Friday, August 24, 2012

BIFF ELLIOT - Filmdoms 1st Mike Hammer and Star Trek Guest-Star

Actor Biff Elliot died at his home in Studio City, California, on August 15, 2012. He was born Leon Shalek in Lynn, Massachusettes, on July 26, 1923. He was 89.  He was a champion amatuer boxer under the name Biff Harris while in his teens. He served in the U.S. Army during World War II, and graduating from the University of Main after his discharge. He moved to New York in 1949 in the hopes of attaining a writing career and also began training as an actor. He appeared on stage and television, before making his film debut as detective Mike Hammer in the 1953 adaptation of Mickey Spillane’s "I, the Jury". Elliot continued his film career in the features "House of Bamboo" (1955), "Good Morning, Miss Dove" (1955), "Between Heaven and Hell" (1956), "The True Story of Jesse James" (1957), "The Enemy Below" (1957), "Torpedo Run" (1958), "Pork Chop Hill" (1959), "The Story on Page One" (1959), "PT 109" (1963), "Brainstorm" (1965), "Blood Bath" (aka "Track of the Vampire") (1966), "Destination Inner Space" (1966), "The Navy vs. The Night Monsters" (1966), "The Day of the Wolves" (1971), "The Hard Ride" (1971), "Kotch" (1971), "Cool Breeze" (1972), "Save the Tiger" (1973), "Wednesday" (1974), "The Front Page" (1974),
"The Wild McCullochs" (1975), "Beyond Reason" (1977), "The Dark" (1979), and "That’s Life!" (1986). He appeared frequently on television in such episodes as "Lights Out", "Kraft Television Theatre", "The Philco Television Playhouse", "Lux Video Theatre", "Treasury Men in Action", "Waterfront", "Stage 7", "The Man Behind the Badge", "Science Fiction Theatre", "Damon Runyon Theater", "Big Town", "M Squad", "The Millionair", "Behind Closed Doors", "Perry Mason", "Law of the Plainsman", "Ripcord", "The Roaring 20’s", "Surfside 6", "Alfred Hitchcock Presents", "Laramie", "77 Sunset Strip", "Route 66", "Hawaiian Eye", "The Lieutenant", "The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters", "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea", "The Dick Van Dyke Show", "ABC Stage 67", "Combat!", the 1967 "Star Trek" episode "The Devil in the Dark", "Mission: Impossible", "Bonanza", "The F.B.I.", "The Magician", "The Streets of San Fransisco", "Cannon", "ABC Afterschool Specials", "Planet of the Apes", "The Blue Knight", "Gibbsville", "The Next Step Beyond", "Falcon Crest", "CHiPs", and "Starman". He also appeared in the tele-films "Steambath" (1973), "The Stranger Who Looks Like Me" (1974), and "Portrait of an Escort" (1980). In his later career, Elliot also covered sports in Los Angeles for the "CBS Radio Network".

Thursday, August 23, 2012

HARRY HARRISON - Sci-Fi Writer & Creator of the Stainless Steel Rat

HARRY HARRISON - Sci-Fi Writer & Creator of the Stainless Steel Rat


Science fiction writer Harry Harrison who was best known his series featuring the characters the Stainless Steel Rat and Bill, the Galactic Hero, and penning the novel "Make Room, Make Room", which was later filmed as "Soylent Green", died at his home in Brighton, England, on August 15, 2012.  He was 87. He was born Henry Maxwell Dempsey in Stamford, Connecticut, on March 12, 1925.  He served in the U.S. Army Air Force as a gunnery instructor during World War II.  He subsequently worked as an illustrator for comics and pulp magazines, and scripted the "Flash Gordon" comic strip.  He created his best known character, James Bolivar 'Slippery Jim' DiGriz, in a 1957 short story for "Astounding" magazine, that was revised and expanded for the 1961 novel "The Stainless Steel Rat".  Harrison's intergalactic con-man headlined numerous novels, short-stories, and comic books over the next five decades, culminating in 2010's "The Stainless Steel Rat Returns".  He frequently shared his advocation in the international laguage Esperanto in these and other stories.
He wrote the 1966 novel "Make Room! Make Room!", about a dystopian future where there were too many people and too little food, though he reportedly abhorred addition of cannibalism to Richard Fleischer's 1973 film version, "Soylent Green", starring Charlton Heston and Edward G. Robinson in his final role.  Harrison also wrote the "Deathworld" series, and created "Bill, the Galactic Hero", in a satirical anti-war novel in 1965.  He returned to the character in the 1989 novel "Bill, the Galactic Hero On the Planet of Robot Slaves", and a handful of subsequent stories were penned by others under Harrison's auspice.  His other novels include "The Techicolor Time Machine" (1967), "Captive Universe" (1969), "Spaceship Medic" (1970), the "To the Stars" trilogy including "Homeworld" (1980), "Wheelworld" (1981), and "Starworld" (1981), "A Rebel in Time" (1983), the "Eden" trilogy including "West of Eden" (1984), "Winter in Eden" (1986), and "Return to Eden" (1988), and the "Hammer and the Cross" series with John Holm (Tom Shippey).  His "Deathworld" series had a resurgence in Russia in the 2000s, with a handful of novel co-authored with Ant Akalandis and Mikhail Ahmanov.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

