Monday, June 15, 2026

RIP Christian Bujeau

 

Death at the age of 81 of Christian Bujeau, dentist of the Visitors and famous fencing master of Kaamelott

Allocine

By Thomas Imbert

June 15, 2026

 

French actor Christian Bujeau, known in the cinema for the role of the dentist in "The Visitors" and the fencing master in "Kaamelott", died on Monday, June 15 at the age of 81.

Famous among the general public for having played Valérie Lemercier's hilarious dentist husband in The Visitors and the master-at-arms with impeccable hygiene and flowery language who trained King Arthur in the series Kaamelott, the French actor Christian Bujeau died on Monday, June 15 at the age of 81.

A complete player

Born in Charron in 1944, Christian Bujeau learned the acting trade by training at the Conservatoire national supérieur d’art dramatique. A complete actor and eclectic artist, he spent his long career between theatre, television and cinema, also officiating as a stuntman, theatre director and drama teacher at the Jean Périmony school.

In the cinema, it was when he landed one of the main roles in Jean-Marie Poiré’s Visitors, in 1993, that he became known to the general public, playing the dentist Jean-Pierre Goulard, husband of Valérie Lemercier and a catastrophic witness to the escapades of Godefroy and Jacquouille (a role that Didier Bourdon and Fabrice Lucchini had almost played).

On the big screen, he has also been seen in films such as The Truth If I Lie! 2, Alibi.com and The Return of the Hero.

The Weapons Master of Kaamelott

On the television side, even if he has participated in many famous series (such as Joséphine, ange gardien, Caméra Café, or Hero Corp), he is known in particular for his role as the fencing master, Arthur's ruthless and hilarious trainer in the series Kaamelott, which offered him many mythical lines.

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BUJEAU, Chsristian

Born: 10/14/1944, Charron, Charente-Maritime, France

Died: 6/15/2026, Paris, Île-de-France, France

 

Christian Bujeau’s westerns – actor:

Bitumes – 1986

Fucking Dead (TV) – 2016 (Asa)

RIP Linda Porto

 

Mexican Film Bulletin

By David Wilt

Spring 2026

 

Actor Linda Porto died on 29 April 2026 in Mexico City; she was 94 years of age. Herminia Guitrón y Porto was born in February 1932, and began acting in the 1950s; her younger sister Maty Huitrón was also in the entertainment industry as a performer. Porto worked in films, television, and in live venues – her last appearance was in the TV series “Mujer, casos de la vida real” in the late 1990s. Her film credits include Cada quien su vida, El jinete de la muerte, and El sinaloense.

PORTO, Linda (Herminia Guitrón y Porto)

Born: 2/5/1932, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico

Died: 4/29/2026, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico

 

Linda Porto’s westerns – actress:

El caballo del diablo – 1975 (Macaria)


RIP Ana Luisa Peluffo

 

Ana Luisa Peluffo, actress of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, dies at 96

Actress Ana Luisa Peluffo, one of the most emblematic figures of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, died at the age of 96, leaving a legacy of more than seven decades on the big screen.

Quien

March 4, 2026

 

On Wednesday, the death of Ana Luisa Peluffo, a Mexican actress in the Golden Cinema and soap operas, was announced.

The family of the actress confirmed the news through a statement, in which they reported that the actress died in peace, on her ranch in the state of Jalisco, accompanied by her loved ones.

Ana Luisa Peluffo, actress of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, dies

In a statement, the family of the actress confirmed the death: “She died in peace, at her ranch her ranch in Tepatitlán de Morelos, Jalisco, accompanied by her loved ones,” they mention.

In the letter it was indicated that during her last days, the actress Ana Luisa Peluffo lived with serenity surrounded by care and closeness to her son.

“We deeply appreciate the affection of all the people who, over the years, appreciated her career and enjoyed her work and company and we applied for respect and understanding at this time. Her memory will remain alive in those who knew her and valued her presence and artistic legacy.”

They also mentioned that the funeral services will be carried out in an intimate and private way, to fulfill the last wish of the artist: "During her last years she lived with serenity, surrounded by care and close to her son. The funeral services will be carried out in an intimate and private manner, in accordance with their will “reads the message

The career of Ana Luisa Peluffo

Ana Luisa Peluffo, whose full name was Ana Luisa de Jesús Quintana Paz Peluffo, was born on October 9, 1929 in Querétaro, Mexico. She began her career in 1948 with a small role in Tarzan and the Mermaids, directed by Robert Florey and starring Johnny Weissmuller in his latest performance as Tarzan. Shee later participated in films such as La venosa (1949) and Orchids for my wife (1954).

Throughout her career she intervened in more than 160 films. She shared a screen with emblematic figures of Mexican cinema such as Germán Valdés, Manuel Valdés, Pedro Infante and María Félix. In later decades she worked with Andrés García and Sergio Goyri in productions such as Pedro Navaja (1984). Her versatility allowed her to excel in drama, comedy and the so-called film cinema in the 1970s.

On television she also left a mark with 17 soap operas, including El sin de Oyuki (1988), Marimar (1994), María Isabel (1997), Dreamers (1998), Carita de Angel (2000) and Contra viento y tida (2005). She also appeared in series such as Mujeres Assassinas (2010) and El Mariachi (2014), the latter her most recent work on screen.

PELUFFO, Ana Luisa (Ana Luisa de Jesús Quintana Paz-Peluffo)

Born: 10/9/1929, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico

Died: 3/4/2026, Tepatitlánde Morelos, Jalisco, Mexico

 

Ana Luisa Peluffo’s western – actress:

El último pistolero – 1969 (Clarence Gaynor)

La venganza de un matón – 1980

El Cain del bajio – 1981

quel famoso Remington – 1992 (Coneja)

Por un vestido de novia - 1983

 Dos pistoleros violentos – 1985


RIP Hector Alterio

 

In Memoriam: Legendary Argentine Actor Héctor Alterio 

Cinema Tropical

December 13, 2025

 

Héctor Alterio, one of the most essential actors in the history of Argentine cinema and theater, died today at the age of 96 in Madrid, Spain, where he lived and worked for decades after going into exile in the 1970s. He had a prolific and celebrated career and was one of the most revered figures in Argentine cinema, theater, and television.

He worked with numerous prestigious filmmakers, including Leopoldo Torre Nilsson, Manuel Antín, Sergio Renán, Carlos Saura, Luis Puenzo, Marcelo Piñeyro, María Luisa Bemberg, and Juan José Campanella, and acted in four of the first five Argentine films ever nominated for the Academy Awards, including the Oscar-winning The Official Story / La historia oficial and Son of the Bride / El hijo de la novia.

Born Héctor Benjamín Alterio Onorato on September 21, 1929, in Buenos Aires to Italian parents, he emerged as a defining presence of Argentine cinema, forging a body of work that bridged classical theater, New Argentine Cinema, and exile-era filmmaking. His acting debut came in the 1948 play Cómo suicidarse en primavera (“How to Commit Suicide in Spring”). After completing drama school, he founded the Nuevo Teatro company in 1950, where he remained active until 1968, playing a key role in transforming Argentina’s theater scene during the 1960s.

His feature film debut came in 1965 with Alfredo Mathé's Every Sun Is Bitter / Todo sol es amargo, and he went on to work in numerous films, including Don Segundo Sombra (1969) by Manuel Antín, The Knight of the Sword / El Santo de la Espada (1970) by Leopoldo Torre Nilsson, Rebellion in Patagonia / La Patagonia rebelde (1974) by Héctor Olivera—which won the Silver Bear at the Berlin Film Festival—and The Truce / La tregua (1974) by Sergio Renán, which became the first Argentine film to be nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.

