Thursday, April 27, 2023

RIP Ramiro Oliveros

 

Ramiro Oliveros, widower of Concha Márquez Piquer, dies at the age of 82

Sportsfinding

By Chris Lawrence

April 27, 2023

 

Ramiro Oliveros widower of Concha Marquez Piquer, died this Wednesday at his home in Pozuelo Alarcón at the age of 82. The actor had serious health problems in recent years that worsened considerably after the death of his wife, in 2021, whom he said goodbye to in tears and confined to a wheelchair.

Ramiro has been admitted several times in recent months due to lung problems. In October, in addition, he suffered a myocardial infarction. His daughter Iris has confirmed the fatal news to ABC: “It was a multi-organ failure. My father was in a lot of pain, due to his lungs, a foot ulcer due to circulation problems, his heart… Since my mother left, it has not gotten better, quite the opposite,” he lamented. “The wake will be in the Sacramental of San Isidro and on Saturday the burial. My father will rest with my mother forever,” he said.

OLIVEROS, Ramiro (Ramiro Oliveros Fernández)

Born: 3/13/1941, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

Died: 4/26/2023, Pozuelo Alarcón, Madrid, Spain

 

Ramiro Oliveros’ western – actor:

Yellow Hair and the Fortress of Gold – 1984 (Tortuga)

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

RIP Frank Agrama

 

Frank Agrama, Founder and Chairman of Harmony Gold, Dies at 93

Variety

By McKinley Franklin

April 26, 2023

 

Frank Agrama, founder and chairman of Harmony Gold, died on Tuesday. He was 93.

Agrama’s career as an entertainment pioneer saw him founding several production companies including the Film Association of Rome and then Harmony Gold, which launched television series such as “Shaka Zulu” and “Robotech.”

He was born on Jan. 1, 1930, and became a child actor in Egypt with his own TV series. While his father was the Surgeon General of Egypt, Agrama initially followed in his father’s footsteps by acquiring a degree in medicine and surgery from the University of Cairo. By the time he was 23 years old, Agrama was a medical doctor.

Agrama left his medical career to pursue his passion for entertainment production, obtaining a Bachelor of Theater Arts from UCLA. He then moved back to the Middle East in 1964 where he would go on to help establish Lebanon’s movie industry.

Agrama then moved to Italy with his family where he founded the theatrical production and distribution company Film Association of Rome. After nine years in Italy, he moved back to the States where he shifted his focus in the industry from film to TV — founding the production company Harmony Gold in 1983.

Harmony Gold played an integral role in the production, acquisition, and distribution of international TV programming. Under its first year of operation, the company launched “Shaka Zulu,” one of the most successful first-run syndicated miniseries in TV history. The company went on to launch “Robotech,” the 1985 Japanese anime franchise that Sony Pictures is set to produce as a full-length live action feature with Mark Canton and Gianni Nunnari producing.

Agrama is survived by his wife; Olfet, his son; Ahmed Agrama (Lena), his daughter; Jehan Agrama (Dwora Fried), his brother; Hani Agrama (Roberta), his sister; Amina Ramzy and his grandchildren; Maya, Natasha, Frankie, Anjoum Anissa, Tayo and Marli.

Donations may be made to Doctors Without Borders, World Central Kitchen or the L.A. Mission.

AGRAMA, Frank (Farouk Agrama)

Born: 1/1/1930, El-Arish, North Sinai, Egypt

Died: 4/25/2023, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

Frank Agrama’s western – assistant director:

The Host - 2000

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

RIP Harry Belafonte

 

Harry Belafonte, Calypso King Who Worked for African American Rights, Dies at 96

Variety

By Chris Morris

April 25, 2023

 

Singer, actor, producer and activist Harry Belafonte, who spawned a calypso craze in the U.S. with his music and blazed new trails for African American performers, died Tuesday of congestive heart failure at his Manhattan home. He was 96.

An award-winning Broadway performer and a versatile recording and concert star of the ’50s, the lithe, handsome Belafonte became one of the first Black leading men in Hollywood. He later branched into production work on theatrical films and telepics.

As his career stretched into the new millennium, his commitment to social causes never took a back seat to his professional work.

An intimate of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Belafonte was an important voice in the ’60s civil rights movement, and he later embarked on charitable activities on behalf of underdeveloped African nations. He was an outspoken opponent of South Africa’s apartheid policies.

Among the most honored performers of his era, Belafonte won two Grammy Awards (and the Recording Academy’s Lifetime Achievement Award in 2000), a Tony and an Emmy. He also received the Motion Picture Academy’s Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award at the Governors Awards ceremony in 2014.

Harold George Belafonte Jr. was born in New York but was sent to live with his grandmother in Jamaica at age 5, returning to attend high school in New York. But Jamaica’s indigenous calypso and mento would supply crucial material for his early musical repertoire.

After serving in the war, Belafonte gravitated to the New York theatrical scene. An early mentor was the famed Black actor, singer and activist Paul Robeson. He studied acting with Erwin Piscator and attended Broadway shows — on a single ticket he would hand off at intermission — with another struggling young actor, Sidney Poitier. Like Poitier, he performed at Harlem’s American Negro Theater.

Belafonte first made his mark, however, as a nightclub singer. Initially working in a pop and jazz vein, Belafonte began his singing career at New York’s Royal Roost and made his recording debut in 1949 on Roost Records. He soon developed a growing interest in American folk music.

A national tour and dates at New York’s Village Vanguard and Blue Angel followed. A scout for MGM spotted him at the latter venue and, following a screen test, Belafonte secured a role opposite Dorothy Dandridge in “Bright Road” (1953).

The same year, Belafonte made his Rialto debut in the revue “John Murray Anderson’s Almanac,” for which he received the Tony for best performance by a featured actor in a musical.

Ironically, while Belafonte was cast as a lead in Otto Preminger’s 1954 musical “Carmen Jones” — based on Oscar Hammerstein II’s Broadway adaptation of Bizet’s opera “Carmen” — his singing voice was dubbed by opera singer LeVern Hutcherson. Belafonte would soon explode in his own right as a pop singer.

He made his RCA Records debut in 1954 with “Mark Twain and Other Folk Favorites”; he had performed the titular folk song with his guitarist Millard Thomas in his Tony-winning Broadway turn. The 1956 LP “Belafonte,” featuring a similar folk repertoire, spent six weeks at No. 1.

Those collections were a mere warm-up to “Calypso.” The 1956 album sparked a nationwide calypso craze, spent a staggering 31 weeks at No. 1 and remains one of the four longest-running chart-toppers in history. It spawned Belafonte’s signature hit, “Banana Boat Song (Day-O),” which topped the singles chart for five weeks. A parody of that ubiquitous number by Stan Freberg reached No. 25 in 1957. Director Tim Burton employed the tune to bright effect in his 1988 comedy “Beetlejuice.”

Belafonte would cut five more top-five albums — including two live sets recorded at Carnegie Hall — through 1961. His 1960 collection “Swing Dat Hammer” received a Grammy as best ethnic or traditional folk album; he scored the same award for 1965’s “An Evening With Belafonte/Makeba,” a collaboration with South African folk artist Miriam Makeba.

He also supplied early employment for a future folk icon: His 1962 album “Midnight Special” featured harmonica work by Bob Dylan.

A frequent guest on TV variety shows, Belafonte became the first Black performer to garner an Emmy with his 1959 special “Tonight With Belafonte.”

Belafonte made his first steps into film production with two features he toplined: end-of-the-world drama “The World, the Flesh, and the Devil” (1959) and the heist picture “Odds Against Tomorrow” (1960). However, discontent with the roles he was being offered, he would remain absent from the big screen for the remainder of the ’60s and busied himself with recording and international touring as his involvement in the civil rights movement deepened.

Closely associated with clergyman-activist King, Belafonte provided financial support to the civil rights leader and his family. He also funded the Freedom Riders and the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee and was a key figure in the organization of the historic March on Washington of August 1963.

