ReportWire

Tag: Obituaries

  • Jon Landau Remembered by ‘Titanic’ Backer Bill Mechanic: “That Movie Required a Lion, and He Proved He Could Roar”

    Jon Landau Remembered by ‘Titanic’ Backer Bill Mechanic: “That Movie Required a Lion, and He Proved He Could Roar”

    Veteran film executive Bill Mechanic shares some memories about producer Jon Landau, who died on July 5 at the age of 63, and the experiences they shared during the making of James Camerons 1997 epic Titanic, which was backed by Fox Filmed Entertainment when Mechanic was that company’s chairman and CEO.

    * * *

    I always looked at Jon as a born film person. His parents, Ely and Edie, were respected producers, and he knew everything there was to know about movie production.

    When I joined Fox, Jon was the head of production, meaning he oversaw every film we made from the studio’s point of view. It was a surprise — and a loss — for us when he left the studio to produce Titanic. But it was also great knowing that we’d have someone so knowledgeable working on a movie that promised to be as ambitious as Jim’s picture.

    No one could have foreseen the difficulties that lay ahead with that film, but even at the toughest moments, Jon was someone we absolutely trusted. When there were arguments about how to forge through to completion, he arbitrated — to the degree anyone could — between the production and the studio, and again made it easier because both sides trusted that every dollar was being spent was in the interests of delivering something special.

    Reflecting back on that time, those of us closest to the film believed it had a chance to become not only a hit, but something truly great. There were, however, no assurances. The stress level was off the charts, and there was no question it weighed heavily on Jon. But he never lost his sense of humor or decency, because he was a soldier. He remained confident and positive, regardless of the moment, and he knew his craft.

    We all had a difficult journey, but it’s a statement of how good Jon was that both the studio and the production felt he was the perfect person for the job. That movie required a lion, and he proved he could roar.

    Scott Feinberg

    Source link

  • Martin Mull: A Life In Photos

    Martin Mull: A Life In Photos

    Martin Mull, a comic actor and musician familiar to fans of Arrested Development, Veep, and Roseanne, died this week, daughter Maggie Mull says. He was 80.

    According to a Friday night Instagram post by Mull, her father “passed away at home on June 27th, after a valiant fight against a long illness. He was known for excelling at every creative discipline imaginable and also for doing Red Roof Inn commercials,” she continued, noting that “He would find that joke funny. He was never not funny.”

    “My dad will be deeply missed by his wife and daughter, by his friends and coworkers, by fellow artists and comedians and musicians, and—the sign of a truly exceptional person—by many, many dogs. I loved him tremendously.”

    L-R Loudon Wainright III, Joan Baez, Billy Crystal, Martin Mull and Steve Martin at The San Francisco Civic Center in 1977 in San Francisco, California.

    Richard McCaffrey/Getty Images

    Image may contain Accessories Formal Wear Tie Adult Person Bag Handbag Crowd Wedding People Chair and Furniture

    Martin Mull (L) and Burgess Meredeith (R) attend an event at the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco, California, on July 11, 1978.

    WWD/Getty Images

    Martin Mull rose to prominence in the 1970s, first as ill-fated domestic abuser Garth Gimble on the soap opera satire Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. In spin-off Fernwood 2-Night, which similarly targeted talk shows, he played Barth Gimble, Garth’s twin.

    Image may contain Martin Mull Penny Marshall Clothing Hat Accessories Glasses Adult Person Camera and Electronics

    Actor Martin Mull (far left)) and actress Penny Marshall (far right) at the Seventh Annual Robert F. Kennedy Pro-Celebrity Tennis Tournament on August 26, 1978 at Forest Hills in New York City.

    Ron Galella/Getty Images

    Eve Batey

    Source link

  • Denver Mayor Mike Johnston says final goodbye to his mother, Sally

    Denver Mayor Mike Johnston says final goodbye to his mother, Sally

    Sally Johnston, mother of Denver Mayor Mike Johnston and co-owner of the Christiania Lodge at Vail, passed away May 17, with the mayor joining her for a final goodbye.

    The city leader announced his mom’s passing in a LinkedIn post on Saturday.

    “Yesterday we said the final good bye to my mom,” Johnston wrote. He depicted her as selfless, joyful and “a tireless force for goodness.”

    Sally Johnston grew up in Port Leyden, N.Y., alongside three sisters. Her father worked as a school principal, while her mother was an arts and music teacher, according to a 2010 article in the Vail Daily.

    She followed in their footsteps — teaching music in Boston in the 1960s, her son Mike recalled in his social media post. There, she spearheaded a Head Start program, the Vail Daily reports.

    Megan Ulu-Lani Boyanton

    Source link

  • Roger Corman, Giant of Independent Filmmaking, Dies at 98

    Roger Corman, Giant of Independent Filmmaking, Dies at 98

    Roger Corman, the fabled “King of the B’s” producer and director who churned out low-budget genre films with breakneck speed and provided career boosts to young, untested talents like Jack Nicholson, Ron Howard, Peter Bogdanovich, Martin Scorsese, Francis Ford Coppola, Jonathan Demme, Gale Anne Hurd and James Cameron, has died. He was 98.

    The filmmaker, who received an honorary Oscar in 2009 at the Governors Awards, died Thursday at his home in Santa Monica, his family told The Hollywood Reporter.

    “He was generous, open-hearted and kind to all those who knew him,” they said in a statement. “When asked how he would like to be remembered, he said, ‘I was a filmmaker, just that.’”

    Corman perhaps is best known for such horror fare as The Little Shop of Horrors (1960) and his series of Edgar Allan Poe adaptations starring Vincent Price, but he became celebrated for drugs-and-biker sagas like The Wild Angels (1966), which was invited to the Venice Film Festival as the Premiere Presentation.

    He also achieved notoriety for producing The Trip (1967), which starred Peter Fonda as a man on an LSD-inspired odyssey. Its controversy delighted Corman, who was one of the first producers to recognize the power of negative publicity.

    His blend of sex, nudity, violence and social themes was taken seriously in many quarters, especially in Europe and among film school professors, and in 1964 he was the first American producer-director to be honored at the Cinematheque Francaisee with a retrospective of his movies.

    Others considered his work so embarrassingly awful that it deserved lasting notoriety. Take Bloody Mama (1970), for instance; sure, it was a gangster saga about Ma Barker and her thug sons, but the cast included Shelley Winters, Robert De Niro and Bruce Dern.

    There are two divergent schools of thought on Corman’s career: 1) That he recognized and nurtured talent or 2) that he exploited youthful talent and never used it to go beyond the rudiments of pushing out quickie product.

    Nicholson, then 21, made his big-screen debut in Corman’s The Cry Baby Killer (1958). Corman hired a young Scorsese to direct Boxcar Bertha (1972) and Demme to write Caged Heat (1974). He made new college graduate Hurd his production assistant and later his marketing chief and handed Cameron the job of designing props for Battle Beyond the Stars (1980).

    The giant of independent filmmaking also gave Howard a chance to direct his first feature, Grand Theft Auto (1977). When the former child actor complained about the producer’s refusal to pay for more extras, Corman famously said, “Ron, if you do a good job for me on this picture, you’ll never have to work for me again.”

    All are proud members of “The Roger Corman School of Filmmaking.”

    Roger William Corman was born in Detroit on April 5, 1926, but his family — including his late younger brother Gene Corman, who went on to become an agent and produce several movies with him — moved to Beverly Hills when he was 14.

    He attended Beverly Hills High School and graduated from Stanford University in 1947 with a degree in industrial engineering, which he said fostered the type of thinking needed in low-budget production.

    He served in the U.S. Navy for nearly three years but found when he was discharged that he had lost his taste for engineering. He took a job at 20th Century Fox as a messenger and worked his way up to story analyst.

    Frustrated with that position, he quit and set off for England. He attended Oxford, doing graduate work in English literature. Ultimately, he went on to Paris, where he sold freelance material to magazines. When he returned to the U.S., he worked as a literary agent. Inspired by the utter awfulness of the scripts he read, he decided to try his hand at writing.