EMI ITO - Half of the Twin Shobijin Fairies in Toho's Mothra Films

EMI ITO - Half of the Twin Shobijin Fairies in Toho's Mothra Films

 Japanese singer Emi Ito, who teamed with her twin sister, Yumi, as part of the pop duo The Peanuts and were featured opposite Toho monster moth, Mothra, in the 1960s, died in Japan on June 15, 2012.  She was 71.  She was born in Tokoname, Aichi, Japan, on April 1, 1941.  She and her sister began performing together in the late 1950s, appearing in the film "Kawaii Hana" (aka "Lovely Flowers").  They were also featured in the television variety series "Shabondama Holiday" in the early 1960s.  They became best known as stars of the Toho feature, "Mothra", the tiny Shobijin Fairies, whose kidnapping from Infant Island by an unscrupulous impressario leads to Mothra, first as a massive caterpillar and then an immense moth, to wreak destruction across the globe to rescue them.
  The sisters returned as Mothra's companions and translators, for the films "Godzilla vs. the Thing" (1964) and "Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster" (1964).  The Peanuts were also seen in the films "Yumi de Aimasho" (1962), "Watashi to Watashi" (1962), "Crazy Adventure" (1965), "Kureji Ogon Sakusen" (1967), and "Mexican Free-for-All" (1968).  The twins were also noted for recording Japanese versions of Western hits before they retired in 1975.  Emi was married to singer Kenji Sawada from 1975 until their divorce in 1987.  She is survived by her sister.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

ANDREW SARRIS - Film Critic Extroardinaire and Auteur Theory Proponent


w/Hitchcock

Film critic Andrew Sarris, who was a leading proponent of the auteur theory that a director is the preiminent figure in the making of a film, died of complications from a fall in a Manhattan hospital on June 20, 2012. He was 83.  Sarris was born in Brooklyn on October 31, 1928. He was fascinated by films from childhood, and graduated from Columbia College in 1951. He served in the Army Signal Corps in the early 1950s and began writing for "Film Culture" in 1955. He became the film critic for "The Village Voice" in 1960, and quickly established himself as a leading figure in cinema. He was an advocate of the new wave of foreign directors, including Francois Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, Michelangelo Antonioni, Ingmar Bergman, and Akira Kurosawa, whose films swept the United States in the 1960s. He also championed such Hollywood luminaries as Orson Welles, John Ford, Howard Hawks, and Sam Fuller, and gave his critical approval to Alfred Hitchcock, who he described as "the most daring avant-garde filmmaker in America today," in his 1960 review of "Psycho". Sarris later promoted the talents, and occasionally exposing the warts, of younger directors including Martin Scorsese, Robert Altman, and Francis Ford Coppola. Sarris penned the influential book "The American Cinema: Directors and Directions 1929-1968" (1968). Sarris was not adverse to revisiting and revising his previous opinions of films and filmmakers. He originally panned Stanley Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey", but upon a later viewing he stated, "I must report that I recently paid another visit to Stanley Kubrick’s ‘2001’ while under the influence of a smoked substance that I was assured by my contact was somewhat stronger and more authentic than oregano... Anyway, I prepared to watch ‘2001’ under what I have always been assured were optimum conditions, and surprisingly (for me) I find myself reversing my original opinion. ‘2001’ is indeed a major work by a major artist."
 He frequently feuded with fellow critics Pauline Kael and John Simon, who debated the merit of the auteur theory. He penned several other books including "Confessions of a Cultist: On the Cinema, 1955-1969" (1970), "The Primal Screen: Essays on Film and Related Subjects" (1973), "The John Ford Movie Mystery" (1975), "Politics and Cinema" (1978), and "You Ain't Heard Nothin' Yet: The American Talking Film – History and Memory, 1927-1949" (1998). He also participated in several documentaries including "Easy Riders, Raging Bulls: How the Sex, Drugs and Rock 'N' Roll Generation Saved Hollywood" (2003), "For the Love of Movies: The Story of American Film Criticism" (2009), and "Andrew Sarris: Critic in Focus" (2011). He continued to write for "The Village Voice" through the late 1980s, and was regularly reviewing films for "The New Your Observer" through 2009. Sarris was also a film professor at Columbia University's School of Arts until his retirement in 2011. He married fellow film critic Molly Haskell in 1969, and she survives him.

