Tag Archives: Obituaries

Clifford Bell Dead: Cabaret Impresario Was 68

Clifford Bell, the cabaret impresario, director and producer affectionately generally known as “Lawrence of Cabarabia,” died Sunday of pure causes at CHA Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Heart, publicist Steve Moyer introduced. He was 68.

“Clifford Bell was a power of nature!” Moyer mentioned in an announcement. “He lived and breathed music day by day of his life to the very finish.”

A 40-year present enterprise veteran, Bell wrote and directed selection performances that includes the likes of Walter Cronkite, Colin Powell and Michael Eisner on the Honda Heart in Anaheim and toured with Katey Sagal and her band.

As a cabaret director, he helmed reveals for singers Gregg Marx, Todd Murray, Lois Bourgon, Carol Whitener, Joanne Tatham, Bonnie Gilgallon, Lauren White, Quinn Johnson, Chase Masterson, Lee Lessack, Bobbie Norman and Katrina Aguilar.

He produced albums for singers Betsyann Faiella, Eileen Barnett and Judy Butterfield and directed one-person reveals starring Beth Lapides, Joan Hotchkis, Juliette Marshall, Craig Laforest, Deborah Pearl and Paul Jacek.

With frequent collaborator and Tony-nominated actress Lara Teeter (On Your Toes), Bell co-created the touring present Direct From Broadway, which starred Tony winners Debbie Gravitte (Jerome Robbins’ Broadway) and Michael Maguire (Les Misérables).

He dealt with selection evenings and showcase shows, usually for charitable causes like Our Identify Is Barbra, an annual celebration of Barbra Streisand’s birthday that has raised funds and consciousness for Bell’s beloved charity, Mission Angel Meals, for 26 years.

His ultimate Our Identify Is Barbra live performance was offered April 24 at Catalina Jazz Membership in Hollywood with a lineup of celebrated performers. It additionally was offered Could 6 for the primary time in Palm Springs to learn the Revolution Stage Firm.

Bell additionally labored with Shannon Penrod of Autism Care Immediately and singer Dana Meller to ascertain Broadway for Autism and with Aguilar to convey consciousness to autism organizations.

Bell was born in New Jersey on Sept. 17, 1956. His father was a symphony conductor and his mom a live performance cellist.

He wrote for Cabaret Scenes journal; was featured alongside Chita Rivera, Bruce Vilanch and Sam Harris in Marc Saltarelli’s 2023 documentary Studio One Perpetually; hosted a podcast about cabaret; and taught cabaret on the Girl’s Membership of Hollywood.

Survivors embody his brother, Bryan Bell, a technologist, audio engineer and former senior vp on the Broadway-oriented label Fynsworth Alley; stepfather Andrew; sister-in-law Margarita; nephew Lindsay; and nieces Christina and Andrea.

Donations in his reminiscence may be made to Mission Angel Meals and/or Cabaret Scenes.

7th Voyage of Sinbad Actress, Wife of Bing Crosby

Kathryn Crosby, who starred in such movies as Operation Mad Ball, The seventh Voyage of Sinbad and Anatomy of a Homicide earlier than she curtailed her appearing profession because the spouse of Hollywood legend Bing Crosby, has died. She was 90. 

Crosby died Friday night time surrounded by her household at her house in Hillsborough, California, a household spokesperson stated. 

Billed beneath her stage title, Kathryn Grant, the Houston native made 5 options for famed movie noir director Phil Karlson, together with Tight Spot (1955), The Phenix Metropolis Story (1955) and The Brothers Rico (1957).

She additionally performed the youthful sister of Martha Hyer’s character in one other movie noir, the Blake Edwards-directed Mister Cory (1957), starring Tony Curtis, and portrayed a budding trapeze artist in The Massive Circus (1959), starring Victor Mature.

Quickly after wrapping manufacturing in Spain together with her flip because the damsel in misery Princess Parisa within the Ray Harryhausen fantasy The seventh Voyage of Sinbad (1958), she grew to become Bing’s second spouse once they wed in a Las Vegas church on Oct. 24, 1957. She was 23, he was 54.

“I’m glad I married an older man,” she stated in Richard Grudens’ 2003 ebook, Bing Crosby: Crooner of the Century. “After I married Bing, he was already fashioned, his character was set. In different phrases, I knew what I used to be getting. With a youthful man, you possibly can’t inform how he’ll develop with the years.”

Kathryn just about put appearing on the again burner as she had three youngsters with the famed singer and Oscar-winning actor: Harry (born in 1958), Mary (born in 1959) and Nathaniel (born in 1961). All survive her.

Nonetheless, she appeared typically together with her husband and the children on Christmas specials, on the ABC selection present The Hollywood Palace and in Minute Maid orange juice commercials, the image of the all-American household. (Bing was a longtime Minute Maid pitchman and stockholder.)

After his loss of life at age 74 on Oct. 14, 1977, from a coronary heart assault after a spherical of golf in Spain, Kathryn appeared onstage in such productions as Similar Time, Subsequent Yr and Charley’s Aunt and labored alongside John Davidson and Andrea McArdle within the 1996 Broadway revival of State Truthful.

She was born Olive Kathryn Grandstaff in Houston on Nov. 25, 1933, and raised in West Columbia, Texas.