The racial tumult of the ’60s hit close to home: In 1968 he became the center of a furor when he appeared as a guest star on an NBC special hosted by British pop singer Petula Clark. During a performance of an anti-war ballad, Clark clutched Belafonte’s arm. Doyle Lott, VP for sponsor Chrysler-Plymouth, was present at the taping and demanded the number be excised, saying the “interracial touching” might offend Southern viewers. But Clark, who owned the show, put her foot down and the show aired as recorded, while exec Lott was fired by the automaker.

Belafonte returned to feature films in 1970 in the whimsical “The Angel Levine” alongside Zero Mostel. He co-starred with old friend Poitier in the comedies “Buck and the Preacher” (1972) and “Uptown Saturday Night” (1974), both directed by Poitier.

His acting appearances would be sporadic for the remainder of his career. Notably, he appeared opposite John Travolta in “White Man’s Burden” (1995), an alternate-universe fantasy-drama about racism; Robert Altman’s ensemble period drama “Kansas City” (1996); and “Bobby” (2006), Emilio Estevez’s account of Sen. Robert Kennedy’s 1968 assassination.

In 1985, Belafonte’s activism and musicianship intertwined when he helped organize the recording session for “We Are the World,” the all-star benefit single devoted to alleviating African famine. His appearance on that huge hit led to “Paradise in Gazankulu” (1988), his first studio recording in more than 10 years.

His latter-day production work included the 1984 hip-hop drama “Beat Street” and the 2000 miniseries “Parting the Waters,” based on historian Taylor Branch’s biography of Martin Luther King Jr.

In 2002, “The Long Road to Freedom: An Anthology of Black Music,” an immense collection of African and African-American music recorded and compiled by Belafonte over the course of a decade and originally set for release by RCA in the ’70s, was finally released as a five-CD set on Universal’s Buddha imprint. It garnered three Grammy nominations.

In later years, Belafonte remained as outspoken as ever, and his views sometimes courted controversy. He was a foe of South African apartheid, opposed the U.S.’s Cuban embargo and denounced George W. Bush’s military incursion into Iraq.

Belafonte was the son of a Jamaican housekeeper and a Martiniquan chef, spending the early and late parts of his childhood in Harlem but the crucial middle period in Jamaica. He enlisted in the Navy in 1944; during his service, he encountered the writing of W.E.B. DuBois, co-founder of the NAACP and a key influence.

He was accorded the Kennedy Center Honor in 1989 and the National Medal of the Arts in 1994.

Belafonte published his memoir “My Song,” written with Michael Shnayerson, in 2011. Susanne Rostock’s biographical documentary “Sing Your Song” was released in early 2012.

He is survived by his third wife Pamela; daughters Shari, Adrienne and Gina; son David; stepchildren Sarah and Lindsey; and eight grandchildren.

BELAFONTE, Harry (Harold George Belafonte Jr.)

Born: 3/1/1927, Harlem, New York, U.S.A.

Died: 4/25/2023, New York City, New York, U.S.A.

 

Harry Belafonte’s western – producer, actor:

Buck and the Preacher – 1972 (Preacher) [producer]

Monday, April 24, 2023

RIP Fumio Demura


 Fumio Demura, Well-known Karate and Martial Arts Icon has died

RIP: What happened to Fumio Demura? Learn more about his death and obituary

SNBC

By Michael Scott

April 24, 2023

 

Fumio Demura Death – Japanese Karate and Martial Arts master, Fumio Demura has sadly passed away. He was confirmed dead on Monday, the 24th of April 2023. The news of his death has lef to many saddened and heartbroken. He was regarded as a legend in the USA karate scene, He was best known as the karate double for Mr Miyagi in the Karate kids films.

Who was Fumio Demura?

Fumio Demura was Karate and Martial Arts legend who is considered a pioneer of the arts. He was known as on who practiced the Shito Ryu Karate and Okinawan Kobudo. Over the decades, Fumio has been regarded as an awesome practitioner, teacher, and involved in many movies. He is often also referred to as “The Sensei” meaning teacher.  He was born on September 15, 1938.

“He was Pat Morita’s martial arts stunt double in the first, third and fourth Karate Kid films (and the inspiration for “Mr. Miyagi”). Demura Sensei held the rank of 9th dan in Shitō-ryū karate. You will be missed Sensei.” – Emerald Coast Martial Arts Academy

What happened to Fumio Demura?

At the time of this publication, the circumstances surrounding Fumio Demura’s passing including his precise cause of death is yet to be revealed. The public will be updated as soon as this piece of information is yet to be revealed. Many have expressed their sincere condolences with the family and loved ones of Fumi since the news of his death surfaced earlier today.

Fumio Demura obituary and funeral arrangements will be released by his family at a later date.

DEMURA, Fumio

Born: 9/15/1938, Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan

Died: 4/24/2023, Santa Ana, California, U.S.A.

 

Fumio Demura’s western – actor:

Walker, Texas Ranger (TV) – 2000 (crime boss henchman)

RIP Karin Gregorek

 

81 years: “For heaven’s sake” actress Karin Gregorek dead

News in Germany

By Armin Weigel

April 24, 2023

 

Karin Gregorek became an actress by chance. After a career in East German film and television, a nun was her trademark in reunified Germany. Now she died.

The film and television actress Karin Gregorek is dead. As the German Press Agency learned from Gregorek’s environment on Monday, she died in the night from Friday to Saturday in Berlin. She was 81 years old.

Gregorek often appeared in supporting TV roles. The Berliner was known to a broad television audience as nun Felicitas Meier from the ARD ratings hit “For heaven’s sake” (2002-2021). She was also very often in the ZDF family series “Tierarzt Dr. Engel” and also appeared in the ARD thrillers “Polizeiruf 110” and “Tatort”.

Her career

Gregorek came to her profession as an actress more by chance, as she said in an interview: “As a friend to audition for acting school Berlin drove, I just came along. I was accepted, my girlfriend wasn’t,” she told the pharmacy magazine “Senioren Ratgeber” in 2019. At the time, her parents didn’t go down well with her career aspirations.

The actress, who was born in Mecklenburg, was already in theatre, film and television during the GDR era TV successful. She had her first screen role in 1963 in the Defa film “Christine”, which was never completed due to the death of director Slatan Dudow during filming.

In the decades that followed, she was repeatedly in film and television productions defa and the DFF. As head nurse Walburga in Lothar Warneke’s drama “One carries the other’s load…” she received the award in the category “Best Supporting Actress” at the National Feature Film Festival of the GDR in 1988.

an era

Her biggest hit with the public, with more than seven million viewers at times, was the long-running hit “Um Himmels Willen”, in which Gregorek has been involved since 2002. Felicitas Meier, the deputy superior of the Magdalen Order, was popular with various weaknesses: among other things, for tobacco, computer games, chocolate and poker.

When Gregorek agreed to play the nun in the ARD series, the habit also played a role for her: “I thought it would be faster in the make-up and wardrobe.” A mistake: the nuns would of course still be thoroughly made up. Despite the costume, she was recognized on the street. “It’s strange.”

GREGOREK, Karin

Born: 9/26/1941, Wendorf, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany

Died: 4/22/2023, Berlin, Berlin, Germany

 

Karin Gregorek’s western – actress:

Death for Zapata – 1979 (Frau Carlota)

Saturday, April 22, 2023

RIP Gavin Peretti

 

Facebook

By Julie Brant Peretti, Evan Peretti

4/21/2023

 

We are deeply saddened to inform everyone that we lost our dear son and brother, Gavin on April 18th.  Our bright, imaginative "rising star" has brought so much joy, happiness and love to all who knew him.

Although our hearts are grieving, they are filled overwhelmingly with more love and positive memories that could ever be imagined.  Gavin will always be cherished beyond measure and missed every single day.  We love you dear boy.

Gavin Peretti was born on June 12, 1983, in Silver Spring, Maryland, U.S.A. Gavin grew up in Germantown, Maryland and graduated from Seneca Valley High School in 2001. He then attended Wesley Institute for the Arts in Sydney, Australia in 2004, where he studied Acting, Producing, and Arts Management. Returned from Austrailia in November of 2004 and graduated from Eastern University in May 2005. Peretti then worked as an actor and assistant director, known for “Desperate Waters” (2019), “Author: Unknown and The Red Tide Massacre” (2022).

He died on April 18, 2023, in Los Angeles County, California, USA.