    “I said to myself that this looked like an easy way to make a buck, so I sat down and spent a lot of nights doing a script called Highway Dragnet,” he once recalled. He sold the script to Allied Artists for $4,000, and it was made into a movie starring Joan Bennett and Richard Conte.

    His early movie days were spent in an association with Samuel P. Arkoff’s American International Pictures, which put out cheap genre pictures. Working with Arkoff and his philosophy of dispensing product geared to drive-in audiences instilled in Corman the virtues of telling stories visually and working quickly. He cranked out eight movies in 1956 alone, and from 1955-60, he’s credited with producing or directing more than 30 AIP movies. All were on budgets of less than $100,000, and most were completed in less than two weeks.

    He delighted in making genre films, beginning with Westerns: Five Guns West (1955) was his first directing credit, and he followed with Apache Woman (1955) and The Oklahoma Woman (1956). He switched to science fiction and horror, blasting out such gobbled fare as Day The World Ended (1956), It Conquered the World (1956), The Undead (1957), Night of the Blood Beast (1958) and She Gods of Shark Reef (1958). Amid the bloodletting, hokey costumes and bizarre plots were bursts of cheeky humor and campy signs of intelligent life, reflecting Corman’s breezy, comic sensibility.

    Ever inventive and calculating, Corman learned how to cash in on topical issues: After the Soviet Union launched Sputnik, he came up with the idea of War of the Satellites (1958). He capitalized on the rock ’n’ roll rebellion of the time, producing such teen pics as Rock All Night, Teenage Doll and Carnival Rock, all released in 1957.

    No matter how disparaging the reviews, his movies turned a profit. (His autobiography, How I Made a Hundred Movies in Hollywood and Never Lost a Dime, was first published in 1990.)

    Somewhat to his amusement, he also knocked out a critical success with AIP’s Machine-Gun Kelly (1958), which starred Charles Bronson in the title role of the maniacal mobster. On the strength of that film, Fox hired him to do I, Mobster, which was released a few months later.

    Not deterred by the ignominy of not being associated with a major studio, the maestro at inexpensive moviemaking continued to serve up lethal does of humor and horror, including A Bucket of Blood (1959) and Little Shop of Horrors, a spoof of horror films that Corman intentionally shot in two days to break a production record. His other work included such schlockers as Creature From the Haunted Sea (1960), Battle of Blood Island (1960) and Last Woman on Earth (1960).

    He became bored once he had mastered a genre, relentlessly switching forms. This led to production problems at times, which Corman solved with good-natured dispatch. For one particularly troubled project, a story that had somehow switched from sci-fi to horror and endured the loss of sets, he was left with a hodgepodge of footage that didn’t make sense or have any consistency.

    But Corman salvaged the film: He had young actor Nicholson grab a character, throw him against a hall, shake him by the neck and, with his most deranged look, scream, “What the hell is going on here?” The actor then dispensed exposition that somehow tied all the conflicting plots, sets and characters together, and the story moved on to a quick, economical ending.

    Corman followed up with heap blood-spillers directed by young novices, including: Dementia 13 (1963), directed by Corman assistant Coppola, who wrote in a Hitchcock-style, ax-murder scene; the violent Targets (1968), helmed by Bogdanovich, who had earned his Corman spurs by scouting locations for The Wild Angels; Death Race 2000 (1975), directed by Paul Bartel, which careened along the black-humor road and featured no-name Sylvester Stallone as the arch-villain, Machine Gun Joe Viterbo; and Rock ’n’ Roll High School (1979), directed by Allan Arkush, starring Bartel as a snide music teacher at Vince Lombardi High School, which the kids blow up in a Poe-style, flaming frenzy.

    Ever restless, Corman ventured into weightier territory, producing The Intruder (1962), a hard look at racial prejudice. It was his first “message” film, and he financed it himself when the major distributors balked at the subject. The story centered on a hatemongering racist (William Shatner) who organized violent opposition to court-ordered school desegregation. It used the N-word in a realistic, non-gratuitous manner, but the film was denied the Production Code’s seal and screened in only a few movie houses in the country.

    Although it received commendations from such critics as The Hollywood Reporter‘s Arthur Knight and The New York TimesBosley Crowther, it was to be Corman’s first money-losing film. He vowed never again to make a movie with “so obviously a personal statement.”

    He went on to sign a deal with Columbia Pictures in the mid-1960s but grew dissatisfied with its low-budget assignments and returned to AIP to do The Wild Angels. Made on a reported budget of $360,000, it grossed more than $25 million.

    After Bloody Mama, he withdrew from directing in 1970 to form New World Pictures, a production and distribution company geared to low-budget, campy movies aimed at young audiences. Despite industry ridicule, his formulaic send-ups made money, among them Women in Cages (1971), The Velvet Vampire (1971) and Night Call Nurses (1972).

    Corman had certain aesthetic rules and qualitative guidelines, which he delivered with his characteristic insouciance: “In science fiction films, the monster should be always be bigger than the leading lady.” He pioneered such cinematic staples as the girls’ shower scene, usually the second scene in a Corman teen film. He insisted his directors practice proper professionalism: namely, always have the girls lather up their arms and stomachs so as not to obscure the integrity of the breast shots.

    Surprising to some, but consistent with his restless nature, Corman switched gears: He sought out sophisticated foreign films. Through New World, he began to distribute overseas films that the majors were too timid, or too weighted down by marketing wisdom, to distribute. He used his cheeky, mass marketing sensibility to release Bergman’s Cries and Whispers (1972), Fellini’s Amarcord (1974), Truffaut’s The Story of Adele H. (1975), Kurosawa’s Dersu Uzala (1975) and Herzog’s Fitzcarraldo (1982).

    These films enjoyed regular runs in Los Angeles at the Nuart Theater, not far from Corman’s home; long lines of film students and movie buffs convened to see such fare in the 1970s.

    In the early ’80s, he sold off New World, which came to be run by former Academy president Robert Rehme. Corman then formed Concorde Films and New Horizons Films and produced a number of low-budget movies with his wife, Julie, whom he married in 1970.

    He had a producing credit on more than 400 projects, with more recent efforts including Attack of the 50ft Cheerleader (2012) and the 2014 TV movie Sharktopus vs. Pteracuda.

    His graduates have affectionately cast him in cameo roles, including Coppola in The Godfather: Part II (1974) and Demme in The Silence of the Lambs (1991), Philadelphia (1993) and Rachel Getting Married (2008).

    In March 2015, Corman and his wife filed a lawsuit in Los Angeles Superior Court saying they lost up to $60 million when their money was mismanaged by an investment fund. They later said that damages ran as high as $170 million.

    In addition to his wife, survivors include their children, Catherine and Mary.

    In his Oscar acceptance speech, Corman applauded those in the world who take risks.

    “Many of my friends and compatriots and people who’ve started with me are here tonight, and they’ve all succeeded,” he said. “Some of them succeeded to an extraordinary degree. And I believe they’ve succeeded because they had the courage to take chances, to gamble. But they gambled because they knew the odds were with them; they knew they had the ability to create what they wanted to make.

    “It’s very easy for a major studio or somebody else to repeat their successes, to spend vast amounts of money on remakes, on special effects-driven tentpole franchise films. But I believe the finest films being done today are done by the original, innovative filmmakers who have the courage to take a chance and to gamble. So I say to you, ‘Keep gambling, keep taking chances.’”

    Hilary Lewis

    Source link

  • Ruth Landers, Producer and Mother of Actresses Audrey Landers and Judy Landers, Dies at 85

    Ruth Landers, Producer and Mother of Actresses Audrey Landers and Judy Landers, Dies at 85

    Ruth Landers, who created the 1990s PBS kids show The Huggabug Club with her daughters, actresses Audrey Landers and Judy Landers, has died. She was 85.

    A longtime resident of Sarasota, Florida, Landers died April 18 of natural causes, her family announced.

    Audrey Landers, 67, portrayed Afton Cooper on Dallas on and off for seven seasons and played the dancer Val Clarke in the 1985 big-screen version of A Chorus Line, directed by Richard Attenborough. Judy Landers, 65, was on such TV shows as Vega$, B.J. and the Bear and Madam’s Place.