Quickly after ending runner-up in a Miss Texas magnificence pageant, Kathryn left the College of Texas in 1952 to return to Hollywood with the assistance of Roy Rogers’ agent, Artwork Rush. Paramount rapidly signed her to a contract after she screen-tested with William Holden.

She was writing a weekly column known as Texas Lady for newspapers again house and dealing in a short lived job within the Paramount wardrobe division when she first met Bing in 1953 as he was ending up work on Little Boy Misplaced.

They ran into one another once more just a few months later as she was escorting guests to the set of White Christmas, and she or he interviewed him for her column.

(Bing had been married to actress-dancer Dixie Lee from 1930 till her loss of life from ovarian most cancers at age 42 in 1952. He and Dixie had 4 sons: Gary, Dennis, Phillip and Lindsay.)

Bing and Kathryn had set a number of marriage ceremony dates over a three-year interval earlier than they might really alternate vows, however he saved suspending as he was romantically concerned with two of his co-stars, Grace Kelly and Inger Stevens.

The Crosby household within the early Seventies, clockwise from prime left: Kathryn, Bing, Harry, Mary and Nathaniel.

Courtesy of Everett

Kathryn had begun her appearing profession with uncredited roles in such movies as So This Is Love (1953), Casanova’s Massive Evening (1954) and Rear Window (1954) earlier than Paramount launched her from her contract in 1954.

Undaunted, she appeared in seven motion pictures launched in 1955 and on an episode of NBC’s Father Is aware of Finest whereas going again to Texas that yr to finish her positive arts diploma. (In 1963, she graduated from nursing college.)

She performed a nurse and Jack Lemmon’s love curiosity in Richard Quine’s Operation Mad Ball (1957), the spouse of James Darren‘s mobster in The Brothers Rico and the daughter of the slain innkeeper in Otto Preminger’s Anatomy of a Homicide (1959), starring James Stewart.

In one in all her uncommon onscreen appearing gigs whereas she was married to Bing, she guest-starred on a 1966 episode of ABC’s — and Bing Crosby Productions’ — Ben Casey. Within the ’70s, she stayed near their house outdoors San Francisco by internet hosting a morning discuss present on KPIX-TV and moonlighting with the American Conservatory Theater.

Bing “was a reasonably cute child when it got here to convincing a lady that what she actually needed was to remain house and to wash flooring,” Kathryn stated in an interview quickly after his loss of life. “He didn’t know that he was a male chauvinist pig, however he was!” she added with fun.

She wrote three units of memoirs about her life with him: 1967’s Bing and Different Issues, 1983’s My Life With Bing and 2002’s My Final Years With Bing.

In 2000, she married longtime companion Maurice William Sullivan, an educator whom she and Bing had employed to tutor their youngsters. He later grew to become trustee of the Crosby property.

In November 2010, Sullivan, 85, was killed and Kathryn was severely injured in a automotive accident within the Sierra Nevada. He was on the wheel when their car went off the street, rolled over and struck a boulder.

As for her youngsters, Harry grew to become an funding banker; Mary is an actress identified for her flip as J.R. Ewing shooter Kristin Shepard on Dallas; and Nathaniel was a superb newbie golfer. She is also survived by a number of grandchildren.

Writer on Aaron Sorkin Series Was 63 

David Handelman, a print journalist turned TV author who labored on the Aaron Sorkin collection Sports activities Evening, The West Wing, Studio 60 on the Sundown Strip and The Newsroom, has died. He was 63.

Handelman died Aug. 15 at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York from issues of Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia, a uncommon blood most cancers, producer David Van Taylor advised The Hollywood Reporter.

Handelman additionally wrote for the 2006 CBS collection Love Monkey; for season six (2008-09) of The CW’s One Tree Hill; for season two (2013-14) of ABC’s Nashville; and for season three (2015) of DirecTV’s Rogue.

Most lately, he was a employees producer and author for nearly a decade on CNN’s Smerconish, which paid tribute to him on the air within the days after his demise.

Earlier than tv, Handelman was a employees author at Rolling Stone, overlaying everybody from Beastie Boys and Speaking Heads to Sam Kinison, people artist Howard Finster and the AIDS activists ACT UP. He additionally edited points dedicated to comedy.

He then labored as arts editor for Vogue and wrote for publications together with The New York Occasions, New York journal, GQ, Particulars, Premiere and Spy.

Born in Scarsdale, New York, on April 23, 1961, Handelman broke into TV by writing a spec script for HBO’s The Larry Sanders Present with Children within the Corridor member Mark McKinney. (Handleman had penned a narrative in regards to the Canadian TV present for Rolling Stone in 1988.)

Sorkin learn that and employed them to put in writing a contract script for ABC’s Sports activities Evening, which turned the 1999 season one episode “The Sword of Orion.”

The next yr, Handelman turned a real-life disastrous expertise interviewing Michael Jordan into the season two installment “The Candy Odor of Air.”

In 2002, Handelman joined the employees of The West Wing for season 4 — Sorkin’s remaining yr — on the NBC drama, then labored on NBC’s Studio 60 on the Sundown Strip in 2006-07 and HBO’s The Newsroom in 2012. His experiences as a journalist knowledgeable many Sorkin plotlines and particulars.

He additionally wrote for the syndicated The Jane Pauley Present, ABC’s Good Morning America and CNN’s Within the Enviornment, hosted by Eliot Spitzer.