CAROLINE JOHN - Doctor Who Companion Liz Shaw


British actress Caroline John, who starred as Liz Shaw in the television series "Doctor Who" in 1970, died in London on June 5, 2012. She was 72.  John was born in York, England, on October 11, 1940. She began her career on stage and toured with the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre in the 1960s. She was featured on television in a 1967 production of "Much Ado About Nothing", and appeared in episodes of "Teletale" and "The Power Game". She was cast as Liz Shaw, a Cambridge scientist, who became a short-lived companion to Jon Pertwee's Third Doctor for four adventures in 1970. She reprised her role in the 1983 episode "The Five Doctors" and a 1993 special episode, "Dimensions in Time". She also appeared in several direct to video releases in the "P.R.O.B.E." series in the 1990s that featured many fellow "Doctor Who" alumni, and was a voice performer for several audio dramas based on the series in the 2000s. John's other television credits include episodes of "The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes", "Z Cars", "Love Story", "Crown Court", "The Bill", "A Dorothy L. Sayers Mystery", "A Perfect Spy", "Dramarama", "Casualty", "Agatha Christie's Poirot", "Wish Me Luck" as Helene Renard in 1990, "Chancer", "Harry Enfield's Television Programme", "London's Burning", "The House of Eliott", "The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes", "The Choir", "EastEnders", "Silent Witness", "In Suspicious Circumstances", "Dangerfield", "Midsomer Murders", "Vital Signs", and "Doctors". She also appeared in television productions of "The Rose of Eyam" (1973), "The Hound of the Baskervilles" (1982), "A Pattern of Roses" (1983), "A Very British Coup" (1988), "A Day in Summer" (1989), "The Woman in Black" (1989), and "Kiss and Tell" (1996). She was featured in a handful of films during her career including "The King's Breakfast" (1963), "Assassin" (1973), "The Razor's Edge" (1984), "Santa Claus" (1985), "Link" (1986), "The Woodlanders" (1997), and "Love Actually" (2003). She is survived by her husband, actor Geoffrey Beevers.

ANTHONY BATE - British Character Actor in "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy"



British actor Anthony Bate, who was noted for his role as Oliver Lacon in the BBC production of "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy", died in an Isle of Wight, England, hospital, on June 19, 2012. He was 84.  Bate was born in Stourbridge, Worcestershire, England, on August 31, 1927. He began his career on stage in the early 1950s, and made his West End debut in a production of "Inherit the Wind" in 1960. He appeared frequently on television from the late 1950s with roles in such series as "A Tale of Two Cities", "Captain Moonlight: Man of Mystery", "White Hunter", "Ivanhoe", "The Honey Siege", "Deadline Midnight", "The World of Tim Frazer", "Boyd Q.C.", "You Can't Win", "A Chance of Thunder", "Dixon of Dock Green", "Studio 4", "Sir Francis Drake", "Out of This World", "BBC Sunday-Night Play", "No Hiding Place", "The Odd Man", "First Night", "Sergeant Cork", "The Edgar Wallace Mystery Theatre", "The Sullavan Brothers", "ITV Sunday Night Drama", "The Idiot", "Gideon's Way", "Redcap", "Broome Stages", "Drama '67", "ITV Play of the Week", "Angel Pavement" as Mr. Golspie in 1967, "Theatre 625", "The Avengers", "Spindoe", "Half Hour Story", "City 68", "The Saint", "The Champions", "Ivanhoe" as Sir Brian de Bois Guilbert in 1970, "Grady", "Shadows of Fear", "The Expert", "Horizon", "Out of the Unknown", "The Gardians", "Suspicion", "ITV Saturdeay Night Theatre", "The Befrienders", "The Man Chance", "Menace", "Sutherland's Law", "Armchair Theatre", "Helen: Woman of Today", "Heil Caesar!", "Intimate Strangers" as Harry Paynter in 1974, "Shades of Greene", "Couples" as Robert Warren from 1975 to 1976, "Murder", "Beasts", "Jubilee", "A Life at Stake", "The Wilde Alliance", "Scorpion Tales", "Scene", "Square Mile of Murder", "Leap in the Dark", "Play for Today", "BBC 2 Playhouse", "Crown Court", "Maybury" "Weekend Playhouse", "Artist's and Models", "Call Me Mister", "Inspector Morse", "Game, Set, and Match" as Bret Renssalaer in 1988, "Agatha Christie's Poirot", "Medics", "A Touch of Frost", "Bodyguards", "Silent Witness", "Midsomer Murders", and "The Bill". His other television credits include productions of "Cards with Uncle Tom" (1959), "Macbeth" (1966), "Les Miserables" (1967) as Insp. Javert, "Julius Caesar" (1969), "Fathers and Sons" (1971), "King Oedipus" (1972), "Ego Hugo" (1973), "Philby, Burgess and Maclean" (1977) as Kim Philby, "Treasure Island" (1977), "The Seagull" (1978), "An Englishman's Castle" (1978), "Crime and Punishment" (1979), the 1979 adaptation of John Le Carre's "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy" as Sir Oliver Lacon, a role he reprised in the 1982 sequel "Smiley's People", "'Tis Pity She's a Whore" (1980), "Fanny by Gaslight" (1981), "Shackleton" (1982), "A Woman Called Golda", "Nelly's Version" (1983), "Breakthrough at Reykjavik" (1987), "Countdown to War" (1989), "War and Remembrance" (1988) as Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt, "Prime Suspect: Inner Circle" (1995), and "Rebecca" (1997). Bate was featured in a handful of films during his career including "High Tide at Noon" (1957), "Desert Mice" (1959), "The Big Day" (1960), "Dentist in the Chair" (1960), "Payroll" (1961), "Dentist on the Job" (1961), "A Prize of Arms" (1962), "The Set Up" (1963), "Act of Murder" (1964), "Stopover Forever" (1964), "Davy Jones' Locker" (1966), "Ghost Story" (1974), "Give My Regards to Broad Street" (1984), "Eminent Domain" (1990), "Happy Now" (2001), and "Nowhere in Africa" (2001).