    Aimed at preschoolers, The Huggabug Club featured Audrey as Miss Audrey and Judy as Miss Judy, working opposite full-bodied puppets. Filled with songs and scripts written by Audrey, it aired on PBS from January 1995 to June 1997, followed by years of reruns.

    Ruth also produced Ghost Writer (1989), featuring her daughters; Club Fed (1990), starring Judy; and California Casanova (1991), starring Audrey; and executive produced Circus Camp (2006), which included her daughters and other family members.

    Ruth Béate Landers was born on May 17, 1938, in Frankfurt, Germany. Shortly after the Kristallnacht incidents in November 1938, she and her mother, grandmother and grandfather — the surviving members of her family — fled the Nazis for Shanghai.

    She arrived in the U.S. in 1948 and in her mid-20s launched her own national printing company, Office Research Corp. Later, she managed the careers of her daughters and served as Audrey’s manager when she toured as a singer.

    Ruth also co-founded the Landers Star Collection, providing affordable fashion to women through Home Shopping Europe, QVC and ShopNBC.

    In addition to her daughters (Judy is married to former Dodgers reliever Tom Niedenfuer), survivors include her grandchildren, twins Daniel and Adam, Lindsey and Kristy; great-grandchildren Sawyer, Evangeline and Hendricks; and sister Esther.

    Mike Barnes

    Source link

  • Bernard Hill, ‘Titanic’ and ‘Lord of the Rings’ Actor, Dies at 79

    Bernard Hill, ‘Titanic’ and ‘Lord of the Rings’ Actor, Dies at 79

    Bernard Hill, known to audiences at Titanic’s Captain Edward Smith in James Cameron’s 1997 film and King Théoden in the Lord of the Rings, has died. He was 79. Hill died Sunday morning, his agent Lou Coulson told the BBC. No cause was given. Hill’s breakout role occurred on the BBC miniseries Boys From the […]

    Zoe G Phillips

    Source link

  • Ray Chan, Art Director and Production Designer for Marvel Films, Dies at 56

    Ray Chan, Art Director and Production Designer for Marvel Films, Dies at 56

    Ray Chan, the art director and production designer for Marvel Studios who contributed to Guardians of the Galaxy, three Avengers movies, the upcoming Deadpool & Wolverine and more, has died. He was 56.

    Chan died Tuesday near his home in Wales, his family announced. No cause of death was divulged.

    “Ray truly was one of the best, in so many ways,” they said. “He had an exuberance for life, which was tragically cut short and will be sorely missed. He loved his career and lived a rich and wonderful life, and his memory will live on through all those he knew and the films he helped make happen.”

    Chan served as supervising art director on Thor: The Dark World (2013), Guardians of the Galaxy (2014), Doctor Strange (2016) and the Avengers films Age of Ultron (2015), Infinity War (2018) and Endgame (2019).

    He also was an art director on Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019) and production designer on the 2021 miniseries The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (2023) and Shawn Levy’s Deadpool & Wolverine, which stars Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman and hits theaters in July.

    “He was as valuable a creative force on Deadpool & Wolverine as the writers, director and stars,” Reynolds said on social media.

    “I don’t pretend to know every chapter of Ray’s heart, but I know it’s unusual to encounter someone with that level of artistry who simultaneously moved through the world with such indelible humanity.

    “He built worlds from scratch — and did so in the most collaborative and inclusive ways. Ray was peerless. He’ll be missed by so many, but most of all by his family. 

    “The last time I saw Ray was exactly two weeks ago. One of [the] last things I said to him was that he makes magic, and there’s nobody on Earth like him. He and I would also give each other a lot of good-natured shit. So … of all the last things you could say to someone you adore, that’s a little scrap of consolation I’ll hang onto forever.”

    Said Levy: “Ray did more than design the world of our movie; he lit up the world around him. Truly, anyone who knew Ray, or was lucky enough to collaborate with him as we were, experienced this beacon of a man: kind, warm, tenaciously devoted and relentlessly inspiring — Ray worked and lived with a joyous and contagious humanity that is rare.”

    The oldest of three children of Hong Kong immigrants, Raymond Chan was born on Dec. 1, 1967, in Oldham, Greater Manchester. His mother was a machinist and his father a bus driver. He graduated with a graphic design degree from the Liverpool School of Art, then moved to London to join the new film and television M.A. postgraduate program at Kingston Art College.

    After graduation and work as a butcher, Chan served as an art department assistant on The Secret Rapture (1993), then was a senior draughtsman on Hackers (1995). He went on to work on other films including Johnny English (2003), National Treasure (2004), Alien vs. Predator (2004), Children of Men (2006), Flyboys (2006), Knight and Day (2010) and Robin Hood (2010).

    Chan collaborated with production designer Charles Wood on six Marvel films and 10 movies in all.

    “Each film that Marvel [puts out], it’s always a very involved process, for myself and Charlie, each one is unique and a challenge,” Chan said in a 2018 interview with The Credits. “Guardians of the Galaxy is different to Ultron, which is different to Dr. Strange.

    Infinity Wars was probably the biggest challenge. It comes off as a collaboration, working with a great studio like Marvel. There are great scriptwriters, directors, they bring a lot to the table. They’d come up with ideas, first, and we’d bounce off that.”

    In a statement to The Hollywood Reporter, Wood called Chan “an incredible talent, a brilliant designer, a true artist and an inspiring and steadfast leader. Ray was filled with the greatest kindness, never-ending generosity and fantastic humor; he had the most extraordinary energy and was so deeply treasured by everyone who met him.”

    “From Xandar to the Sanctum Sanctorum, Ray brought distinct, lived-in worlds to the screen, spanning the far reaches of space to a Louisiana fishing boat,” Marvel said. “He was also a wonderful friend and colleague.”

    Chan shared excellence in production design awards from the Art Directors Guild in 2015 and 2020 for Guardians of the Galaxy and Endgame, respectively.

    Survivors include his wife, Lindsay; his sons, Caspar and Sebastian; and his daughter-in-law, Danielle.

    “If not occupied with family or film,” they said, “Ray would most likely have his mind set on one of the three things, each of which, in another life, Ray would have excelled in: food, for Ray dearly loved to cook for family and friends and was a first-rate chef and benevolent host; cars, be it his beloved Range Rover P38, the mechanics of a Jeep’s engine or Formula One; his garden, at his house in Cowbridge, Wales, which he planned with his usual design flair. A lover of classic film, Ray also, perhaps surprisingly, loved musicals, with The Sound of Music being a firm favorite.”

    Any stories or memories of Chan can be left here. Donations in his memory can be made to the Stroke Association.

    Mike Barnes

    Source link

  • Chance Perdomo, Gen V and Chilling Adventures of Sabrina Actor, Dead at 27

    Chance Perdomo, Gen V and Chilling Adventures of Sabrina Actor, Dead at 27

    Photo: Karwai Tang/WireImage

    Chance Perdomo, the actor best known for his roles in Gen V and Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, has died at the age of 27 following a motorcycle accident.

    A statement shared with Variety from Perdomo’s publicist reads, “His passion for the arts and insatiable appetite for life was felt by all who knew him, and his warmth will carry on in those who he loved dearest. We ask to please respect the family’s wish for privacy as they mourn the loss of their beloved son and brother.”

    In addition to starring as Andre Anderson on Gen V, Amazon Prime’s spin-off of The Boys, Perdomo played Ambrose Spellman on Netflix’s Chilling Adventures of Sabrina from 2018 to 2020. That role was written with Perdomo in mind after creator Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa was impressed by his audition for Jughead Jones on Riverdale. Perdomo also starred in the After franchise as Landon Gibson.

    A statement from the producers of Gen V reads, “We can’t quite wrap our heads around this. For those of us who knew him and worked with him, Chance was always charming and smiling, an enthusiastic force of nature, an incredibly talented performer, and more than anything else, just a very kind, lovely person. Even writing about him in the past tense doesn’t make sense. We are so sorry for Chance’s family, and we are grieving the loss of our friend and colleague.”

