[DeadCelebrityAlert] Mystery writer Sue Grafton dies in California

 


LOS ANGELES (AP) — Sue Grafton, author of the best-selling "alphabet series" of mystery novels, has died in Santa Barbara. She was 77.

Grafton was surrounded by family, including husband Steven Humphrey, when she died Thursday after a two-year battle with cancer, her daughter, Jamie Clark, posted on the author's website.

"Although we knew this was coming, it was unexpected and fast. She had been fine up until just a few days ago, and then things moved quickly," the posting said.

Grafton began her "alphabet series" in 1982 with "A is for Alibi." Her most recent book, "Y is for Yesterday," was published in August.

"Many of you also know that she was adamant that her books would never be turned into movies or TV shows, and in that same vein, she would never allow a ghost writer to write in her name," her daughter wrote. "Because of all of those things, and out of the deep abiding love and respect for our dear sweet Sue, as far as we in the family are concerned, the alphabet now ends at Y."

Humphrey said Grafton had been struggling to find an idea for "Z'' while undergoing treatment and losing weight.

In this Oct. 15, 2002 file photo, mystery writer Sue Grafton poses for a portrait in New York.© (AP Photo/Gino Domenico, file) In this Oct. 15, 2002 file photo, mystery writer Sue Grafton poses for a portrait in New York."Nothing's been written," he told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. "There is no Z."

He added with a laugh, "Nobody in this family will ever use the letter Z again."

The fictional heroine of the series, Southern California private detective Kinsey Millhone, was Grafton's alter ego, she told The Seattle Times earlier this year.

"I'm an introvert, so doing half of what Kinsey is beyond my poor capabilities," Grafton said. "But it's fun to get to live her life without penalty."

Her husband agreed that Grafton was Kinsey.

"Yes, as Sue said, 'We're one spirit in two bodies, and she got the good one,'" Humphrey said.

While Grafton aged, her heroine didn't quite as much.

"So when I started, she was 32, and I was 42. Now, she is 39, and I am 77. So there's a little bit of injustice there, but she is single," she told NPR in an interview earlier this year. "She's been married twice. She has no kids, no pets, no house plants."

She said she was looking forward to reaching the end of the alphabet with "Z is for Zero."

Grafton began writing at 18, and wrote her first novel at 22. "A is for Alibi" was the eighth novel she wrote, and the third she had published.

On her blog, she said her ideas come from everywhere.

"I read newspapers, textbooks on crime. I talk to private investigators, police officers, jail administrators, doctors, lawyers, career criminals. Ideas are everywhere," she said.

Born in Louisville, Kentucky, Grafton stayed tied to her roots, dividing her time between a home there and her home in California. In addition to her husband and daughter Jamie Clark, she is survived by another daughter, Leslie Twine, and her son, Jay Schmidt.

Grafton's remains will be cremated and the family will hold a private memorial Sunday. Memorials also will be held in Louisville and New York City.


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[DeadCelebrityAlert] From her web site

 

It is with broken hearts that we share the horribly sad news that our beloved Rose Marie passed away this afternoon. http://missrosemarie.com/

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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Heather Menzies, 68

 

Actress Heather Menzies, who played one of the singing von Trapp children in the hit 1965 film, "The Sound of Music," has died. She was 68.

Her son, actor Ryan Urich, told Variety that his mother died late Sunday in Frankford, Ontario. She recently had been diagnosed with brain cancer.

"She was an actress, a ballerina and loved living her life to the fullest," Urich said.

Menzies played Louisa von Trapp, the third-oldest of the seven von Trapp children, in the film adaptation of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical that starred Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer.

"The Sound of Music" captured five Academy Awards, including best picture.

"Heather was part of 'the family.' There is really no other way to describe the members of the cast of the movie of 'The Sound of Music,'" Ted Chapin, president and chief creative officer of the Rodgers and Hammerstein Organization, said in a statement.