SUSAN TYRRELL - Cult Film Actress


Character actress Susan Tyrrell died at her home in Austin, Texas, on June 16, 2012. She was 67.  She was born Susan Creamer in San Francisco on March 18, 1945, and was raised in New Canaan, Connecticut. She began her career on stage in the early 1960s, performing in regional theater and summer stock. She was appearing in productions on and off Broadway by the end of the decade including "The Rimers of Eldritch" (1967), "A Cry of Players" (1968), "The Time of Your Life" (1969), and "Camino Real" (1970). She made her film debut in the early 1970s, with roles in "Shoot Out" (1971), "Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up to Me" (1971), and "The Steagle" (1971). Her role as the young barfly, Oma, in John Huston’s 1972 film "Fat City" earned her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. She frequently appeared in off-beat roles in cult films over the next three decades. Her film credits include ""Catch My Soul" (1974), "Zandy’s Bride" (1974), "To Kill the King" (1974), "The Killer Inside Me" (1976), the animated fantasy "Wizards" (1977) as the narrator, "Islands in the Stream" (1977), "Andy Warhol’s Bad" (1977), "I Never Promised You a Rose Garden" (1977), "September 30, 1955" (1977), "Another Man, Another Chance" (1977), "Racquet" (1979), "Loose Shoes" (1980), "Subway Riders" (1981), "Tales of Ordinary Madness" (1981), Richard Elfman’s cult classic "Forbidden Zone" (1982) as Queen Doris of the Sixth Dimension, "Fast-Walking" (1982), "Liar’s Moon" (1982), the comedy redub "What’s Up, Hideous Sun

 Demon" (1983) as the voice of Bunny, the psycho thriller "Night Warning" (1983) as Aunt Cheryl, the animated "Fire and Ice" (1983), "The Killers" (1984), "Angel" (1984) and "Avenging Angel" (1985) as Solly Mosler, "Flesh+Blood" (1985), "The Underachievers" (1987), "From a Whisper to a Scream" (aka "The Offspring") (1987), the animated "The Chipmunk Adventure" (1987), "Tapeheads" (1988), "Big Top Pee-wee" (1988) as Midge Montana, "Far from Home" (1989), "Rockula" (1990), John Waters’ "Cry-Baby" (1990) as Ramona Rickettes, Johnnny Depp’s biker grandma, "Motorama" (1991), "The Demolitionist" (1995), "Digital Man" (1995), "Powder" (1995), "Poison Ivy: The New Seduction" (1997), "Pink as the Day She Was Born" (1997), "Relax... It’s Just Sex" (1998), "Swap Meet" (1999), "Buddy Boy" (1999), "Masked and Anonymous" (2003), the short "The Devil’s Due at Midnight" (2004), and "Pieces of Dolores" (2007). Tyrrell also appeared frequently on television during her career, with roles in episodes of "The Patty Duke Show", "Mr. Novak", "Bonanza", "Nichols", "Baretta", "Starsky and Hutch", "Kojak", "Flying High", "Visions", the short-lived comedy series "Open All Night" as Gretchn Feester" from 1981 to 1982, "The Hitchhiker", "Shades of LA", "Wings", and "Tales from the Crypt". Her other television credits include the tele-films "Lady of the House" (1978), "Ladies in Waiting" (1979), "Willow B: Women in Prison" (1980), "Midnight Lace" (1981), "Jealousy" (1984), "MacGruder and Loud" (1985), "Thompson’s Last Run" (1986), "If Tomorrow Comes" (1986), "The Christmas Star" (1986), "Poker Alice" (1987), and "Windmills of the Gods" (1988). She was also a voice actress on the cartoons "Cow and Chicken", "I am Weasel", and "Extreme Ghostbusters". Tyrrell contracted a rare blood disease, thrombocythemia, in 2000, and both of her legs were amputated below the knee due to multiple clots. She continued her career from a wheelchair, making her final film appearance in 2012’s "Kid-Thing".