(A lot of Handelman’s behind-the-scenes tales about his profession — together with one the place he bought his mom on the telephone with Bruce Springsteen — could be discovered right here.)

Lately, he turned a frontrunner within the on-line neighborhood that fashioned across the band Wilco throughout the COVID shutdown. Final yr, he served as a picket captain throughout the WGA strike.

Handelman’s life was celebrated Saturday on New York’s Higher West Facet throughout a service that was attended by greater than 400 individuals, together with many trade professionals. One eulogy was delivered by McKinney.

Survivors embrace his spouse, Syd Sidner; his daughters, Helen and Nancy; and his brothers, Dan and Matt.

‘Last Man on Earth’ Actress Was 88

Franca Bettoia, the Italian actress who starred reverse Vincent Value within the 1964 cult sci-fi movie The Final Man on Earth, has died in Rome, her household informed the Italian information company Adnkronos. She was 88.

Bettoia was married to Italian actor Ugo Tognazzi — he starred within the 1978 film La Cage aux Folles within the half performed by Robin Williams in Mike Nichols’ 1996 adaptation The Birdcage — from 1972 till his demise from a cerebral hemorrhage in 1990 at age 68.

In The Final Man on Earth, directed by Ubaldo Ragona and Sidney Salkow, Bettoia portrays Ruth, a lady who, with the assistance of Value’s Dr. Robert Morgan, is warding off the consequences of a plague that has turned people into vampiric creatures.

Filmed in Rome, produced by Robert L. Lippert and distributed by American Worldwide Footage, the film was primarily based on Richard Matheson’s 1954 novel I Am Legend. The creator then co-wrote the screenplay credited as Logan Swanson. (Will Smith starred within the 2007 adaptation directed by Francis Lawrence.)

Franca Bettoia with Vincent Value in 1964’s ‘The Final Man on Earth.’

Courtesy of Everett Assortment

Born in Rome on Could 14, 1936, Bettoia made her movie debut in 1955 and had her breakout position as “the opposite lady” in Pietro Germi’s Man of Straw (1958), which premiered on the Cannes Movie Competition.

She additionally starred with Alan Ladd in Duel of Champions (1961), co-directed by Terence Younger; in Day by Day, Desperately (1961), directed by Alfredo Giannetti; in Will Our Heroes Reach Discovering Their Buddy Who Mysteriously Disappeared in Africa? (1968); and in Don’t Contact the White Girl (1974).

Her final movie was Teste rasate (1993), during which she performed the mom of her real-life son, Gianmarco Tognazzi. Survivors additionally embody her daughter, Maria Sole Tognazzi, a director.

‘Karate Kid’ Actor, Son of Steve McQueen Was 63

Chad McQueen, who adopted his father, Steve McQueen, into performing and auto racing and portrayed the bully Dutch within the first two Karate Child films, has died. He was 63.

McQueen died Wednesday of organ failure at his ranch in Palm Desert, his buddy of 40 years, Arthur Barens, instructed The Hollywood Reporter. He had been injured in a fall in 2020 and by no means absolutely recovered.

In an announcement on Instagram, his kids Chase and Madison wrote:

“His exceptional journey as a loving father to us, alongside together with his unwavering dedication to our mom, really exemplified a life crammed with love and dedication. His ardour for racing not solely highlighted his distinctive expertise but in addition served as a strategy to honor his father’s legacy, a testomony to the values instilled in him.

“He handed his ardour, data and dedication right down to us, and we are going to proceed not solely his legacy however our grandfather’s as effectively. As a household, we have to navigate this troublesome time, and we kindly ask for privateness as we keep in mind and have fun his extraordinary life.”

Because the Cobra Kai scholar Dutch in The Karate Child (1984) and The Karate Child Half II (1986), McQueen was not shy about giving Ralph Macchio’s Daniel LaRusso a tough time. He didn’t return for The Karate Child Half III (1989) or for the present Cobra Kai TV collection, the place it was famous that Dutch was serving time in jail.

Chadwick Steven McQueen was born in Los Angeles on Dec. 28, 1960, and raised in Malibu. His mom was Filipino-born actress Neile Adams. His dad and mom have been married from 1956 till their 1972 divorce.

His performing résumé additionally included roles within the Dick Wolf-written Skateboard (1978), Martial Regulation (1991), New York Cop (1993), Loss of life Ring (1992) and Crimson Line (1995).

Like his dad, McQueen was passionate about auto racing. He started auto racing at age 10, successful his first race, a children-only Le Mans occasion created on the set of his father’s 1971 movie Le Mans. His skilled racing profession began with occasions within the Sports activities Automobile Membership of America collection.

A crash at Daytona Worldwide Speedway in 2006 whereas training for the 24 Hours of Daytona occasion ended his racing profession.

His firm, McQueen Racing, based in 2010 and now run by Chase and Madison, develops high-performance vehicles and bikes.

Steve McQueen, in fact, was the star of such movies as The Nice Escape (1963), The Cincinnati Child (1965), The Sand Pebbles (1966), The Thomas Crown Affair (1968), Bullitt (1968) and The Getaway (1972).

When Chad was 19, his dad died in November 1980 of a coronary heart assault after a battle with most cancers at age 50. Steve McQueen’s different youngster, daughter Terry, died in 1998 at age 38.