A Toronto native, Menzies other film credits include "Hawaii" and "Piranha." On television, she appeared as a fugitive in "Logan's Run" and had guest spots on "Dragnet," "Bonanza," "Marcus Welby, M.D." and other series.

Variety reports that Menzies is survived by two other children, several grandchildren and a great-grandchild.

Her husband, actor Robert Urich, died in 2002. After his death, Menzies established the Robert Urich Foundation to raise funds for cancer research.







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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Dick Enberg, 82

 

Legendary announcer Dick Enberg, whose amazing sportscasting career spanned six decades, died Thursday at the age of 82. He did play-by-play for college basketball, college and professional football and Major League Baseball. He also called other sporting events such as boxing, tennis, golf, horse racing and the Olympics.

Enberg retired from his TV job with the San Diego Padres in October 2016.

Endberg was known for exclaiming "Oh my!" So much so, that his 2004 autobiography is titled: Dick Enberg, Oh My!
He also had a baseball catchphrase: "touch 'em all" for home run hitters.

Enberg's big break came when he was chosen to call UCLA basketball games. During that nine-year stint, the Bruins won eight NCAA titles.
When asked what was the most historically important event he covered, Enberg replied, "The Game of the Century." In that 1968 game, the University of Houston Cougars beat UCLA to snap the Bruin's 47-game winning streak.

During his time behind the microphone Enberg had many broadcast partners, including Al McGuire, Merlin Olsen and Don Drysdale.
Enberg's wife Barbara told the San Diego Union-Tribune that her husband died Thursday morning at his home in La Jolla, Calif.
















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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Jim Nabors, Gomer Pyle from the ‘Andy Griffith Show,’ Dies

 



Jim Nabors, the actor who famously played Gomer Pyle on the Andy Griffith Show, died on Thursday morning. He was 87.

According to reports, TV producer Phil Arnone confirmed Nabors' death.

Born James Thurston Nabors in Sylacauga, Ala., he was a multi-faceted entertainer who did comedy and singing in addition to acting.
Nabors sang "Back Home Again in Indiana" at the beginning of each Indy 500 race from 1972 to 2014, missing only a few races during that extensive period. Andy Griffith brought him onto the Andy Griffith Show after watching him at a California comedy club. Nabors' Gomer Pyle character was a beloved fixture of the show, eventually receiving his own spinoff, Gomer Pyle U.S.M.C. Nabors was living in retirement in Hawaii at the time of his death.

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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Jim Nabors, 87

 

Jim Nabors, who starred as Gomer Pyle on The Andy Griffith Show and on his own sitcom before retiring the wide-eyed, countrified character at the height of his popularity, has died. He was 87.
 
Nabors died at his home in Hawaii on Wednesday night, his longtime partner told Indiana's WTHR. A native of Alabama, Nabors also recorded more than two dozen albums with a rich, operatic baritone voice that surprised those who were used to hearing Nabors exclaim "Gawwwleee!" with a Southern twang on television.

For many years, Nabors sang "Back Home Again in Indiana" during the opening ceremonies for the Indianapolis 500.

In the early 1960s, Nabors was a regular performer at The Horn, a cabaret theater on Wilshire Boulevard in Santa Monica that showcased new talent, when he was spotted by Andy Griffith, who thought Nabors would be perfect to play a new character on his CBS sitcom. That would be Gomer, a dimwitted, affable mechanic at Wally's Filling Station in Mayberry and a cousin of Goober (George Lindsey).

Nabors was signed for just one episode, which aired midway through The Andy Griffith Show's third season in December 1962, but Gomer proved popular, and Nabors went on to appear on 23 installments of the series. One of his signature phrases sprang from a discussion in which Gomer extolled the sophistication of Don Knotts' Barney Fife: "Gawwwleee! He's even been out with some nurses."

Nabors' run on The Andy Griffith Show culminated with the fourth-season finale, in which Gomer joins the U.S. Marines (the episode also served as the pilot for the spinoff sitcom).