RICHARD LYNCH - Cult Horror & Sci-Fi Star




Character actor Richard Lynch, who was noted for his villanious roles in numerous horror and science fiction films, was found dead at his home in Palm Springs, California, on June 19, 2012. Lynch was born in Brooklyn, New York, on February 12, 1936. He was 76.  He served in the U.S. Marines in the late 1950s, and trained at New York’s Actors Studio in the 1960s. His distinctive scarred face was the result of an drug-related incident in New York’s Central Park, where he set himself on fire after a bad LSD trip in 1967. He appeared in numerous films from the early 1970s, including "Scarecrow" (1973), "The Seven-Ups" (1973), "Open Season" (1974), "The Happy Hooker" (1975), "The Premonition" (1976), "God Told Me To" (1976), "The Baron" (1977), "Stunts" (1977), "Deathsport" (1978), "Steel" (1979), "Delta Fox" (1979), "Twinkle Twinkle, Killer Kane" (aka "The Ninth Configuration") (1980), "The Formula" (1980), "The Sword and the Sorcerer" (1982), "Inferno in Diretta" (aka "Cut and Run") (1985), "Invasion U.S.A." (1985), "Savage Dawn" (1985), "Nightforce" (1987), "The Barbarians" (1987), "Little Nikita" (1988), "Bad Dreams" (1988), "High Stakes" (1989), "One Man Force" (1989), "Lockdown" (1990), "The Forbidden Dance" (1990), "Aftershock" (1990), "Return to Justice" (1990), "The Last Hero" (1991), "Alligater II: The Mutation" (1991), "Puppet Master III: Toulon’s Revenge" (1991), "Trancers II" (1991), "Maxium Force" (1992), "Inside Edge" (1992), "Merlin" (1993), "Double Threat" (1993), "Showdown" (1993), "Necronomicon" (1993), "Loving Deadly" (1994), "Dangerous Waters" (1994), "Death Match" (1994), "Roughcut" (1994), "Scanner Cop" (1994), "Cyborg 3: The Recylcer" (1994), "Takedown" (1995),

