Sunday, June 22, 2014

http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/wireStory/gerry-goffin-carole-kings-husband-dies-75-24219568

Lyricist Gerry Goffin, who with his then-wife and songwriting partner Carole King wrote such hits as "Will You Love Me Tomorrow," ''(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman," ''Halfway to Paradise" and "The Loco-Motion," died Wednesday at his home in Los Angeles. He was 75.

His wife, Michelle Goffin, confirmed his death.

Goffin, who married King in 1959 while they were in their teens, penned more than 50 top 40 hits, including "Pleasant Valley Sunday" for the Monkees, "Crying in the Rain" by the Everly Brothers, "Some Kind of Wonderful" for the Drifters and "Take Good Care of My Baby" by Bobby Vee. The couple divorced in 1968, but Goffin kept writing hits, including "Savin' All My Love for You" for Whitney Houston.

King said in a statement that Goffin was her "first love" and had a profound impact on her life.

"Gerry was a good man with a dynamic force, whose words and creative influence will resonate for generations to come," King said. "His legacy to me is our two daughters, four grandchildren, and our songs that have touched millions and millions of people, as well as a lifelong friendship."

The Goffin-King love affair is the subject of the Tony Award-nominated musical "Beautiful: The Carole King Musical" on Broadway. King, while backing the project, had avoided seeing it for months because it dredged up sad memories. She finally sat through it in April.

The musical shows the two composing their songs at Aldon Music, the Brill Building publishing company in Manhattan that also employed Neil Sedaka, Howard Greenfield and Carole Bayer Sager. The show ends just as King is enjoying fame for her groundbreaking solo album "Tapestry." It also alleges Goffin's womanizing and depression were causes of the breakup.

After their divorce, Goffin garnered an Academy Award nomination with Michael Masser for the theme to the 1975 film "Mahogany" for Diana Ross. He also earned a Golden Globe nomination for "So Sad the Song" in 1977 from the film "Pipe Dreams."

Goffin and King were inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1987 and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame three years later.

Goffin was born in Brooklyn in 1939 and was a chemist who loved music when he met King at Queens College. A whirlwind romance led to a marriage and their first hit, when she was only 17, "Will You Love Me Tomorrow" for the Shirelles.

Both quit their day jobs to focus on music, and other songs followed, including "Up on the Roof" for the Drifters, "One Fine Day" for the Chiffons and "Chains," which was later covered by the Beatles. Goffin also collaborated with another Aldon composer, Barry Mann, on the hit "Who Put the Bomp (In the Bomp Bomp Bomp Bomp)."

Goffin continued co-writing songs, including "I've Got to Use My Imagination" recorded by Gladys Knight and the Pips, and "It's Not the Spotlight," recorded by Rod Stewart. In the 1980s and '90s, he co-wrote "Tonight I Celebrate My Love," a duet recorded by Peabo Bryson and Roberta Flack, and the Whitney Houston mega-hit "Savin' All My Love for You."

He is survived by his five children and his wife.

http://www.wyff4.com/news/conductor-composer-johnny-mann-dies-in-anderson/26566626#ixzz355lzqWhm


ANDERSON, S.C. —Johnny Mann, the Hollywood composer who worked with the likes of Nat King Cole, Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra, died late Wednesday night in Anderson, according to sources close to the family.


They say Mann died at his home. He was 85 years old.

Johnny Mann is best known for the forty-two albums he arranged and conducted for his Johnny Mann Singers resulting in five Grammy Award nominations and two Grammy Awards, according to his website.

The site goes on to say:

Johnny got his start in Hollywood arranging scores for seven full-length motion pictures for Warner Brothers, Twentieth Century Fox and Columbia Studios. He then became the choral director of the "NBC Comedy Hour," which led to the formation of The Johnny Mann Singers and a record contract. Along with being musical director of the original "Alvin and The Chipmunks" TV series, he sang the voice of "Theodore".

Mann moved to Anderson, with his wife Betty, several years ago to be closer to family, according to friends.

The McDougald Funeral Home is handling the arrangements for Mann's services, but the exact date has not been decided.