Chad’s survivors additionally embody his mom; his second spouse, Jeanie; one other son, Steven, an actor recognized for his work on The Vampire Diaries and the spinoff Legacies; and his grandson, Michael.

A donation in his reminiscence may be made to Boys Republic, which gives a house and help for deprived kids.

Artist on Joss Whedon’s Astonishing X-Men Was xx

John Cassaday, the artist who co-created the influential turn-of-the-century comedian Planetary after which drew an award-winning X-Males comedian written by Joss Whedon for Marvel, has died. He was 52.

His sister Robin Cassaday introduced his dying Monday on Fb. She beforehand wrote that he had been admitted to the intensive care unit of Mount Sinai West in New York on Sept. 3. The reason for dying was not revealed.

Cassaday additionally drew the relaunch of Star Wars that grew to become the best-selling comedian of 2015.

“Like [fellow artists] Neal Adams, Jim Steranko or Michael Golden, he’s a touchstone, a reference level to the handfuls and dozens of artists whose work was influenced by his,” comics author and editor Mark Waid mentioned. “Most individuals are fortunate if greater than a dozen persons are nonetheless speaking about them a month after they go. My buddy John will likely be talked about and remembered by a whole business for ages.”

Born in 1971, Cassaday was a self-taught artist and movie faculty graduate who plugged away at his craft whereas working in building and as a director of native TV information in Texas. Within the mid-Nineties, he confirmed his portfolio to Waid at a comic book conference.

Waid then referred the artist to writer and editor Jeff Mariotte, and that opened the door to Cassaday getting employed for illustration gigs that paid effectively sufficient for him to stop his day job and draw full time.

Within the late Nineties, he teamed with writer Warren Ellis for Planetary, an exploration of the superhero and pulp hero genres that centered on a trio of adventurer-archeologists who have been a part of a company that tried to maintain observe of worldwide superpowered exercise.

The comedian initially printed on a bimonthly schedule earlier than Ellis’ well being problems — and Cassaday’s propensity for exactness — precipitated a number of delays. Nonetheless, its 27-issue run, printed by Picture imprint Wildstorm, would discover comics tropes earlier than such a factor was in style and achieve a cult following. It additionally earned a number of Eisner Award nominations.

Cassaday discovered breakthrough industrial success with Astonishing X-Males, a 25-issue run within the mid-aughts that helped restore the mutant group to prominence amongst Marvel titles. His cinematic type proved to be an ideal complement to the tales by Whedon, the creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Firefly. Critics liked it, with the collection successful the Eisner for greatest comedian in 2005 and 2006 and Cassaday taking the most effective artist prize in 2005. One of many storylines additionally influenced Brett Ratner’s X-Males: The Final Stand (2006).

The artist labored on titles for a number of publishers, together with I Am Legion for French-based Humanoids, and continued to attract for Marvel, the place he additionally labored on a Captain America comedian. He additionally dipped his toe in Hollywood, appearing as an idea artist for Zack Snyder’s 2009 adaptation of Watchmen, amongst different gigs.

When Disney acquired Lucasfilm in 2012 after which Marvel a 12 months later, the license for Star Wars comics returned to the latter. Marvel relaunched the title in 2015, marking the primary time a Star Wars comedian was printed by the corporate for the reason that Nineteen Eighties.

Cassaday was chosen to attract the primary story arc of the ebook, propelling gross sales into hyperspace. The title grew to become the high-selling comedian of that 12 months, and the primary situation offered greater than 1,000,000 copies.

“We’re devastated by the lack of our pricey buddy, artist and comedian ebook legend John Cassaday,” Marvel mentioned in an announcement to The Hollywood Reporter. “His artwork was a grasp class in emotion, motion and storytelling, and he captured the essence of each character he drew. John was one the most effective, and he’ll all the time be a part of our Marvel household.”

James Earl Jones, Sonorous Voice of Authority: Critic’s Appreciation

I spent my first decade in New York working at Selection’s former places of work on Park Ave. South and greater than as soon as discovered myself sharing an elevator with James Earl Jones whereas he was on his option to or from Verizon to shoot commercials. The large of an actor, who died immediately at age 93, by no means didn’t say a heat “Good morning” or “Good Afternoon,” and even when I hadn’t acknowledged his face or his imposing 6’2” body, there was no mistaking that sonorous voice.

His voice was the earth-shaking basso rumble coming from behind the forbidding masks of Darth Vader within the Star Wars saga, beginning with the unique 1977 movie, and the stentorian growl of Mufasa, King of the Pleasure Lands and father of Simba in The Lion King.

It was additionally the voice of a revered stage actor, who cast his popularity within the Sixties and ‘70s, tackling the good classical roles in Shakespeare within the Park productions of The Winter’s Story, Othello, Troilus and Cressida, Coriolanus, Hamlet and King Lear. His versatility led him to Hickey in The Iceman Cometh, Lennie in Of Mice and Males, Lopakhin in The Cherry Orchard and Troy Maxson in Fences.

I caught that towering efficiency because the tragic hero in August Wilson’s 1985 masterpiece solely on video at Lincoln Heart’s invaluable Library for the Performing Arts. Even with out the electrical energy of dwell theater, the pathos and delight, the power of will masking a damaged spirit in Jones’ portrait of a Pittsburgh sanitation employee bitter over the profession in Main League Baseball he was denied, rang out loud and clear. It gained him the second of three Tony Awards.