PERETTI, Gavin (Gavin Philip Peretti)

Born: 6/12/1983, Silver Springs, Marryland, U.S.A.

Died: 4/18/2023, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

Gavin Peretti’s western – actor:

Sherman’s March – 2007 (hanged man)

RIP Sylvain Lemarié

 

One Piece in mourning: Luffy's anime and his crew loses one of its iconic voices

PUREBREAK

By Quentin Piton

4/20/2023

 

It is a sad news that we have just learned: the anime One Piece - adapted from the manga of Eiichiro Oda whose chapter 1081 is expected by fans, says goodbye to one of its emblematic voices. Sylvain Lemarié - actor specializing in dubbing in France, died this week at the age of 70.

The dubbing world is in mourning. A few weeks after the disappearance of Marion Game (Malcolm, Desperate Housewives...), it is the actor Sylvain Lemarié who has just left us at the age of 70. His name may not ring a bell but know that his voice has carried you through many projects, starting with One Piece.

An essential voice of animation

And for good reason, the French actor was behind two mythical characters from the adventures of Luffy in the anime adapted from Eiichiro Oda’s manga: Jinbei – the helmsman of the Straw Hat Crew, but also Magra – a member of the Dadan Family. Sad news for fans of the first hour, even if the most attentive will have noticed that Sylvain Lemarié had left his place along the way to Michel de Warzée.

But Sylvain Lemarié’s voxography was not limited to this essential Japanese series. Also in the field of Asian animation, he was behind Sig Curtis in Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood and Hol Horse in JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure. On the side of Western works, we could see him slip into the skin of the brilliant Java of Martin Mystère, Nute Gunray of Star Wars: The Clone Wars or Gunmar in Troll Hunters.

A talent present everywhere

Regarding the series, the actor also hid behind the voices of many mythical characters, starting with Captain Roy Montgomery of Castle (Ruben Santiago-Hudson), Commander Acastus Kolya in Stargate Atlantis (Robert Davi), Bobby Elvis in Sons of Anarchy (Mark Boone Junior) but also King Aelle of Northumbria in Vikings (Ivan Kaye). A perfect filmography.

Finally, the one who was one of the regular voices of Ron Perlman (Blade 2, Alien, the resurrection) or Jonathan Frakes (Star Trek) in the cinema, also made his voice talent speak in the world of video games. Yes, he was in the cast of Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002) with Hagrid, from Sly 2: Association of Thieves (2004) as King Master Rajan, Assassin's Creed (2007) with the role of William of Montferrat as well as The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild (2017) with the Mojo Tree and Blacksad: Under the Skin (2019) with Frank Cassidy and Wilson.

In 50 years of career, Sylvain Lemarié has accompanied us and made us dream absolutely everywhere and it is an understatement to say that his emblematic voice will be missed.

LEMARIE, Sylvain

Born: 9/2/1952, France

Died: 4/20/2023, France

 

Sylvain Lemarié’s westerns – voice actor:

Asterix in America – 1994 [French voice of chef]

Buffalo Girls (TV) – 1995 [French voice of Peter Coyote]

Postman – 1997 [French voice of James Russo]

Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron – 2002 [French voice of railway employee]

Django Unchained – 2012 [French voice of James Remar]

Friday, April 21, 2023

RIP Rita Lakin

 

Rookies’ and ‘Flamingo Road,’ Dies at 93

One of television's first showrunners, she also wrote for 'Dr. Kildare,' 'Peyton Place,' 'Mod Squad' and 'Medical Center' and had a long association with producer Aaron Spelling.

The Hollywood Rpeorter

By Mike Barnes

April 21, 2023

 

Rita Lakin, the boundary-pushing TV writer and showrunner who worked on Peyton Place, The Doctors and Mod Squad and created series including The Rookies and Flamingo Road, has died. She was 93.

Lakin died March 23 of natural causes at an assisted living facility in Novato, California, her son, writer-producer Howard Lakin, told The Hollywood Reporter. “Before her, they hadn’t thought about writing television from a woman’s point of view,” he noted.

Lakin also penned a groundbreaking 1975 episode of CBS’ Medical Center centered on a transgender character; served as a showrunner/executive producer on the 1976-77 CBS drama Executive Suite; and wrote such popular telefilms as 1971’s Death Takes a Holiday and 1973’s Message to My Daughter and A Summer Without Boys.

After she met some people from Texas whom she didn’t like, she rejected an offer in 1978 to create the pilot for a show about an oil family in the Lone Star State. That series, of course, was CBS’ Dallas. “They were fortunate I turned it down,” she told Adrienne Faillace during a 2017 chat for the TV Academy Foundation website The Interviews.

Lakin began a long association with producer Aaron Spelling in 1969 when she was a story editor and writer for two seasons on his hit ABC drama Mod Squad, about three young undercover cops played by Clarence Williams III, Peggy Lipton and Michael Cole.

Three years later, she arrived at his office to pitch him on a movie and learned he was desperately struggling to come up with a new show for ABC — and that his deadline was 15 minutes away.

“Unbelievably, I opened my mouth and said, ‘Why don’t you give them Mod Squad all over again?'” she recalled. “I’m making this up as I go along. I said why don’t you do something called The Rookies? Instead of having boy cops in the field, you have boys becoming cops. That might work.

“He dashes over to the phone, calls up ABC and says, ‘I think I have the show. It’s called The Rookies.’ … He’s pitching this and I’m saying to him, ‘Yeah, it’s the life of these guys and their girlfriends and their wives and what happens to them’ … I’m throwing this out to him and he’s repeating every word. He hangs up the phone and says, ‘It’s sold’ [and] ‘I’m now going to make you rich.'”

Lakin received creator credit for The Rookies, which starred Georg Stanford Brown, Michael Ontkean, Sam Melville, Kate Jackson and Gerald S. O’Loughlin, but did not have anything to do with the series once it was greenlighted. It ran four seasons, from 1972-76.

She developed the 1980-82 NBC primetime soap Flamingo Road, starring Morgan Fairchild, Howard Duff and Stella Stevens, from a 1942 novel and became its showrunner before that was even a term.

“They hired me because they wanted me to run the show and make it succeed,” she said. “Before that, the attitude toward writers was keep them as far away from the set as you possible could because they’re going to want to change everything.”

The older of two sisters, Rita Weisinger was born in the Bronx on Jan. 24, 1930. Her father, David, was a plumber and her mother, Gladdy, a housewife. As a youngster, she loved reading and “lived at the library,” she said.

She attended Hunter College with the goal of becoming a teacher but started writing short stories and sold her first one to Manhunt magazine as R.W. Lakin, using that byline because she was told no one would buy an action-adventure yarn from a woman.

When her husband, Hank, a nuclear physicist, landed a job in Simi Valley, they came west, but he died suddenly from leukemia in 1961, and she was left with three young children and no money at age 30. (Her son said the family learned about the cause of his illness — from radiation poisoning on the job — just a few years ago.)

“I didn’t want to work at Woolworths, I didn’t know what to do, and I was also grieving,” she said. “I went to all the movie studios, and I did get a job at Universal as a secretary.” Even though she could type only six words a minute and did not know shorthand, she played “the widow’s card” to get hired, she revealed in 2016.

Her bosses would become future Paramount and Universal studio chief Ned Tanen and Dale Sheets, later a top personal manager in Hollywood.

Lakin bought a book, Teleplay, to learn how to write a script after hearing she could make hundreds of dollars on one and sold a story about a woman with kids who becomes widowed to NBC’s Dr. Kildare. It would become a 1964 episode that was directed by Sydney Pollack and featured Ronnie Howard of The Andy Griffith Show.

After writing for Daniel Boone, The Virginian and Bob Hope’s Chrysler Theater, she got her first staff writing position, on Peyton Place. She spent two seasons (1965-66) on the ABC primetime soap, which aired three half-hour episodes a week during her stay there.

On that show — the best job she ever had, she said — the staffers wrote scenes, not entire scripts, and “came up with a style that worked for everybody.” (She returned 20 years later for the telefilm Peyton Place: The Next Generation.)

She said that when she was starting out, only about 40 of the 1,000 or so screenwriters in television were women, and more than half of them worked with their husbands.