No internet link - but here is the obit for "Classic Images"

MICKEY DEEMS, 89 - April 14, 2014
Comedian and actor Mickey Deems died of cancer at his home in Sherman Oaks, California, on April 14, 2014. Deems was born in Englewood, New Jersey, on April 22, 1925. He began his career in show business as a drummer and musical arranger, but soon turned to comedy. He made his Broadway debut in the 1950 revue in "Alive and Kicking". He was featured in several roles in Sid Caesar's Broadway comedy "Little Me" in 1962, and was Caesar's understudy. He also starred in the 1963 Off-Broadway production of Cole Porter's "Anything Goes". He appeared on television in the recurring role of Officer Charlie Fleischer in "Car 54, Where Are You?" from 1961 to 1963. He starred with Joey Faye as a pair of bumbling handymen in the syndicated short comedy series "Mack & Myer for Hire" from 1963 to 1964, also writing and directing most of the 202 episodes. He was also seen in episodes of such series as "Cavalcade of Stars", "The Blue Angel", "The Ed Sullivan Show", "The Jackie Gleason Show", "The Phil Silvers Show", "The Patty Duke Show", "Mister Roberts", "The Hollywood Palace", "The Don Knotts Show", "The Hero", "Get Smart", "Bewitched", "The Jeffersons", "Fernwood 2 Night", "Operation Petticoat", "Laverne & Shirley", "Hizzoner" in the recurring role of Nails, "House Calls", "The Ropers", "The Stockard Channing Show", "Three's Company", and "Trapper John, M.D.". His other television credits include the 1969 tele-film "Three's a Crowd" and 1981's "The Munsters' Revenge". Deems was featured in several films during his career including "Diary of a Bachelor" (1964), "Hold On!" (1966), "The Busy Body" (1967), "A Guide for the Married Man" (1967), "The St. Valentine's Day Massacre" (1967), "The Spirit Is Willing" (1967), "Who's Minding the Mint?" (1967), and "With Six You Get Eggroll" (1968).


Her 15 Minutes at an End: Ultra Violet dead at 78

Isabelle Collin Dufresne, known as Ultra Violet, died this morning after a battle with cancer. She was 78.

Dufresne was perhaps the most famous Mormon artist that most Mormons haven’t heard of. But at the height of the Pop Art movement and Andy Warhol’s Factory, Ultra Violet was well known in the New York art scene, and she is still well remembered for her memoir of that time, Famous For 15 Minutes: My Years with Andy Warhol.

Born in France in 1935, she met Salvador Dalí in 1954, becoming his muse and student. Then in the early 1960s Dufresne became interested in the Pop Art movement, and after Dalí introduced her to Andy Warhol in 1963, she became one of the participants in Warhol’s unorthodox studio, The Factory, and acted in more than a dozen films between 1965 and 1974. In 1969 she was replaced as Warhol’s primary “muse” and by the 1980s she left Warhol’s group.

After a 1973 near-death experience, Dufresne began a spiritual quest that eventually led to joining the LDS Church in 1981. She has been a participant in the New York City-based Mormon Artists Group in recent years, and has been well known among many members in her stake.

She is the author of three books and appeared in 19 films, including a small part in the academy award winning film Midnight Cowboy (1969).

http://www.timesandseasons.org/index.php/2014/06/her-15-minutes-at-an-end-ultra-violet-dead-at-78/

Baseball great and "Mr. Padre" Tony Gwynn has died, according to Major League Baseball and NBC Sports.

The word came via Twitter with this post: "We mourn the passing of Hall of Famer and @Padres icon Tony Gwynn, who died today at the age of 54."

The Hall of Fame outfielder had battled cancer, undergoing a second surgery in February 2012 that removed a tumor inside his right cheek.

http://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/sports/Tony-Gwynn-Dies-San-Diego-Padres-Baseball-Great--263296261.html

Surgeons grafted a nerve from his shoulder to replaces the nerve damaged by the tumor.

The former San Diego Padres, now San Diego State University's baseball coach spoke with NBC 7 after that surgery about the prognosis.

He had undergone a previous surgery in 2010 but it was the most recent surgery that noticeably changed his appearance and speech.



http://www.locusmag.com/News/2014/06/daniel-keyes-1927-2014/
Author Daniel Keyes, 86, died June 15, 2014.

Keyes is best known for his Hugo Award winning classic SF story “Flowers for Algernon” (F&SF, 1959), the Nebula Award winning and bestselling 1966 novel expansion, and the film version Charly (1968).

Keyes was born August 9, 1927 in New York. He worked variously as an editor, comics writer, fashion photographer, and teacher before joining the faculty of Ohio University in 1966, where he taught as a professor of English and creative writing, becoming professor emeritus in 2000. He married Aurea Georgina Vaquez in 1952, who predeceased him in 2013; they had two daughters.

