[DeadCelebrityAlert] James Noble, 94

 

James Noble, who played Governor Eugene Gatling on the sitcom "Benson," died Monday at age 94, a spokesman for the actor's family told the New York Times.

The actor suffered a stroke last week, the spokesman added.

Noble played the scatterbrained governor opposite Robert Guillaume on the series, an offshoot of the comedy "Soap." The series aired from 1979 to 1986 on ABC.

Born in Dallas in 1922, Noble initially performed as a stage actor, debuting on Broadway in 1949 in a production of "The Velvet Glove." He also played John Hancock in the musical "1776." Noble also appeared in the 1972 film of "1776."

Noble's other film and television credits included "One Life to Live" and "Another World," as well as the Bo Derek film "10."

Noble's last IMDb credit is for the 2011 short film "Consequential Lies," playing Father Easter.








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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Patty Duke Astin, 69

 

Hollywood legend Patty Duke -- who won an Oscar for playing Helen Keller in "The Miracle Worker" -- has died. 

She was 69.

Duke passed away at 1:20 AM Tuesday morning. She died from sepsis due to a ruptured intestine. 
Duke's son, Sean Astin, said the family is "relieved" because Duke was in a lot of pain and the process took a long time to play out.


Duke was a child star -- winning the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress at 16 years old in 1963.

She was married 4 times ... including to actor John Astin -- the father of "Lord of the Rings" star Sean Astin.

Duke is survived by her husband, Michael Pearce, and her 3 kids.


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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Joe Garagiola, 90

 

Joe Garagiola, who turned a stint as a light-hitting catcher in the late 1940s and mid &lsquo50s into a bounteous television career as a baseball announcer and TV host, died Wednesday, the Arizona Diamondbacks announced. He was 90.

Garagiola called games at NBC for a quarter-century and served as a host on the Today show from 1967-73 and 1991-92. The likable St. Louis native sat in at times for Johnny Carson on The Tonight Show and hosted a number of game shows, including Joe Garagiola's Memory Game, Sale of the Century, To Tell the Truth and Strike It Rich.

His book Baseball Is a Funny Game, a collection of humorous anecdotes told in his neighborly fashion, was first published in 1960 and was perhaps the first New York Times best-seller with baseball as its subject. He said sales took off after he made an appearance on The Jack Paar Show, and the book gave him a huge career boost and put him on the national stage.

Garagiola did games for NBC starting in 1961 and worked on New York Yankees telecasts from 1965-68 before returning to the Peacock network. In 1976, he succeeded Curt Gowdy as NBC's No. 1 play-by-play announcer to partner with former Yankees shortstop Tony Kubek. His folksy, comic style helped spur ratings for The Game of the Week each Saturday afternoon.

In the '80s, Garagiola shifted to the analyst chair to team with legendary play-by-play man Vin Scully. He resigned from NBC Sports after calling the Los Angeles Dodgers' win in the 1988 World Series, did a brief tour as a commentator with the California Angels and spent 15 years analyzing games for the Arizona Diamondbacks, where his son, Joe Garagiola Jr., had served as the team's GM.

He won a Peabody Award in 1973, was inducted into the broadcasters wing of the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1991 and later hosted the televised Westminster Dog Show at Madison Square Garden.

Through the years, the energetic Garagiola was a popular TV guest, appearing on such programs as Late Night With David Letterman, often making fun of how bad a ballplayer he was.

"Each year I don't play," he once said, "I get better. The first year on the banquet trail, I was a former ballplayer, the second year I was great, the third year one of baseball's stars, and just last year I was introduced as one of baseball's immortals. The older I get, the more I realize that the worst break I had was playing."

Tweeted Matt Lauer of the Today show: "God I'll miss Joe Garagiola. Was part of the soul of our show, and told me stories that made me laugh till I cried. Hall of fame person."

Joseph Henry Garagiola was born on Feb. 12, 1926. He was boyhood pals with another future big-league catcher, Yogi Berra of the New York Yankees.

A .257 lifetime hitter over nine seasons, Garagiola played with the St. Louis Cardinals, Pittsburgh Pirates, Chicago Cubs and New York Giants. His Pirates in 1952 went 42-112, one of the worst records in baseball history.

His interest in broadcasting was spurred during the 1950 season when he listened to games on the radio while sidelined with a separated shoulder. After his playing career ended in 1954, he joined St. Louis radio station KMOX and called Cardinals games. His wife Audrie was the organist at the stadium.

Garagiola was active in a campaign against spit tobacco, a favorite avocation of big leaguers, and was president emeritus of the Baseball Assistance Team, the charitable organization that helps ex-players who have fallen on hard times.

On Opening Day in 2014, the Diamondbacks honored Garagiola for having received the 2014 Buck O'Neill Award from the National Baseball Hall of Fame. The award is presented for "extraordinary efforts to enhance baseball's positive impact on society."