    By Tom Smyth

    Source link

  • Louis Gossett Jr., Star of ‘An Officer and a Gentleman’ and ‘Roots,’ Dies at 87

    Louis Gossett Jr., Star of ‘An Officer and a Gentleman’ and ‘Roots,’ Dies at 87

    Louis Gossett Jr., the tough guy with a sensitive side who won an Oscar for his portrayal of a steely sergeant in An Officer and a Gentleman and an Emmy for his performance as a compassionate slave in the landmark miniseries Roots, has died. He was 87.

    Gossett’s first cousin Neal L. Gossett told the Associated Press that the actor died Thursday night in Santa Monica. The cause of death is unknown, but Gossett announced in 2010 that he had prostate cancer.

    With his sleek, bald pate and athlete’s physique, Gossett was intimidating in a wide array of no-nonsense roles, most notably in Taylor Hackford’s Officer and a Gentleman (1982), where as Gunnery Sgt. Emil Foley he rides Richard Gere’s character mercilessly (but for his own good) at an officer candidate school and gets into a memorable martial arts fight.

    He was the second Black man to win an acting Oscar, following Sidney Poitier in 1964.

    For the role, the 6-foot-4 Gossett trained for 30 days at the Marine Corps Recruitment Division, an adjunct of Camp Pendleton north of San Diego. “I knew I had to put myself through at least some degree of this all-encompassing transformation,” Gossett wrote in his 2010 biography, An Actor and a Gentleman.

    Douglas Day Stewart’s original script called for Gere’s Zack Mayo to beat up Foley.

    “The Marines changed it,” Gossett recalled in a 2010 interview. “They said that an enlisted man would never beat up a drill sergeant. We’ll tear the place up unless you change it. They said, ‘If you don’t do this well, Mr. Gossett, we’re going to have to kill you.’ “

    The Brooklyn native capitalized on this hard-ass image in such action films as The Punisher (1989), opposite Dolph Lundgren, and Iron Eagle (1986) and its three sequels. In the Iron Eagle series, he starred as Col. Charles “Chappy” Sinclair, a leader of dangerous rescue missions in threatening international locales.

    In 1959, Gossett played George Murchison in the original Broadway production of Lorraine Hansberry’s domestic tragedy A Raisin in the Sun, then segued to Daniel Petrie’s 1961 Columbia film adaptation along with his stage co-stars Poitier and Ruby Dee, launching his career in Hollywood.

    It was his eloquent portrayal as Fiddler, an older slave who teaches a young Kunta Kinte (LeVar Burton) to speak English on the eight-part ABC miniseries Roots, that earned him his first significant dose of national recognition. Eighty-five percent of the U.S. population tuned in for at least a portion of Roots, and the finale drew more than 100 million viewers in January 1977.

    “All the top African-American actors were asked, and I begged to be in there,” Gossett once said. “I got the best role, I think. It was wonderful.”

    Gossett also starred in the critically acclaimed telefilm Sadat (1983), in which he played the assassinated Egyptian leader (Sadat’s widow, Jehan, personally chose him for the part), and he portrayed a baseball immortal in Don’t Look Back: The Story of Leroy “Satchel” Paige in a 1981 telefilm.

    During his 60-year-plus career, Gossett excelled in a number of non-stereotypical racial roles, playing a hospital chief of staff on the 1979 ABC series The Lazarus Syndrome and the title character Gideon Oliver, an anthropology professor, on a 1989 set of ABC Mystery Movies.

    He also appeared as the guardian of a 16-year-old alien (Peter Barton) on NBC’s The Powers of Matthew Star; as Gerak, the first leader of the Free Jaffa Nation, on the Syfy series Stargate SG-1; as Halle Berry‘s estranged father on CBS’ Extant; and as former vigilante Will Reeves on HBO’s Watchmen. (That last one resulted in his eighth career Emmy nom.)

    Gossett was born on May 27, 1936, in the melting pot of Brooklyn, the son of a porter (who was adopted and raised by an Italian family) and a maid. At Abraham Lincoln High School, he was class president and starred on the baseball, track and basketball teams; later, he would be invited to the New York Knicks’ rookie camp.

    When a leg injury forced him to sit out one high school basketball season, Gossett developed an interest in acting, and his English teacher recommended him to the producers of the 1953 Broadway show Take a Giant Step. He won the lead role at age 17 over more than 400 other contenders, then received the Donaldson Award for newcomer of the year.

    Gossett accepted a dramatics scholarship to NYU, became pals with James Dean at the Actors Studio in New York and made his onscreen debut in 1957 on the NBC anthology series The Big Story.

    In 1964, he, Lola Falana and Mae Barnes sang in the cast of America, Be Seated, a “modern minstrel show” that was produced by Mike Todd Jr. and played at the 1964 World’s Fair in New York.

    Two years later, he co-wrote the antiwar song “Handsome Johnny” for Richie Havens’ first album, a tune the folk legend performed as the opening act at Woodstock three years later.

    Gossett went on to play an angry man living in a run-down apartment building in Hal Ashby’s The Landlord (1970), a con artist opposite James Garner in the slavery-era Skin Game (1971), a drug-dealing cutthroat in The Deep (1977), a headmaster in Toy Soldiers (1991) and a down-and-out boxer in Diggstown (1992).

    The actor’s film résumé also included Travels With My Aunt (1972), The Laughing Policeman (1973), The River Niger (1976), The Choirboys (1977), Enemy Mine (1985), The Principal (1987), Blue Chips (1994), Jasper, Texas (2003), Daddy’s Little Girls (2007), King of the Dancehall (2016), Foster Boy (2018), The Cuban (2019) and The Color Purple (2023).

    Gossett also did excellent work in The Sentry Collection Presents Ben Vereen: His Roots; Backstairs at the White House; Palmerstown, U.S.A.; A Gathering of Old Men; and Touched by an Angel. He received an Emmy nom for each of these five projects.

    As a producer, he shared a Daytime Emmy for the 1998 children’s special In His Father’s Shoes, in which he also starred.

    He was active in the New York Alumni Association, a group of Big Apple emigrants who for more than two decades reunited each year for a show at Beverly Hills High School.

    In 2006, Gossett founded the nonprofit Eracism Foundation, an “all out conscious offensive” to eradicate all forms of racism by providing programs that foster cultural diversity, historical enrichment, education and antiviolence initiatives. (In the 1966, he said he was pulled over by Beverly Hills cops and handcuffed to a palm tree for no reason.) 

    “We better take care of ourselves and one another better, otherwise nobody’s gonna win anything,” he said in July 2020 during a CBS Sunday Morning profile. “We need each other quite desperately — for our mutual salvation.”

    Duane Byrge contributed to this report.

    Hilary Lewis

    Source link

  • David Bordwell, Preeminent Film Scholar, Dies at 76

    David Bordwell, Preeminent Film Scholar, Dies at 76

    David Bordwell, the noted film scholar, teacher, author and researcher known for sharing his knowledge and enthusiasm of cinema with movie lovers everywhere, has died. He was 76.

    Bordwell died Thursday after a long illness, the University of Wisconsin-Madison announced. He taught at the school from 1973 until his retirement in 2004 and was its Jacques Ledoux Professor Emeritus of Film Studies at the time of his death.

    For more than two decades, Bordwell supplied commentaries, visual and written essays and interviews for films in the Criterion Collection and was seen and heard on 50 insightful episodes of Observations on Film Art on the Criterion Channel.

    In a statement, Criterion called him “a great, longtime friend and a tireless champion of cinema who spent decades imparting his wisdom and passion onto film lovers around the world.”

    Bordwell wrote his essential textbooks Film Art: An Introduction, first published in 1979, and Film History: An Introduction, first published in 1994. Both were authored with his wife, Kristin Thompson, a fellow UW professor.

    The couple also published an authoritative film blog at davidbordwell.net.

    In all, Bordwell authored, co-authored or edited some 22 books and monographs and more than 140 journal articles, book chapters, introductions to collections and review essays, UW said.

    Bordwell was born on July 23, 1947, in Penn Yan, New York. “I grew up on a farm and so didn’t have the easy access to movies that kids in cities would have,” he said in 2006.

    “I began to watch classic movies on TV late at night while also reading books like Arthur Knight’s The Liveliest Art and Paul Rotha’s The Film Till Now. … So in a weird way I got more of my awareness of film from reading than from viewing.”