As Argentina descended into political terror, Alterio became one of the many artists forced into exile following threats. He settled in Spain in 1975, a rupture that reshaped his artistic trajectory but never diluted his identity. From exile, Alterio built a formidable second career, becoming a cornerstone of Spanish cinema and theater while continuing to work with filmmakers committed to memory, resistance, and historical reckoning.

In Spain, he played Anselmo in Carlos Saura’s landmark 1976 psychological drama Cría Cuervos, which won the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival and was selected as the Spanish entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 49th Academy Awards. The following year, he acted in To an Unknown God / A un dios desconocido by Jaime Chávarri and Elías Querejeta, earning the Best Actor Award at the San Sebastián Film Festival. Other Spanish film credits include Pascual Duarte (1976) by Ricardo Franco, Asignatura pendiente (1977) by José Luis Garci, and The Nest / El nido (1980) by Jaime de Armiñán, which was nominated for an Academy Award.

With the return of democracy to Argentina in the 1980s, Alterio worked in films produced in both countries and in co-productions. In 1984, he starred as Adolfo O’Gorman in Bemberg’s Oscar-nominated Camila, considered one of the best Argentine films of all time.

The following year, Alterio starred as Roberto Ibáñez in Puenzo’s historical political drama The Official Story, also starring Norma Aleandro. The film tells the story of a high school history teacher who enjoys a comfortable life with her husband, a businessman connected to the military, and their adopted daughter. When Alicia starts questioning the origins of her child, she comes to fear that her daughter may have been taken from parents who were abducted or killed during the government’s violent repression of leftist activists. The Official Story made history as the first Latin American film to win an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.

He remained active in numerous film, theater, and television productions, collaborating with Argentine filmmaker Marcelo Piñeyro on the music biopic Wild Tango / Tango feroz (1993), the drama road movie Wild Horses / Caballos salvajes (1995), the crime thriller Ashes of Paradise / Cenizas del paraíso (1997) and the queer thriller Burnt Money / Plata quemada (2000).

In 2001, he reunited with Norma Aleandro in Juan José Campanella’s heartwarming dramedy Son of the Bride, also starring Ricardo Darín, which received an Oscar nomination. The film follows a middle-aged restaurateur navigating a midlife crisis while fulfilling his aging father’s wish to remarry his mother, who is suffering from Alzheimer’s, in the church wedding she always dreamed of.

In 2004, Alterio received the Honorary Goya Award presented by the Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain. He is survived by his children, actors Malena and Ernesto Alterio, with whom he formed a rare intergenerational bridge between Latin American and Spanish cinema.

ALTERIO, Hector (Héctor Benjamín Alterio Onorato)

Born: 9/21/1929, Chacarita, Buenos Aires, Argentia

Died: 12/13/2025, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

 

Hector Alterio’s westerns – actor:

Don Segundo Sombra – 1969 (gaucho in black)

Rebellion in Patagonian - 1974 (Commander Zavala)

The Last Train – 2002 (El Profesot)

RIP Eduardo Manzano

 

Eduardo Manzano, iconic Mexican actor and comedian, dies at 8 

USA Today

By Edward Segarra

December 5, 2025

 

Mexican actor and comedian Eduardo Manzano, best known for "El Show de los Polivoces," died at age 87 on December 4, 2025. His son Lalo announced the death on social media, noting the lack of a disclosed cause. Manzano was celebrated for his decades‑long career in film, television and comedy, including his recent role on "Una Familia de Diez."

Eduardo Manzano, the Mexican actor and comedian best known for his role on "El Show de los Polivoces," has died. He was 87.

Manzano died on Thursday, Dec. 4, Manzano's son, Lalo Manzano, shared in an emotional social media post on Friday. A cause of death was not given.

"Today, the stage of life has lowered the curtain," Lalo Manzano wrote in a lengthy tribute, in Spanish. "My father, a comedian loved by thousands and a human being admired by everyone who knew him, has departed this world. He was an extraordinary, kind and intelligent man with a heart as big as his talent."

Representatives for Manzano and Lalo Manzano were not available for comment at the time of publication.

One of the stars of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, Manzano appeared in a number of TV series and films throughout the 1960s alongside his comedic partner-in-crime, fellow Mexican actor-comedian Enrique Cuenca. The duo, known as Los Polivoces, nabbed supporting roles in the feature films "Agarrando Parejo" and "Tres Mil Kilómetros de Amor" and starred in 1969's "El Aviso Inoportuno."

Manzano and Cuenca solidified their comedy legacy with "El Show de los Polivoces," a sketch comedy series that showcased the pair's hilarious vocal impersonations through celebrity parodies and zany original characters. The show ran for four seasons from 1971-1975.

"Behind every joke was a tireless worker. Behind every applause was a human being who deeply loved what he did," Lalo Manzano wrote. "And behind every smile, there was always a father who taught us to laugh, including in the most difficult moments."

Manzano's most recent role was a recurring gig on the family sitcom "Una Familia de Diez," playing Don Arnoldo López for over 130 episodes from 2007-2022.

"With deep sorrow we bid farewell to my beautiful daddy, and we thank all who have respectfully joined in with their love. 🙏🏻❤️✨," Lalo Manzano wrote.

Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa dies: 'Mortal Kombat' and 'Pearl Harbor' actor was 75

Stars remember 'comedy master' Eduardo Manzano

Several stars took to the comments section of Lalo Manzano's tribute to mourn Manzano's death.

"You don't know how I feel, my dear Lalo," actor Luis Felipe Tovar wrote. "I send you a very strong hug and wish with all my heart that your daddy is already enjoying the bliss of having accomplished his mission. RIP. The great among the greats."

"God has him in his glory, master of comedy 🙏🏼 🙏🏼 ❤️ ❤️," TV host Mario Bezares commented.

Joan Templeman dies: Wife of Virgin businessman Richard Branson was 80

"I'm so sorry, Lalo. Your dad will always live in our hearts," actress and TV host Mariazel wrote.

"A master of comedy, a great friend, an outstanding guy. Lalo, Ariel and family, I accompany you in your grief," comedian JoJo Jorge Falcon wrote. "He left a huge legacy, no other like him. Rest in peace 🕊️"

MANZANO, Eduardo (Eduardo Manzano II)

Born: 7/18/1938, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico

Died: 12/4/2025, Tlalpan, Mexico City, Mexico

 

Eduardo Manzano’s westerns – actor:

Somo del otro Laredo – 1977 (Dinamita Mazano)

RIP Erna Martha Bauman

 

3 Mexican Actors Die: From a Miss Universe Representative to The Rose of Guadalupe

ANDI confirmed the departure of actress and former beauty queen, Erna Martha Bauman Krauze, who is cataloged as one of the unforgettable faces of Mexican fantasy cinema

N+ Newsroom

November 21, 2025

 

Mourning in film and television in Mexico the death of three endearing actors and actresses, the deaths of two actors who participated in the Rose of Guadalupe, The Lord of the Skies, and of an actress who was even a beauty queen and participated in Miss Universe, were confirmed this Friday, November 21, 2025.

The first of these deaths was reported by the National Association of Interpreters (ANDI) when confirming the departure of actress and former beauty queen, Erna Martha Bauman Krauze, who is cataloged as one of the unforgettable faces of Mexican fantasy cinema, and who died at the age of 86.