As a result of Jones remained so loyal to his theater roots, I used to be lucky to see him on stage a number of occasions. The primary was his return to Broadway after practically twenty years’ absence, starring reverse Leslie Uggams in a 2005 revival of Ernest Thompson’s On Golden Pond. Even in that creaky car Jones was majestic, rising above the inventory character of the lovable curmudgeon to imbue him with blazing intelligence, mischievous humor and searing vulnerability when a life-threatening well being scare exposes his concern of loss of life.

In 2008, he performed the overbearing Southern patriarch Massive Daddy with gusto in a mixed-bag all-Black manufacturing of Cat On a Sizzling Tin Roof, then returned two years later, pairing with Vanessa Redgrave, their mixed stature elevating the rickety Driving Miss Daisy.

Jones continued engaged on the stage as much as his mid-80s, demonstrating an eight-performance-a-week self-discipline and stamina that many actors a fraction of his age wrestle to take care of.

In Gore Vidal’s election satire, The Finest Man, Jones was one in every of two octogenarians to steal the present (the opposite was Angela Lansbury), taking part in a former president staring into the abyss of mortality however reinvigorated by the battle of a contentious major race and cagey about which candidate goes to get his endorsement.

He was sheer delight because the benevolent grandpa of an eccentric household in a sprightly 2014 revival of Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman’s screwball comedy You Can’t Take It With You, taking part in the position with a twinkle in his eye but additionally with the gravitas and knowledge to make him an efficient peacemaker in moments of disaster. “Life is type of lovely for those who let it come to you,” he mentioned in one of many 1936 play’s extra memorable traces.

Jones’ last Broadway position, in 2015, was one other pairing of two stage titans, starring reverse Cicely Tyson as bickering and bantering residents of a retirement residence in The Gin Recreation. The reasonably slight play was given substance and vitality by the enjoyment of watching two wily previous professionals activate each other. Jones was awarded a Lifetime Achievement Tony the next yr.

Whereas he made his movie debut with a small position in Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove in 1964, my first encounter with Jones on display screen was on late-night TV in Martin Ritt’s 1970 movie of The Nice White Hope, tailored from the play that had gained Jones his first Tony the earlier yr.

He reprised the a part of Jack Jefferson, a personality primarily based on real-life boxer Jack Johnson, whose profitable streak rankled racist sports activities followers into mounting a seek for a white challenger to take down the heavyweight champion. In the end, Jack’s defeat comes when authorities goal him for his courtship of a white lady, performed by fellow Tony-winning stage holdover Jane Alexander.

That movie, which earned Jones his first and solely Oscar nomination (the Academy offered him with an Honorary Award in 2012), opened up a movie profession that will span six a long time, even when he was seldom given the leading-man alternatives {that a} white actor of his standing would have landed.

His booming voice made him a pure for roles of authority, however he radiated power even in silence. Jones may additionally modulate the highly effective instrument that grew to become his trademark to convey out heat, velvety textures in additional avuncular elements, invariably displaying nice depth of feeling whether or not he was taking part in hubris or humility.

Past Darth Vader, film audiences most likely know Jones greatest from his position as Admiral James Greer in three Tom Clancy variations, The Hunt for Purple October, Patriot Video games and Clear and Current Hazard; and because the king of a fictional African nation in Coming to America and its sequel, which was his last function look.

Different outstanding display screen roles embody the South African church minister whose son is arrested for homicide in Cry the Beloved Nation; the consultant for Black West Virginia coal miners in John Sayles’ union drama Matewan; and the disenchanted creator and activist who helps Kevin Costner’s Iowa farmer pursue his imaginative and prescient of a baseball subject in his cornfield, the place ghosts of legendary gamers are welcomed, within the fantasy drama Area of Desires.

I choose to recollect Jones in one in every of his earlier and maybe most uncharacteristic display screen roles, the 1974 romantic comedy-drama Claudine, through which he co-starred as a rubbish collector who falls in love with Diahann Carroll’s title character, a single mom elevating six kids in Harlem.

It’s a beautiful movie, bittersweet and humorous, with two incandescent lead performances. Claudine bucked the Blaxploitation pattern of the time to think about the hopes and goals of unusual Black Individuals, fighting poverty, the indignities of welfare and systemic inequality. It additionally has a killer Curtis Mayfield soundtrack with vocals by Gladys Knight & the Pips.

Or perhaps I’ll simply select to recollect Jones fondly because the elegant gentleman within the elevator.

‘Gidget,’ ‘Time Tunnel,’ ‘T.J. Hooker’ Actor Was 88

James Darren, the previous teen idol and pop singer who performed the dreamy surfer Moondoggie in three Gidget films earlier than starring on tv on The Time Tunnel and T.J. Hooker, died Monday. He was 88.

Darren died in his sleep at Cedars-Sinai Medical Heart in Los Angeles, his son Jim Moret, a correspondent for Inside Version, informed The Hollywood Reporter. He had entered the hospital for an aortic valve substitute however was deemed too weak to have the surgical procedure; he went residence however needed to return.

“I all the time thought he would pull by means of,” Moret stated, “as a result of he was so cool. He was all the time cool.”