    He graduated from the State University of New York at Albany in 1969 after studying English literature and joined the faculty at the UW’s Department of Communication Arts immediately after completing coursework for his Ph.D. from the University of Iowa.

    His writings included 1980’s The Films of Carl-Theodor Dreyer; 1985’s The Classical Hollywood Cinema: Film Style and Mode of Production to 1960; 1988’s Ozu and the Poetics of Cinema; 2000’s Planet Hong Kong; 2005’s Figures Traced in Light: On Cinematic Staging; and 2006’s The Way Hollywood Tells It: Story and Style in Modern Movies.

    Among Bordwell’s favorite films, according to IndieWire, were Passing Fancy (1933), How Green Was My Valley (1941), Sanshiro Sugata (1943), Song of the South (1946), Advise and Consent (1962), Zorns Lemma (1970), Choose Me (1984), Back to the Future (1985) and The Hunt for Red October (1990).

    In addition to his wife, survivors include his sisters, Diane and Darlene; his nephew, Sanjeev; and his niece, Kamini.

    Screenwriter, director and producer James Schamus, a three-time Oscar nominee, paid tribute to Bordwell in a statement to UW:

    “As a filmmaker, I can describe David’s friendship as unnervingly generous. His astonishing critical intelligence never got in the way of his enthusiasms, and his enthusiasms never dampened his analytic regard; they were functions of each other,” he wrote.

    “This meant that when talk came around to one’s own work, the effect was something akin to getting a loving bear hug from a nuclear-powered microscope. There will never be another like David again.”

    Mike Barnes

    Source link

  • Style Icon Iris Apfel, an American Original, Is Dead at 102

    Style Icon Iris Apfel, an American Original, Is Dead at 102

    “You’ve either got or you haven’t got style,” goes the old Sammy Cahn lyric. “If you’ve got it, you stand out a mile.” Iris Apfel, with her signature oversized glasses and distinctive outfits—who died today in Palm Beach—stood out a mile, and then some.

    The centenarian wore her age well. On the occasion of her 100th birthday, the indefatigable fashion influencer and style icon posted an Instagram slideshow displaying things she was older than. These included: the Cyclone roller coaster, the Chrysler Building, Rockefeller Center, and the Empire State Building. Within the fashion world, she was—in a word—a monument.

    In September 2022, at the age of 101, she posted her thoughts on fashion versus style to her more than two million social media followers. They are “two entirely different things,” she said. “You can easily buy your way into being fashionable. Style, I think, is in your DNA. It implies originality and courage. The worst that can happen is you can fail, and you don’t die from that.”

    It was certainly in her DNA. In Iris, Albert Maysles’s 2014 award-winning documentary, Apfel recalled being taken aside by Loehmann’s department store founder Frieda Loehmann, who told her, “Young lady, I’ve been watching you. You’re not pretty and you’ll never be pretty, but it doesn’t matter. You have something much better. You have style.” Her philosophy that “more is more and less is a bore” made her a self-described “accidental icon” (which is also the title of her 2018 memoir) and “geriatric starlet.”

    In 2005, the Costume Institute at The Metropolitan Museum of Art mounted an exhibition of Apfel’s clothes. “Rara Avis: Selections from the Iris Apfel Collection” presented 40 of her sartorially striking accessories and ensembles. In Maysles’s documentary, Harold Koda, the curator in charge of the Costume Institute at the time, noted, “She’s an artist. What she uses all of her clothing and accessories to do is compose a new vision. That, to me, is creativity.”

    Apfel was an American original. Martha Stewart once dubbed her “a legendary collector of fashion”—part archivist, part aesthete, part social anthropologist. Apfel radically juxtaposed high and low fashion, as The Met noted: “Dior haute couture with flea market finds, 19th-century ecclesiastical vestments with Dolce & Gabbana lizard trousers. With remarkable panache and discernment, she combines colors, textures, and patterns without regard to period, provenance, and, ultimately, aesthetic conventions.”

    She described her personal style to Vogue in 2022: “It’s big and it’s bold and it’s a tangible expression about how I feel about things.” One thing it was not, she emphasized, was planned. “I just do it unconsciously,” she said. “It is a creative exercise that I seem to do every day.”

    Apfel was born Iris Barrel in New York City on August 29, 1921. An only child, she wrote in her memoir that she began buying her own clothes when she was 12. She credits her grandmother with first igniting her creative spark by giving her fabric swatches to play with at family gatherings. “My eyes popped,” she told Vogue. “She said, ‘Look, you can play with all these scraps—just play and do whatever you want with them, and at the end of the day, if you’ve had a good time and you like them, I’ll let you take home six pieces of your choice.’ It was the entrance to my life in the textile world. I had the time of my life. It was so exciting for me to put colors together. It was my first dose of how it feels to be creative. I must have been about five years old.”

    Her mother, Sayde “Syd” Barrel, who attended college and then law school—but dropped out when she became pregnant with Iris—opened a boutique during the Great Depression. In her memoir, Apfel recalls Easter 1933, when her mother gave her $25 to assemble an outfit to wear in the Fifth Avenue Easter Parade. She found a dress for $12.95 and a pair of pumps for $3.95, which left her enough money for a straw bonnet, a light lunch, and transportation home. “My mother approved my fashion sense,” she wrote. “My father praised my financial skill.” Thus began her career as, in her words, a “black belt shopper.”

    Donald Liebenson

    Source link

  • What Alexey Navalny’s Death Means For Russia and Putin’s Regime

    What Alexey Navalny’s Death Means For Russia and Putin’s Regime

    “I’m not ready for my son to become a martyr.” Alexey Navalny’s mother said these words in 2011, at the start of his journey to prominence as Russia’s most active opposition politician. Thirteen years later, as news of her son’s death, in a remote penal colony inside Russia’s Arctic Circle, spread across the world, she said that she didn’t want to hear any condolences. “I saw my son in prison on the 12th, when we went to visit him. He was alive, healthy, and cheerful.”

    Navalny’s team filled the void of his absence with similar calls. “We have no reason to believe state propaganda. They have lied, are lying and will continue to lie,” wrote Leonid Volkov, a longtime associate of Navalny’s. “Don’t rush to bury Alexey.”

    Who could blame them? Everyone knew the stakes. Navalny had risen from anti-corruption activist to online superstar to grassroots organizer to Russia’s most famous political prisoner. He had battled countless physical attacks along the way, including one, when the nerve agent Novichok nearly killed him. Navalny himself had addressed the possibility of his death in the Oscar-winning documentary that carried his name. “Don’t give up. You cannot give up,” he says straight to the camera in the film directed by Daniel Roher. “If it happens, if they decide to kill me, it means we are incredibly strong. We need to use that power.” That begins by depriving the Russian state of the authority of defining his death.

    Navalny was a singular figure in Russia—though he would bristle at that description. He wanted to inspire through his example and empower average people to throw off the yoke of Vladimir Putin’s tyrannical leadership—itself, an inheritance from centuries of Russian imperial rule. If Navalny—the son of a couple who owns a basket-weaving factory in the outskirts of Moscow, and who studied law at a second-tier university—could come deeply in touch with his power as a citizen, couldn’t anyone? When Navalny emerged in 2011 to become a leader of the massive street protests that swept Russia (after Putin announced he was returning to the presidency following a brief stint as prime minister), his chants embodied that idea. “We exist!” he would yell to a crowd of tens of thousands. At one such protest, late in 2011, he sounded like a being from another planet, far from a Russia that had consolidated itself around one man: “The only source of power is the people of the Russian Federation,” Navalny told the crowd. The roar in response was deafening.

    Now he is gone, killed—perhaps in the moment, but certainly over the past few years of his imprisonment—by a regime that could not tolerate him. “Putin tried and failed to murder Navalny quickly and secretly with poison, and now he has murdered him slowly and publicly in prison,” wrote the exiled Russian opposition figure Garry Kasparov, and he could not be more right.

    Navalny grew an enormous following inside Russia by conducting thorough and easily digestible investigations into the corruption of the country’s top elite, including Putin. He exposed shady deals, gaudy palaces, nepotistic excesses, and luxury yachts. After he was poisoned with Novichok on a trip to Siberia, he, along with the journalist Christo Grozev, called one of his own poisoners—an FSB agent—and got him to admit what he had done.