Who was Erna Martha Bauman Krauze the beauty queen?

Actress Erna Martha Bauman Krauze dedicated herself in her last years of life to piano lessons.

Erna Martha Bauman Krauze was born on July 6, 1938, in Mexico City, she became a public figure from a very young age, when in 1956 she obtained the title of Miss Mexico and represented the country in Miss Universe, where she managed to advance to the semifinals. Her beauty led her to professional modeling and, later, to cinema.

Her film debut occurred at the end of the fifties, starting a career that consolidated her as one of the most emblematic actresses of Mexican horror cinema.

During the sixties she participated in productions that are currently cult, such as "The Bloody Vampire", "The Invasion of the Vampires" and "The World of the Vampires", where she played some of the most iconic vampires on the Mexican screen. Although terror marked a large part of his career.

She had a filmography that combined national and international productions, including the American film Vampire Hookers (1978).

BAUMAN, Erna Martha

Born: 7/6/1938, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico

Died: 11/20/2025, Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico

 

Erna Martha Bauman’s western – actress:

Los siete proscritos – 1969 (Mary Garrison)

Sunday, June 14, 2026

RIP Corrado Solari

 

Corrado Solari, the historic face of Elisa di Rivombrosa loved by the general public, has died: the cause of the actor's death

Corrado Solari, historic actor of Italian cinema, has passed away at the age of 79. From Elisa di Rivombrosa to cult films, she was famous for her antagonist roles.

Magazine

By Melania Fiata

June 10, 2025

 

Italian cinema loses one of its most unmistakable faces. Corrado Solari died at the age of 79, and he was the actor that the public learned to hate on screen and that his colleagues did not stop admiring in life. A thoroughbred character actor, trained in the theater, he has gone through years and years of Italian entertainment playing antagonists, cynical officials and other characters thanks to which he has left his mark, as in the historic fiction Elisa di Rivombrosa. Yet, off the set, he was anything but: a cultured gentleman, passionate about literature and art, very far from any form of protagonism.

Farewell to Corrado Solari, the causes of death

The villain par excellence of Italian cinema and television has left us: Corrado Solari, an actor with a severe face, a sharp gaze, and a stage presence capable of making even the most marginal character unforgettable, has passed away at the age of 79. The causes of death have not yet been disclosed. With a career spanning over fifty years and a solid theatrical training, he has played numerous complex characters, often antagonists, criminals and authoritarian figures and with a strong expressive intensity. In his private life, however, he was known as a cultured, kind person and deeply passionate about art and literature.

Corrado Solari, an extraordinary career: the face that great directors could not forget

Throughout his career he has worked with some of the most important Italian directors, including Sergio Leone in Giù la testa, Elio Petri in La classe operaia va in paradiso, Damiano Damiani and Marco Bellocchio. He was also one of the symbolic faces of the Italian detective story, participating in films such as Roma a mano armata and La banda del trucido. In the 2000s he achieved new television popularity thanks to Elisa di Rivombrosa and, more recently, he appeared in the series Vita da Carlo by Carlo Verdone. Just in the famous fiction of Canale 5, with Puccini and Preziosi, despite his 'perfidious' role, he was much appreciated by the public. For those who don't know, he was the one who carried out the orders of 'very bad' Luca Ward.

His last film performance was in the film Nel tepore del ballo by Pupi Avati, alongside Massimo Ghini, Isabella Ferrari, Raoul Bova, Giuliana De Sio and others. With his death, the world of entertainment loses an interpreter of great talent and professionalism: a man with a gloomy appearance on the set but with a good, honest and kind soul in everyday life. Especially for this, we are sure that he will always be remembered.

SOLARI, Corrado

Born: 7/21/1948, Rimini, Emilia-Romagna, Italy

Died: 6/9 /2026, Rome, Lazio, Italy

 

Corrado Solari’s western – actor:

Duck You Sucker – 1971 (Sebastian)

 

RIP Oliver Lee

 

Singer Oliver Tree, 32, killed in helicopter crash in Brazil

New York Post

By Ronny Reyes

June 14, 2026

 

Singer Oliver Tree died in a helicopter crash Sunday when two choppers collided in Rio de Janeiro, killing all six occupants, officials said.

The “Life Goes On” singer, 32, was in the middle of a tour in Brazil when he boarded a helicopter in Recreio dos Bandeirantes, in the Southwest zone of Rio de Janeiro, CNN reported.

The chopper Tree was on then slammed into another over an electric car lot, setting at least 20 cars ablaze in the deadly collision.

Harrowing images of the aftermath show the helicopters completely mangled on the ground, surrounded by crushed and burnt cars in the lot.

The other victims include passengers Lucas Vignale, Gaspar Prim (also known as Argentinian YouTuber Gaspi), Lucas Brito Chaves, and pilots Alexandre Souza and Charles Marsillac.

Officials say the cause of the collision is still under investigation.

Tree — who’s also known for his distinctive hairstyle, a bowl-cut mullet hybrid — was in South America as part of his “The World’s First World Tour,” which was meant to span across 30 countries and hit all seven continents.

He had wrapped up his Brazilian show in São Paulo last week and was set to travel to Portugal for a show in Lisbon on July 13.

The “Miss You” singer, who has more than 11 million monthly listeners on Spotify, was born in Santa Cruz, California, and made his start in the music world at age 17 when he worked with big names like Skrillex and Zeds Dead.

Tree released his independent album, “Splitting Branches,” in 2013, with the artist stepping away from the scene afterward to study music technology.

He returned to the scene in 2020 with his first studio album, “Ugly is Beautiful,” which featured his platinum hit “Life Goes on.”

By 2024, he was nominated for the International Song Brit award alongside Robin Schulz for their hit song “Miss You.”

He went on to release “Cowboy Tears,” “Alone in a Crowd,” and his April 2026 album, “Love You Madly Hate You Badly.”

Along with his music career, Tree is also known for breaking the Guinness World Record for the largest kick scooter on Earth in 2020, with the machine measuring more than 13 feet tall and 10 feet long.

TREE, Oliver (Oliver Tree Nickell)

Born: 6/29/1933, Santa Cruz, California, U.S.A.

Died: 6/14/2026, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

 

Oliver Tree’s western – singer:

Oliver Tree: Cowboys Don't Cry – 2022

Friday, June 12, 2026

RIP Ronnie Schell

 

Ronnie Schell, ‘Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.’ and ‘That Girl’ Actor, Dies at 94

Variety

By Matt Minton

June 12, 2026

 

Ronnie Schell, the versatile actor known for his comedic work in “Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.” and “That Girl,” died Friday in Los Angeles of natural causes, his publicist confirmed to Variety. He was 94.

Known for his work in film, TV and on stage as a comedian, the San Francisco native amassed over 140 credits over the course of his decades-spanning career.

He is perhaps best remembered for his run of ’60s shows, from starring in 92 episodes of “Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.” as Duke Slater to three episodes of “That Girl” alongside Marlo Thomas. During that time period, he made appearances on “The Patty Duke Show” and “The Andy Griffith Show.” He co-starred with Goldie Hawn on “Good Morning World.”

Schell’s career as a performer started after auditioning for San Francisco’s Purple Onion nightclub while he was still a senior at San Francisco State University. He also enlisted in the Air Force.

Beyond his on-screen work, which included roles in “Fatal Instinct,” “The Devil and Max Devlin” and “The Revenge of the Red Baron,” Schell was known as a voice performer for “Cat from Outer Space,” “Jetsons,” “Rover Dangerfield,” “Battle of the Planets” and “Goober and the Ghost Chasers.” Additionally, he was credited as a dialogue coach on 1984’s “All of Me,” directed by Carl Reiner.