With Pvt. Pyle being hounded by tough but caring drill sergeant Vince Carter (Frank Sutton), Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. aired for five years (1964-69) on CBS and was a great success in the ratings — always in the top 10 and No. 2 in its final season — before the actor decided to pursue other activities, which included hosting his own variety show.

"It got down to what you think you want to be, an actor or an entertainer. I want to entertain," Nabors said in 1969, when he decided to hang up Pyle's fatigues. "I don't think I'm much of an actor. The only part I ever played was Gomer. I'm the most surprised person around that I'm successful anyway."

He then showcased his singing and comedic talents on The Jim Nabors Hour, which lasted two seasons and featured some of his Gomer Pyle co-stars.

The big-hearted Nabors never ventured far into movies, though he did perform opposite his pal Burt Reynolds in such fare as The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (1982), Stroker Ace (1983) and, as "Pvt. Homer Lyle," Cannonball Run II (1984).

James Thurston Nabors was born June 12, 1930, in Sylacauga, Ala., the son of a policeman. He sang in high school and acted in fraternity productions at the University of Alabama. After graduating with a degree in business administration, he moved to New York and worked as a typist and answered phones at the United Nations.

"With my thick accent, people would try out different languages on me, never suspecting I was speaking English," he joked.
Nabors returned to the South and worked as a film cutter for a TV station in Chattanooga, Tenn., then moved to Los Angeles — the climate was better suited for his asthma — and landed a similar job at NBC. At nights, he sang and spun tales as a Gomer-like character at The Horn.

Comedian Bill Dana saw him perform, and that led to Nabors becoming a regular on ABC's The New Steve Allen Show. All the while, he kept performing in Santa Monica.

Nabors also showed up as a beatnik in Take Her, She's Mine (1963), starring James Stewart and Sandra Dee; his voice was dubbed in the film.

In the 1970s, Nabors starred with Ruth Buzzi as time-traveling androids on the ABC series The Lost Saucer, produced by Sid and Marty Krofft, and hosted his own syndicated talk show.

He was back as Gomer for the 1986 NBC reunion movie Return to Mayberry.

Nabors admitted that he had trouble watching Pyle's opening credits when the series was playing in syndication because many of the Marines with whom he marched were killed in Vietnam. (The Pollyanna sitcom never addressed the war.)

He first demonstrated his singing ability to TV viewers in 1964 on CBS' The Danny Kaye Show, and on a Gomer Pyle episode that aired in November 1967, he sang "The Impossible Dream" from Man of la Mancha, which would become a concert staple for him. His 1980 album, The Heart-Touching Magic of Jim Nabors, went platinum.

Nabors sang "Back Home in Indiana" at the Indy 500 for the last time in 2014.

"I'll be honest with you, I didn't want to stay too long at the fair," he said. "Everyone has been so incredible to me so many years. The first time I was here was 1972, so I guess most people have grown up with me."

Nabors, who underwent a liver transplant in 1994, starred regularly at the Hilton Hawaiian Village Dome in The Jim Nabors Polynesian Extravaganza, which in the 1980s was one of the state's top showbiz attractions. He lived in Hawaii for more than 30 years and had homes in Honolulu and Maui, where he had a macadamia nut farm.

In January 2013, Nabors exchanged wedding vows with Stan Cadwallader, his partner of almost four decades, before a judge in a Seattle hotel room. Nabors met Cadwallader, a former firefighter in Honolulu, in 1975.














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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Rance Howard, actor and father of Ron Howard, dies at 89

 

Longtime film and television actor Rance Howard, father of director Ron Howard, has died at 89, according to a Saturday tweet from Ron Howard's verified account.