Early in his profession, the dark-haired Darren obtained wonderful notices for starring in Let No Man Write My Epitaph (1960) — portraying the son of a hoodlum defended by Humphrey Bogart’s character in 1949’s Knock on Any Door — and for enjoying the Greek soldier Spyros Pappadimos in The Weapons of Navarone (1961).

Despite the fact that he couldn’t surf, the Philadelphia native bought the position of Moondoggie (actual identify: Jerry Matthews) reverse three actresses because the precocious Malibu teen: Sandra Dee in Gidget (1959), Deborah Walley in Gidget Goes Hawaiian (1961) and Cindy Carol in Gidget Goes to Rome (1963). 

Darren then spiraled by means of historical past because the headstrong Dr. Tony Newman, an electronics genius, on the 1966-67 ABC journey sequence The Time Tunnel, additionally starring Robert Colbert. (Tom Hanks as soon as stated it was his favourite present as a child.)

In an interview with Tom Weaver for the 2008 guide I Talked With a Zombie, Darren stated he wasn’t interested by doing tv or science fiction earlier than he agreed to a gathering with the creator of The Time Tunnel, Irwin Allen.

Allen informed him, “That is one thing it’s important to do. I do know you don’t wish to do it, however I believe you’re excellent for this position, and he satisfied me,” Darren recalled. “Irwin was one of many nice salespersons of our time. I accepted the position due to my assembly with him.”

Fifteen years later, Darren joined the William Shatner ABC motion drama T.J. Hooker in its second season, portraying Officer Jim Corrigan reverse Heather Locklear as his inexperienced companion, Stacy Sheridan.

Darren directed for the primary time in 1986 as an emergency fill-in throughout the remaining season of T.J. Hooker, and he went to helm episodes of Hunter, Silk Stalkings, Melrose Place, Werewolf, The A-Crew and Beverly Hills, 90210.

He additionally performed the rich Tony Marlin on Fox’s Melrose Place, on which he reunited with Locklear.

Darren’s greatest splash as a singer got here with the Gloria Shayne-written “Goodbye Merciless World,” which reached No. 3 on the Billboard Sizzling 100 chart in 1961. (Darren carried out a model of the tune, a few man whose coronary heart is damaged by a “imply, fickle lady,” on an episode of The Donna Reed Present that yr.)

He cracked the highest 10 once more in 1962 with “Her Royal Majesty,” written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin. And within the early ’70s, he sang and performed the straight man in a lounge act with comedian Buddy Hackett.

Darren revived his singing profession within the late ’90s when he appeared on a number of episodes of the syndicated sequence Star Trek: Deep Area 9 because the holographic lounge singer Vic Fontaine, a job he referred to as “some of the satisfying” he ever performed.

A number of of his Frank Sinatra-styled performances have been recorded for the 1999 album This One’s From the Coronary heart

After a few years out of the limelight, Darren made an impression because the husband of a bar proprietor in Harry Dean Stanton‘s remaining movie, Fortunate (2017).

James William Ercolani was born on June 8, 1936. Rising up on South tenth Avenue in South Philadelphia, he was impressed by one other Philly native, Eddie Fisher, to change into a singer and actor, and he commuted to New York to check performing with Stella Adler.

Whereas within the metropolis, the proprietor of a images store related him to Columbia Photos expertise scout Joyce Selznick (David O. Selznick’s niece), and he went on to signal a contract with the studio.

Darren made his movie debut as a highschool senior and gang member reverse Robert Blake within the crime drama Rumble on the Docks (1956), then adopted with roles in Operation Mad BallThe Brothers Rico and The Tijuana Story in 1957 and Gunman’s Stroll in ’58. 

The Gidget films made him extraordinarily well-liked with younger girls. 

“The defining second was once I was at a studio in San Francisco and phrase bought out that I used to be there,” he recalled in a 2015 interview with Los Angeles journal. “1000’s of women have been screaming out entrance. After I needed to depart the constructing, they tackled me to the bottom and pulled items of my hair out. The police needed to rescue me and took me to the roof till issues settled down.”

To land the Gidget gig, Darren needed to persuade the producers that he might carry a tune. “They have been going to make use of anyone else’s voice, however I informed them I might sing,” he stated. “We went into one of many soundstages with a piano participant and I sang the music they usually stated, ‘He can do it.’ Then they put me on their label, Colpix.”

Darren additionally was heard performing in All of the Younger Males (1960), Diamond Head (1962), Beneath the Yum Yum Tree (1963) and For These Who Assume Younger (1964).

He sang “Nearly in Your Arms” on the 1959 Academy Awards and “It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World” on the 1964 Oscar telecast; carried out as Yogi Bear in a 1964 animated movie; and did a quantity on a 1965 episode of The Flintstones.

He additionally performed the very best pal reverse Sal Mineo in The Gene Krupa Story (1959), starred as a automotive mechanic in The Vigorous Set (1964) and ventured to Italy to topline Venus in Furs (1969) with Barbara McNair.

Darren was married to childhood sweetheart Gloria Terlitsky from 1955 till their 1958 divorce and to Evy Norlund, a former Miss Denmark, from 1960 till his loss of life. He lived for many years in a house on Kimridge Highway in Beverly Ridge Estates that had been owned by Audrey Hepburn.