His most recent appearances included the TV shows “See Ya” and “Kaplan’s Korner.” He also starred in the musical comedy “Don’t Leave it All to Your Children!”

Schell is survived by his wife Janet, sons Gregory and Christian and a granddaughter, Chiara.

SCHELL, Ronnie (Ronald Ralph Schell)

Born: 12/23/1932, Richmond, California, U.S.A.

Died: 6/12/2026, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

Ronnie Schell’s western – actor:

 The Cowboy Killer – 2026 (Trucker Harry)

 

RIP Pauls Butkēvičs

 

Latvian actor Pauls Butkēvičs passes away

Latvian Public Service Media

6/12/2026

 

Latvian actor Pauls Butkēvičs, who played approximately 150 roles during his film career, has died at the age of 85, announced Marta Bite, the chairwoman of the board of the Latvian Cinematographers' Union, citing information from the actor's relatives.

Butkēvičs was born in 1940. After graduating from Riga Secondary School No. 11 in 1959, he studied at the Riga Polytechnic Institute (now Riga Technical University) and worked at the "VEF" electrical factory. At the same time, he was actively involved in artistic life at the Dailes Theatre, where he mastered the basics of acting together with several later famous stage artists. He also studied at the Law, History and Philosophy Faculties of the University of Latvia.

Butkēvičs began his career in film in 1963 with a role in the film "Nedziedātā dziesma". A few years later, he got his first leading role in Ada Neretniece's film "Hipokrāta zvērests", and starred in director Rolands Kalniņš' films "Akmens un šķēmbas" and "Elpojiet dziļi".

He went on to star in numerous films and TV series and worked in Russia, Germany, Poland, Sweden, Denmark and India.

In 2016, Butkēvičs was awarded the Fourth Class of the Cross of Recognition for his long-standing and significant contribution to Latvian culture and cinema.

Our condolences to his friends and family.

BUTKEVICS, Pauls (Paul Paulovitch Butkevich)

Born: 8/8/1940, Riga, Latvia, U.S.S.R.

Died: 6/12/2026, Latvia

 

Pauls Butkēvičs – western – actor:

Alaska Kid (TV) – 1993 (Clark)

RIP Margaret Kerry

 

Margaret Kerry, the Inspiration for Disney’s Tinker Bell, Has Passed Away at 97

The Dis

By Chloé Ferreira

June 12, 2026

 

The Disney community is mourning the loss of Margaret Kerry, the actress and dancer whose performances helped bring Disney’s iconic Tinker Bell to life in the 1953 animated classic Peter Pan. Kerry passed away yesterday, on June 11, 2026, at the age of 97 following a battle with lung cancer.

For Disney fans, Kerry will forever be associated with Tinker Bell. While she did not provide the character’s voice, her live-action reference performances were used by Disney animators as they crafted the beloved pixie audiences have adored for generations. Her expressive movements, charm, and personality became an important part of creating one of Disney’s most recognizable characters.

Beyond her connection to Disney, Kerry enjoyed a lengthy career spanning film, television, radio, and voice acting. Throughout the decades, she appeared in productions such as The Andy Griffith Show, The Lone Ranger, and numerous animated projects. She also remained a familiar face at Disney and fan events, where she often shared stories from Hollywood’s Golden Age and her experiences working with Walt Disney Studios.

In 2016, Kerry published her autobiography, Tinker Bell Talks: Tales of a Pixie Dusted Life, offering fans a closer look at her career through personal stories, photographs, and memories from throughout her life.

Margaret Kerry leaves behind a lasting legacy that extends far beyond a single role. Through her work, she helped create a character that continues to inspire generations of Disney fans around the world. Every flutter of pixie dust and every appearance by Tinker Bell serves as a reminder of the talent and heart she brought to Disney history.

Our heartfelt condolences go out to Margaret Kerry’s family, friends, and all those whose lives she touched throughout her extraordinary career.

KERRY, Margaret (Margaret McCarty)

Born: 5/11/1929, Springfield, Illinois, U.S.A.

Died: 6/11/2026, · Wilmington North Carolina, U.S.A.

 

Margaret Jerry’s western – actress:

The Lone Ranger (TV) - 1950 (Jane Carter)

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

RIP Armando Norte

 

Chicano animator and science fiction visionary Armando Norte dies at 72

CALO News

By Robb Hernández

6/10/2026

 

Legendary Chicano artist Armando Norte passed away on June 4, 2026, after a long illness at the age of 72. Born and raised in East Los Angeles on June 12, 1953, Norte attended Montebello High School and pursued art training at East L.A. College and California State University Los Angeles (CSULA). Later, he secured a job at Filmation Associates where he worked as an illustrator for several animated children’s shows of the 1980s, including “He-Man: Masters of the Universe,” “She-Ra: Princess of Power” and “The Real Ghostbusters,”among others.

Norte’s artistic voice was gregarious, extraordinary and startling like the aftereffects of a flash in his words.  More than his accomplishments in commercial media, Norte was part of a formative generation of Mexican American artists from Southern California who trailblazed an experimental vocabulary amid the tumult of post-1960s civil rights activism.

By instigating L.A. publics through intermedia artworks that provoked and disturbed, Norte found camaraderie among different art organizations germane to the expressive fabric of East L.A. In the early 1980s, he was a recognizable figure in Self Help Graphics’ earliest forays in Day of the Dead activities. His eye-catching looks and trendy ensembles innovated the cultural tradition with New Wave sensibilities and modernizing attitudes in costuming and make-up. His creative designs remolded cultural archetypes in ways that drew attention from the Los Angeles Times and attracted photographers Laura Aguilar, Harry Gamboa, Jr. and Ricardo Valverde, who respectively documented Norte and his family in acclaimed artworks like “At Home with the Nortes” (1990), “Blessed Bag Bombers” (1982), and “Armando y Consuelo: Two Alienz Muertos” (1983/1991).

More than dress, Norte was equally adept at printmaking and explored the medium in the historic Self Help Graphics’ Experimental Screenprint Ateliér in 1983 where his piece, ‘Savagery and Technology,” conjoined Mesoamerican ritual with a hardwired East L.A. His capacity to suffuse past, present, and future in his post-apocalyptic visualizations focused much of his work throughout the decade, which culminated in a retrospective show entitled “Barrio 2100,” organized by Consuelo Flores and featured historic and new work by Norte and sons, Alain and Gian, at Avenue 50 Studio on Fig in 2025. Norte’s screen prints have been collected by the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Blanton Museum of Art at the University of Texas Austin, and the University of California Santa Barbara Special Research Collections. 

Over the years, Norte’s penchant for Chicano futurist aesthetics found partnerships with a host of other artistic innovators, among them Diane Gamboa, Nic Greene, Gronk, Willie Herrón and Marisela Norte, along with the space age rock band, Zolar X. His artistic practice in the early 80s can be seen in the speculatively fantastic and spectacularly odd theatrics in performance art actions of various art organizations and collectives.

One of his signature contributions innovated paper dress silhouettes for Day of the Dead celebrations choosing to supplant tradition with armored garments, plated extraterrestrials and machinic homeboys with kitschy charm akin to Elsa Schiaparelli couture. His expertise in science fiction idioms forged interdisciplinary outlets and exploratory platforms in ways that redefined the terms of Chicano art, preferring to focus on the rubble of artistic address and distress.

