is no way to assimilate this news, of course I am bringing my embrace to Malena Figó and the whole family, which is a lifelong theater family, "he concluded.

Da PASSANO, Claudio (Claudio da Passano Gallo)

Born: 5/12/1957, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Died: 1/25/2023, Argentina

 

Claudio Da Passano’s westerns – actor:

Martin Fiero, La Pelicula – 2007 (Salazar)

Gauchito Gil – 2020 (voice)

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

RIP Lance Kerwin

 

Lance Kerwin, ‘Salem’s Lot’ and ‘James at 15’ Actor, Dies at 62

The former child star had roles on such TV series as 'Little House on the Prairie,' 'Gunsmoke' and 'Wonder Woman.'

The Hollywood Reporter

By Ryan Gajewski

January 25, 2023

 

Lance Kerwin, a former child star known for television projects James at 15, Salem’s Lot and The Loneliest Runner, has died. He was 62.

Kerwin died Tuesday morning, according to his daughter Savanah. A cause of death was not given.

In 1976, he starred as the younger version of Michael Landon’s character in NBC’s Landon-directed made-for-TV movie The Loneliest Runner, playing a boy who loves to run. He followed that with the title role in the network’s drama series James at 15 (later known as James at 16) that launched in 1977 and ran for 20 episodes.

Kerwin co-starred alongside David Soul and James Mason in the 1979 television horror miniseries Salem’s Lot, based on Stephen King’s novel of the same name. The project earned three Emmy nominations.

The youngest of five brothers, Kerwin was born in Newport Beach, California, on Nov. 6, 1970.

He also appeared in 1970s episodes of such TV series as Emergency!, Little House on the Prairie, Gunsmoke, Wonder Woman and The Bionic Woman.

Kerwin’s later TV credits included roles in Children of Divorce, Insight, Trapper John, M.D., Simon & Simon, Murder, She Wrote and The New Lassie.

After stepping away from acting in the 1990s, he was working as a pastor in Hawaii. A GoFundMe account was set up in 2021 to raise money for Kerwin as he suffered from health issues, including a back injury.

Kerwin is survived by wife Yvonne and five children, including Savanah. His family plans to announce an after-life ceremony in the near future

KERWIN, Lance (Lance Michael Kerwin)

Born: 11/6/1960, Newport Beach, California, U.S.A.

Died: 1/24/2023, San Clemente, California, U.S.A.

 

Lance Kerwin’s westerns – actor:

Little House on the Prairie (TV) – 1974 (Danny Peters)

The Quest (TV) – 1976 (Braithwhite’s son)

Sara – 1976 (Derek)

Sunday, January 22, 2023

RIP Jiří Machání

 

Cameraman Jiří Machání died at the age of 82

 

CESKE NOVINY

1/21/2023

 

Prague - At the age of 82, cameraman Jiří Machání died on Friday. He has participated in the creation of more than 50 films, including Funeral Party, Day for My Love, The Virgin and the Monster, The Black Barons and The Shadow of the Vanished. His daughter Martina Macháňová informed the Czech News Agency about his death.

Machna's work also involved in series such as The Visitors, The Necklace and Commissioner Maigret. He has worked with Juraj Herz, František Vláčil, Karel Kachyňa, František Filip, Jan Němec and Jan Schmidt. He also worked for many years as a teacher at Prague's FAMU, where he significantly contributed to the formation of the Department of Cinematography.

In 2015, the Association of Czech Cinematographers awarded him the Lifetime Achievement Award. Machání considered his collaboration with Juraj Herz to be the most important part of his work. "We made about 15 movies together, if you add television. We also filmed in Germany or for the French," he told the Czech News Agency during the award ceremony in 2016. According to him, this director had a great vision, they didn't have to talk much and they understood each other. "I just understood his imagination – I hope he was happy too," he added.

Jiří Machání was born in 1940 and twenty-four years later he graduated from the profession of cinematography. At first he worked in the Czechoslovak Army Film and as a second cameraman he participated in Jan Schmidt's gloomy vision The End of August in the Ozon Hotel and in Kachyňa's disillusioning fresco Long Live the Republic. He began his independent work as a cameraman with Schmidt's film The Lanfieri Colony, shot in the Soviet Union during the August invasion of Czechoslovakia. His Funeral Celebration directed by Zdeněk Sirový giving a true picture of the village in the 50s and 60s ended up in the vault, it was not performed until 1990.

MACHANI, Jirí

Born: 12/27/1940, Nové Mesto nad Metují, Czechoslovakia

Died: 1/20/23. Prague, Czech Republic

 

Jiří Machání westerns – cinematographer:

The Claim at Deaf Creek – 1972

David Sandel’s Last Shot – 1972

Friday, January 20, 2023

RIP Wally Campo

 

Echo Vita

January 13, 2023

 

Wallace Joseph Campodonico

APRIL 23, 1923 – JANUARY 14, 2023

We are sad to announce that on January 14, 2023, we had to say goodbye to Wallace Joseph Campodonico of Valley Village, California, born in Stockton, California. You can send your sympathy in the guestbook provided and share it with the family.