 "Toughguy" (1995), "Dragon Fury" (1995), "Destination Vegas" (1995), "Midnight Confessions" (1995), "Vendetta" (1996), "The Garbage Man" (1996), "Werewolf" (1996), "Warrior of Justice" (1996), "Diamond Run" (1996), "Total Force" (1997), "Ground Rules" (1997), "Divine Lovers" (1997), "Under Oath" (1997), "Shattered Illusions" (1998), "Armstrong" (1998), "Love and War II" (1998), "Enemy Action" (1999), "Eastside" (1998), "Lone Tiger" (1999), "Lima: Breaking the Silence" (1999), "Strike Zone" (2000), "Death Game" (2001), "Ankle Bracelet" (2001), "Outta Time" (2002), "Crime and Punishment" (2002), "Curse of the Fourty-Niner" (2002), "Reflex Action" (2002), "Corpes Are Forever" (2003), "Final Combat" (2003), "First Watch" (2003), "Fabulous Shiksa in Destress" (2003), "Ancient Warriors" (2003), "The Mummy’s Kiss" (2003), "The Great War of Magellan" (2005), "Wedding Slashers" (2006), "Mil Mascaras vs. the Aztec Mummy" (2007), Rob Zombie’s "Halloween" (2007) as Principal Chambers, "Laid to Rest" (2009), "Chrome Angels" (2009), "The Rain" (2009), "Lewisburg" (2010), "Resurrection" (2010), and "Gun of the Black Sun" (2011). He appeared frequently on television, guest-starring in episodes of "Bronk", "Switch", "Baretta", "Serpico", "The Bionic Woman", "Battlestar Galactica", "Police Woman", "The Streets of San Francisco", "Starsky and Hutch", "Barnaby Jones", "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century", "A Man Called Sloane", "Charlie’s Angels", "Galactica 1980" as Xavier, "Vega$", "McLain’s Law", "The Phoenix" as Justin Preminger from 1981 to 1982, "Bring ‘Em Back Alive", "T.J. Hooker", "Manimal", "Masquerade", "Blue Thunder", "Automan", "Matt Houston", "Cover Up", "The A-Team", "The Fall Guy", "Partners in Crime", "Riptide", "MacGruder and Loud", "Scarecrow and Mrs. King", "Airwolf", "The Last Precinct", "Once a Hero", "The Law and Harry McGraw", "Werewolf",
 "CBS Summer Playhouse", "Hunter", "High Performance", "True Blue", "Dark Justice", "Jake and the Fatman", "Super Force" in the recurring role of Dr. Lothar Presley, "The Hat Squad", "Star Trek: The Next Generation", "Cobra", "Murder, She Wrote", "Thunder in Paradise", "Phantom 2040" in a voice role, "Highlander", "Baywatch", "Noi Siamo Angeli", "Thinking About Africa", "Mike Hammer, Private Eye", "Air America", "Acapulco H.E.A.T.", "Six Feet Under", and "Charmed". His other television credits include the tele-films "Roger & Harry: The Mitera Target" (1977), "Good Against Evil" (1977), "Dog and Cat" (1977), "Vampire" (1979), "Alcatraz: The Whole Shocking Story" (1980), "Sizzle" (1981), "White Water Rebels" (1983), "The Last Ninja" (1983), "Kojak: Flowers for Matty" (1990), and "Terminal Virus" (1995). Lynch had recently completed filming Rob Zombie’s "The Lords of Salem" (2012) at the time of his death. He and first wife, Beatrix, had a son, Christopher, who appeared with his father in the 1991 film "Trancers II", and died of pneumonia in 2005. He is survived by his second wife, Lily, who starred with him in the 1998 film "Breaking the Silence".
 
                                