Though Norte would eventually step away from performance-based collaborations, his countercultural language of punk angst, urban pessimism and B-movie sensibilities endured in sketchbooks and paintings.

Later in life, Norte aligned himself with a rogues’ gallery where his unapologetic defense of monsters and counterfactual questions about life (and death) in East L.A. allowed for a fantastical place giving the divine, demeaned and alienated their due. More than his historic contributions to Chicano art and performance aesthetics, Norte might also be known for his personal touches quietly embellishing the borders and corners of paper goods with immaculate ghouls or adorning himself in handmade steampunk trimmings further solidifying his place among a pantheon of the city’s science fiction originals, along with his peers Forrest Ackerman, Ray Bradbury, Octavia Butler and Ray Harryhausen.

He is survived by his sister Marisela Norte; son Alain Flores Norte, daughter-in-law Aimée Suen, and their child Iyari Huitzili Suen Norte; son Gian Flores Norte, daughter-in-law Omega Norte and their sons Benjamin Ezekiel Norte and Titus Alexius Pedro Norte. He is preceded in death by his father Armando Norte, Sr. and his mother Eloisa Melendez Norte. The family asks that donations be made in his name to Self Help Graphics.

NORTE, Armando

Born: 6/12/1953, East Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Died: 6/4/2026, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

Armando Borte’s westerns – animator:

Brave Starr (TV) -1987-1988

Brave Starr: The Legend - 1988

RIP Dennis Rush

 

Dennis Rush, Child Actor in ‘Man of a Thousand Faces’ and ‘The Andy Griffith Show,’ Dies at 74

He played Lon Chaney Jr. in the James Cagney classic and Howie, one of Opie’s friends, on the beloved CBS sitcom.

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

May 10, 2026

 

Dennis Rush, who played Lon Chaney Jr. as a youngster opposite James Cagney in Man of a Thousand Faces and one of Opie’s pals alongside Ron Howard on The Andy Griffith Show, has died. He was 74.

Rush, who was diagnosed with leukemia last month, lived in the San Diego area and died Saturday on the way to the hospital, actor-musician Keith Thibodeaux told The Hollywood Reporter. (Thibodeaux played Johnny Paul Jason, another of Opie’s friends, on The Andy Griffith Show, though he’s best known as Little Ricky from I Love Lucy.)

Rush also showed up from 1960-62 on seven episodes of Wagon Train — John Ford directed him in one — and from 1962-63 on three installments of Laramie. Both were Westerns from Revue Studios and NBC.

The freckle-faced Rush made his onscreen acting debut as Creighton Chaney, age 4, in Universal-International’s Man of a Thousand Faces (1957), starring Cagney as silent film star Lon Chaney (The Hunchback of Notre Dame, The Phantom of the Opera).

As Creighton grows up, Rush is succeeded by Rickie Sorensen, Robert Lyden and finally Roger Smith, who at the end will embark on his own career as an actor (and a starring turn in The Wolf Man!) using the stage name Lon Chaney Jr.

The youngster appeared as Howie Pruitt on CBS’ The Andy Griffith Show over three seasons from 1963-65. “I got to be in eight episodes over about a 2 1/2-year period,” he said in 2022. “It was just the best of the best.”

On the 1964 episode “Barney’s Physical,” Rush ad-libbed a line during rehearsal about Don Knotts’ character “hanging himself in the closet” — he had blanked on what was in the script — and it made it onto the show.

Dennis Eugene Rush was born in Philadelphia on June 10, 1951. When he was 1, his father, Jack, brought the family to Los Angeles and got a job as a film archivist at Universal.

“If you were good, you got to go to the studio and have lunch with dad, it was kind of a big deal,” he recalled last year at the Mayberry-I Love Lucy Festival in Granville, Tennessee.

While they were sitting at the lunch counter, “a man taps my dad on the shoulder and says, ‘I’m looking for a little boy to play my son, I’m making a movie called Man of a Thousand Faces’ … That gentleman was James Cagney.’”

When his father explained that Dennis wasn’t an actor and had to go to school, Cagney replied, “Trust me.” Rush’s screen test involved riding a tricycle around a Christmas tree, and he would spend six months on the movie.

Dorothy Malone portrayed his mom and Jim Backus his uncle, and Rush managed to get emotional in a scene in which Creighton is told by his dad that he’s going to be placed in an orphanage.

Cagney said, “‘You know, this has all been make-believe,” Rush remembered in a 1989 interview with the Los Angeles Times. “But you know how much fun Christmas can be and being with your folks and all that? Well, this little boy is never going to see his mom or his dad again. No more Christmases. No more good food.’

“He kept that up for a walk around the soundstage and had me in tears. We went right in and did the scene in five minutes. Whenever I had to cry from then on, I remembered that.”

He said he and Cagney exchanged Christmas cards every year before the Oscar winner died in March 1986.

Rush also worked on the films No Name on the Bullet (1959) and Follow Me, Boys! (1966) and on episodes of The Millionaire, Checkmate, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Perry Mason, The Lucy Show, Gunsmoke, My Favorite Martian, My Living Doll and The Magical World of Disney.

“Every month or so you would do a number of things and then six months would go by and you wouldn’t do anything,” he said. “Then you’d get a call and go on an interview and you might be with 20 kids or you might be with 200 kids [vying for the same job].”

After he outgrew his child roles, Rush joined the U.S. Marines, and when he finished his stint, he learned that his parents had spent all the money he earned as an actor (he said he made as much as $500 a week).

He graduated from Notre Dame High School and then San Diego State in 1977, had a career in the hotel and restaurant business and was a frequent and popular guest at the Mayberry Lucy fest (he was there last month) and at the Mayberry Days celebration held each year in Mount Airy, North Carolina.

Says a post on the Mayberry Days website: “Dennis was an absolute joy to be around and one of the sweetest men you could ever meet. It was always a pleasure to welcome him to Mayberry Days, where he shared smiles, stories, hugs and kindness with fans from all over the world.”

Survivors include his siblings, Sally, Monica, Patrick and Megan. Another brother, Jack, died in February.

RUSH, Dennis (Dennis Eugene Rush)

Born: 6/10/1951, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.A

Died: 5/10/2026, San Diego, California, U.S.A.

 

Dennis Rish’s westerns – actor:

No Name on the Bullett – 1959 (Billy Chaffee)

The Deputy (TV) - 1959 (Timmy Jackson)

Wagon Train (TV) – 1960-1962 (Davy Adams, David Ivers)

Frontier Circus (TV) - 1962 (boy)

Gunsmoke (TV) – 1962 (kid)

Laramie (TV) – 1962-1963 (boy, Teddy)

RIP Anthony Guidera

 

Anthony Guidera, Actor Who Had a Memorable Kiss in ‘Species,’ Dies at 65

A onetime model based in Paris, he also appeared in ‘The Rock,’ ‘Armageddon,’ ‘The Postman’ and ‘The Annihilation of Fish.’

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

June 9, 2026

 

Anthony Guidera, an actor and model who played pilots for Michael Bay in The Rock and Armageddon and shared a memorable kiss with Natasha Henstridge in Species, has died. He was 65.

Guidera died Saturday in a Los Angeles-area hospital, his wife, Valarie, told TMZ. He was taken off life support after he had suffered a heart issue at their home on May 11, she said.

The hunky Guidera also appeared in Scott Winant’s ’Til There Was You (1997) and Kevin Costner’s The Postman (1997) and portrayed a gun seller in Charles Burnett’s The Annihilation of Fish (1999).