In addition to his wife and son, Garagiola is survived by his daughter Gina; another son Steve; and eight grandchildren.







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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Ken Howard, 71

 

Ken Howard, the strapping character actor who starred in the 1970s TV drama "The White Shadow" and was serving as president of SAG-AFTRA, has died at age 71.

The union announced Mr. Howard's death Wednesday. No cause was given.

His career spanned four decades in TV, theater and film. In the acclaimed CBS series "The White Shadow," which aired from 1978-81, he starred as a white coach to an urban high-school basketball team, a part, one of Mr. Howard's best known, that drew on the personal history of the 6-foot-6 actor, who played basketball growing up on Long Island in New York and at Amherst College.

The series' title came from Mr. Howard's nickname as the only white starter on the Manhasset High varsity team.

He was a staple character actor on television, starring opposite Blythe Danner in "Adam's Rib" on ABC in the 1970s and appearing as chipper Kabletown boss Hank Hooper on NBC's "30 Rock" some 40 years later.

In early seasons of NBC's "Crossing Jordan," which premiered in 2001, he played Jill Hennessy's father, a retired police detective who gave behind-the-scenes advice to his daughter, a crime-solving forensic pathologist. He starred opposite Jimmy Smits in the 2007 CBS drama "Cane."

His other TV credits included "The West Wing," "NYPD Blue," "The Practice," "Boston Legal," "Law & Order: SVU," "Curb Your Enthusiasm" and "The Office."

Mr. Howard played Thomas Jefferson on Broadway in "1776," a role he reprised in the 1972 film. He won a Tony Award for Robert Marasco's Catholic boarding-school drama "Child's Play."

After making his film debut opposite Liza Minnelli in 1970's "Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon," Mr. Howard's films included "Rambo," "In Her Shoes," "Michael Clayton," and last year's "Joy." He won an Emmy for his performance in HBO's "Grey Gardens" in 2009.

He was also familiar to viewers of the Screen Actors Guild Awards, providing an update on the union's accomplishments during the televised awards ceremony.

Mr. Howard was elected SAG president in 2009 and was a catalyst for its 2012 merger with the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists union. Combined, the groups represent 160,000 actors, broadcasters and recording artists.

He was the first president of SAG-AFTRA and was re-elected to the post last year.

"Ken was a remarkable leader and his powerful vision for this union was a source of inspiration for all of us," SAG-AFTRA executive director David White said in a statement.

He was born Kenneth Joseph Howard Jr. on March 28, 1944, in El Centro, Calif.

He is survived by his wife of 25 years, stuntwoman Linda Fetters Howard.

His first marriage was to actress Louise Sorel. His second wife was Margo Howard, the daughter of advice columnist Ann Landers. He had three adult stepchildren from a previous marriage.







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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Joe Santos, 84

 

Joe Santos, best known for playing Lt. Dennis Becker, the frustrated L.A. policeman pal of James Garner's private detective on The Rockford Files, died Friday. He was 84.

Santos suffered a heart attack at his Los Angeles home Wednesday and was put on life support. He died in a Santa Monica hospital, he said.

The Brooklyn native played Becker, who had a love-hate relationship with Garner's Jim Rockford, on 112 episodes of The Rockford Files, which ran on NBC from 1974-80. He was nominated for an Emmy for outstanding supporting actor in a drama series in 1979 and reprised the role for several telefilms.

"He's the kind of guy who lights up a set just by showing up," Garner said of Santos in a 1977 story in TV Guide. "And there aren't too many around like that. He's so good and so professional, and he's got so much enthusiasm. He's one hell of an actor, and he's one tough little dude. But mostly, Joe is a pussycat."

His 40-year career was filled with roles as good cops on such series as Police StoryMagnum, P.I. and Hardcastle and McCormick and on the 1973 miniseries The Blue Knight opposite William Holdenthough he played a bad guy, Consigliere Angelo Garepe, on The Sopranos.

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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Frank Sinatra, Jr. 72

 

Frank Sinatra Jr., the son of the legendary entertainer who had a long musical career of his own, died Wednesday, said manager Andrea Kauffman.

He was 72.

Kauffman said Sinatra died at a Daytona Beach, Florida, hospital. Singer Nancy Sinatra said on her Facebook page that her brother died of cardiac arrest.

"Sleep warm, Frankie..." she wrote.

Sinatra was on his "Sinatra Sings Sinatra" tour and was scheduled to perform at the Peabody Auditorium on Wednesday. An announcement on the venue's Facebook page said the singer had taken ill.

Sinatra followed his father's singing career path and was a 19-year-old on tour when he was kidnapped in 1963. After three days, two of the men collected a $240,000 ransom paid by his father, while the other abductor let the son free. Days later, that kidnapper confessed to his brother, who called the FBI.

Sinatra, whose voice and looks were very much like his father's, released about a half dozen albums.

Sinatra also did some acting, appearing in almost 20 shows, including Adam-12, the animated series "Family Guy," and playing himself in an episode of "The Sopranos."