    His career in politics began on the street and then quickly shifted into something more. In 2013, he ran for mayor of Moscow and came in second. Three years later, he tried to run for president but was barred. He founded an organization, the Anti-Corruption Foundation, which opened regional chapters across the country, before being declared extremist in 2021 and now operates in exile. He launched a campaign to get Russians to engage in “Smart Voting”—casting their ballots for anyone but Putin’s cronies in the United Russia party.

    He was driven by one goal—to get Putin and his henchmen out of power. He made some serious mistakes along the way, including early engagement with nationalist anti-migrant politics and initial acceptance of Putin’s seizure of Crimea from Ukraine, which he later renounced.

    Through it all, he remained, unmistakably, himself. Navalny was deeply serious about his work, but also quick to make a joke or flash a smile. This might not seem notable, but in Russia it was revolutionary. Russia’s Soviet legacy did so much to degrade the country, including its language and the way people not well acquainted interact with one other. Listening to a politician or newscaster talk is often an exercise in acronyms, the passive voice, and language so technical it’s as though they’re talking about the intricacies of factory parts. Interpersonal exchanges are governed by suspicion or fear.

    Miriam Elder

    Source link

  • Bob Edwards, longtime host of NPR’s ‘Morning Edition,’ dies at 76

    Bob Edwards, longtime host of NPR’s ‘Morning Edition,’ dies at 76

    By Eva Rothenberg

    New York — Bob Edwards, the longtime National Public Radio host and a goliath of the broadcasting world, died on Saturday, his wife, NPR reporter Windsor Johnston, confirmed in a Facebook post. He was 76.

    Edwards began his 30-year tenure at NPR in 1974, when the network was still in its infancy. He co-hosted “All Things Considered,” NPR’s evening show, before spearheading “Morning Edition” as its inaugural host in 1979, a position he held until 2004.

    “Bob Edwards understood the intimate and distinctly personal connection with audiences that distinguishes audio journalism from other mediums, and for decades he was a trusted voice in the lives of millions of public radio listeners,” NPR CEO John Lansing said in a statement Monday. “Staff at NPR and all across the Network, along with those millions of listeners, will remember Bob Edwards with gratitude.”



    Cnn Com Wire Service

    Source link

  • Colorado civil rights attorney Kevin Williams, who fought to improve lives of people with disabilities, dies at 57

    Colorado civil rights attorney Kevin Williams, who fought to improve lives of people with disabilities, dies at 57

    Colorado civil rights attorney Kevin Williams died this week after 26 years of fighting to improve the lives of people with disabilities. He was 57.

    Williams died Tuesday after a short illness, according to colleagues at the Denver-based Colorado Cross-Disability Coalition, where he launched the legal program in 1997 upon graduation from law school.

    A quadriplegic paralyzed from his chest down following a car crash at age 19, Williams steadily increased access for disabled people by filing lawsuits — pressing for enforcement under the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act, the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act and the Fair Housing Act.

    He began this work as a third-year law student at the University of Denver. Shortly before his graduation, he sued his law school. The issue was compliance with the ADA. He prevailed, leading to required improvements, including a wheelchair-accessible graduation venue.

    Often serving as the plaintiff, Williams repeated that feat again and again, expanding access for Coloradans with disabilities in stores, restaurants, public transit systems, theaters, arenas and travel pathways around the state. For example, his litigation compelled the operators of Red Rocks Amphitheatre to provide accessible parking, seating and ticketing.

    He also led other lawyers into disability rights work.

    Williams grew up in the suburbs of Cleveland.  He made Colorado his home in 1990, the year President George H.W. Bush signed the ADA into law. He enjoyed drives in the mountains, attending concerts and visiting local breweries and distilleries.

    Friends this week remembered him as passionate in his pursuit of civil rights.

    “Kevin was contemplative, thorough and certain not to leave any stone unturned, especially in litigation,” said Andrew Montoya, who worked in the coalition’s legal program as an assistant and then was inspired to attend law school.

    “Even seemingly mundane legal issues could occupy hours of lively discussion ranging from interpretive case law to contemporary and historical politics to litigation strategy to the meaning of life, and back again,” Montoya said. “His passion for civil rights, both in general and specifically those of people with disabilities, clearly animated his work, both in the courtroom and in the rest of the world.”

    He also had a knack for making light of difficulties. Friends recalled his adaptation of the Beatles’ “Let It Be” — a rendition that he titled “Let Us Pee.” (“When I find myself in times of trouble; The bathroom door is two-foot-three; Whisper words of wisdom; Let us pee, let us pee.”

    “He was intense, passionate, focused and very analytical. What kept him motivated was seeing people with disabilities face discrimination and knowing that the laws that are supposed to protect us are being violated,” said Julie Reiskin, co-executive director of the coalition.

    “What bothered him was the blatant violation of the law, especially by those who should know better, such as courts and lawyers that made excuses rather than working to fix the problem.”

    Get more Colorado news by signing up for our daily Your Morning Dozen email newsletter.



    Bruce Finley

    Source link

  • Isabelle Thomas, Filmmaker and Wife of ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Producer Bradley Thomas, Dies at 39

    Isabelle Thomas, Filmmaker and Wife of ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Producer Bradley Thomas, Dies at 39


    Isabelle Thomas, British documentary filmmaker and the wife of Oscar-nominated Killers of the Flower Moon producer Bradley Thomas, was found dead at a Los Angeles hotel this week, medical records show. Thomas was 39.

    Isabelle Thomas died by suicide and was discovered with “multiple traumatic injuries” at a local hotel, according to online records from the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s Office. Citing law enforcement sources, TMZ reported this week that on Monday, Thomas had lept from a high-up floor at the Hotel Angeleno; the 17-floor Westwood hotel is notable for the balconies that wrap around the building on each floor.

    Police sources reportedly indicated that she was discovered dead at the scene when first responders arrived.

    “Isabelle was the light of our lives,” said the family in a statement to the L.A. Times. “She was courageous and took all life’s opportunities without fear, showering love and kindness on her friends, family, and children along the way. Her projects were as diverse as her passions, reflecting a curiosity about people and our culture that inspired everyone lucky enough to spend time with her. We remember her as a soulmate, beautiful daughter, sister, devoted mother and wife.”

    The British producer, also known as “Izzy,” is from the Cotswolds in the U.K and resided in California with her husband and their two children. According to her website, she graduated from Oxford University and went on to advise on projects for international entertainment companies, private family offices, global membership spaces, start-ups, the UN and The World Bank. 

    Isabelle married Bradley Thomas, a producer of major films for decades, in 2018. The couple was spotted at red carpet events around town while his career flourished as a producer on Clint Eastwood’s The Mule in 2018 and 2022’s Palme d’Or-winning satire Triangle of Sadness. The two were photographed together as recently as Jan. 13 at the 2024 BAFTA Tea Party at The Maybourne Beverly Hills.

    Isabelle Thomas’ death comes as her husband is in the height of award season as he promotes Killers, which, alongside fellow producers Dan Friedkin, Bradley Thomas, Martin Scorsese and Daniel Lupi, is up for the 2024 Oscars best picture trophy.

    Bradley Thomas’ producing career began with the Farrelly brothers’ hit 1994 comedy Dumb and Dumber and has not lost momentum over 30 years. He produced several of the duo’s subsequent comedies, including There’s Something About Mary and Shallow Hal, then later teamed up with legendary filmmaker Ridley Scott for All the Money in the World and Swedish filmmaker Ruben Östlund as EP on the biting satires that followed his debut, Force Majure.



    Jackie Strause

    Source link

  • Actor Carl Weathers, who starred as Apollo Creed in ‘Rocky’ movies, dies at 76

    Actor Carl Weathers, who starred as Apollo Creed in ‘Rocky’ movies, dies at 76


    Beloved actor and former NFL player Carl Weathers, whose Hollywood legacy includes an iconic role as boxing heavyweight Apollo Creed in the “Rocky” franchise, has died at 76, his family said Friday. 