Keyes began working in SF as an associate editor at Marvel Science Fiction in 1951, and his first SF story was “Precedent” there in 1952. Other novels include The Touch (1968; as The Contaminated Man, 1977), The Fifth Sally (1980), and The Asylum Prophecies (2009). He had other books published in Japan, including novel Until Death Do Us Part: The Sleeping Princess (1998), and wrote true crime volumes including Edgar Award winner The Minds of Billy Milligan (1982), sequel The Milligan Wars: A True-Story Sequel (1994 in Japan, forthcoming in the US), and Unveiling Claudia: A True Story of Serial Murder (1986). His memoir Algernon, Charlie and I: A Writer’s Journey (2000) discusses the experience of writing the story and its impact on his life. Keyes was honored as a SFWA Author Emeritus in 2000.

Keyes lived in south Florida, and is survived by his daughters.

- See more at: http://www.locusmag.com/News/2014/06/daniel-keyes-1927-2014/#sthash.hZdS1Wnz.dpuf
http://www.contracostatimes.com/news/ci_25935512/former-cy-young-award-winner-bob-welch-dies

OAKLAND -- Bob Welch, a former Cy Young Award winner and the last Major League pitcher to win at least 25 games in a season, has passed away at the age of 57, the Oakland Athletics announced Tuesday.

Welch, a two-time All-Star who posted a 27-6 record as the Cy Young Award winner on the Athletics' 1990 American League championship team, passed away in Seal Beach, Monday night. Cause of death was unavailable.

"We are deeply saddened by the sudden passing of Bob Welch," said A's President Michael Crowley. "He was a legendary pitcher who enjoyed many of his best seasons with the Oakland A's. He will always be a significant part of our franchise's history, and we mourn his loss. We send our greatest sympathies to his family and friends."

"This is a sad day for the entire A's organization," said Billy Beane, the A's vice president and general manager. "Those of us who knew Bob as a teammate and a friend will miss him greatly. My condolences go out to his family."

In 17 seasons in the majors, Welch compiled a 211-146 record (.591) and 3.47 ERA with the Los Angeles Dodgers (1978-87) and Athletics (1988-94). He was a prominent member of Oakland teams that won three straight American League pennants in 1988-90, including the 1989 club that swept the San Francisco Giants in a World Series that was interrupted by an earthquake. It has been 24 years since he became the last pitcher to win at least 25 games in a season.

Welch also was the pitching coach for the Arizona Diamondbacks when they won the 2001 World Series, and has served as a special instructor for the A's in recent years, working on the minor league level as well as visiting Major League camp during spring training. His son Riley was selected by the A's in the 34th round of the 2008 MLB First-Year Players Draft.

He is survived by his sons Dylan (25) and Riley (23), daughter Kelly (18) and former wife Mary Ellen. Memorial services are pending.



http://newsok.com/legendary-actress-activist-ruby-dee-dies/article/4902999

Ruby Dee, one of the legendary actresses in Hollywood and on Broadway, died Wednesday night, according to TMZ.

Ruby was at home in New Rochelle, NY surrounded by family when she passed away, according to sources connected to the family. A rep confirmed the death.


She was a pioneer for African-American women in Hollywood and is perhaps best known for her starring role in the 1960s film "A Raisin in the Sun," TMZ reports.

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/voice-captain-scarlet-francis-matthews-3698733

Francis Matthews, the veteran stage and screen actor who was most famous as the voice of Captain Scarlet, has died aged 86.

He starred in the classic 1960s sci-fi puppet show, produced by Thunderbirds creator Gerry Anderson, about a virtually indestructible secret agent, pitted against the vengeful Mysterons of Mars.

As well as providing the voice of the smooth talking Spectrum agent, Matthews appeared in several acclaimed Hammer Horror films, including Dracula: Prince of Darkness and The Revenge of Frankenstein.

He also starred as a mystery solving crime novelist in 1969 TV series Paul Temple.

Among Matthews' many talents was his ability to mimic Hollywood icon Cary Grant, upon whom aspects of Captain Scarlet were based.

So impressive was Matthews' impression, he was called upon to provide the voice of Grant in Cary Comes Home, a 2004 film about the actor's life and career.

A statement from Anderson Entertainment, who manage the estate of Captain Scarlet's creator, read: "We are very sorry to report that Francis Matthews, best known to Gerry Anderson fans as the voice of the indestuctible puppet hero Captain Scarlet, has died aged 86.