He was an actor and director, known for The Little Shop of Horrors (1960), Mark of the Gun (1969) and Shock Corridor (1963).

CAMPO, Wally (Wallace Joseph Campodonico)

Born: 4/23/1923, Stockton, California, U.S.A.

Died: 1/14/2023, Valley Village, California, U.S.A.

 

Wally Campo’s westerns – director, actor:

Warlock – 1959 (barber)

Bat Masterson (TV) – 1961 (Mickey)

Mark of the Gun – 1969 [director]

Thursday, January 19, 2023

RIP David Crosby

 

David Crosby, Byrds and Crosby, Stills & Nash Co-Founder, Dies at 81

 

Variety

By Carmel Dagan

January 19, 2023

 

Singer-songwriter-guitarist David Crosby, a founding member of two popular and enormously influential ’60s rock units, the Byrds and Crosby, Stills & Nash (later Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young), has died. He was 81 years old.

His wife released a statement to Variety, saying, “It is with great sadness after a long illness, that our beloved David (Croz) Crosby has passed away. He was lovingly surrounded by his wife and soulmate Jan and son Django. Although he is no longer here with us, his humanity and kind soul will continue to guide and inspire us. His legacy will continue to live on through his legendary music. Peace, love, and harmony to all who knew David and those he touched. We will miss him dearly. At this time, we respectfully and kindly ask for privacy as we grieve and try to deal with our profound loss. Thank you for the love and prayers.”

With bandmates Roger McGuinn, Gene Clark, Chris Hillman and Michael Clarke, Crosby set down the template for ’60s L.A. folk-rock in the Byrds during his stormy 1964-67 tenure in the group.

Bonding with Stephen Stills of Buffalo Springfield and Graham Nash of the Hollies amid the glitter of L.A.’s late-’60s Laurel Canyon scene, Crosby launched CS&N, whose multi-platinum 1968 debut inaugurated rock’s supergroup era.

The addition of another volatile member, Stills’ erstwhile Buffalo Springfield colleague Neil Young, added to the act’s commercial luster. However, a constant clash of egos within Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, fueled by the rock excesses of the era, toppled the act during the ’70s, though its members would regroup sporadically over the years as a recording and touring unit. Crosby’s most stable association was with Nash: The duo recorded and toured regularly into the new millennium.

While never the principal songwriter in either the Byrds or CSN&Y, Crosby was an integral part of the densely layered harmony front line that launched both those acts’ multiple chart hits.

The hedonistic personification of the ’60s sex-drugs-and-rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle, he grappled with addiction for many years. His sensational 1982 arrest in Texas on drug and weapons charges led to a five-month prison stay in 1986. Wracked by years of cocaine and alcohol abuse, he underwent liver transplant surgery in 1994.

Though he never returned to the popular eminence of his early years, Crosby recorded and toured profitably into the 2000s.

He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice, as a member of the Byrds (1991) and Crosby, Stills & Nash (1997).

Crosby was a child of Hollywood privilege. He was the son of cinematographer Floyd Crosby, who won an Oscar for his work on F.W. Murnau’s 1931 feature “Tabu.” Raised in L.A. and Santa Barbara, he was an indifferent student who gravitated to acting and music at an early age.

Dropping out of Santa Barbara City College to pursue a career in music, he became involved in the commercial folk music scene via brief membership in Les Baxter’s Balladeers, a Limeliters-styled unit organized by the well-known composer-arranger.

He began working the L.A. folk clubs as a solo act; at a set at the Troubadour, his crisp tenor voice attracted the attention of Jim Dickson, the house engineer at Richard Bock’s L.A. label World Pacific Records. Dickson began demoing Crosby as a solo artist, but those sessions ultimately culminated in the formation of a band.

L.A.’s nascent singer-songwriter scene was then coalescing around the Folk Den, the front room at the Santa Monica Boulevard club the Troubadour. One evening in 1964, the headstrong Crosby inserted himself into a jam session involving two well-traveled young folksingers. McGuinn (then known by his birth name, Jim; he soon changed his name to Roger after joining the spiritual movement Subud) had previously worked with the urban folk outfits the Limeliters and the Chad Mitchell Trio, and had met Crosby during a Santa Barbara tour stop by the former act. Clark had been a member of another clean-cut folk act, the New Christy Minstrels.

Though McGuinn was wary of Crosby’s outsized, opinionated personality, he was under the sway of the Beatles and envisioned the formation of a new group; Crosby’s access to free studio time at World Pacific led to first sessions by McGuinn, Crosby and Clark under the collective handle the Jet Set.

Under the name the Beefeaters, the trio issued a flop single on Elektra Records, but soon reformulated themselves as a full-blown rock quintet that reflected the influence of the Beatles’ ’64 debut feature “A Hard Day’s Night.” The lineup was filled out with the addition of neophyte bassist Chris Hillmen, formerly mandolinist with the bluegrass-oriented World Pacific group the Hillmen, and the unskilled but photogenic drummer Michael Clarke.