And on television, he showed up on everything from Renegade, Baywatch, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Red Shoe Diaries and Hope & Gloria to Nash Bridges, Acapulco H.E.A.T., Angel, ER and, on a 2005 episode for his last credit, L.A. Dicks.

In the sci-fi horror film Species (1995), directed by Roger Donaldson, Guidera’s character doesn’t know Henstridge’s Sil is an alien/human hybrid organism when he forces her to kiss him — to disastrous results.

The moment was recognized as the year’s best kiss at the 1996 MTV Movie Awards.

“This kiss between alien man-eater Natasha Henstridge and Anthony Guidera in Species is scary-good — emphasis on the scary,” Michelle Darrisaw wrote in a post for Oprah Daily. “It’s not every day that puckering up results in an exploding head.”

Born in San Francisco on Oct. 18, 1960, Guidera moved to Paris and traveled around the world for about a decade while making commercials and modeling under the name James Guidera.

He performed in plays in Paris, studied with Robert Lewis at The Actors Studio in New York and landed his first onscreen role as a bodyguard in Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather Part III (1990), working on that film for five months.

GUIDERA, Anthony

Born: 10/18/1960, San Francisco, California, U.S.A.

Died: 6/6/2026, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

Anthony Guidera’s westerns – actor:

Precious Find – 1996 (jumper)

RIP William Hasley

 

William Hasley, Screenwriter Who Co-Wrote Book With Caitlyn Jenner, Dies on Hollywood Hiking Trail

Variety

By Pat Saperstein

June 9, 2026

 

William Hasley, a writer who worked on TV series including “The Smurfs” and co-wrote an inspirational book with Caitlyn Jenner, has been identified as the hiker who was found dead on Hollywood’s popular Runyon Canyon trail on Saturday evening. He was 78.

Hasley was previously married to “The Bold and the Beautiful” actress Robin Riker. His death comes just two weeks after a man in his 40s died of cardiac arrest on the same trail.

The Los Angeles Fire Department told the Daily Mail, “LAFD Air Operations lowered rescuers to the patient, and medical treatment was administered.” Officials then pronounced Hasley dead at the scene.

Born in Pittsburgh, Hasley graduated Marshall U., where he played football and ran cross-country, according to his official bio. He started out in animation, writing for Hanna-Barbera and Filmation shows “The Smurfs” and “Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids.”

Always a sports fan, he worked with NBC-TV on the special “Star Salute to the U.S. Olympic Team,” where he met Caitlyn Jenner. Jenner commissioned Halsey to write the motivational book “Finding the Champion Within” for Simon & Schuster. He went on to ghostwrite other motivational books including “Passion, Profit & Power” and “The Slight Edge.” He also wrote “Chasing the Wind, The Autobiography of Steve Fossett,” and was a producer on two TV specials about the mysterious aviator.

He worked on developing the pilot “Borderline Heroes,” which was sold to ABC and wrote the half hour comedy pilot “Steeltown” for Castle Rock Entertainment and developed the pilot “Brooklyn District.”

Hasley went on to work with Oliver Stone and Gerald Green as a writer on “Defiance” and wrote episodes of “The Young Riders” and “Swift Justice.”

He also taught writing at UCLA and participated in numerous charitable events. 

HASLEY, William

Born: 7/?/1947, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.

Died: 6/7/2026, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

 

William Hasley’s westerns – writer:

The Young Riders (TV) - 1990

Saturday, June 6, 2026

RIP Julio Jung

 

Renowned actor Julio Jung dies at 84

biobio Chile

By Gerson Guzmán D.

June 6, 2026

 

At the age of 84, the actor, comedian and councilman, Julio Jung, remembered for his remarkable works of cinema, TV series and comedy, such as the classic Mediomundo, passed away.

His family confirmed the unfortunate news that mourns the Chilean cultural world.

Jung had a very extensive career, and in 2025 he received the National Humor Award.

In that instance he was recognized as one of the characters who managed to circumvent censorship in oppressive times.

"During the most complex years of the dictatorship, he was part of a generation that bordered on censorship and challenged power with irony and lucidity," they pointed out in 2025.

They also highlighted his career as an actor of multiple registers and a prolific career in film, theater and television, through which he made humor not only an expressive tool but also a field of artistic and political exploration.

Julio Jung is also remembered for his unforgettable duo with the also deceased Andrés Rillón, with whom he made an intelligent, historical comedy with high critical content.

In the middle of last year, Julio Jung Duvauchelle, his son, revealed that the actor suffered from senile dementia almost four years ago and that for that reason he was hospitalized in a care center for the elderly.

However, he remained active despite the difficulties, and continued to create until his last days.

JUNG, Julio (Julio Humberto Gonzalo Benito Jung del Favero)

Born: 3/21/1942, Santiago, Chile

Died: 6/6/2026, Santiago, Chile

 

Julio Jung’s western – actor:

Cherif – 2002 (Doctor Jung)

RIP Patrick Godfrey

 

Patrick Godfrey

'Ever After' Star Dead at 93

TMZ

Staff

June 6, 2026

 

Actor Patrick Godfrey -- best known for portraying Leonardo da Vinci in the 1998 film "Ever After: A Cinderella Story" starring Drew Barrymore -- has died.

Patrick passed "peacefully at home surrounded by his family" on Thursday, his talent agency announced in a statement. They added ... "Paddy was an exceptionally talented actor and a remarkable individual, and we will miss him greatly."

A cause of death was not revealed.

Patrick enjoyed a prolific career spanning nearly 70 years, which included roles in period dramas, novel adaptations, musicals, and more. Some of his notable projects aside from 'Ever After' include 1986's "A Room with a View," 1993's "The Remains of the Day," 2002's "The Count of Monte Cristo," and 2012's "Les Misérables."

He also scored TV roles in popular shows including "Doctor Who" and "Inspector Morse."

Patrick was 93.

RIP

GODFREY, Patrick (Patrick Lindesay Archibald Godfrey)

Born: 2/13/1933, Finsbury Park, London, England, UK

Died: 6/4/2026,

 

Patrick Godfrey’s western – voice actor:

Red Dead Redemption – 2010 {voice of The Local Population]

Red Dead Redemption II – 2018 [voice of The Local Pedestrian Population]

Friday, June 5, 2026

RIP Max Kleven

 

Max Kleven, Stuntman, Second-Unit Director on ‘Rollerball,’ ‘Batman Returns’ and ‘The River Wild,’ Dies at 92

A ski jumper from Norway, he also worked on ‘Naked City,’ ‘Silent Movie,’ the ‘Back to the Future’ trilogy and ‘Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves.’

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

May 4, 2026

 

Max Kleven, the Norwegian-born stunt performer, stunt coordinator and second-unit director with credits including Our Man Flint, Rollerball, The Deep and the Back to the Future trilogy, has died. He was 92.

Kleven died Wednesday of heart failure at Henry Mayo Newhall Hospital, his family announced.

Early in his career, Kleven doubled for Paul Burke on ABC’s Naked City and for Glenn Corbett on CBS’ Route 66, and he served as the president of the Stuntmen’s Association of Motion Pictures in the 1970s.

Kleven did double duty performing stunts and directing scenes on several films, starting with Cotton Comes to Harlem (1970) and the sequel Come Back Charleston Blue (1972) and followed by Rollerball (1975), Silent Movie (1976), Batman Returns (1992) and The River Wild (1994).