Having previously had a policy of using American accents in their shows to aid sales to America, Gerry and [wife] Sylvia relaxed their casting requirements for Captain Scarlet as it was felt that British accents were now more acceptable Stateside than had previously been the case.

"After hearing Matthews’ uncanny impression of Cary Grant, a voice that would have been familiar to all on both sides of the Atlantic, he was cast in 1966."

Matthews played Captain Scarlet in all 35 episodes of its original run, and returned to voice the character in a 2000 CGI short film, entitled Captain Scarlet and the Return of the Mysterons.

He also regularly appeared with Morecambe and Wise, both as a guest on their TV shows and starring opposite them in their movies The Intelligence Men and That Riviera Touch.

Matthews was born in York in 1927 and was married to TV actress Angela Browne, whom he met on the set of 1962 spy series The Dark Island. Browne died in 2001, aged 63.



http://www.santafenewmexican.com/news/local_news/academy-award-nominated-actress-martha-hyer-dies/article_5410fdae-1987-5544-989f-0efdbffe60df.html

Academy Award-nominated actress Martha Hyer, 89, dies

Posted: Monday, June 9, 2014 5:00 pm | Updated: 5:48 pm, Mon Jun 9, 

2014.

By Robert Nott
The New Mexican | 0 comments

Martha Hyer, one of the last studio glamour girls of the Golden Age 

of Hollywood, died May 31 at her Santa Fe home. She was 89 and had 

lived in Santa Fe since the mid-1980s.

A representative from Rivera Funeral Home confirmed the death and 

said there was no funeral service or memorial planned.

A striking blonde who once turned down a date request from the young 

Sen. John F. Kennedy, Hyer was nominated for an Academy Award as best 

supporting actress for her work in 1958’s Some Came Running, an MGM 

film starring Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Shirley MacLaine. She 

lost to Wendy Hiller, for her role in Separate Tables. Although she 

put on a good face during the remainder of the Oscars show, Hyer 

later recalled that she went home and cried all night.

The Oscar nod did not help Hyer’s career, which started with a 

three-year contract at RKO in the early 1940s and ended with a series 

of forgettable cheap films made in both America and Europe.

Martha Hyer was born Aug. 10, 1924, in Fort Worth, Texas, to Julien 

C. Hyer (a Texas legislator) and Agnes Barnhart. In her 1990 

autobiography, Finding My Way, she described her childhood desire to 

be an actress and her love of film. “Movies were magic, our passport 

to outside,” she wrote.

She enrolled in the Pasadena Playhouse in California, where she was 

spotted by a Hollywood talent agent — despite the fact that she was 

playing a bearded elder in a Greek tragedy. Soon, she was under 

contract to RKO during the war years, appearing in several B-

Westerns. “I was Little Nell in lots of those,” she wrote.

For several years, Hyer was unable to secure a secure toehold in 

Hollywood, although she worked in everything from Abbott and Costello 

Go To Mars to the B-adventure Yukon Gold and the African safari film 

The Scarlet Spear. She married the latter’s director, C. Ray Stahl, 

but the marriage quickly ended in divorce.

Hyer’s first big break came when she was cast as William Holden’s 

fiancée in Billy Wilder’s 1954 romantic comedy Sabrina, which starred 

Audrey Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart. In her autobiography, she 

recalled Bogart as being helpful and selfless in his scenes with her.

But ensuing roles in pictures like Red Sundown, opposite Rory 

Calhoun, and Francis in The Navy, opposite Donald O’Connor and a 

talking mule, again stalled Hyer’s career. She worked with Rock 

Hudson — whom she said was shallow and self-centered — in 1956’s 

Battle Hymn. In quick succession, she found herself playing straight 

woman to the likes of David Niven, Bob Hope and Jerry Lewis in films 

that spotlighted their characters, not hers. She liked Niven and 

Hope, but not Lewis.

Some Came Running, based on the James Joyce novel, briefly rescued 

Hyer and brought her critical acclaim. She wrote fondly of the 

experience, noting that MacLaine was “brilliant,” Sinatra “never 

better” and Martin “marvelous.” MacLaine received a best actress 

nomination for her work on the film.

But most of Hyer’s 1960s films were weak, including Bikini Beach, 

House of 1,000 Dolls and Picture Mommy Dead — “all ones I’d rather 

forget,” she wrote. She did secure a supporting role in Hal Wallis’ 

1965 production The Sons of Katie Elder, but she again played second 

— or in this case, fifth — fiddle to a cast topped by John Wayne and 

Dean Martin.