Rechristened the Byrds in obvious emulation of the Fab Four, the act was signed to Columbia Records in late 1964 on the basis of promotional efforts by Dickson, who was now managing the band. Momentously, the well-connected Dickson urged his act to cover a new song penned by one of his friends, folk star Bob Dylan.

Issued as the Byrds’ first single, the harmony-laden version of Dylan’s “Mr. Tambourine Man” leaped to No. 1 on the U.S. singles chart in early 1965; the eponymous debut album reached No. 6. By that time, the group was the reigning attraction on Hollywood’s Sunset Strip, thanks to a high-profile residency at Ciro’s. For the next two years, Crosby’s group would reign as American pop’s answer to the Beatles, and influence a host of like-styled folk-rock acts. All of their Columbia albums during that period reached the U.S. top 25.

Though Crosby’s pure, soaring voice was a key component of the unit’s sound, he took a back seat as a writer to bandmates McGuinn and Clark, who were responsible for the group’s hit originals. The Crosby-penned singles “Lady Friend” and “Why” failed to catch fire. The departure of the emotionally unsettled Clark from the group in 1966 only served to exacerbate tensions between McGuinn and Crosby.

Strife within the Byrds came to a head in 1967. That June, the band appeared at the historic Monterey Pop Festival in Northern California; the politically outspoken Crosby infuriated McGuinn with some of his onstage remarks, and further enraged his bandmate by sitting in with Buffalo Springfield for most of their set. In a move that could be considered payback, McGuinn vetoed the release of a new Crosby composition, “Triad,” about a sexual ménage a trois; the song would ultimately find a home on “Crown of Creation,” a 1968 album by Crosby’s San Francisco friends Jefferson Airplane.

Finally, in October 1967, McGuinn and Hillman drove their Porsches to Crosby’s Beverly Glen house and fired him from the Byrds.

Amid the then-burgeoning musical colony in L.A.’s idyllic Laurel Canyon, the newly cashiered Crosby began jamming with his friend Stephen Stills, whose L.A.-based band Buffalo Springfield had recently imploded amid internecine strife, and Graham Nash, who had met the other two during a 1966 U.S. tour by his Manchester, England-bred group the Hollies. After a deal brokered by David Geffen freed the three musicians from their outstanding contractual obligations, Crosby, Stills & Nash was signed to Atlantic Records.

The group’s self-titled album was released in May 1969; it sported three notable Crosby compositions – the ballad “Guinnevere” (a love song inspired by his girlfriend Christine Hinton and his ex-paramour Joni Mitchell, who had subsequently entered a relationship with Nash), the apocalyptic “Wooden Ships” (co-written with Stills and Paul Kantner, and covered the same year by Kantner’s group Jefferson Airplane) and the stormy “Long Time Gone.”

The harmonious album vaulted to No. 6 on the U.S. chart, and was ultimately certified for sales of 4 million copies. In August 1969, already ubiquitous on the American airwaves, the group made its second concert appearance – with new member Neil Young in tow – before half a million people at the Woodstock music festival in Bethel, N.Y.

Young’s addition to the lineup, now billed as Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, ramped up the group’s already formidable commercial clout. The superstar quartet’s 1970 album “Déjà Vu” rocketed to No. 1 and ultimately sold 7 million copies; 1971’s “4-Way Street,” a two-LP live set drawn from their subsequent U.S. tour, also claimed the top slot and went quadruple-platinum.

However, Crosby’s personal problems escalated at the height of CSN&Y’s popularity. Already an enthusiastic consumer of cocaine, he turned to heroin after Hinton was killed in a 1970 car accident. Though by no means a stranger to drug use himself, Young was appalled by Crosby’s behavior and the constant tension and disorder within the group, and withdrew to focus on his solo career, though he would return to tour with the other members in 1974.

Despite his eroding condition, Crosby released a 1971 solo debut, “If I Could Only Remember My Name,” which peaked at No. 12 in 1971; he received all-star backing from Nash, Young, Joni Mitchell and members of Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead and Santana.

In 1972, a reunion of the original Byrds lineup of Crosby, McGuinn, Clark, Hillman and Clarke was engineered by David Geffen for his Asylum label, and McGuinn, who had led the act following Crosby’s exit, disbanded the then-current edition of the group. However, while the 1973 release “Byrds” managed to reach No. 20 on the U.S. album chart, the set was largely dismissed critics, and the members went their separate ways. No other new material was ever released under the Byrds’ name.

Graham Nash was Crosby’s reliable partner and stabilizing collaborator through the ’70s: Together they issued the duo recordings “Graham Nash/David Crosby” (No. 4, 1972), “Wind on the Water” (No. 6, 1975) and “Whistling Down the Wire” (No. 26, 1976). However, the pair were odd men out in what began as a 1976 CSN&Y studio reunion: Their vocals were stripped from the project, which was issued as “Long May You Run,” billed to the Stills-Young Band, in 1976.

Nonetheless, CS&N managed to bury the hatchet long enough to record “CSN” (No. 2, 1977) and “Daylight Again” (No. 4, 1982). But Crosby’s personal life unraveled very publicly the year the second album was released.