Along with his spouse and Moret, survivors embody his different sons, Christian and Anthony; grandchildren Amanda, Carly, Matthew, Natalie and Nicholas; and goddaughter A.J. Lambert, daughter of Nancy Sinatra.

Through the years, Darren encountered many followers of his music, a few of them surprising.

“I used to be in a pizza store at some point with a pal of mine. I heard this bike pull up, and in walked Bruce Springsteen in his little bike cap, like Brando wore in The Wild One — I assume he left his helmet exterior,” he recalled in his chat with Weaver. “I stated, ‘Oh, I gotta go say hello to him.’

“I walked as much as him and stated, ‘Hello, I don’t wish to interrupt you, however my identify is James Darren. I simply wish to inform you I’m an enormous fan. I really like all of your stuff.’ And he stated, ‘James Darren? I purchased “Goodbye Merciless World” in Freehold, New Jersey.’ Isn’t that candy?”

Duane Byrge contributed to this report.

AP Trial Writer Was 80

Linda Deutsch, a particular correspondent for The Related Press who for practically 50 years wrote glittering first drafts of historical past for lots of the nation’s most vital legal and civil trials — Charles Manson, O.J. Simpson, Michael Jackson, amongst many others — died Sunday. She was 80.

Deutsch was identified with pancreatic most cancers in 2022 and underwent profitable remedy, however the most cancers returned this summer time. She died at her Los Angeles house, surrounded by household and mates, stated nurse Narek Petrosian of Olympia Hospice Care.

One among America’s best-known trial reporters when she retired in 2015, Deutsch’s courts profession started with the 1969 trial and conviction of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy’s murderer, Sirhan Sirhan. She went on to cowl a who’s who of legal defendants — Manson, Simpson, Jackson, Patty Hearst, Phil Spector, the Menendez Brothers, “Night time Stalker” Richard Ramirez, “Unabomber” Ted Kaczynski and the cops charged within the beating of motorist Rodney King.

She was in a Los Angeles courtroom in 1995 for the conclusion of “The Trial of the Century” that noticed Simpson, an NFL Corridor of Famer, acquitted of killing his ex-wife and her buddy. 13 years later, Deutsch was in a Las Vegas courtroom when Simpson was convicted of kidnapping and theft and sentenced to jail.

“When an enormous trial loomed, AP’s project editors didn’t need to ask who ought to get the project. No, the moment query was, ‘Is Linda accessible?’” recalled Louis D. Boccardi, who served as AP’s govt editor for a decade and as president and CEO for 18 years. “She mastered the artwork of movie star trial protection and, within the course of, turned one thing of a media movie star herself.”

For many years, Deutsch lined each attraction and parole listening to of every convicted Manson Member of the family. Different historic moments included witnessing the 1976 conviction of Hearst, the newspaper heiress discovered responsible on financial institution theft and different expenses; the 2005 acquittal of Jackson on youngster molestation expenses; and the 2009 homicide conviction of Spector, the famed music producer.

“Linda was a fearless reporter who beloved being on an enormous story — and she or he certainly lined among the greatest,” stated Julie Tempo, AP’s govt editor and senior vice chairman. “She was a real trailblazer whose command of her beat and tireless work ethic made her an inspiration to so many journalists on the AP and throughout our trade.”

Her work, at all times written with verve, was not restricted to movie star — different trials concerned fraud, conspiracy, environmental disasters and immigration — and ultimately earned her the title of particular correspondent, essentially the most prestigious byline for an AP reporter.

Protection legal professional Thomas Mesereau, who represented Jackson, known as Deutsch “the epitome of ethics and professionalism in journalism.”

“I can’t consider anyone who rises to her stage,” he stated of Deutsch when she retired.

Deutsch was simply 25 when she lined the conviction of Sirhan. She then turned to the weird case of Charles Manson, a profession legal who had reinvented himself as a hippie guru, proselytizing and furnishing psychedelic medication to a bunch of disaffected youth.

The Manson Household, as they got here to be recognized, terrorized Los Angeles on successive summer time nights in 1969, breaking into houses in two rich neighborhoods and killing seven folks, together with pregnant actress Sharon Tate. Most victims had been stabbed a number of occasions, and their blood was used to scrawl “pig” and different phrases on the partitions of the houses.

When Manson and three of his younger feminine followers went on trial for homicide in 1970, they turned the monthslong authorized continuing right into a “surreal spectacle,” as Deutsch would write when Manson died in 2017.

“Folks had been having LSD flashbacks within the courtroom and at one level Charlie is leaping throughout the counsel desk on the decide with a pencil in his hand and the women are leaping up and down singing,” Deutsch recalled throughout a 2014 interview.

With just one important trial underneath Deutsch’s belt, the AP initially despatched a extra skilled reporter from New York to guide its Manson trial protection. After a month of witnessing such antics, he returned house in disgust, leaving Deutsch in cost.

“I assumed, ‘Oh, that is actually one thing,’” Deutsch remembered with fun. “I didn’t know trials might be like this.”

Nonetheless, she was hooked, forming tight bonds with the journalists who confirmed up day by day for 9 months.

However an excellent greater trial, born within the fashionable tv period, would eclipse Manson greater than 20 years later. When Simpson, one in every of America’s most beloved celebrities and sports activities figures, was charged with fatally stabbing Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman in a match of rage, information retailers from all around the world despatched reporters to cowl the case.