She married Wallis in December 1966. In her autobiography, she 

reflected on both his strong points and his weaknesses, including his 

tight-fisted approach to spending that left her to finance the 

couple’s lifestyle.

By her own admission, Hyer became caught up in the high-living 

culture of the Hollywood lifestyle and began overspending. Shortly 

after she penned a first-person account of her lifestyle in a 1959 

Life magazine article, she came home to find her Hollywood home 

robbed of all its goods. She later managed to pay ransom money to get 

some of her paintings back.

Worse was to come. By the early 1980s, Hyer was in debt to loan 

sharks, to the tune of several million dollars. With her career 

behind her — her last film roles were in the early 1970s — she turned 

to God for help and found immediate solace and peace. In her memoir, 

she wrote: “God poured through me.”

Shortly thereafter, Wallis, as well as some lawyers and the FBI, 

helped Hyer work her way out of her financial mess.

Hyer first visited New Mexico when Wallis was here filming Red Sky at 

Morning, the 1971 movie version of Richard Bradford’s 1968 novel. 

“The Indians say Santa Fe is sacred ground. I believe it,” she wrote.

Wallis died in 1986, and Hyer moved to Santa Fe shortly thereafter. 

“This country casts a spell and it never lets go,” she wrote.

Hyer became somewhat of a recluse in her later days, preferring to 

paint, hike and spend time with close friends.

“When you live with fame as a day-to-day reality, the allure of 

privacy and anonymity is as strong as the desire for fame for those 

who never had it,” she said.



Rik Mayall, the comedian and star of The Young Ones, has died aged 56.

A spokesman for Mayall’s management company told The Press Association that he died this morning. 

The comedian appeared in television comedies The Young Ones, Blackadder, The New Statesman and Bottom, and had a long-running partnership with Ade Edmondson.

In 1998, he survived a near-fatal quad bike accident at his home in Devon.

He is survived by his wife, Barbara, and three children.
Karlheinz Böhm (16 March 1928 – 29 May 2014), sometimes referred to as Carl Boehm or Karl Boehm, was an Austrian actor and the only child of soprano Thea Linhard and conductor Karl Böhm. Böhm took part in 45 films and became well known in Austria and Germany for his role as Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria in the Sissi trilogy and internationally for his role as Mark, the psychopathic protagonist of Peeping Tom, directed by Michael Powell.
He was the founder of the trust Menschen für Menschen (“Humans for Humans”), which helps people in need in Ethiopia. He also received Ethiopian honorary citizenship in 2003.


Having two citizenships, he saw himself as a world citizen: His father was born in Graz, his mother in Munich and until his death he lived in Grödig near Salzburg. He spent his youth in Darmstadt, Hamburg and Dresden. In Hamburg he attended elementary school and the Kepler-Gymnasium (a grammar school). A faked medical certificate[citation needed] enabled him to emigrate to Switzerland in 1939, where he attended the Lyceum Alpinum Zuoz, a boarding school. In 1946, he moved to Graz with his parents, where he graduated from high school the same year. He originally intended to become a pianist but received poor feedback when he auditioned. His father urged him to study English and German language and literary studies, followed by studies of history of arts for one semester in Rome after which he quit and returned to Vienna to take acting lessons with Prof. Helmut Krauss. From 1948 to 1976 he worked as a successful actor in about 45 films and also in theatre. With Romy Schneider, he starred in the Sissi trilogy as the Emperor Franz Joseph which limited him to one specific genre as an actor.

He made three American films in 1962. He played Jakob Grimm in the 1962 MGM-Cinerama spectacular The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm and Ludwig van Beethoven in the Walt Disney film The Magnificent Rebel. (The latter film was made especially for the Disney anthology television series, but was released theatrically in Europe.) He appeared in a villainous role as the Nazi-sympathizing son of Paul Lukas in the MGM film Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, a Technicolor, widescreen remake of the 1921 silent Rudolph Valentino film.

During 1974 and 1975, Böhm appeared prominently in four consecutive films from prolific New German Cinema director Rainer Werner Fassbinder: Martha, Effi Briest, Faustrecht der Freiheit (Fox and His Friends), and Mutter Küsters' Fahrt zum Himmel (Mother Küsters' Trip to Heaven).