Thursday, June 7, 2012

RAY BRADBURY - Legendary Science Fiction & Fantasy Writer - Dead at 91





Author Ray Bradbury, who was one of the most acclaimed science fiction writers of the 20th Century, died in Los Angeles following a long illness on June 5, 2012. He was 91.  Bradbury was born in Waukegan, Illinois, on August 22, 1920. He was a voracious reader from an early age, and was soon writing his own tales. His youthful encounter with a traveling carnival performer known as Mr. Electro - who jolted him with an electrical current with the words "Live Forever" - further inspired his writing aspirations.  He began writing for science fiction fanzines in the late 1930s, and made his first professional sale to Super Science Stories in 1941. A collection of his short-stories, Dark Carnival, was published by Arkham House in 1947. His numerous works include The Martian Chronicles (1950), Fahrenheit 451 (1953), Dandelion Wine (1957), Something Wicked This Way Comes (1962), The Halloween Tree (1972), Death Is a Lonely Business (1985), A Graveyard for Lunatics (1990), From the Dust Returned (2001), Let's All Kill Constance (2003), and It Came from Outer Space (2003). He also authored numerous short-story collections including The Illustrated Man (1951), The Golden Apples of the Sun (1953) which included the classic tale "A Sound of Thunder", The October Country (1955), A Medicine for Melancholy (1959), R Is for Rocket (1962), The Machineries of Joy (1964), S Is for Space (1966), I Sing the Body Electric! (1969), Long After Midnight (1976), A Memory of Murder (1984), The Toynbee Convector (1988), Quicker Than the Eye (1996), Driving Blind (1998), One More for the Road (2002), and The Cat's Pajamas: Stories (2004). Many of Bradbury's tales were adapted for EC Comics in the early 1950s. They also were dramatised on radio for the science fiction anthology series "Dimension X" and "X Minus One", and on such television series as Tales of Tomorrow, Lights Out, Out There, Suspense, CBS Television Workshop, Jane Wyman's Fireside Theatre, Star Tonight, Windows, and Alfred Hitchcock Presents. His screen treatment "Atomic Monster" was adapted for the 1953 film "It Came from Outer Space", and his short-story "The Fog Horn" inspired "The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms" (1953). He scripted John Huston's 1956 film version of Herman Melville's classic tale, "Moby Dick". Bradbury's work on the film inspired a semi-fictionalized account of his experiences with the 1992 book Green Shadows, White Whale. His short-story, "I Sing the Body Electric", was adapted for an episode of "The Twilight Zone" in 1962 and became the tele-film "The Electric Grandmother" in 1982. Francois Truffaut directed a 1966 adaptation of the novel "Fahrenheit 451", starring Oskar Werner and Julie Christie. Several of his short stories were collected for the 1969 film "The Illustrated Man" starring Rod Steiger and Claire Bloom, and "The Martian Chronicles" became a television mini-series with Rock Hudson in 1980. His dark fantasy novel "Something Wicked This Way Comes" became a film in 1983.  A television series, Ray Bradbury Theater, aired from 1985 to 1992, featuring adaptations of numerous Bradbury tales, and an introduction by Bradbury for each episode. The 60+ episodes were written by Bradbury and many on his earlier works including "A Sound of Thunder", "Marionettes, Inc.", "Banshee", "The Playground", "Mars is Heaven", "Usher II", "The Jar", "The Long Rain", "The Veldt", "The Small Assassin", "The Pedestrian", "The Fruit at the Bottom of the Bowl, "Here There Be Tygers", "The Toynbee Convector", and "Sun and Shadow". Bradbury scripted a 1998 film version of "The Wonderful Ice Cream Suit", and the 2005 feature "A Sound of Thunder" was losely based on his short-story of the same name. His short story also formed the basis for the 2008 film "Chrysalis". His wife of 57 years, Marguerite, predeceased him in 2003, and he is survived by their four daughters and eight grandchildren
Ray Bradbury was unique - his works were a mixture of childhood exhilaration and fears, and adult anxieties and triumphs.  He was largely responsible for bringing science fiction and fantasy tales to mainstream America from the 1940s.  He, with Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, Robert Heinlein, Fredrick Pohl and a handful of others, inspired generations of readers into the Space Age and beyond.  Bradbury was a popular media figure in the 1960s, when science fiction was rapidly become science fact.  He was perhaps at his best when commenting at the time of the June 1969 lunar landing -"...it's the night when we become immortal-when we begin the steps that will enable us to live forever. Now, if you don't know this, you don't know anything about space. To hell with all the political talk. To hell with all the military talk. To hell with all this nonsense that you're giving me about the funds and priorities and all this.  The money that's spent on this is miniscule compared to the money wasted on our war efforts the last 10 or 15 years.  "Give me the pittance to work with because I have long views, and I want you to have the long views with me; and the long view is this-at the center of all of our theologies, at the center of all of our philosophies for thousands of years, people have said, 'Why live? Why bother? What's the use if we're going to stay here and die and our philosophies be buried and stuffed in our mouths?  What's the use? What is it all about?'  Suddenly the space ship comes along-the gift we give ourselves and the total race the gift of life, as mysterious as it is. We've been trying to figure it out for thousands of years now. We've had to take it on faith from the theologians and on data from the scientists, and we are still so ignorant..."We are still the ape man in the cave, and we have this torch given us - the rocket ship. Now, for God's sake, we use it to light the universe with. We don't know what's out there. We know it's pretty empty. And our part of the universe is full of us and this gift. I want that gift to go on. I want mirror images of myself and my children's children's children to go on.  All of you. Now, we can't stay here and die, that's for sure.  We are a danger to ourselves. We must go off to other worlds. We will go to the moon. We will go to Mars.  We will go beyond Jupiter. We will be going beyond our own solar system and eventually, sometime in the next 100, 500, 1,000 years, we will build those starcraft we've been speaking of and head for stars so far away they are impossible to imagine. "That's what it's all about. It's huge. It's a long-range thing. And the things that we do here on earth right now are housekeeping. I want to do them both! I want to clean up the house and improve the civil disputes and help the people, but help them also to survive not for 100 years, not for 1,000 years but for the 2 billion years that will be the Age of Apollo which opens before us this very instant."