"My lack of success does not trouble me at this stage in my life," he told the Guardian four years ago.
And he recently told the Daytona Beach News-Journal that he wasn't upset that his life as a singer was nowhere close to his famed father's career.

"I think in my generation, when I came along in the early '60s, the type of music that was in vogue in society in those days had moved on to another kind of music," Sinatra told the newspaper. "I was trying to sell antiques in a modern appliance store."






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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Nancy Reagan, 94

 

Nancy Reagan, (born Anne Francis Robbins) one of the most high-profile and influential first ladies of the 20th century, has died, according to a spokeswoman with the Reagan Library. She was 94.

The cause of death was congestive heart failure, according to her rep Joanne Drake. "Mrs. Reagan will be buried at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, next to her husband, Ronald Wilson Reagan, who died on June 5, 2004," Drake wrote in a statement.

Nancy Reagan was born in New York City and when she was six her mother, Edith, a stage actress, married Dr. Loyal Davis, a neurosurgeon. The doctor adopted Nancy and she grew up in Chicago. She later attended Smith College in Massachusetts, where she majored in theater.

Reagan was an actress, known then as Nancy Davis, when she met Ronald Reagan in 1951, then an actor and president of the Screen Actors Guild, according to a White House bio.
While Ronald Reagan was governor of California from 1967 to 1975, Nancy worked with numerous charitable groups, and spent hours visiting veterans, the elderly, and the emotionally and physically handicapped.

When her husband became president of the Unite States, First Lady Reagan continued her interest in these groups continued, and arguably became best known for her "Just Say No" program fighting against drug abuse among youth.








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[DeadCelebrityAlert] George Kennedy, 91

 

George Kennedy, the brawny, Oscar-winning character actor known for playing cops, soldiers and blue-collar authority figures in such films as "Cool Hand Luke," "Airport" and the "Naked Gun" films, has died. He was 91.

Kennedy died Sunday in Boise, Idaho, said his grandson, Cory Schenkel.

"He passed Sunday morning, due to old age and some health issues," Schenkel said.

The New York-born Kennedy came by his military gravitas honestly; he served in World War II and spent 16 years in the U.S. Army, many of them with Armed Forces Radio. In the 1950s, he was an adviser to Phil Silvers' "Sgt. Bilko" show and then started getting acting roles.

Among his early notable films were 1963's "Charade," in which he played one of the criminal gang threatening Audrey Hepburn's character, and 1965's "The Flight of the Phoenix," in which he played a passenger on James Stewart's stranded airplane.

He broke through with 1967's "Cool Hand Luke," in which he played Dragline, a convict who resists, and then becomes friendly with, Paul Newman's Luke character.

"The marvelous thing about that movie was that as my part progresses, I changed from a bad guy to a good guy," Kennedy said in 1978, according to the Hollywood Reporter. "The moguls in Hollywood must have said, 'Hey, this fellow can do something besides be a bad guy.' "
His performance won him an Oscar for best supporting actor.

Kennedy was, by then, a go-to character actor. He played Joe Patroni, the mechanic and problem solver who was the one constant in the 1970s "Airport" movies. He also starred in 1974's "Earthquake," another disaster flick, about a quake that hits Los Angeles.

Meanwhile, he had a number of TV roles, including starring in the short-lived '70s series "Sarge" and "The Blue Knight."

But he also had a sense of humor about himself, which came in handy given his beefy, 6-foot-4 frame.

He and Raymond Burr were friendly -- Kennedy guest-starred on both "Perry Mason" and "Ironside" -- and Kennedy told the Smashing Interviews website that they used to break each other up.

"Raymond and I were big men," he recalled, noting their height and that "both of us weighed more than a ton and a half each."
But they found their size entertaining, not intimidating.

"If you can picture this, we'd talk about being big guys, and we would giggle. Now, here was 600 pounds of guys sitting between shots in a couple of chairs and almost breaking them because we're giggling at jokes. Over all of Raymond's movies and TV shows, I remember him as a guy who'd giggle with me and didn't care."

Kennedy also got to laugh with Albert Brooks, playing himself in 1981's "Modern Romance," and Leslie Nielsen, co-starring as Detective Captain Ed Hocken in the "Naked Gun" movies.

"I love comedy perhaps more than anything else," he told Smashing Interviews.

He didn't stop acting until he was in his 80s, by then doing a seven-year stint on the soap "The Young and the Restless." The Internet Movie Database lists more than 180 acting credits.

"My grandpa loved acting. Every opportunity he had, he enjoyed with such a passion," his grandson said. "It was definitely amazing to see that passion. Acting was natural to him."

Late in life, Kennedy wrote a memoir, "Trust Me," in which he described growing up lonely in New York and the joy he found in acting.

"I considered the time I spent acting a gift from the beyond," he told interviewer Brad Berkwitt. "It was what I could do best."

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