In April 1982, he was arrested in a Dallas nightclub and charged with possessing a .45-caliber handgun and a pipe he used to freebase cocaine. Convicted in 1983, he finally served five months of a five-year sentence in 1986 – the year after another bust for drunk driving in Northern California. He later credited the Texas conviction for ending his addiction to cocaine. (His run-ins with the law continued in later years. He was convicted and fined for marijuana and firearms possession in 2004. In 2015, he hit a jogger with his car in Santa Ynez, Calif., but was not charged in the incident.)

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young reunited for a performance at Farm Aid in 1985. In 1986, they appeared for the first of seven times as headliners at the Bridge School Concert, a benefit event organized by Neil Young and his then-wife Pegi for a Northern California school serving disabled children.

Crosby maintained his solo career with the albums “Oh Yes I Can” (No. 104, 1989) and “Thousand Roads” (No. 133, 1993). His most unusual collaborative effort, the drolly named CPR, was founded in 1996, after he reunited with his son, pianist James Raymond, who had been born in 1962 and given up for adoption by his mother after a brief relationship with Crosby. The band, which also included guitarist Jeff Pevar, released four independent albums from 1998-2001. Crosby and Nash cut a self-titled duo release in 2004, reaching No. 142.

His last solo recording, “Croz,” was issued in 2014.

Crosby returned to acting during the ’90s with appearances on “The John Larroquette Show” (as the star’s Alcoholics Anonymous sponsor) and “Roseanne” and in the films “Hook” and “Thunderheart.” He also voiced two cartoon cameos on “The Simpsons.”

With Carl Gottlieb, he authored two memoirs, “Long Time Gone” (1988) and “Since Then: How I Survived Everything and Lived to Tell About It” (2007). In 2000 he published “Stand and Be Counted,” a history of activism in music, with David Bender.

Crosby is survived by his wife Jan Dance, their son Django, son James Raymond, and two daughters, Erika and Donovan, from previous relationships. In 2000, it was revealed by singer Melissa Etheridge that Crosby was the biological father of two children born to Etheridge’s then-partner Julie Cypher via artificial insemination.

CROSBY, David (David Van Cortlandt Crosby)

Born: 8/14/1941, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Died: 1/19/2023, U.S.A.

 

David Crosby’s western – actor:

Thunderheart – 1992 (bartender)

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

RIP Joanna Goode

 

Hollywood LA News

January 16, 2023

 

Joanna Goode, 53, Died at a Residence 

Case Number: 2023-00595

Los Angeles County is reporting the death of a 53-year-old female of Caucasian ethnicity that occurred at a residence.

The coroner’s office has identified the woman as Joanna Goode.

Manner and cause of death have yet to be disclosed; the information will be added to this page as soon as it becomes available.

RIP JOANNA GOODE (December 19, 1969 – January 15, 2023)

GOODE, Joanna

Born: 12/20/1963, St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.

Died: 1/15/2023, Los Angeles, California

Joanna Goode’s western – actress:

Palo Pinto Gold – 2009 (Kayla MacIntyre)

RIP Giorgio Mariuzzo

 

DAG/SPIA.com

Marco Giusti for Dagospia

January 18, 2023

The Italian genre cinema loses Giorgio Mariuzzo, 83, director of a series of bizarre films in the 1970s such as the musical "Quelli belli siamo noi" with Maurizio Arcieri, Orchidea De Santis, Loredana Berté, Ric and Gian, the comedian “Orazie Curiazi 3 – 2” with Gianni Agus, Lino Banfi, Gloria Guida, Ines Pellegrini, Elio Pandolfi, the gruesome erotic late western “Apache Woman”, signed by George McRoots with Al Cliver alias Pier Luigi Conti and the fake Indian Yara Kewa alias Clara Hopf, filmed in Viareggio in the Tyrrhenian Sea at Studios, "Mondo porno oggi" and the most recent but no less messy "Andy is Born".

Mariuzzo was also a prolific screenwriter for all kinds of films, from Lucio Fulci's infernal horrors, “E tu vivrai nel terrore. The Afterlife", "That villa next to the cemetery", to the more or less apocryphal Pierini, "Pierino medico della Saub" and "Pierini la peste alla riscossa" by Umberto Lenzi, to the TV series by Giorgio Capitani, his master of cinema, such as “The Restorer” with Lando Buzzanca filmed in 2012.

He had started writing for cinema in the 60s with a series of erotic films directed by Giuliano Biagetti, "Interrabang" with Haydée Politoff, Corrado Pani, Beba Loncar and "La svergognata" with Philippe Leroy and Leonora Fani, "La novizia", to then continue with the sexy comedy, "The Doctor Under the Sheet", "Three Under the Sofa", "The Teacher by the Sea With the Whole Class".

Fundamental was his meeting with Lucio Fulci, for whom he also wrote the TV series dedicated to Franco Franchi "A Man to Laugh". He was also very active in the Rai serial, from "Linda e il brigadiere" to "Il mastino", from "un cane maverick" to "Commesse", working with all the directors of the time, from Sergio Martino, Gianluigi Calderone, Luigi Perelli and Giorgio Capitani, with whom he managed to express a healthy craftsmanship that made him absolutely indispensable.