    Weathers’ manager, Matt Luber, told the Associated Press that Weathers died Thursday. The Weathers family said the actor “died peacefully in his sleep.”

    Starting with the first installment of “Rocky” in 1976, Weathers played the world champ who gave Sylvester Stallone’s underdog character, Rocky Balboa, the chance to rival him in a title bout in Philadelphia. Weathers developed the Creed role further in subsequent films, becoming the Italian Stallion’s trainer in “Rocky III.” And in the next movie, Creed dramatically dies in the ring during his bout with Soviet fighter Ivan Drago. His character’s son, Adonis Creed, later goes on to helm the “Creed” trilogy starring by Michael B. Jordan. 

    Stallone and Jordan had not publicly commented on Weathers’ death by early Friday evening.

    Though Adonis Creed helped put Rocky on the fictional map, Stallone had a similar impact on Weathers in real life.

    In a 2015 interview, Weathers told the The Hollywood Reporter that he nearly ruined his chance to be in “Rocky” because he had mouthed off about Stallone during his audition. Weathers said he had been told there was nobody available to read lines with, so he’d have to do so with the writer of the movie — Stallone. 

    “And we read through the scene, and at the end of it, I didn’t feel like it had really sailed, that the scene had sailed, and they were quiet and there was this moment of awkwardness, I felt, anyway,” Weathers said. “So I just blurted out, ‘I could do a lot better if you got me a real actor to work with.’ So I just insulted the star of the movie without really knowing it and not intending to.”

    Stallone reportedly felt the outburst was in character for Creed and that Weathers’ mistake made him stand out for the role. 

    Prior to becoming an actor, Weathers played linebacker in the NFL for the Oakland Raiders and also spent time in the Canadian Football League, during which time he pursued a degree in drama. 

    Weathers’ memorable roles included his appearances in “Predator,” in which he starred alongside Arnold Schwarzenegger, and in “Action Jackson,” for which got a nomination for an NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture. More recently, Weathers starred as Greef Karga in Disney’s “The Mandalorian” and directed two episodes of the “Star Wars” series.

    Weathers’ most-quoted character may be Derick “Chubbs” Peterson, the quirky golf guru who mentors Adam Sandler in “Happy Gilmore.” Chubbs famously clasps his arms around Happy Gilmore ahead of an important putt — showing off the false wooden hand he wears to replace the appendage he lost to an alligator bite — and tells Gilmore that the game of golf is “all in the hips.” 

    Sandler, who invited Weathers to reprise the Chubbs role in “Little Nicky,” shared a message on X, formerly Twitter, remembering his longtime friend.

    Weathers’ death came after he filmed a Super Bowl commercial with former football player Rob Gronkowski, who’s slated to participate in FanDuel’s “Kick of Destiny” before Sunday’s game between the Chiefs and 49ers. Fans are invited place bets on whether Gronk will make or miss the kick — which, in the commercial, Weathers tells him he “won’t miss.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-IZ1hM8IUSA

    In a statement on X, FanDuel said it is “deeply saddened” by Weathers’ passing. The company told AdAge it plans to adjust its campaign accordingly out of respect for the family. 





    Michael Tanenbaum

    Source link

  • Joe Biden On Chita Rivera: “Her Dazzling Charm Will Live On In The Soul Of Our Nation”

    Joe Biden On Chita Rivera: “Her Dazzling Charm Will Live On In The Soul Of Our Nation”


    President Joe Biden praised Chita Rivera as a performer who “brought joy to millions and captured the grit and grace of America.”

    “A mesmerizing dancer, singer, and actor, Chita’s work was more than entertainment – it reflects part of who we are as Americans and as human beings, and it has helped shape how we see each other and our world,” Biden said in a statement released by the White House today. “Chita knew what great Americans know – it’s not how hard you get knocked down, it’s how quickly you get back up. Her dazzling charm will live on in the soul of our nation.”

    Rivera died on Tuesday after a brief illness. She was 91.

    In the statement, Biden recognized Rivera’s work, including “originating the roles of iconic strong women in classics from West Side Story, to Bye Bye, Birdie, to Chicago, to Kiss of the Spider Woman, while blazing a trail for generations of Latina performers.”

    The complete statement from the White House is below:

    Chita Rivera was an all-time-great of American musical theater, a pioneer and perfectionist whose magnetic performances in scores of Broadway productions brought joy to millions and captured the grit and grace of America.
     
    The irrepressible third child of public servants – her mother was a Pentagon clerk and her father a clarinetist in the U.S. Navy Band– she moved to New York to dance at age 15. Over the next seven decades, she built a dazzling career, originating the roles of iconic strong women in classics from West Side Story, to Bye Bye, Birdie, to Chicago, to Kiss of the Spider Woman, while blazing a trail for generations of Latina performers.
     
    Chita won three Tony Awards, Kennedy Center Honors, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom, but she never quit putting the work first. She rode highs and lows with fierce resilience, including a devastating car crash that shattered her leg and left her with metal pins in her bones, only to see her climb back to the top and turn in Tony-nominated performances well into her 70s and 80s.
     
    A mesmerizing dancer, singer, and actor, Chita’s work was more than entertainment – it reflects part of who we are as Americans and as human beings, and it has helped shape how we see each other and our world. Chita knew what great Americans know – it’s not how hard you get knocked down, it’s how quickly you get back up. Her dazzling charm will live on in the soul of our nation.
     
    Our love goes out to Chita’s daughter, Lisa; to Chita’s siblings, Julio, Armando, and Lola del Rivero; and to her generations of fans.



    tedstew1

    Source link

  • Richard Romanus, Actor in ‘Mean Streets,’ Dies at 80

    Richard Romanus, Actor in ‘Mean Streets,’ Dies at 80

    Richard Romanus, the tough-guy character actor best known for his turn as Michael Longo, the Little Italy loan shark who gets into it with Robert De Niro’s Johnny Civello in Martin Scorsese’s Mean Streets, has died. He was 80.

    Romanus died Dec. 23 in a private hospital in Volos, Greece, his son, Robert Romanus, told The Hollywood Reporter.

    Romanus handled prominent voice roles for Ralph Bakshi in 1977’s Wizards (as the elf warrior Weehawk) and 1982’s Hey Good Lookin’ (as the leader of a 1950s greaser gang), and in between, he played the cab driver Harry Canyon in another animated film, Heavy Metal (1981).

    He also appeared on four episodes of The Sopranos as Richard LaPenna, the on-again, off-again husband of Lorraine Bracco’s Jennifer Melfi, from 1999-2002.

    In Mean Streets (1973), Romanus’ character is famously disrespected by Johnny when he leans on him for his money.

    “You know, Michael, you make me laugh,” Civello says. “You see, I borrow money all over this neighborhood, left and right from everybody, and I never pay them back. So, I can’t borrow no money from nobody no more, right? So who would that leave me to borrow money from but you?

    “I borrow money from you, because you’re the only jerk-off around here who I can borrow money from without payin’ back, right? You know, ’cause that’s what you are, that’s what I think of you, a jerk-off. You’re smiling ’cause you’re a jerk-off. You’re a fucking jerk-off! I’ll tell you something else, I fuck you right where you breathe, because I don’t give two shits about you or nobody else.”

    Michael, of course, will get his revenge on the road to Brooklyn.

    The son of a dentist, Richard Joseph Romanus was born on Feb. 8, 1943, in Barre, Vermont, and raised in West Hartford, Connecticut. He graduated from Xavier University in Cincinnati in 1964 with a degree in philosophy and spent a year in law school before studying acting with Lee Strasberg at Carnegie Hall.

    In 1970, he appeared on episodes of Mission: Impossible and The Mod Squad and in the David Janssen-starring telefilm Night Chase before he was hired on Mean Streets.

    His iconic scene with De Niro came on the next-to-last day of shooting, Scorsese recalled in Andy Dougan’s 2011 book, Untouchable: Robert De Niro.

    “Something had happened between Bobby and Richard because the animosity between them in that scene is real, and I played on it,” the director said. “They had gotten on each other’s nerves to the point where I think they really wanted to kill each other. I kept shooting take after take of Bobby yelling all these insults while the crew was getting very upset.”