Bohm's voice acting work included narrating his father's 1975 recording of Peter and the Wolf by Prokofiev and in 2009 as the German voice for Charles Muntz, villain in Pixar's tenth animated feature Up.

Since 1981, when he founded Menschen für Menschen ("Humans for Humans"), Böhm was actively involved in charitable work in Ethiopia, for which in 2007 he was awarded the Balzan Prize for Humanity, Peace and Brotherhood among Peoples.

Karlheinz Böhm was married to Almaz Böhm, a native of Ethiopia, since 1991. They have two children, Nicolas (born 1990) and Aida (born 1993). Böhm had five more children from previous marriages, among them, the actress Katharina Böhm (born 1964). In 2011 Almaz and Karlheinz Böhm were awarded the Essl Social Prize for the project Menschen für Menschen.

Obit-
http://kurier.at/kultur/film/schauspieler-karlheinz-boehm-gestorben/68.045.168

ttp://www.westfordfuneralhome.com/obituaries/Betty-Turnage/#!/Obituary

ttp://tinyurl.com/oss2k75

TV legend Ann B. Davis who played Alice on "The Brady Bunch" has died ... TMZ has learned.

According to the couple she lived with ... Ann fell in her bathroom early this morning and hit her head causing grave damage. We're told she never regained consciousness.

Her roommate says Davis had been pretty healthy for an 88-year old woman -- and her death was a total shock. In fact, she even walked downstairs to say goodnight before going to bed.

We're told the members of the church she was close with are currently planning funeral arrangements.
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/efrem-zimbalist-jr-dead-star-700983


http://tinyurl.com/ll678ap

Nancy Malone, a ground-breaking and Emmy-winning director-producer, Emmy-nominated actress and the first woman VP at a major studio, died May 8 at City of Hope in Duarte, Calif., as the result of pneumonia that arose from complications of leukemia. She was 78.

Shortly after producing her first TV movie, “Winner Take All,” starring Shirley Jones, for NBC, Malone joined 20th Century Fox’s TV department as director of TV development. Soon she was named vice president of television, becoming the first woman VP at a major studio. During her time at Fox, Malone co-founded Women in Film.

Malone was an actress for decades, appearing extensively on TV and on stage, before moving behind the camera and into the executive suite and continued acting even after doing so, including a supporting role in the 1973 Burt Reynolds starrer “The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing.”

She joined Tomorrow Entertainment as a story analyst in 1971 and established Lilac Productions in 1975 to produce TV films.

Her producing credits include “Sherlock Holmes in New York,” with Roger Moore and John Huston; “Like Mom,” “Like Me,” with Linda Lavin; “The Great Pretender,” with Billy Dee Williams; “I Married a Monster”; and The Violation of Sarah McDavid,” with Patty Duke. She developed and produced a one-hour comedy for CBS, “Husbands, Wives and Lovers.” “The Nurses” pilot followed, as well as a season of “The Bionic Woman.”

Malone won an Emmy for co-producing “Bob Hope: The First 90 Years.”

During the 1980s Malone completed the American Film Institute’s Directing Workshop for Women and began her directing career. Her first full-length film, “There Were Times, Dear,” starring Shirley Jones and Len Cariou, appeared on PBS and was among the first films to center on Alzheimer’s disease.
It was accompanied by a NIMH outreach program. This film was used as a fundraiser by various Alzheimer’s support chapters around the country.

Malone’s first assignment as a director of episodic television was episode 100 of “Dynasty,” after which she became a staff director at Aaron Spelling Productions. She directed multiple episodes of “Hotel,” “Melrose Place,” “Dynasty,” and “Beverly Hills, 90210″ and went on to direct “Knots Landing,” “Sisters,” “Cagney & Lacey,” “Star Trek Voyager,” “Touched by an Angel,” “Dawson’s Creek,” “Judging Amy,” “Starman,” “The Guardian,” “Resurrection Blvd.” and a “Bob Hope Christmas Special.”

She recently co-produced and directed a live event at Ellis Island honoring Bob Hope and starring Michael Feinstein, and Malone co-produced and directed 2011′s “The NY Pops Tribute to Bob Hope at Carnegie Hall.”

Malone also directed for the theater, including “All the Way Home,” “Howie the Rookie” and “Big Maggie,” starring Tyne Daly. For L..A Theatre Works she directed “Agnes of God,” “Prelude to a Kiss” and “The Country Girl”; for the Ford Theatre in Los Angeles she directed “Long Day’s Journey Into Night.”