MARIUZZO, Giorgio

Born: 7/14/1939, Venice, Veneto, Italy

Died: 1/16/2023, Rome, Lazio, Italy

 

Giorgio Mariuzzo’s western – director, writer:

Apache Woman - 1976

RIP Edward R. Pressman

 

Edward R. Pressman Dies: Prolific ‘Wall Street’, ‘American Psycho’ & ‘Badlands’ Producer Was 79

 

DEADLINE

By Greg Evans

January 18, 2023

 

Edward R. Pressman, the prolific Hollywood indie producer behind Wall Street, Badlands, American Psycho, Das Boot and The Crow, among dozens of others, died Tuesday in Los Angeles. He was 79.

His death was confirmed to Deadline his company, Pressman Films.

With dozens of acclaimed and impactful films and TV movies stretching back to the late 1960s and including now-classics like Conan the Barbarian, Talk Radio, Bad Lieutenant and Brian De Palma’s 1972 Sisters, Pressman was noted for discovering talented directors early in their careers. In addition to Sisters he produced De Palma’s Phantom of the Paradise, and, with the acclaimed 1973 TV-movie Badlands, Terrence Malick. Jason Reitman made his directing debut in Pressman’s 2005 Aaron Eckhart starrer Thank You for Smoking.

An early collaboration with Oliver Stone on the 1981 drama The Hand paved the way for Talk Radio (1988) and the 1987 Oscar-winning Wall Street (which included an appearance by Martin Sheen, who had his breakthrough as the sociopathic killer of Badlands). He and Stone produced Kathryn Bigelow’s early film Blue Steel (1990).

Among the other directors with whom Pressman would forge early bonds were Alex Proyas (The Crow), Sylvester Stallone (Paradise Alley) and Sam Raimi (Crimewave).

Among his many other credits both domestic and international, either as producer or executive producer, are Fred Schepisi’s Plenty, starring Meryl Streep; Wolfgang Petersen’s Das Boot; Mary Harron’s American Psycho, with Christian Bale; James Toback’s Two Girls and a Guy; Harold Becker’s City Hall, starring Al Pacino; Danny DeVito’s Hoffa, starring Jack Nicholson; Charles Burnett’s To Sleep With Anger, starring Danny Glover; Barbet Schroeder’s Reversal of Fortune, starring Jeremy Irons in an Oscar-winning performance as Claus von Bülow; and John Frankenheimer’s The Island of Dr. Moreau, with Marlon Brando and Val Kilmer.

Pressman also earned Emmy and PGA Award nom as an executive producer of the 2018 HBO telefilm Paterno, and former longtime Penn State football coach Joe Paterno. The producer also was nominated for back-to-back Indie Spirit Awards in 1992 and ’93 for Homicide and Bad Lieutenant, respectively, and received Film Independent’s John Cassavetes Award in 1991. He also received a Tribute Award from the Gothams in 2003.

A native New Yorker and Stanford University graduate who also studied at the London School of Economics, Pressman has been honored by the French Cinematheque, The National Film Theatre in London, New York’s Museum of Modern Art, the Pacific Film Archives and the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Cinematék, among others.

Pressman is survived by his wife of 39 years, Annie McEnroe Pressman, and son Sam Pressman, who has worked for Edward R. Pressman Productions for the past decade and says he will continue producing films for the company in honor of his father. 

PRESSMAN, Edward R. (Edward Rambach Pressman)

Born: 4/11/1943, New York City, New York, U.S.A.

Died: 1/17/2023, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

Edward R. Oressman’s westerns – producer:

Cherry 2000 – 1987

Walker - 1987

RIP Simone Bär

 

The German Film Academy mourns the loss of casting director Simone Bär

 

Deutsche Filmakademie

1/18/2023

 

The casting of a film resembles a family constellation and Simone Bär was the congenial performer. The 57-year-old casting director Simone Bär died on 16 January 2023 in Berlin.

In her long, diverse casting biography, she has connected many actors and directors and thus very often given us the realization that the perfect casting of a film can change everything. Simone Bär has elevated casting to art, impenetrable for most, shaped by her unique feeling and curiosity about people, about life. She was one of the best judges of human nature in this profession, always looking for a new face, a new inspiration, always ready to throw everything overboard for the perfect group, for the perfect leading role.

So we will soon feel the tension between Bachmann and Frisch in "Ingeborg Bachmann – Reise in die Wüste" by Margarethe von Trotta. Experience whether "All Quiet on the Western Front" by Edward Berger with a stunning, completely new ensemble or "Tár" by Todd Field at the Academy Awards, where the new film by Christian Petzold's "Red Sky" takes us or how "Sisi and I" by Frauke Finsterwalder catches us.

Simone Bär cast "Babylon Berlin" for Tom Tykwer, Henk Handloegten and Achim von Borries, worked repeatedly with Christian Petzold, Matti Geschonneck, Florian Gallenberger, Robert Thalheim and Baran bo Odar and with Sherry Hormann for "Nur eine Frau".