Seizing an opportunity to come home, Lakin joined the New York-based NBC soap The Doctors, where she knocked out scripts for five shows a week from 1967-69, departing with the serial No. 1 in the daytime ratings.

In the ’70s, she began to pitch her own ideas — “I was able to write about things that were important and nobody stopped me; in fact, they said, ‘Go ahead, do it,'” she indicated. One notable effort became a season-opening, two-part episode for the issues-oriented Medical Center about a surgeon (Robert Reed) who wants gender-reassignment surgery.

Her résumé also included installments of Run for Your Life, The Invaders and her only sitcom, Family Affair. Those comedies “were stupid, and they wanted stupid people to say stupid things at all times. I didn’t want to do that,” she said.

In addition to Mod Squad and The Rookies, Lakin worked with Spelling on the highly rated 1972 telefilm Women in Chains, starring Ida Lupino; as a staff writer for a season of ABC’s Dynasty in 1987; and as a co-creator of the 1989 NBC medical drama Nightingales. It would be her last TV gig.

After the 1988 WGA strike, she said the studios “got rid of every writer who made too much money, and I was on that list. I couldn’t get a job after that.” She was told that she was too old.

Spelling, she said, “had one idea that he carried through all the time: gorgeous women and gorgeous men looking gorgeous and doing exciting things. Show after show after show, that’s what he did.”

Her autobiography, The Only Woman in the Room, was published in 2015. She also wrote nine “Getting Old Is … ” mystery novels that centered on a 75-year private detective in Fort Lauderdale named Gladdy Gold and a 2021 romantic comedy, Prince Charming, Go Home.

Her son noted that she mentored “a ton of people” during her career and was “a real pistol. She was very social and loved to be out there in the world.”

In addition to Howard — a writer and/or producer on shows including Dallas, Falcon Crest and Flamingo Road and one of the creators of Nightingales with his mom — survivors include her other children, Gavin and Susanne, and her grandchildren, Alison and James.

LAKIN, Rita (Rita Weisinger)

Born: 1/24/1930, Bronx, New York, U.S.A.

Died: 3/23/2023, Novato, California, U.S.A.

 

Rita Lakin’s westerns – writer:

Daniel Boone (TV) – 1965

The Virginian (TV) - 1965

RIP Jesús Barreda

 

La Razon

4/21/2023

 

Voice actor Jesús Barreda (Cat Noir) dies at age 60

He was known for his voices as Cat Noir in "LadyBug", Panda in "Somos Osos", Capheus in "Sense8" and Carlos in "The Crown".

 

This Friday we knew the sad news of the death of dubbing actor Jesús Barreda. They have been his colleagues from Adoma (Union of Dubbing Artists of Madrid) incharge of communicating his death and the first condolences.

"Comrades, with all the pain of our heart we have to inform you that our beloved Jesus Barreda has died. All our love to his family and friends. Always in our hearts and in that of the characters you gave life to. Rest in peace 🌹." With these words his colleagues said goodbye to the dubbing actor who for more than 25 years has put the Spanish voice to countless voices of series and video games.

Perhaps his best-known work was the voice of Cat Noir in the French animated series "LadyBug". But his professional work extends to many more areas and was the voice of Eddie Redmayne in "The fate of Jupiter", "Lego Dimensions", the series of "The pillars of the Earth", "The Crown" (as Carlos) or the miniseries "Tess, that of the d'Urberville".

"Quantum", "Glee", "Scandal", "Shameless" or "Rugrats", are among his hundreds of works in television, but he stood out notoriously in the world of video games. Among the titles he voiced are "Quake 4", "Doom 3", 'Borderlands', 'Resident Evil' or "Gears of War". Fans of his work did not hesitate to comment on their social networks their passion for his work: "One of the most unforgettable voices of this country, eternal youth made voice ... Characters like Peter Parker, Pops, Panda or Chat Noir had a great personality in Spain for being their soul behind a lectern. Thank you for everything, Jesus, we will miss you so much."

Among the condolences is that of Thomas Astruc, the creator of the "LadyBug" series: "I am devastated to learn that @BarredaJesus is no longer with us. I had the privilege of meeting him in Seville years ago. Cat Noir loses one of his best voices, and the world a super sweet guy. Rest in peace, friend."

On November 10, 2022, he confirmed the worst of the news: "The worst news...... But we're going to start the fight against cancer next week. A Barreda does not give up so easily. And we will continue to work, of course."

BARREDA, Jesús

Born: 3/11/1963, Spain

Died: 4/21/2023, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

 

Jesús Barreda’s westerns – voice dubber:

The Broken Star – 1956 (Henry Calvin, Felipe Turich (?))

Wynona Earp (TV) – 2017 (Sam Duke)

Thursday, April 20, 2023

RIP Carol Locatell

 

Carol Locatell, Friday the 13th Part V: A New Beginning's foul-mouthed Ethel Hubbard, dies at 82

The actress was remembered by Ron Sloan, who portrayed her son in the 1985 horror film, as a "wonderful, brilliant actress [slash] mom."

ENTERTAINMENT

By Emlyn Travis

April 19, 2023

 

Carol Locatell, the actress best known for her fiery performance as no-nonsense, foul-mouthed mom Ethel Hubbard in Friday the 13th Part V: A New Beginning, has died. She was 82.

Her longtime agent, Peter Strain, shared a statement on behalf of Locatell's family with EW. "Carol Locatell past away last week from cancer," he wrote. "She was a wonderfully versatile actress whose career spanned decades on Broadway and in Feature Films and Television. She was surrounded by her husband of many years and close friends."

Ron Sloan, who played Locatell's son Junior in the horror flick, mourned the loss of his costar in a poignant Facebook statement on Monday.

"Dearest friends, fans, and Horror family, with great sadness, it breaks my heart to announce that my Friday the 13th Part 5 Mom, (Ethel Hubbard) Carol Locatell has passed away," Sloan wrote. "She had battled cancer for many years. For the longest time, I thought she [was going to] kick cancer's ass, 'cause she really was a tough lady."

The actress' husband, Gregory Prestopino, told The Hollywood Reporter that Locatell died at her Sherman Oaks, Calif., home on April 11. As Ethel Hubbard, she delighted audiences as a foul-mouth, shotgun-wielding, and stew-making mother who resides near Pinehurst Halfway House in the 1985 film.

Sloan added that, over the years, he'd shared "more laughter with Carol [than] you could ever imagine" and especially loved seeing her connect with the slasher franchise's fanbase. He noted that she often asked fans if they'd like her to flip them off or write one of her legendary lines from the film alongside her autograph, including "You big dildo, eat your f---ing slop," "Who the f--- are you," and "What the f--- do you want.'"

"We were not only great friends, but we were family," he continued. "Those of us who are fortunate enough to be actors in horror films know the meaning of the Horror Family. This is truly a life experience for me and I am so proud to have Carol Locatell share her private life with her husband, Greg, with my wife Lisa."

"From laughter to tears, I was truly blessed to work with this wonderful, brilliant, actress / mom. Her sailor mouth will truly be missed at the next convention," he concluded. "Please say a prayer for her and her family. She truly did love her fans, and we truly had so much fun together meeting you. Please feel free to post your pictures and memories of Carol to celebrate her life. Many blessings and #F--K CANCER!"

Born in 1940, Locatell made her acting debut in a 1967 episode of the beloved sitcom The Flying Nun and, six years later, made the jump to the big screen as Priscilla in the 1973 action film Coffy.

In addition to her role in Friday the 13th Part V, Locatell also appeared in three films with late actor Burt Reynolds — 1981's Paternity and Sharky's Machine, and 1982's Best Friends — as well as 2002's Bug and 2005's The Family Stone. Her television credits include Bonanza, M*A*S*H, ER, Ally McBeal, Touched by an Angel, NYPD Blue, Mad Men, Scandal, NCIS, Grey's Anatomy, Station 19, Shameless, and more.

LOCATELL, Carol (Carol Merrie Locatell)

Born: 12/13/1940. Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A.

Died: 4/11/2023, Sherman Oaks, California, U.S.A.