Malone also taught acting and directing, and she conducted master classes at: UCLA, Piscator Institute of New York, Pasadena’s Art Center College of Design, National University of Ireland, Galway; the Stella Adler Academy; Women in Film; and the American Film Institute, among other places. In the spring of 2013, Nancy taught a master class at the Steinhardt School at NYU.

In 2010, at the request of the Performing Arts Section of the UCLA Library: Special Collections, she organized and presented her papers and memorabilia to that facility for permanent research and record keeping.

She served as chair of the WIF Foundation and established the Crystal Award, the Dorothy Arzner Award, the Norma Zarky Award and the Founders Award. The Nancy Malone Directors Award was named after her for her contributions to the Film Finishing Fund.

Born in Queens Village, Long Island, N.Y., Malone began her career at age 7 as a model for ads ranging from Kellogg’s Cereal to Ford cars and Macy’s. At 10 she was chosen for the cover of Life magazine’s 10th anniversary issue, “The Typical American Girl.”

She was signed by William Morris and began her acting career in a show broadcast live on the DuMont TV Network and appeared in one of TV’s first soap operas, “The First Hundred Years.”

Malone joined the Actors Studio and studied with Stella Adler as well as David Craig and Milton Katselas and studied ballet with Nora Kaye.

At 15 she made her Broadway debut as the title character in “Time Out for Ginger,” co-starring Melvyn Douglas. After the Broadway run, she toured the U.S. in the play for a year. When she returned to New York, Charles Laughton chose her to play Jenny Hill in a production of Shaw’s “Major Barbara,” followed by “The Seven Year Itch,” “A Place for Polly” (a pre-Broadway tryout); “Requiem for a Heavyweight,” “The Chalk Garden” with Judith Anderson, “A Touch of the Poet” with Helen Hayes, and “The Trial of the Catonsville Nine.”

Along with her work in theater, she also starred in the television series “Naked City,” for which she received an Emmy nomination for best actress; played Clara Varner in TV series “The Long Hot Summer”; and appeared in “The Killing of Randy Webster “and “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.” She guested on “Bonanza,” “The Fugitive,” “The Partridge Family,” “Big Valley,” “The Rockford Files,” “Outer Limits,” “Run for Your Life,” “Dr. Kildare,” “The Andy Griffith Show,” “Hawaii Five-O,” “The Twilight Zone” and “Lou Grant,” among other shows.

Malone is survived by her colleague and longtime friend, Linda Hope.

Services are to be announced. Donations may be made to Directing Workshop For Women at AFI (http://www.afi.com/dww/), City of Hope or the Performing Animals Welfare Society (http://www.pawsweb.org/).

http://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-herb-jeffries-20140526-story.html#page=1

Monday, June 9, 2014

He passed away at age 81 may 3 2014

http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/thestar/obituary.aspx?page=lifestory&pid=170965563

will be most known for A Christmas Story as the tree man who haggles with Darren McGavin. 

Horror fans will remember him from Black Christmas, Deranged and he was great as the villain in Videodrome


http://tinyurl.com/l7cuhzp

Influential cinematographer Gordon Willis, whose photography for “The Godfather” series and Woody Allen’s “Annie Hall” and “Manhattan” helped define the look of 1970s cinema, has died, according to his close associate Doug Hart’s Facebook page. He was 82.

Willis was known as the Prince of Darkness for his artful use of shadows, and was DP on seminal 1970s films including “Klute,” “The Paper Chase,” “The Parallax View” and “All the President’s Men.”

He received an honorary Academy award in 2009 at the first Governor’s Awards ceremony.

Among the other Woody Allen films he shot were “Interiors,” “Stardust Memories,” “Broadway Danny Rose,” “The Purple Rose of Cairo” and “Zelig,” for which he was Oscar-nommed. His other Oscar nomination was for “The Godfather III.”

Regarding his work on “The Godfather,” Variety wrote in 1997, “Among “The Godfather’s” many astonishments, the photography by Gordon Willis — a rich play with light and shadow — confirmed Willis’ genius but was especially striking as an extension of Francis Ford Coppola’s creative intelligence. “

Born in New York City, his father worked as a make-up artist at Warner Brothers, and though Willis was originally interested in lighting and stage design, he later turned to photography. While serving in the Air Force during the Korean War, he worked in the motion picture unit and then worked in advertising and documentaries. His first feature was “End of the Road” in 1970, and his last, Alan Pakula’s “The Devil’s Own” in 1997.

http://www.kesq.com/news/singer-jerry-vale-dies/26045480

THOUSAND PALMS, Calif. -

KESQ and CBS Local 2 learned singer Jerry Vale passed away Sunday morning in hospice care with family by his side. 