In addition, she was an expert in major international arthouse cinema in collaborations with Stephen Daldry ("The Reader"), Quentin Tarantino ("Inglourious Basterds"), Steven Spielberg ("War Horse"), Jonathan Glazer ("The Zone of Interest"), François Ozon ("Frantz"), Martin Zandvliet ("Land of Mine") and Wes Anderson ("The Grand Budapest Hotel").

At the same time, she accompanied young filmmakers such as Ilker Çatak, Barbara Ott and Philip Koch on their first films with great enthusiasm, incorruptibly interested in the book and the collaboration with the artists.

Above all, the long-term nature of the cooperation, recurring and characterized by absolute trust, was significant. When asked what casting was for her, she replied: "Credibility, that it is coherent, ... for me the characters are tangible, that I am kidnapped, ... They enchant me. You can't generalize, you cast a comedy differently than a drama, but the actors have to convey the script as well as possible."

And she searched for these actors and found them congenial again and again, to find the finest nuances in the cast of the Netflix series "Dark" – to find in dialect adaptations of the older and younger players of a role – was a pleasure for her. Nina Hoss, Sandra Hüller, Paula Beer, Vicky Krieps, Peter Kurth, Christoph Waltz and many, many more have grown with the joint works.

Simone Bär has achieved world fame in her profession due to her precise eye and her high level of competence. She has cast films that have been awarded the most important prizes for their knowledge and feelings, including multiple Oscar winners and nominees, winners of the Golden Globe, the German Film Award, the European Film Award and Grimme winners.

Simone Bär has also been honored several times for this outstanding work, she is the winner of the German Casting Award and multiple winner of the German Acting Award in the field of casting. She has received numerous honours from her colleagues, such as the Angela Award at the Kilkenny Film Festival.

She was a Grimme Prize winner, a member of the American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences as well as the German and European Film Academies.

Simone Bär will remain close to all of us, in the encounters we remember, in the films she worked on. No one will be like them.

BAR, Simone

Born: 1965, Konig’s Wusterhausen, Brandenburg, Germany

Died: 1/16/2023, Berlin, Berlin, Germany

 

Simone Bär’s westerns – script director:

Tom Sawyer - 2011

The Adventures of Huck Finn - 1972

RIP Jorge de Cominges

 

Writer and journalist Jorge de Cominges has died at the age of 78.

 

Social Bites

By Brandon

January 17, 223

 

This Jorge de Cominges, Barcelona-based writer, journalist and film critic. Director of the magazine ‘Qué Leer’ and editor-in-chief of ‘Fotogramas’, Died this Tuesday in the Catalan capital at the age of 78 from a serious illness. Family sources reported.

Openly, De Cominges’ death ‘Fotogramas’ reacted on social networks noting that he is “an important figure in the history of the magazine” and “one of its most beloved members”.

As a writer, he is the author of the novels ‘A carnation between the teeth’ (1989), ‘Tul ilusión’ (1993) or ‘Las Adelfas’ (1997) in which he portrays the high society and ruined characters of Barcelona. ‘A Very Intensive Course’ (1999) is a teen novel that he wrote with his daughter Clara.

His last literary foray was ‘El astonishment’ (2009). A work in which the heroine, the daughter of the Catalan bourgeoisie, rebelled against her social origin by devoting herself to the field of film and theater production during the Transition period, closing the novel “quartet” dedicated to Barcelona. High society.

He also published a book of cinematographic memoirs called ‘My Cinema Years (1976-1979)’. Between description and ‘quality’ (2001) and his autobiography ‘Memories of a stranger’ (2004).

In the presentation of these memoirs, Jorge de Cominges admitted: From my attachment to a bourgeois family, then my work in cinema and then my work in journalism, I have always felt like an outsider, out of place. anyone”.

Born in Barcelona in January 1945, Jorge de Cominges graduated from the University of Barcelona in Law, although he did not practice law and worked as a film technician from 1968-1980.

Since 1976 he has been a film critic for publications such as Destino, El Noticiero Universal and El Periódico de Catalunya.

He joined Fotogramas magazine in 1981, where he served as editor-in-chief until 1996, when he took over the management of the literary magazine ‘Qué Leer’ in 1989.

In 1971 he married journalist Margarita Rivière, a reference to Catalan journalism and died in 2015, and they had two children, Clara and Hugo.

de COMINGES, Jorge (Jorge de Cominges Trías)

Born: 1/?/ 1945, Barcelona, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain

Died: 1/17/1923, Barcelona, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain

 

Jorge de Cominges’ westerns – script supervisor:

Stagecoach of the Condemned – 1970

Twenty Paces to Death (Saranda) - 1970

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

RIP Leon Dubinsky

 

'His music will live on forever': Iconic Cape Breton musician/artist Leon Dubinsky dead at 81

Dubinsky wrote Rise Again; helped create ‘Summertime Review’

 

Saltwire

By Shannon Lee

January 17, 2023

SYDNEY, N.S. - A Cape Breton artist and actor known for creating the unofficial anthem for Cape Breton Island died on Monday.