 

Carol Locatell’s western – actress:

Bonanza (TV) – 1970, 1972 (Mrs. Marshall, Etta, Mrs. Holcombe)

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

RIP Mauro Muñiz

 

Don Mauro, comedian and actor of 'La que se avecina', 'Aida' and 'Hospital central', dies at the age of 58

The comedian and performer from Madrid acted in films such as 'Pagafantas' or 'Losing the East'

HOLA.com

By Paloma Anaya

April 17, 2023

 

The actor, comedian and musician Mauro Muñiz, popularly known as Don Mauro, dies at the age of 58. The news of his death has transcended thanks to the Film Academy and some colleagues, such as the comedian Luis Piedrahita, who lamented his death with these words: "Don Mauro has died. A comedian of pure strain, one of the always. A committed, cultured and knowledgeable uncle. A classic. DEP".

Son of journalists Paloma de Urquiza and Mauro Muñiz and brother of socialist MEP María Muñiz, Don Mauro began his artistic career as a pianist and composer of different music groups such as La Cabra Mecánica, where he worked as a keyboardist. However, he became known among the general public with his humorous monologues on Paramount Comedy in the early 2000s, where he participated in humor programs such as La hora chanante with Joaquín Reyes, Ernesto Sevilla or Pablo Chiapaella.

In addition to his comic and musical side, he stood out as an actor in films such as Pagafantas, 3 bodas de más or Perdido el este, and in successful series such as Aida, Hospital Central, Los hombres de Paco, Sin tetas no hay paraíso and La que se avecina. In less than a month the fans of La que se avecina have had to say goodbye to another of their actors after Laura Gómez-Lacueva died on March 30 at age 48 victim of cancer.

On television Mauro Muñiz also participated in programs such as Vigilante de la tele, presented by Manu Carreño, on TVE in the program Carta de ajuste, with José María Íñigo and Minerva Piquero, and gave voice to first level advertising campaigns such as Domino's Pizza and Aquarius. And in theater he starred in La Fuga with Amparo Larrañaga, Kira Miró and José Luis Gil, his partner in La que se avecina and who recovers from a stroke, as well as the adaptation of John Gray's best seller, Los hombres son de Marte y las mujeres de Venus.

"Too soon, buddy. I still don't believe it. DEP Mauro. DON MAURO, with capital letters", Berta Collado sent him as a message of condolence. "We coincided a few times, but enough to verify that it was different from the rest. Gone is a great actor and a great comedian. Rest in peace, mate," said Luis Larrodera. "I just heard the news of your departure and I don't fit it, I don't believe it, I never think I'll believe it. A gentleman from head to toe, a guy to envy his enormous and multifaceted talent, an empathetic person, an impeccable companion. I would have given everything to look just a little like him. I don't know what to say, I feel like a straitjacket gripping me. I love you, Mauro Muñiz. I love you, "Marqués de Urquiza", Miguel Ángel Hernando "Lichis" said goodbye to La Cabra Mecánica.

MUNIZ, Mauro (Mauro Muñiz de Urquiza)

Born: 9/16/1964, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

Died: 4/16/2023, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

 

Mauro Muñiz’s western – actor:

Limoncello – 2007 (Mitch)

Monday, April 17, 2023

RIP John Iacovelli

 

John Iacovelli 1959 – 2023

 

Live Design

By Ellen Lampert-Greaux

April 17, 2023

 

Award-winning scenic designer John Iacovelli passed away on Friday, April 14, 2023 at the age of 64. Many years ago, I visited John on the set of "Babylon 5," for which he was nominated for an Art Directors Guild Award for Excellence in Production Design in 1998. He won a Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Art Director for a Variety or Music Program for "Peter Pan" in 2021. I think the last time I saw John was at USITT in 2018, when he received their Distinguished Achievement Award in Scene Design and Technology. His additional awards include a Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award, a Bay Area Drama Critics Circle Award, the Backstage West Garland Award, and fourteen Drama-Logue Awards.

John Iacovelli, the Emmy-winning prolific scenic designer for stage and screen, whose ability to balance poetics with pragmatism made him a beloved and invaluable collaborator for Los Angeles theater artists for many decades, died Friday after a long battle with cancer, his family told The Times. He was 64.

His range was limitless, moving effortlessly on stage from lavish musical spectacle to Beckettian minimalism, on screen from the space opera of “Babylon 5” to the instantly recognizable reality of “Lincoln Heights.” Theater was his true love and the dream factory Iacovelli operated seemed to run around the clock, but precision was never sacrificed by speed of production.

“John worked scenic miracles on Los Angeles stages throughout his long and distinguished career,” said Times theater critic Charles McNulty. “His fertile imagination and practical know-how could endow any work from the repertoire with just the right amount of whimsy, lyricism and realism.”

“His death represents an incalculable loss for L.A.’s theater community,” McNulty added. “He was a pillar of the scene here, a beloved and trusted counselor to fellow artists, an amiably enlightening interlocutor with critics and an impish presence who embodied theater’s Dionysian spirit.”

Iacovelli worked with budgets big, medium and small, conjuring from the resources at hand the scenic magic required to transport an audience to the aesthetic world of the play or musical. But he was, first and foremost, a practical man of the theater.

As he told The Times’ Mary McNamara in 2020, “In the end, the set is there to serve the actors...It is a machine for action.”

Quotes from friends:

"In honor of my dear friend and longtime colleague, John Iacovelli. This is particularly difficult. So many incredible shared experiences, challenges, fun and incredible work. Grateful to have brought John into the truly unbelievable project of “Casablanca, the Dance,” where we collaborated in creating a complete black and white experience that transformed to color. In China. Where no one had ever built a Western designed production before. The highs and lows of that experience, of finding the people to build this project and turn his vision and our collective vision into an incredible reality were beyond any imaginable. And it was stunning. And fun. I’m sure some part of it was fun, mostly because it couldn’t not be with John. And crazy difficult and stressful.

We first met on a wonderful Fountain Theater production of Central Avenue directed by Shirley Jo Finney in 2001. As with most all of you, we became fast friends immediately and have stayed so through the years.

I’m so grateful for all the time I spent with you my friend, and deeply saddened that those times have ended in this realm. Here’s to dinners at the Tam. May you always have as many productions as you like in progress." —Marc Rosenthal.

"So sad to hear of the passing of my good friend and colleague John Iacovelli. I will miss him dearly. He was a collaborative, graceful presence in all of our various projects. Working with him was like coming home. His care and support of all the artists he touched along the way lifted us all. Heaven has a new set designer. As I remember him, I can only smile and recall the warm embrace of every chance encounter." —Jon Gottlieb.

IACOVELLI, John

Born: 2/25/1959, U.S.A.

Died: 4/14/2023, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

John Iacovelli’s western – production designer:

The Wild West (TV) – 1993

Siringo (TV) - 1995

Thursday, April 13, 2023

RIP Maeliosa Stafford

 

Famous Galway actor dies suddenly as tributes pour for 'committed and passionate' figure

His death has come as a shock to the community

GalwayBeo

By Jessica Mercer

April 11, 2023

 

A famous Galway actor has died suddenly this week as several tributes flow from the community.

Well-known Galwegian actor Maeliosa Stafford has died in Australia leaving the theatre community in shock.

On Tuesday, a post on social media read: "Very sad news coming from Australia. Maeliosa Stafford - one of the greats - has passed away."

His death comes nearly seven years after the death of his mother Máire.

Máire Stafford (née Fitzpatrick) died back in 2014 and was a very accomplished actress, director, translator and costume designer, and central to the development of Taibhdhearc na Gaillimhe, the Irish language theatre.

Her five children spent time on the stage from an early age and their mother was involved in more than 100 dramatic productions, both plays and pantomime.

Maelíosa's death has come as a shock to many in the Galway theatre community, as several people recalled his stunning talent and generous personality.

One commented on the post: "Such sad news, Maelíosa was a wonderful actor and Galwegian. He personified everything that was great in Galway arts. He was committed, passionate, creative."

Another remembered: "Ah that's sad news. For me, he was such a champion of artists...fledgling artists especially when he was Druid's AD. His whole family so kind. And he never missed s Flying Pig show. Very generous man."