The decide made Deutsch, by then a well-known face across the courthouse, the one reporter to cowl jury choice. She turned ubiquitous on tv, telling a worldwide viewers what was occurring within the courtroom.

After Simpson was acquitted 11 months later, he known as to thank her for what he thought-about truthful and goal protection. The dialog led to what could be the primary of a variety of unique interviews he gave her over time.

Not all her trials concerned celebrities. Deutsch spent 5 months in Alaska masking the trial of Joseph Hazelwood, the captain of the Exxon Valdez oil tanker that prompted one of many worst U.S. environmental disasters when it spilled 11 million gallons (41 million liters) of crude oil in 1989.

She was additionally on the 1973 espionage trial of Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked to The New York Instances the highest secret Pentagon Papers that exposed unsavory particulars about U.S. involvement in Vietnam. The Instances revealed a sequence of articles in regards to the contents that helped flip the general public in opposition to the Vietnam Warfare.

Deutsch lined the trial of Ramirez, the “Night time Stalker” serial assassin, listening to testimony so ugly it introduced tears to the eyes of reporters. But it surely was the 1992 trial of 4 Los Angeles cops who had been videotaped beating King that shook Deutsch essentially the most. Their acquittals triggered rioting in Los Angeles that killed 55 folks and prompted $1 billion in property harm.

“That just about destroyed my perception within the justice system,” she stated in 2014. “I really feel a jury often will get it proper, however in that case, no. It was the unsuitable conclusion. It was the unsuitable verdict and it practically destroyed my metropolis.”

Like so many others, Deutsch fell in love with Los Angeles after transferring there from some place else. Born and raised in New Jersey, she traced her curiosity in journalism to age 12, when she based a global Elvis Presley fan membership e-newsletter in her hometown of Perth Amboy. The lifelong Presley fan traveled to the musician’s Graceland house in Memphis, Tennessee, in 2002 to cowl the twenty fifth anniversary of his demise.

By her sophomore yr at New Jersey’s Monmouth School — now Monmouth College — she had landed a part-time job at her hometown newspaper, the place she persuaded her editor to permit her to journey to Washington, D.C., in 1963 to cowl the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s historic “I Have a Dream” speech.

Arriving in Southern California after commencement, she labored briefly for the San Bernardino Solar earlier than becoming a member of the AP in 1967. Deutsch initially aspired to be an leisure reporter and, for years, would take time without work from the courtroom beat to assist cowl the Academy Awards.

In 1975, after the autumn of Saigon ended U.S. involvement in Vietnam, she was despatched to the Pacific island of Guam to interview evacuees and assist get regionally employed AP staffers safely to america.

But it surely was at all times the drama of the courtroom that known as her house.

“It’s as outdated as Shakespeare and as outdated as Socrates,” she stated in a 2007 interview. “It’s a particularly highly effective theater that tells us about ourselves and in regards to the folks on trial. And I feel it’s ever fascinating.”

Fatman Scoop Dead at 53 After Collapsing Onstage

Fatman Scoop, the Grammy-winning DJ, hype man and radio character, died after collapsing onstage this weekend. He was 53.

Fatman Scoop, actual identify Isaac Freeman III, collapsed on Friday whereas acting at City Heart Park in Hamden, Connecticut, per video obtained by TMZ. His household introduced his loss of life on Saturday morning, however gave no trigger.

Of their assertion, the household referred to Freeman as “a radiant soul, a beacon of sunshine on the stage and in life” who, on high of being a “world class performer” was additionally “a father, brother, uncle and a good friend.”

“He was the laughter in our lives, a continuing supply of help, unwavering energy and braveness,” they continued. “FatMan Scoop was identified to the world because the undisputed voice of the membership. His music made us dance and embrace life with positivity. His pleasure was infectious and the generosity he prolonged to all can be deeply missed however by no means forgotten.”

A press release from MN2S, Freeman’s PR agency, additionally spoke to his “iconic voice, infectious power and nice character.” The corporate famous he had been a shopper for 15 years, and his “vibrant spirit, boundless enthusiasm and fervour for music will all the time stay in our hearts.”

Sharron Elkabas, CEO of MN2S, additionally advised The Hollywood Reporter, “He had an power drink earlier than happening stage. He by no means drank power drinks, however he did earlier than this present.”

Freeman is finest identified for his 1999 observe “Be Trustworthy.” He was additionally featured on Missy Elliott’s 2005 “Lose Management,” for which he received a Grammy. The identical yr, he appeared on Mariah Carey’s “It’s Like That.”

Freeman and Dyce Payso had simply premiered the official music video for his or her new tune, “Let It Go,” on Friday morning. Final month, he was featured on Tech N9ne’s observe, “No Popcorn.” On social media, he was celebrated for his membership remixes of in style songs, together with numbers by Nicki Minaj and Tyla.

Per Elkabas, Freeman is survived by his son, daughter and brother.

On Instagram, Questlove posted a tribute to the DJ, writing, “I need to thank Fatman Scoop for being an embodiment of what hip hop was really about. To simply neglect about your troubles and stay within the second and permit pleasure in.”

DJ D-Good additionally posted a tribute, saying “he was all the time type to me. It is a main loss for the tradition. My condolences to all of his family members.”