Monday, June 4, 2012

KANETO SHINDO - Japanese Film Director - Onibaba & Kuroneko - Dead at 100

Japanese film director and writer Kaneto Shindo, who helmed the 1960s ghost story "Onibaba", died in Hiroshima, Japan, on May 29, 2012. He was 100.  Shindo was born in Hiroshima on April 22, 1912. He embarked on a career in film in the mid-1930s with Shinko Kinema in Kyoto. He soon moved with Shinko to Tokyo where he worked under Hiroshi Mizutani in the art department. He served as art director for several films in the late 1930s and was soon writing scripts for such films as "Mojo-Tsukai no Shimai" (1941) and "Hokkyokuko" (1941). He served in the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II, but his physical exam relegated him to cleaning building used by the military. He returned to the cinema after the war, joining the Shochiku Film Company. He worked frequently as screenwriter for director Kozaburo Yoshimura, and had a hit with 1947's "A Ball at the Anjo House". They teamed with actor Taiji Tonoyama to form the independent production company Kindai Eiga Kyokai in 1950, and Shindo made his directorial debut with the semi-autobiographical "The Story of a Beloved Wife" the following year. He also directed the 1952 film "Avalanche", and "Children of Hiroshima", about the dropping of the atomic bomb on his hometown, which debuted at the Cannes Film Festival in 1953. He also helmed "Shukuzu" (1953), "Onna no Issho" (1953), "Dobu" (1954), "Okami" (1955), "Gin Shinju" (1956), "Ryuri no Kishi" (1956), "Joyu" (1956), "Umi no Yarodomo" (1957), "Kanashimi wa Onna Dakeni" (1958), "Lucky Dragon Number 5" (1959), and "Hanayome-san wa Sekai-Ichi" (1959). He earned internation success with 1960's "The Naked Island" which starred his frequent leading lady Nobuko Otowa. Shindo followed his success with the socially relevant films "Ningen" (1962) and "Mother" (1963), before helming the acclaimed supernatural horror film "Onibaba" in 1964. His other film credits include "Akuto" (1965), "Lost Sex" (1966), "Libido" (1967), the horror film "Kuroneko" (aka "Black Cat") (1968),
"Operation Negligee" (1968), "Heat Wave Island" (1969), "Strange Affinity" (1970), "Live Today, Die Tomorrow!" (1970), "Kanawa" (1972), "Sanka" (1972), "Love Betrayed" (1973), "My Way" (1974), the 1975 documentary "Kenji Mizoguchi: The Life of a Film Director", "The Life of Chikuzan" (1977), "The Strangling" (1979), "Edo Porn" (1981), "The Horizon" (1984), "Black Board" (1986), "Tree Without Leaves" (1986), "Sakura-tai Chiru" (1988), "The Strange Tale of Oyuki" (1992), "A Last Note" (1995), "Will to Live" (1999), "By Player" (2000), "Owl" (2003), "Teacher and Three Children" (2008), and "Postcard" (2010). His son, Jiro Shindo, produced several of his later films, and granddaughter Kaze Shindo also became a film director and writer.

RICHARD DAWSON - Family Feud Host & Running Man Villain - Dead at 79


British-born comedian Richard Dawson, who was best known as host of the "Family Feud" game show, died of complications of esophageal cancer in Los Angeles on June 2, 2012. He was born Colin Lionel Emm in Gosport, Hampshire, England, on November 20, 1932. He began his career as a comedian in England under the name Dickie Dawson. He married actress Diana Dors in 1959 and came to the United States in the early 1960s. He was featured in a handful of films including "The Longest Day" (1962), "Promises! Promises!" (1963), "King Rat" (1965), "Out of Sight" (1966), "Munsters, Go Home!" (1966), and "The Devil's Brigade" (1968). He also appeared on television in episodes of "The Jack Benny Program", "The Dick Van Dyke Show", "The Outer Limits" (in "The Invisibles" episode), "The Alfred Hitchcock Hour", and "Mr. Terrific". Dawson had seperated from Dors several years before their divorce in 1966. He was noted for his role as Cpl. Peter Newkirk in the popular comedy series "Hogan's Heroes", starring Bob Crane, from 1965 to 1971. He was a regular performer on "Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In" from 1971 to 1973, and was Richard Richardson on the sit-com "The New Dick Van Dyke Show" from 1973 to 1974. He also guest-starred in episodes of "McCloud", "Lover, American Style", "Wait Till Your Father Comes Home", "The Odd Couple", "McMillan & Wife", "Fantasy Island", and "The Love Boat", and appeared in the 1978 tele-filn "How to Pick Up Girls!". Dawson became best known for his work in television game-shows, becoming a regular panelist on the popular "Match Game" from 1973 to 1978 with host Gene Rayburn, and fellow stars Brett Somers and Charles Nelson Reilly. He hosted the short-lived game show "Masquerade Party" in 1974, and became the first host of "Family Feud" in 1975. He earned a Daytime Emmy Award in 1978, and his kissing of female contestants became his trademark. He remained with the series until it was canceled in 1985. Dawson starred in the 1987 science fiction film "The Running Man" with Sylvester Stallone, playing Damon Killian, the host of a deadly futuristic game show. He returned to "Family Feud" for a season in 1994, before retiring from show business. He married Gretchen Johnson in 1991, who he had met when she was a "Family Feud" contestant a decade earlier. She and their daughter survive him, as do his two sons from his previous marriage.