Meanwhile a third wrote: "Utterly shocked to hear the news. A wonderful actor and a lovely man. Maeliosa was a great mentor. I can’t believe it. Don’t know what to say …my deepest sympathies to Orlaith and all the Staffords."

STAFFORD, Maeliosa

Born: 19??, Galway, Ireland

Died: 4/10/2023, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

 

Maeliosa Stafford’s western – actor:

Quigley Down Under – 1990 (Cavanagh)

RIP Donald W. Ernst

 

Animation Editor-Producer Don Ernst Dies Age 89

Animation Magazine

By Mercedes Milligan

April 12, 2023

 

Don Ernst, a film, sound and music editor and producer who worked on many hits across both live-action TV and film and animation over more than 50 years, died Sunday at age 89. News of his passing was shared with Animation Magazine by animation historian and former Disney colleague Tom Sito, who worked with the late producer off and on at the studio from Aladdin (1992) through Fantasia 2000 (1999).

"Don had a polific career editing classic TV series like Gunsmoke, Gilligan’s Island and Hill Street Blues,” Sito wrote. “He was a mainstay for Ralph Bakshi, cutting Heavy Traffic, Coonskin, Lord of the Rings and more. At Walt Disney feature, he worked on Back to Neverland and Fantasia Continued, later Fantasia 2000.

“He could be gruff, but he was always fair. I can still hear his deep gravely voice in the hallway calling out, ‘Lois! Lois!’ for Lois Freeman-Fox, Fantasia‘s lead editor.

“A devoted father and grandfather. Peace and comfort to Stacy, Darci and all the Ernst family. RIP.”

Born January 25, 1934, Donald William Ernst cut his teeth in live-action TV in the mid-1950s, and went on to win two Primetime Emmy Awards (and several more nominations through the ’70s and ’80s) for his sound editing work, taking home the prize for the special Raid on Entebbe and series Hill Street Blues.

Starchaser: The Legend of Orin

His earliest work in animation was with the auteur New York director Ralph Bakshi, working on his adults-only dark comedies Heavy Traffic , Coonskin and Hey Good Lookin’ as well as the fantasy epic Wizards and adaptation of Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings. He also edited for Steven Hahn’s 1985 space opera, Starchaser: The Legend of Orin, notable for being the first animated feature produced in 3-D, and Jerry Rees’s 1987 fan favorite The Brave Little Toaster.

At the close of the ’80s, Ernst edited shorts based on Disney hits Peter Pan (Back to Neverland) and Tummy Trouble (Who Framed Roger Rabbit), shifting roles to produce the early ’90s shorts Roller Coaster Rabbit, Mickey’s Audition and, later, the Goofy outing How to Haunt a House (1999). He also served as story supervisor on the Oscar-nominated Disney-Dalí short Destino.

Ernst was co-producer on Disney’s animated Aladdin and a producer on the musical anthology Fantasia 2000, as well as the Walt Disney Pictures English-language dub of Hayao Miyazaki’s Oscar-winning feature Spirited Away (2002). He also executive produced the popular live-action comedy-adventure Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey (1993).

ERNST, Donald W. (Donald William Ernst)

Born: 1/25/1934, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Died: 4/9/2023, Stevenson Ranch, California, U.S.A.

 

Donald W. Ernst’s western – film editot, sound editor, music editor:

The Wild Wild west (TV) – 1966 [film editor]

Cimarron Strip (TV) – 1967 [film editor]

Gunsmoke (TV) – 1968, 1969, 1970 [film editor]

She Came to the Valley – 1979 [music editor]

Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (TV) – 1982 [music editor]

I Married Wyatt Earp (TV) – 1985 [sound editor]

Once Upon a Texas Train – 1988 [sound editor]

Monday, April 10, 2023

RIP Elizabeth Hubbard

 

ELIZABETH HUBBARD PASSES AWAY AT 89 

Soap Opera Digest

April 10, 2023

 

Beloved daytime vet Elizabeth Hubbard has passed away at the age of 89. Her son, Jeremy Bennett, posted the news on Facebook, writing, “I’m sorry to say with a broken heart my mum passed over the weekend. Thank you for being an unmovable rock that guided me through life. I will try to honour your memory for as long as I live.” Born in New York City on August 22, 1933, the actress earned a degree in philosophy from Radcliffe College (the women’s college of Harvard University) ad graduated from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London, England, earning the school’s prestigious silver medal. She began her soap career in 1962, playing Anne Benedict Fletcher, then joined EDGE OF NIGHT in 1963 as Carol Kramer. From 1964-69, 1970-78 and 1981-82, she became a fan favorite as Althea Davis on THE DOCTORS, a role for which she earned the very first Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress in 1974. Following the cancellation of THE DOCTORS, she did a 1983-84 stint on ONE LIFE TO LIVE as Estelle Chadwick, then was tapped by AS THE WORLD TURNS to play Lucinda Walsh, a role she held from 1984 through the series’ finale in 2010. In her final interview with Digest in 2015, Hubbard voiced her deep appreciation for her loyal fans, saying, “I love them and I mean that. They’re in my heart… let the fans know that I love them and honor them and I still look at the poems I sent them. I’ve dated many men in my life, but my secret love affair is with the fans.” Hubbard’s on-screen daughter, Martha Byrne (ex-Lily), posted, “As many of you are finding out this morning, Elizabeth Hubbard passed away. First and foremost I want everyone to know I made sure she was aware of how much everyone loved her. I would share your comments from social media, videos and your fond memories of her as Lucinda, Althea, every time I saw her. She loved the audience and fought like HELL to bring truth and honesty to her performances. On a personal level there aren’t words to describe how much she meant to me. Only feelings, which override words in so many cases when it comes to love. I will be sharing more so we can all grieve together but here are our last words together only just a few days ago. I said, ‘Liz, do you know how much you have done for me?’ She said, ‘You can do more.’ Because of what she has done for me over the last 38 years, the strength and fearless nature in how she lived her life, she is right, I can AND WILL do more. I look forward to sharing more about her life, which encompasses so much more than her INCREDIBLE career on daytime television. She also said to me when I told her how much the fans loved her…’I tried.’ She more than tried. She left it all on the screen. I’ll miss her every day but grateful the universe gifted me with such a force of nature, of which the world will not see the likes of again.”

HUBBARD, Elizabeth (Elizabeth Wright Hubbard)

Born: 12/22/1933, New York City, New York, U.S.A.

Died: 4/8/2023, Roxbury, Connecticut, U.S.A.

 

Elizabeth Hubbard’s western – actress:

The Virginian (TV) – 1970 (Mary Marshall)

RIP Richard Ng

 

Veteran actor Richard Ng, who rose to fame in 1970s Hong Kong comedies, dies at age 83

Ng had been suffering health problems for years, telling media in 2021 he had undergone heart surgery

He made name for himself on television show The Hui Brothers and later starred in The Pilferers’ Progress, directed by John Woo 

South China Morning Post

By Edith Lin

April 10, 2023

 

Veteran Hong Kong actor Richard Ng Yiu-hon, who starred in some of the city’s most popular comedies throughout the 1970s and 1980s, died on Sunday at age 83, according to an industry representative.

Tenky Tien Kai-man, spokesman for the Federation of Hong Kong Filmmakers, told the Post on Monday that Ng’s family had confirmed the actor’s death and asked for privacy during the difficult time.

“He filmed numerous comedies and brought laughter to Hongkongers of our generation,” Tien said. “He lies in many people’s memory.”

Instantly recognisable by his prominent square jaw, Ng made his name as one of the city’s top comedic performers alongside other celebrities in the 1970s, including martial arts legend Jackie Chan and Sammo Hung Kam-bo, and went on to star in more than 100 films.

But he was also “passionate” about nurturing the younger generation, Tien said, noting the veteran actor had appeared for free in projects by filmmakers just starting out in the business.

Ng disclosed in 2019 that he had been suffering kidney problems and had to undergo peritoneal dialysis daily. But he insisted he would carry on with acting.

“If the schedule fits, I can still film movies,” he told the media. “I won’t lose interest in filming because of this problem. Filming is the joy of my life.”

In 2021, he revealed he had undergone recent heart surgery.

Born and raised in Hong Kong, Ng moved at age 15 to the United Kingdom, where he attended school and entered a dentistry programme, but he soon switched to studying film. His first role was in a British television soap drama.