Leon Dubinsky, who wrote Rise Again, which has become synonymous with the resilience of the people of the island, was 81. 

The Sydney native also played with a popular local band called Buddy and the Boys and was a former artistic director of the Cape Breton Summertime Revue.

Longtime friend Stephen MacDonald described Dubinsky as being very passionate about his work.

“He was very interesting and full of life and full of music,” said MacDonald. “Leon was a brilliant songwriter and a good friend. He was very politically aware.”

Dubinsky grew up on the Esplanade in Sydney and spent his childhood and teen years with other artists. He attended Sydney Academy and co-wrote the All Hail Sydney Academy theme song.

“In the early days he was on the local folk music scene with his brother, Leslie, and they would perform when the coffee houses were big,” recalled MacDonald. “His family were all musical.

“He did a movie way back in the 70s called Life Classes – a Nova Scotia-based movie.”

Dubinsky, who played guitar and keyboard, wrote many popular songs including “One World” and “Oh Love.” He co-wrote All Hail Sydney Academy with Robert Angel and was awarded an honorary degree at Cape Breton University in May of 1997.

“Leon and I have been friends since we met in 1972,” recalled musician Max MacDonald. “We were co-founders of Buddy and the Boys Band, we worked together on Cape Breton Summertime Revue. We worked a lot together.

“It follows right on the heels of our mutual friend Ralph Dillon (who died last month) so it is a lot to process right now.”

Noted Cape Breton photographer Warren Gordon featured Dubinsky in a book.

“I was photographing notable musicians and, of course, I had to have Leon because he was and is an icon,” said Gordon. “That was about 30 years ago.”

“I think Leon was always looked upon as an icon. He was older than the rest of us by quite a bit but he just fit in. He was cool.”

Dubinsky’s work served as inspiration for many local artists and musicians.

“I was one of those kids coming through that was inspired by his music,” said Stephen Muise, who is now the musical director for the Men of the Deeps.

“I don’t think you can find a musician in Cape Breton or the East Coast of Canada who has not been influenced by his music. I think the musical community is going to miss him greatly.

“His music will live on forever.”

Funeral arrangements have not yet been announced.

DUBINSKY, Leon

Born: 7/4/1941, Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada

Died: 1/17/2023, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada

 

Leon Dubinsky’s western – actor:

Pit Pony (TV) – 1999-2000 (Cap McKenzie)

RIP Piers Haggard

 

Piers Haggard, ‘Pennies From Heaven’ Director Who Worked With Liza Minnelli, Dies at 83

 

Variety

By K.J. Yossman

January 17, 2023

 

Director Piers Haggard, best known for his film “Pennies From Heaven” and for establishing directing guild Directors U.K., has died. He was 83.

No cause of death was given but in a statement his agents at Casarotto said he “died peacefully” on Jan. 11. “He is deeply missed by his family, friends, colleagues, and the industry at large,” the statement said.

“[He was] a warm-hearted and generous man, full of energy, whose family was a large part of his life as both a husband, father and grandfather,” the statement continued. “Piers’ other great passion was as a campaigner of the rights of his fellow directors. He was instrumental in helping to create the Directors Guild of Great Britain and Directors and Producers Rights Society, which today form Directors U.K., an organisation Piers remained deeply involved with up until his passing.”

Haggard’s career spanned over five decades and a variety of industries, including film, television and theater. His mini-series “Pennies From Heaven” featured Bob Hoskins as a travelling music salesman and won a BAFTA for Most Original Programme in 1979.. Haggard also worked with stars including Liza Minnelli, Vanessa Redgrave, Helen Mirren and Maureen Lipman.

Haggard was born in London in 1939 to Morna Gillespie and actor, poet and novelist Stephen Haggard. He began his career as an assistant director at the Royal Court and moved into television in 1965, directing shows including the BBC’s “Thirty Minute Theatre.”

He later moved into film, directing features including 1970’s “Wedding Night” and “The Blood on Satan’s Claw.”

Haggard was also integral in the fight for directors to secure rights and recognition, establishing and serving as chairman of the Directors Guild of Great Britain (now Directors U.K.) among other organizations. He finally stepped down from the board of Directors U.K. in 2017.

He also served as vice president and chairman of the Federation of European Film Directors from 2009-2013. He was awarded an OBE in 2016 for services to film, television, and theatre.

Haggard is survived by his four children from his first marriage to Christiane Stokes, his second wife Anna Sklovsky and their two children as well as thirteen grandchildren.

HAGGARD, Piers (Piers Inigo Haggard)

Born: 3/18/1939, London, England, U.K.

Died: 1/11/2023, U.K.

 

Piers Haggard’s western – director:

Four Eyes and Six Guns (TV) - 1992

RIP Gino Landi

 

The choreographer Gino Landi, collaborator of Federico Fellini and Nino Rota, dies

 

Swiss info

January 17, 2023

 

Rome, Jan 17 (EFE) with artists of the stature of Nino Rota and Federico Fellini.