At the age of 15, he started singing professionally in supper clubs. Known for singing primarily love songs, Vale went on to record more than 50 albums.

Vale received a star on the Palm Springs Walk of Stars on December 5th, 1998. His star is at 255 S. Palm Canyon Drive. 

Vale and Rita, his wife of over 40 years, resided in Palm Desert. 

Vale was 81 years old.



http://www.kxlh.com/news/montana-artist-mad-editor-feldstein-dies/

LIVINGSTON - Albert B. Feldstein was editor of MAD magazine for nearly 30 years.

He oversaw much of its wacky content including the development of Alfred E. Neuman, the magazine's cover boy and mascot.

He lived a low-key existence in the Paradise Valley for more than two decades, his wife, Michelle, said Wednesday.

He painted fine Western art, revisited his early comic-book work, and rescued animals on his Paradise Valley ranch.

Born in Brooklyn in 1925, Feldstein worked in comic books in the 1950s before joining MAD Magazine, where he worked as editor for nearly 30 years before retiring in 1984.

The period included the development of MAD's signature wackiness, sharp social commentary and recurring features such as its television and movie spoofs, the "Spy vs. Spy" comic and the wildly stylized human characters of Don Martin.

He died Tuesday at 88.

No services are being held.


http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/efrem-zimbalist-jr-dead-star-700983

Dick Ayers, one of the last of the major artists of the early "Marvel Age of Comics," has died. It happened yesterday, only days following his 90th birthday. The cause is being reported as complications from Parkinson's Disease, a condition he had battled for some time.

Ayers was born April 28, 1924 in Ossining, New York. He did his first comic art while in the Army Air Corps during World War II. After his discharge, he sought work from comic book publishers but was told his work wasn't quite good enough. He studied with at the Cartoonists and Illustrators School in New York, later known as the School of Visual Arts. The co-creator of Superman, Joe Shuster, visited the class and this led to Ayers assisting Shuster, who by then needed a lot of help due to failing eyesight. Ayers then worked for an any number of publishers throughout the fifties but he was best known for a western hero he designed named The Ghost Rider.

Eventually, he did most of this work for Stan Lee at the company now known as Marvel. When the company had to downsize, Ayers found himself out of work and wound up getting a job, which he hated, at the post office. He continuously pestered Stan Lee to help him out of that situation and eventually, Stan brought him back to ink much of what Jack Kirby was doing for the film and also to pencil some comics.

He was pretty good at inking Kirby's work and not bad at taking over the penciling of a strip that Kirby had launched. He drew Giant-Man, The Human Torch and others but super-heroes were not his strength. He did better at westerns and war books including a long run on Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos. At one point, Marvel even decided to revive The Ghost Rider, reportedly without permission, and Ayers wound up drawing a new version of that old character.

In the seventies, Dick had some trouble giving editors at Marvel what they wanted and he eventually found himself without sufficient work. Neal Adams intervened at DC to get them to take him on and for years, Dick worked mainly as a layout artist for them. He did many issues of Kamandi, The Unknown Soldier, Jonah Hex and other DC titles. Fans began to approach him about doing re-creations of his past work, particularly covers he'd done with Kirby, and he did a lot of that. That put him on the convention circuit where I got to spend a lot of time interviewing him on panels and talking with him when we weren't on stage. He was a charming gent with an amazing lifetime output of popular comics. They don't make 'em like that anymore.

http://www.newsfromme.com/

Former heavyweight boxing champion Jimmy Ellis, who trained with fellow Louisville fighter Muhammad Ali and squared off against some of his era's best fighters, has died in his hometown. He was 74.

Ellis' brother, Jerry, said the ex-champion died at a Louisville hospital Tuesday after suffering from Alzheimer's disease in recent years.

Ellis defeated Jerry Quarry to win the WBA crown in 1968. Ellis defended the title by defeating Floyd Patterson, but was stopped by Joe Frazier in a fight to unify the world heavyweight championship in 1970.

He was stopped by Ali in the 12th round of their bout in 1971.

Ellis, the son of a preacher, retired from boxing in 1975. He spent years training fighters and later worked for the Louisville parks department.

http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory/boxing-champion-jimmy-ellis-dies-23611069