Ng returned to the city in 1970 to help care for his family and he eventually joined the local television industry. He made guest appearances on The Hui Brothers, a show hosted by comedian Michael Hui Koon-man and his brother Sam Hui Koon-kit, a singer-songwriter.

Ng continued working with the Hui brothers, playing a policeman in Michael Hui Koon-man’s comedy The Private Eyes in 1976, which centred on a private detective agency.

A year later, Ng starred in The Pilferers’ Progress along with one of Hui’s other brothers, Ricky Hui Koon-ying, as two thieves fighting over stolen diamonds. The film, directed by John Woo, was the most successful movie of 1977, earning more than HK$5 million.

Ng also starred and produced the second-biggest hit that year, Winner Takes All. He continued to star in local blockbusters in the 1980s, including the Pom Pom series, which featured veteran actor and producer John Sham Kin-Fun.

He took part in TV productions in Singapore during the 1990s and 2000s, including the popular sitcom Under One Roof, in which he played a protective father. He had a small role in the 2003 Hollywood film Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life, posing as a buyer.

Ng’s final performance was in Where The Wind Blows, in which he played the father of the lead actress, Du Juan. The film, which starred Aaron Kwok Fu-shing and Tony Leung Chiu-wai, opened the Hong Kong International Film Festival last year.

Tributes to the actor began pouring in as news of his death spread.

Eric Tsang Chi-wai, general manager of the free-to-air TV station TVB and who co-starred with Ng in Winners and Sinners, said Ng was “one of a kind” in the world of comedy films.

“He was very good at using body movement to do gag acts,” he said. “But he would not overdo it or use too many exaggerated actions.

“One cannot overstate his contributions to the local film industry and he will be missed forever.”

Director Philip Yung Tsz-kwong described Ng as optimistic and cheerful, and recalled he lent his vintage cigarette tins for props in the movie.

“He did not take advantage of his seniority. He thought a lot of stuff could be settled by humour,” Yung said, adding the veteran actor would often tell jokes on set.

Comedic actor Stanley Fung Shui-fan, who filmed 1983’s Winners and Sinners with Ng and emigrated to Taiwan 30 years ago, called the news of Ng’s death saddening. In a Facebook post, he described the actor as his “rare friend”.

Director Hui said Ng was “always optimistic”.

“He was a gifted comedian and had a good sense of humour,” he said. “It is a pity that Hong Kong has lost a very outstanding comedian.”

Ng is survived by his wife and four children, including actor Carl Ng Ka-lung, 47.

NG, Richard

Born: 12/17/1939, Guangdong, China

Died: 4/9/2023, Hong Kong, China

 

Richard Ng’s westerns – actor:

Millionaires’ Express – 1986 (Han)

Once Upon a Time in China – 1997 (Uncle Han)

Saturday, April 8, 2023

RIP Warren Hammack

 

The Keeme Sentinel

April 8, 2023

 

Warren Franklin Hammack, producer, actor, writer and director, died peacefully at home with his family in Northampton, Mass., on Feb. 13, 2023. He was one day shy of his 89th birthday, which was celebrated earlier with neighbors, cake and sweet goodbyes.

Warren, the eighth in a close-knit family of nine children, was born in the western Kentucky town of Sturgis in 1934. Farm tasks bred a lifelong ethic of patience, determination and practicality. His stories of lessons drawn from his work with Jake and Queen, “the smartest mule team in Union County,” evoked the experience and spirit of a bygone era.

Warren’s academic achievements at Sturgis High were complemented by his athleticism. In 1951, the Louisville Courier Journal attributed Warren with “the longest touchdown run in Kentucky this year” with the headline: “Hammack Shows ’Em How.”

Warren enlisted after high school, serving as a U.S. Army motion picture photographer. Kentucky’s Georgetown College, afforded by the G.I. Bill, followed. After graduating magna cum laude with majors in drama and history, Warren was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. Subsequent study at the Dallas Theatre Center as a Danforth Fellow and Resident Artist launched his lifetime of professional artistic achievement.

Warren performed in stage productions throughout the U.S and abroad, playing the central role in The Book of Job in close to 500 performances. In Hollywood for 10 years, he freelanced in film and network television, with guest appearances on The Virginian, Gunsmoke, Ironside, My Three Sons and other popular shows. He collaborated with Jon Voight to produce A Streetcar Named Desire, and he later played the role of Polonius to Voight’s Hamlet. One of Warren’s favorite projects was acting in Horton Foote’s adaptation of the William Faulkner story, Old Man. Years later, he reconnected with Foote in New York at the HB Studio where he starred in Valentine’s Day with Hallie Foote (Horton’s daughter) and Matthew Broderick.

In 1975, Warren welcomed an invitation from local visionaries in south central Kentucky to bring professional theatre back home. He created the Horse Cave Theatre, a regional equity theatre in central Kentucky. The year 1977 saw its first season, along with his fortuitous hiring of Pamela White as lead actress. Pamela and Warren married in 1979, remaining artistic and administrative partners at the theatre for 24 successive seasons. During his tenure as artistic and producing director at Horse Cave, the theatre produced more than 130 plays; Warren directed more than 70 of these, with acting roles in many. The theatre received national recognition for its quality productions. In 1997, the New York Times saluted the theatre on its 20th anniversary season with an article, “By an Ancient Cave, the Classics Flourish.”

Under Warren’s artistic leadership, Horse Cave Theatre contributed to the cultural life of the region with such programs as the summer Student Theatre Workshops, a statewide outreach program enabling thousands of Kentucky students to see a Shakespeare play, and the Kentucky Voices program, yielding 17 world premieres — of plays by or about Kentuckians — performed at Horse Cave. An anthology of 14 of these was published in 2009.

Also during that time, Warren was awarded a Theatre Communications Group grant to travel to other theatres, received a MacDowell Colony Fellowship to complete a screenplay about an episode in Kentucky history, and served on several boards and task forces. Warren’s years of commitment to his home state were celebrated in 1995 with the Governor’s Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Arts.

Warren and Pamela enjoyed a return to rural life, moving to their home in Nelson in 2002. Opportunities in theatre then brought him to Florida, Arkansas, West Virginia and Tennessee while, closer to home, he worked with the Peterborough Players and the New Hampshire Institute for the Arts. Neighbors in and around Nelson were often treated to readings and short productions offered by Pamela and Warren. Warren’s commitment to Nelson also led to his service on the select board. After 15 years in Nelson, Pamela and Warren moved to the Lathrop Independent Living Community in Northampton, Mass., in 2016.

Warren forged close relationships with surviving relatives. On his side are nephews Scott, Ben and Joe, and nieces Bonnie, Sally, Alice and Sandra, and many great-nieces and nephews. On his wife’s side are her siblings, Debbie, Barrie and Ellen and her husband, Ron; four nephews, Colin, Alex, Ethan and Andrew, and niece, Emily. His greatest love he reserved for his wife, Pamela White, his artistic collaborator, fellow adventurer, sweetheart, best friend and (recently) caregiver.

In lieu of flowers, Warren requested you consider contributing to the ACLU (https://www.aclu.org/donate) or Soldier On Foundation (https://wesoldieron.org/about-the-foundation).

HAMMACK, Warren (Warren Franklin Hammack)

Born: 2/14/1934, Sturgis, Kentucky, U.S.A.

Died: 2/13/2023, Hampton, Massachusetts, U.S.A.

 

Warren Hammack’s westerns – actor:

The Virginian (TV) – 1967, 1968 (Gil Blinns, gunsmith, Joe Willard)

The Wild Wild West (TV) – 1967 (soldier)

RIP Franese de Bernal

 

Actor Farnese de Bernal died at the age of 96

The artist collaborated with celebrities such as Angelina Jolie or Cantinflas

Infobae

April 7, 2023

 

This Friday, April 7, the death of actor Farnesio de Bernal at the age of 96 was announced. It was through the Twitter account of the National Theater Company (CNT) where the sensitive death of the artist was reported.

"'I am very happy to have been able to do everything I have done' The members of the CNT celebrate the life of our beloved Farnese de Bernal. Rest in peace," it reads.