    Romanus said De Niro actually got angry when he saw him laugh during the tirade. “By laughing I was saving face. He thought I should be fuming, but he had no control over my reactions,” he said. “Sometimes the reaction you get from your acting partner is not the one you want. Then you simply have to react off that. But in this scene I laughed organically. I thought Bobby was very funny when he was doing that stuff. And he looked ridiculous.”

    Romanus spent the rest of the decade showing up on such shows as Rhoda, Kojak, Starsky & Hutch, The Rockford Files and Hawaii Five-O and in the film Russian Roulette (1975).

    In 1981-82, he landed a regular role as Det. Lt. Charlie Gunzer on the ultra-violent ABC crime show Strike Force, starring Robert Stack and produced by Aaron Spelling, but the series was canceled after 20 episodes.

    From left: Michael Goodwin, Robert Stack, Dorian Harewood, Trisha Noble and Richard Romanus from the 1981-82 series Strike Force.

    Robert Phillips / Everett Collection

    He played another cop on another short-lived ABC series, Foul Play, in 1981.

    Romanus’ résumé included the films Sitting Ducks (1980), Protocol (1984), The Couch Trip (1988), Oscar (1991), Point of No Return (1993), Cops and Robbersons (1994), Nailed (2001) and The Young Black Stallion (2003) and TV work on Hill Street Blues, The A-Team, MacGyver, Cagney & Lacey and NYPD Blue.

    In addition to his son, survivors include his second wife, Oscar-nominated costume designer Anthea Sylbert (Rosemary’s Baby, Chinatown, Julia), whom he married in August 1985, and younger brother Robert Romanus, who played Mike Damone in Fast Times at Ridgemont High.

    Twenty-three years ago, Romanus and Sylbert moved to the Greek town of Skiathos, and he wrote about the experience in Act III: A Small Island in the Aegean, published in 2011. Plus, he authored two novels set in the country, 2011’s Chrysalis and 2014’s Matoula’s Echo.

    The couple, who were declared honorary citizens of Skiathos in 2021, also wrote and produced two Lifetime telefilms, 1998’s Giving Up the Ghost and 1999’s If You Believe (the latter got them a WGA nomination).

    Romanus’ first wife was actress-singer Tina Bohlmann. They were married from 1967 until their 1975 divorce.

    Mike Barnes

    Source link

  • Toby Yates, Film Editor and Son of ‘Bullitt’ Director Peter Yates, Dies at 61

    Toby Yates, Film Editor and Son of ‘Bullitt’ Director Peter Yates, Dies at 61

    Toby Yates, a film editor in Hollywood for 40 years and the son of Oscar-nominated director-producer Peter Yates, has died. He was 61.

    Yates died Nov. 17 in Los Angeles after a stroke, his family announced.

    Yates was a frequent collaborator with director Karen Moncrieff, editing her first feature, Blue Car (2002), followed by The Dead Girl (2006) and The Trials of Cate McCall (2013).

    He also cut The Moon and the Stars (2007) for director John Irvin — he received a best editor prize at the Milano International Film Festival for that — and The Midnight Meat Train (2008) and No One Lives (2012) for director Ryûhei Kitamura.

    Most recently, he edited Brave the Dark (2023), directed by Damian Harris.

    Toby Robert Quentin Yates was born on Sept. 18, 1962, in London and raised there and in New York City. He studied filmmaking and editing while in high school, working as an apprentice editor and later assistant editor under Roy Lovejoy (2001: A Space Odyssey, Aliens).

    After graduating from Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York, Yates attended Columbia University School of Arts for film studies and won the first MTV Student Award for directing. He then directed for the theater in London and Los Angeles.

    In 1998, he edited his first independent feature, Cleopatra’s Second Husband, and Brown’s Requiem, adapted from James Ellroy’s debut novel. In 2000, he cut the John Lithgow-starring TNT telefilm Don Quixote, one of his dad’s last directorial efforts.

    He also worked on such TV series as Brothers & Sisters and Shameless and taught editing at the American Film Institute and Maine Media.

    Survivors include his wife, designer Min Young Lee, whom he married in 2014; their 9-year-old son, Peter; his mother, Virginia Pope Yates, a film publicist; sister Miranda; nephew Theodore; and niece Beatrice.

    Peter Yates, who earned dual directing and best picture Oscar nominations for his work on both Breaking Away (1979) and The Dresser (1983), also was known for helming Bullitt (1968), The Friends of Eddie Coyle (1973), The Deep (1977) and Suspect (1987), among many other films. He died in 2011 of heart failure at age 81.

    Mike Barnes

    Source link

  • Mike Nussbaum, Actor in ‘Glengarry Glen Ross’ and More for David Mamet, Dies at 99

    Mike Nussbaum, Actor in ‘Glengarry Glen Ross’ and More for David Mamet, Dies at 99

    Mike Nussbaum, the late-blooming Chicago actor who portrayed the aging salesman George Aaronow in the original Broadway production of Glengarry Glen Ross, just one of his many collaborations with David Mamet, has died. He was 99.

    Nussbaum died Saturday — six days shy of his 100th birthday — at his home in Chicago, his daughter, Karen, told the Chicago Sun-Times.

    He acted on Windy City stages for more than a half-century and received a lifetime achievement award from the League of Chicago Theaters in 2019.

    On the big screen, Nussbaum played the book publisher Bob Drimmer in Fatal Attraction (1987), a school principal in Field of Dreams (1989) and the alien jewelry store owner Gentle Rosenburg in Men in Black (1997).

    Nussbaum and Mamet first met in the late 1960s, and the future Pulitzer Prize winner would cast him as Teach in the 1975 premiere of his three-man drama American Buffalo at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago. He also played Albert Einstein in Mamet’s Relativity.

    He shared a Drama Desk award in 1984 for his turn as Aaronow (Alan Arkin had the role in the 1992 movie adaptation) in Glengarry Glen Ross and was another salesman, Shelley Levene (Jack Lemmon in the film), in another acclaimed run at Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre.

    “It’s wonderful to work with Mike because, like any artist, like any actor, he’s just unusual,” Mamet said in a 2014 profile of Nussbaum in Chicago magazine. “You’re constantly saying, ‘My God, where did that come from?’ It’s not coming out of a bag of ‘acting moments.’ That’s all bullshit. It’s coming out of — who the hell knows where? You either got it, or you don’t, and Mike certainly does.”

    The son of a fur wholesaler, Myron Nussbaum was born on Dec. 29, 1923, and raised in the Albany Park area of Chicago. He graduated from Von Steuben High School, then left the University of Wisconsin to enlist in the U.S. Army, where he served under Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower as a teletype operator.

    Back home, he worked in a family exterminating business for nearly two decades before deciding when he was in his 40s to pursue a full-time career as an actor. He did not earn his Equity card until the early ’70s.

    Nussbaum first made it to Broadway as the director of the 1982 musical comedy Do Black Patent Leather Shoes Really Reflect Up?, but that lasted just five performances. He was back four years later with a role in John Guare’s The House of the Blue Leaves.

    Nussbaum also played a con artist and mafia boss, respectively, in the Mamet films House of Games (1987) and Things Change (1988).

    His onscreen résumé included Harry and Tonto (1974), Losing Isaiah (1995) and Steal Big Steal Little (1995), and TV turns in The Equalizer, 227, L.A. Law, Brooklyn Bridge, Frasier, The Commish, The X-Files and Early Edition.

    In the Chicago magazine profile, he noted that he did 50 push-ups a day and drank a double shot of rye before bed every night.

    Survivors include his second wife, Julie, whom he married in 2004; his children, Jack and Karen, and seven grandchildren. His first wife was Annette Brenner; they were married from 1949 until her death in 2003.

    “I think that being an actor in Chicago, over a number of years, is the most satisfying life I could imagine,” Nussbaum told the Sun-Times in 2019. “I found New York and L.A. to be … antithetic to art. The desire for fame, the desire for glory, for money, is overwhelming in both cities. Although I had some success in both cities, I decided my life was more balanced here. I enjoy getting on the bus to go downtown and have someone come up and say, ‘I loved you in such-and-such.’”

    Mike Barnes

    Source link