And as an actor on television action series, he showed up on everything from Rescue 8, Get Smart, The Big Valley, Combat! and The Invaders to Batman, Star Trek, Mannix, Kojak and Magnum, P.I.

Born on Aug. 16, 1933, in Trondheim, Norway, Kleven spent his early years on a farm with his mother, Jenny, and a cousin, Joni. He joined the Norwegian Merchant Marine as teenager and came to the U.S. in 1951; he said the moment he saw California’s sunshine and palm trees, he knew he never wanted to leave.

Kleven had been an accomplished ski jumper in his home country, and when he was spotted sliding down and flying off ramps in Sugarbush, Vermont, he was recruited to be a stunt performer. According to IMDb, the first movie he worked on was the Oscar best picture winner Around the World in 80 Days (1956).

Kleven did stunts for other films including Our Man Flint (1966), Murderers’ Row (1966), Who’s Minding the Mint? (1967), Charley Varrick (1973), Back to the Future (1985), Ruthless People (1986), Species (1995) and Wild Wild West (1999).

His résumé as a stunt coordinator included Book of Numbers (1973), Dillinger (1973), The Deep (1977), The Changeling (1980), Footloose (1984) and Sleeping With the Enemy (1991), and he was a second-unit director on Raid on Entebbe (1976), Runaway Train (1985), Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), Back to the Future Part II (1989) and Part III (1990), Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991) and Spider-Man (2002).

He even got to direct a handful of films.

Kleven’s family said that one of his career highlights came when Steven Spielberg told him, “I hire you to fix my movies.” (Kleven worked for the producer on the Back to the Future films, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, 1980’s Used Cars and 2000’s What Lies Beneath, among other features),

Survivors include his wife, Luz; his daughters, Valli and Céline; his son, Erik; and his grandson, Hunter.

KLEVEN, Max (Max J. Klevin)

Born: 8/16/1933, Trondheim, Norway

Died: 6/3/2026, Newhall, California, U.S.A.

 

Max Kleven’s westerns – assistant director, actor, stuntman:

The Big Valley (TV) 1965 (Dave Williams)

The Virginian (TV) 1968 (Halevey)

The Hard Man – 1957 (townsman)

Billy the Kid Versus Dracula – 1966 (Sandy Newman)

The Good Guys and the Bad Guys – 1969 [stunts]

Zandy’s Bride – 1974 [stunts]

The Duchess and the Dirtwater Fox – 1976 [assistant director]

Almost Heroes – 1998 [stunts]

Wild Wild West – 1999 [stunts]

Back to the Future III – [assistant director]

RIP Anthony Head

 

Buffy and Ted Lasso star Anthony Head dies at 72

BBC

By Annabel Rackham Ian Youngs

June 5, 2026

 

British actor Anthony Head, best known for his roles in TV shows including Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Ted Lasso, Merlin and Little Britain, has died at the age of 72.

Head found international fame as Rupert Giles in hit supernatural teen show Buffy in the late 1990s.

He went on to have a recurring role in sketch show Little Britain as the prime minister, he played king Uther Pendragon in the BBC's Merlin, and appeared as former football club owner Rupert Mannion in Ted Lasso.

"He passed away peacefully of complications due to pneumonia, surrounded by his family," his daughters Emily and Daisy said.

His daughters' statement said, "it is with heavy hearts that we announce the death of our extraordinary father".

They added: "It has been, and forever will be, an honour and a privilege to be his daughters, and to have witnessed firsthand the impact both he and his work have had on so many."

They also said they knew "how dearly he will be missed by friends, colleagues and fans of the show he was in", adding that he "loved his job very much" and "always considered himself incredibly lucky".

His family acknowledged that "his legacy will live on" and said they considered themselves "lucky" to have watched him doing what he loved throughout his career.

Head's other credits included playing Geoffrey Howe in The Iron Lady and appearing in Doctor Who, Persuasion, The Inbetweeners and Manchild.

Head first found fame in the UK in the 1980s as the face of Nescafe coffee adverts on TV.

He was part of the Gold Blend couple alongside Sharon Maughan, with their coffee-themed romance ads becoming popular between 1987 and 1993.

Head starred in numerous popular British shows during his career, also including Motherland, Silent Witness and Doctor Who.

Head's last acting credits included Bridgerton in 2022, in which he starred in one episode in series two.

He also joined the cast of BBC Radio 4's long-running drama The Archers in 2018, playing Robin Fairbrother.

He enjoyed a long stage career, performing in several iterations of The Rocky Horror Show and musicals such as Godspell and Chess.

Head lost his long-term partner Sarah Fisher, who was an animal welfare campaigner, in December 2025 at the age of 61.

His daughters Emily, 37 and Daisy, 35, both work as actors - with Emily best known for playing Carli D'Amato in The Inbetweeners.

Daisy has appeared in TV shows including Harlots and Shadow and Bone.

His brother Murray is also an actor, who appeared in the Oscar-nominated 1971 film Sunday Bloody Sunday and the musical Chess.

HEAD, Anthony (Anthony Stewart Head)

Born: 2/20/1954, Camden, London, England, U.K.

Died: 6/5/2026, Bath, Somerset, England, U.K.

 

Anthony Head’s western – actor:

And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself – 2003 (William Benton)

RIP James Handy

 

Veteran Actor James Handy Stabbed To Death In Tarzana

The son of his girlfriend called 911, the LAPD says, and confessed to the killing

Los Angeles Magazine

Michele McPhee

June 5, 2026

 

“I am the son of man. I just killed the man of sin,” a 44-year-old man allegedly said in a 911 call from a West Valley address at around 9:30 a.m. Wednesday morning.

Los Angeles Police Department officers raced to an address on the 19200 block of Erwin Street in Tarzana where they found 81-year-old veteran actor James Handy collapsed on the front lawn with a stab wound to his chest, according to a statement. Handy, a character actor in films like “Logan,” “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Arachnophobia,” was soon pronounced dead and the son of his girlfriend was taken into custody.

The suspect, Michael Gledhill, who lived at the home with his mother, flagged down police officers and told them he was the person they were looking for, the LAPD said. Gledhill is being held on $2 million bail.

Handy had close to 150 acting credits on IMDb. He also made appearances in TV shows including “The West Wing,” “9-1-1,” “NCIS: Los Angeles,” “CSI: NY,” “The Young and the Restless,” “Castle,” “Criminal Minds,” “Cold Case,” “Without a Trace,” “ER,” “The X-Files” and “Mulaney.”

HANDY, James (James Michael Handy)

Born: 3/19/1945, New York City, New York, U.S.A.

Died: 6/3/2026, Sherman Oaks, California, U.S.A.

 

James Handy’s westerns – actor:

The Young Riders (TV) – 1992 (Isiah Burke)

Walker, Texas Ranger (TV) – 1995 (Elliot Cheever)

Vegas (TV) – 2012 (Mr. Dobbs)

Thursday, June 4, 2026

RIP Axel Schreiber

 

Actor Axel Schreiber dies at the age of 49

He became famous with the ARD series "Türkisch für Anfänger". Now Axel Schreiber has died at the age of just 49. He suffered from cancer.

blue news

6/4/2026

 

The actor Axel Schreiber is dead. The artist known from the successful ARD series "Türkisch für Anfänger" died at the age of 49, as his acting agency Hübchen confirmed, citing a close friend of Schreiber. According to the statement, the actor died on June 3 "after a long and serious illness with cancer". The "Bild" newspaper and "Focus" had previously reported.