Similarly, other organizations dedicated to artistic expression such as the National Institute of Fine Arts and Literature (INBA) shared their condolences to the loved ones of the artist.

"We mourn the sensitive death of the actor, dancer, musician and choreographer, Farnesio de Bernal, a vital member of the @CNT. For his fundamental career in the performing arts he was recognized in2011 with the Fine Arts Medal. We send our love to his family. Rest in peace," they tweeted.

While the account of Theaters of Mexico City added: "Today we say goodbye to an essential figure of art in our country. We mourn the sensitive loss of the first actor, dancer, choreographer and director Farnese de Bernal (1926 -2023). Originally from Michoacán, Bernal is a nodal figure in our artistic panorama. QEPD".

Guillermo del Toro said goodbye to his partner and expressed, through his social networks, his sadness: "A great film colleague. Work and enjoy with CRONOS and with CABEZA DE VACA. Dearest by all..."

For her part, actress Leticia Huijara, who was awarded the National Dramaturgy Award in 2014, also wrote a few words to the renowned figure.

"I always believed that Farnese De Bernal would be immortal. Today I learn that he abandoned us; to us who loved him so much and to the Mexican cinema and theater to which he provided such good services. Until forever dear and gentle friend."

In addition, Leonardo Daniel Miranda, national coordinator of Theater, made a brief remembrance of Bernal's career.

"I regret the recent death of Farnesio de Bernal, full actor of the National Theater Company, who sustained a career of more than 60 years, deserving of various awards, such as the Fine Arts medal, in 2011. I send my condolences to his family and friends," he said.

Who was Farnese de Bernal

Farnesio de Bernal was a choreographer, actor and dancer who was born in 1926 in Zamora, Michoacán. Throughout his life he consolidated an extensive artistic career becoming one of the greatest references in the performing arts of the country.

The artist collaborated throughout his life with great figures, such as Mario Moreno Cantinflas, as both were in the films Su excelencia (1967) or Por mis pistolas (1968).

He also rubbed shoulders with exclusive Hollywood stars, as he participated with Angelina Jolie in the film Original Sin (2001).

As Guillermo del Toro pointed out, Farnesio de Bernal was involved in his film The Invention of Cronos (1993), which is considered one of the most remembered productions of the Mexican director.

In an old interview with Cristina Pacheco, de Bernal commented that theater for him represented one of his greatest passions throughout his life and he did not conceive that there were people who dedicated themselves to this art just because they wanted to gain recognition or money.

"There are actors who succeed and already, they do the same character, the same character, there are people who get into theater, acting not because they love acting, but they want to be famous, rich, admired. Not because they want to dedicate themselves to the theater, they succeed, but I say. It would not give me satisfaction for reasons other than the talent, the love you have for your career," he said at the time.

de BERNAL, Farnesio (Jaime Farnesio Bernal Contreras)

Born: 11/20/1936, Zamora, Michoacan, Mexico

Died: 4/7/2023, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico

 

Farnesio de Bernal’s westerns – actor:

Por mis pistolas -1968 (cantina owner)

Zapata - 1970

Los fuerzas vivas – 1975 (Boticario_

Los hermanos del viento – 1977 (Martin)

Eagle’s Wing – 1979 (monk)

Thursday, April 6, 2023

RIP Bill Butler

 

Bill Butler, Cinematographer on ‘Jaws’, Dies at 101

The Oscar nominee shot the first film ever directed by William Friedkin and replaced Haskell Wexler on 'The Conversation' and 'Cuckoo's Nest.'

The Hollywood Reporter

By Rhett Bartlett

April 6, 2023

 

Bill Butler, the self-taught, Oscar-nominated cinematographer whose work on the landmark 1975 horror film Jaws unleashed a wave of anxiety for beachgoers that lasts to this day, has died. He would have turned 102 on Friday.

Butler died Wednesday evening in Los Angeles, according to the American Society of Cinematographers. He is survived by five daughters and his wife, Iris.

During his five-decade career, Butler also shot Francis Ford Coppola’s The Rain People (1969) and The Conversation (1974); Peter Hyams’ Capricorn One (1977); Randal Kleiser’s hit musical Grease (1978); and Rocky II (1979), Rocky III (1982) and Rocky IV (1985), all written and directed by and starring Sylvester Stallone.

On another noteworthy 1975 release, Butler replaced the fired Haskell Wexler midway through production on Milos Forman‘s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Both shared an Oscar cinematography nomination for their work.

Butler also had replaced Wexler on The Conversation after creative differences forced Wexler off that production early on.

Butler also lensed the first film William Friedkin ever directed as well as Jack Nicholson’s 1971 helming debut, Drive, He Said; the horror sci-fi Demon Seed (1977); the skating drama Ice Castles (1978); the 1980 musical Can’t Stop the Music; the Ivan Reitman comedy Stripes (1981); and the 1997 scary snake picture Anaconda.

Butler had collaborated with Steven Spielberg on his early 1970s telefilms Something Evil, featuring Sandy Dennis and Darren McGavin, and Savage, starring Martin Landau. He bumped into the director by happenstance in the Universal Studios parking lot one day and said, “I hear you are making a movie about a fish.”

For Jaws, Butler said his intention was for the early scenes on Amity Island to reflect the style of Andrew Wyeth paintings — regional and realistic — and later contrast them with darker, violent imagery.

His iconic shots included the early dawn attack of the first victim (Susan Backlinie) that opens the film, the Vertigo-inspired dolly zoom that accompanies Chief Brody’s (Roy Scheider) shock at witnessing a shark attack from the beach and the extreme close-ups of panicking swimmers.

“I brought a lot of new things to the picture, such as hand-holding the camera,” Butler noted in Patrick Jankiewicz’s 2015 book, Just When You Thought It Was Safe: A Jaws Companion.

“In the old days of making sea pictures, they used a giant gimbal, which weighs roughly 400 pounds and is slow and hard to set up but does keep the camera level. I found, just by experimenting, that I could hand-hold the camera on an oceangoing boat and keep it level simply by using my knees. I told Steven that I had this idea about shooting the picture hand-held, and he just fainted.”

As second-unit photographer on John Boorman’s Deliverance (1972), Butler shot stunt footage and the opening-title sequence as the camera skims across the river, an experience that heavily influenced his Jaws approach.

Butler recalled how Deliverance cameraman Vilmos Zsigmond filmed the famed rapids sequence, then approached Panavision to construct a waterproof plastic and glass floating box that would enable him to shoot at ocean level for Jaws.

“We were able to dip just slightly into the water to show the audience a scene from the shark’s perspective,” he said in 2005. “The dangling legs of swimmers looked like dinner to the shark. Panavision also provided an underwater camera. It was enormous but very stable underwater and easy to operate.”

Production problems on the set of Jaws became legendary. The movie began without a completed script, the giant mechanical shark malfunctioned, and the planned 55-day shoot ballooned to 159 days with a wildly overblown budget that more than doubled to approach $9 million. Spielberg feared he would be fired at any moment.

“I said to Steve, ‘I’ll tell you something, it’s been a week and we’re still here. You have absolutely nothing to worry about. They must think we’ve got a great project going here or we would be gone, because we’re over further than any picture at Universal has ever gone over!’ “

Despite all the setbacks, Jaws received Oscar nominations for picture, score, editing and sound (eventually winning all but the top award), but Butler’s name went missing from the cinematography category. The summer blockbuster became the highest-grossing film of all time ($470 million) until surpassed by 1977’s Star Wars.

Wilmer Butler was born on April 7, 1921, in Cripple Creek, Colorado, and raised in Mount Pleasant, Iowa. He said his earliest film memory was watching The Jazz Singer (1927) when he was 6.

Years after graduating with a degree in engineering from the University of Iowa, Butler was working as a cameraman doing live shows and commercials for WGN-TV in the early 1960s when he met Friedkin, then a floor manager at the Chicago station.

BUTLER, Bill (Wilmer Butler)

Born: 4/7/1921, Cripple Creek, Colorado, U.S.A.

Died: 4/5/2023, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

Bill Butler’s westerns – music consultant, cinematographer:

Good Times -1967 [music consultant]

Running Wild – 1973 [cinematographer]