Landi died at his home, where he was receiving treatment for various health problems, according to what his regular collaborator and choreographer Cristina Arrò revealed to the newspaper La Repubblica.

Born in Milan on August 2, 1933, Landi began in the world of dance as a dancer until he decided to dedicate himself to devising choreographies.

His first jobs were with the actor and comedian Fanfulla, but he soon made the leap to the national theater circuit and to Italian television, where he took on the direction of several editions of the Sanremo Festival, the longest running musical event in Europe, precursor to the Eurovision Song Contest.

Landi came to collaborate with icons of Italian culture such as composer Nino Rota, filmmaker Federico Fellini and screenwriter Ennio Flaiano, co-author of the screenplays for "La Dolce Vita" (1960) and "8½" (1963).

In the choreographic section, Landi directed operas such as "Les contes d'Hoffmann" by Offenbach, "La Rondine" by Puccini and "Il mondo della Luna" by Paisiello.

LANDI, Gino (Luigi Gregori)

Born: 8/2/1933, Milan, Lombardy, Italy

Died: 1/17/2023, Rome, Lazio, Italy

 

Gino Landi’s western – choreographer:

Another Try, Eh Providence? - 1973

Monday, January 16, 2023

RIP Brian Tufano

 

British cinematographer Brian Tufano who shot Trainspotting, Billy Elliot, Quadrophenia and Kidulthood dies aged 83 as BAFTA lead tributes

 

The Daily Mail

By Harry Howard

January 16, 2023

 

The British cinematographer behind films including Trainspotting, Kidulthood and Billy Elliot has died aged 83.

Film industry veteran Brian Tufano had a 50-year career that saw him work on dozens of productions, which also included Blade Runner, East is East and Quadrophenia. 

He was described by the Daily Mail in 1977 as the 'most celebrated TV cameraman in Britain'.

Leading tributes, Bafta Scotland said: 'We are saddened by this news - Cinematographer Brian Tufano shot some of Scotland's most iconic films: Trainspotting, Shallow Grave and Late Night Shopping.'

Quadrophenia's director, Frank Roddam, told MailOnline that Tufano was a 'brilliant' and 'lovely' man who brought 'great experience'. 

Announcing news of his passing on Twitter today, Tufano's former colleague at the UK's National Film and Television School said: 'Very sorry to have to share that Cinematography legend and former @NFTSFilmTV Head of Department Brian Tufano has died.

'He shot so many amazing films and did so much to champion new talent, in particular female DPs. We loved him and will REALLY miss him.'

Fim producer Jessica Levick said: 'So sorry to hear this and love to all his family. If there was one person I was in total awe of at @NFTSFilmTV when I was there, it was Brian Tufano, for DPing some of my absolute favourite films so brilliantly.

'He was amazing.'

Filmmaker Chris Atkins said: 'Brian Tufano shot Trainspotting and was a titan of cinematography, sorely missed.'

Born in Shepherd's Bush, West London, in 1939, Tufano entered the film industry in 1956 as a pageboy at Lime Grove Studios.

He then embarked on an apprenticeship at the BBC and went on to spend more than 20 years working with directors including Ken Loach and Stephen Frears.

Tufano's first prominent film role came on Quadrophenia, which was released in 1979 and became a cult classic.

The film is set during the violent era of rivalry between 'Mods' and Rockers'.

Quadrophenia's director Mr Roddam told MailOnline: 'When I did my first ever film at the BBC, a documentary, there was a system where you had a pool of cameramen.

'You could get very unlucky and get a terrible one. There were certain stars in the group and Brian was one of those. He was much revered.

'On my first documentary, I got him. Years later, I pulled him out of the BBC to make Quadrophenia.'

He added: 'He brought great experience. He was a very experienced cameraman. He was a bit of a classicist.

'It is very important to maintain a tone when you're making a film, he was a very good moderator of the tone.

'We had that language between us.

'He would have a clear memory of the transitions. A brilliant man. And a lovely man to work with.'

The cinematographer went on to form a fruitful partnership with director Danny Boyle, working on four films with him.

The first - Shallow Grave - was released in 1994 and starred Ewan McGregor, Christopher Eccleston and Kerry Fox. 

Trainspotting, which was released two years later, proved to be another classic, with McGregor starring as Mark Renton.

Tufano then worked with Boyle on A Life Less Ordinary - released in 1997 - and Alien Love Triangle, which hit cinemas in 2008.

Earlier in his career, he worked as a photographer on 1982 film Blade Runner, which received rave reviews from critics and viewers.

Billy Elliot, released in 2000, made star Jamie Bell a household name and netted Tufano the Television Craft award from Bafta.

The film was also nominated for the Best Cinematography award.

For the last decade, Tufano has been semi-retired, with his last credit coming on Gymnast, a documentary that followed the British gymnastics athletes who went to the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.

TUFANO, Brian

Born: 1939, Shepard’s Bush, West London, England, U.K.

Died: 1/16/2023, U.K.

 

Brian Tufano’s western – cinematographer:

War Party - 1988