"It's very, very sad," said Sanna Hübchen, co-owner of the agency. Director Laura Fischer and the agency published an emotional post on Instagram: "You were not only a wonderful actor for us, but also a companion, best friend, our family, buddy, colleague, dream interpreter, traveler and seeker".

It continued: "Here in our world you have definitely built a monument to yourself; in your films, series, with your paintings and with us - your fellow travelers. You made us laugh, feel and cry again and again - Axel you enriched our lives!"

Emotional reactions

Schreiber’s last wish was “deep peace”, his agents and his girlfriend wrote. There were numerous expressions of sympathy under her post. Numerous colleagues also spoke out. Actress Lea van Acken wrote: “We will miss you so much Axel, you beautiful soul.”

Actress Annika Ernst said: “I hope that his lightness and wisdom helped him through the last difficult times.” Actor Christian Kahrmann was shocked: “No! That can’t be... What a fine guy. Have a safe journey, my friend...” Actress Judith Hoersch also said goodbye with moving words: “I have to cry and wish his loved ones, including you dear Laura and his family, love and support in this difficult time. And a safe journey and deep peace to you Axel.

Also in front of the camera for Tatort

Schreiber, who was born in Lübben, Brandenburg, is best known for his role in the series "Türkisch für Anfänger" (2006-2008) alongside Josefine Preuss and Elyas M'Barek. There he played Axel Mende, who was at times together with the protagonist Lena (Preuss). In 2006, "Türkisch für Anfänger" was awarded the German Television Prize.

Over the course of his career, Schreiber has also appeared in other productions for film and television, such as "Soko Leipzig" and "Tatort". In 2024, he was in front of the camera for the German film "Für immer Freibad" by Laura Fischer, which was broadcast on ZDF in August last year. In 2025, Schreiber was still in front of the camera for "In aller Freundschaft".

SCHREIBER, Axel

Born: 1/30/1980, Lübben, Brandenburg, Germany

Died: 6/3/2026, Berlin, Berlin, Germany

 

Axel Schreiber’s western – actor:

The Young Chief Winnetou – 2022 (Deputy Sheriff Wilson)

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

RIP Giacomo Piperno

 

Giacomo Piperno, actor and voice actor with an eclectic career, has died

Notizie Nazionali

6/2/2026

 

The actor and voice actor Giacomo Piperno, eclectic and multifaceted interpreter between cinema and television, thanks to his versatility, professionalism and passion for the scenic art, died at the age of 90 at the Umberto I Polyclinic in Rome. The announcement of the disappearance, as reported by Adnkronos, was made by his children.

Born in Rome on January 20, 1936, into a Jewish family, Piperno escaped deportation by fleeing to Switzerland with his family in the days of the roundup in the ghetto of Rome in October 1943. He made his debut in 1960 with a television role in "Lieutenant Sheridan: A Gardenia for Helena Carrel" (1960), but it was with the film "Commandos" (1968) that his career gained momentum. Since then, his versatility has led him to play dramatic, historical and comic roles on the big and small screen, ranging from "Sacco e Vanzetti" (1971) by Giuliano Montaldo, to "Rugantino" (1973) by Pasquale Festa Campanile, up to the episode "In banca" of "Tu mi turbi" (1982) directed by Roberto Benigni. For Benigni he has also always starred in "The Little Devil" (1988). Among other films he starred in "Il camorrista" (1986) by Giuseppe Tornatore, "Splendor" (1988) by Ettore Scola, "Open Doors" (1990) by Gianni Amelio, "Il portaborse" (1991) by Daniele Luchetti (1991), "Pasolini, un delitto italiano" (1995) by Marco Tullio Giordana. On television he participated in numerous series and miniseries, including "Napoleon on St. Helena" (1973) and "Catherine and her daughters" (2005-2007), where he played the husband of Iva Zanicchi's character. His talent also extended to dubbing between the sixties and eighties he lent his voice to performers such as Gene Hackman and Philippe Leroy, helping to make the characters on the Italian big screen memorable.

He made his debut in 1960 with a television role in "Lieutenant Sheridan: A Gardenia for Helena Carrel" (1960), but it was with the film "Commandos" (1968) that his career gained momentum. Since then, his versatility has led him to play dramatic, historical and comic roles on the big and small screen, ranging from "Sacco e Vanzetti" (1971) by Giuliano Montaldo, to "Rugantino" (1973) by Pasquale Festa Campanile, up to the episode "In banca" of "Tu mi turbi" (1982) directed by Roberto Benigni. For Benigni he has also always starred in "The Little Devil" (1988). Among other films he starred in "Il camorrista" (1986) by Giuseppe Tornatore, "Splendor" (1988) by Ettore Scola, "Open Doors" (1990) by Gianni Amelio, "Il portaborse" (1991) by Daniele Luchetti (1991), "Pasolini, un delitto italiano" (1995) by Marco Tullio Giordana. On television he participated in numerous series and miniseries, including "Napoleon on St. Helena" (1973) and "Catherine and her daughters" (2005-2007), where he played the husband of Iva Zanicchi's character. His talent also extended to dubbing between the sixties and eighties he lent his voice to performers such as Gene Hackman and Philippe Leroy, helping to make the characters on the Italian big screen memorable.

PIPERNO, Giacomo

Born: 1/20/1936, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Died: 5/31/2026, Rome, Lazio, Italy

 

Giacomo Piperno’s westerns – voice actor:

A Coffin for the Sheriff – 1965 [Italian voice of Miguel De La Riva]

Pecos Cleans Up – 1967 [Italian voice of Carl Gaddi]

A Hole in the Forehead – 1968 [Italian voice of Gianni Brezza]

One by One - 1968 [Italian voice of Peter Lee Lawrence]

Heads or Tail – 1969 [Italian voice of Franco Daddi]

Adiós, Sabata – 1970 [Italian voice of Dean Reed]

Kill Django... Kill First – 1971 [Italian voice of Giacomo Rossi Stuart]

Shoot Joe, and Shoot Again – 1971 [Italian voice of Richard Harrison]

Shoot the Living and Pray for the Dead – 1971 [Italian voice of Klaus Kinski]

RIP Knut Husebø

 

Knut Husebø is dead

Actor Knut Husebø has died, 80 years old. He became a national celebrity for the role of Hamsun's Benoni in the TV series.

Seher

By Karoline Henriette Bjånesøy

6/1/2026

 

Actor and visual artist Knut Husebø has died, 80 years old.

This is stated by theatre director Trond Lie (76) on his Facebook profile.

For several decades, Husebø was a prominent figure in Norwegian cultural life.

He became a national celebrity in the 1970s for his role as Benoni in the TV series Benonig and Rosa, directed by Per Bronken. Here he played opposite Unni Evjen in a heartbreaking Hamsun drama from the Nordland coast.

He first made a name for himself as an actor on the theatre stage, before later also making his mark as a visual artist.

He was associated with several of the country's leading theatre institutions and participated in a number of stage and television productions.

Throughout his career, he became known for his interpretations of both classic and modern roles.

In later years, Husebø devoted more and more time to the visual arts.

His work was shown at several exhibitions in Norway and abroad.

Cultural personalities who have left comments under Lie's Facebook posts describe him as a friendly and interested man.

The time of the funeral is not yet known.

HUSEBO, Knut

Born: 5/10/1946, Stavanger, Rogaland, Norway

Died: 6/1/2026, Norway

 

Knut Husebø’s western – actor:

Morgan Kane: Death is a Lonesome Hunter – 2001 (outlaw)