Actor Rance Howard and director Ron Howard arrive at the premiere of "Cinderella Man" (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

"Clint & I have been blessed to be Rance Howard's sons. Today he passed at 89. He stood especially tall 4 his ability to balance ambition w/great personal integrity. A depression-era farm boy, his passion for acting changed the course of our family history. We love & miss U Dad," Ron Howard tweeted.

Details of the death were not immediately available.

Rance Howard was born Harold Engle Beckenholdt on November 17, 1928, in Oklahoma, according to the Internet Movie Database.

He performed in a touring children's theater as a child and, as an adult, toured with Henry Fonda in the stage presentation of "Mister Roberts," according to the Turner Classic Movies archives.

He moved to New York and was cast with son Ron Howard in "The Journey," the TCM archives said. He soon found work in television and won roles in shows such as "Bat Masterson," "Gunsmoke" and "The Waltons." He had a regular role on "Gentle Ben," along with his younger son, Clint Howard.

Rance Howard had appeared in numerous films, starting with "Frontier Woman" in 1956 and ending with "Nebraska" in 2013. He appeared in six movies nominated for best-picture Oscars: "The Music Man," "Chinatown," "Apollo 13," "A Beautiful Mind," "Frost/Nixon" and "Nebraska," according to the IMDb.

"A Beautiful Mind," directed by Ron Howard, won the award in 2001. Rance Howard played a "white haired patient," IMDb said.

Russell Crowe, who had the lead role in "A Beautiful Mind," tweeted: "Hey @RealRonHoward my deepest condolences . He was a fine man indeed was Rance Howard . Fine man, fine actor. Being in his company was always a pleasure."

Ron Howard, who played Opie Taylor on the "Andy of Mayberry" television show as a child, went on to become a director. Along with "A Beautiful Mind," Ron Howard gave his father roles in many of his movies, such as "Splash," "Cocoon," "The Paper," "Apollo 13," "Frost/Nixon" and "Angels and Demons."

Rance Howard is survived by his two sons; granddaughters Bryce Dallas Howard and Paige Howard; and one great-grandchild. He was married to Jean Speegle Howard and Judy Howard, both of whom preceded him in death.


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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Rance Howard, 89

 

Rance Howard, father of director Ron Howard and actor Clint Howard, died on Saturday. He was 89.

Ron Howard took to Twitter to announce his father's passing Saturday afternoon. Details of the death were not immediately disclosed. 

"Clint & I have been blessed to be Rance Howard's sons," he wrote. "He stood especially tall [for] his ability to balance ambition [with] great personal integrity. A depression-era farm boy, his passion for acting changed the course of our family history. We love & miss U Dad."

Rance Howard was born Harold Engle Beckenholdt on November 17, 1928, in Oklahoma, according to the Internet Movie Database.
He performed in a touring children's theater as a child and, as an adult, toured with Henry Fonda in the stage presentation of "Mister Roberts," according to the Turner Classic Movies archives.
He moved to New York and was cast with son Ron Howard in "The Journey," the TCM archives said. He soon found work in television and won roles in shows such as "Bat Masterson," "Gunsmoke" and "The Waltons." He had a regular role on "Gentle Ben," along with his younger son, Clint Howard.

The elder Howard appeared in more than a dozen films his son directed, including "Apollo 13," "A Beautiful Mind," "Splash," "Cocoon," "How the Grinch Stole Christmas," "Parenthood" and "Grand Theft Auto," which he co-wrote with his son.










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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Actor & Singer David Cassity, Partidge Family fame, dead at age 67.

 



David Cassidy, the singer and actor who rocketed to teen-idol status in the 1970s as the costar of the musical TV sitcom "The Partridge Family," died Tuesday, Nov. 21, after having been hospitalized several days earlier in Florida, where he lived, according to multiple news sources. He was 67. 

Cassidy had announced earlier this year that he was battling dementia, which had previously afflicted his mother and grandfather. 

David Bruce Cassidy was born April 12, 1950, to the musical theater actors Evelyn Ward and Jack Cassidy. His parents divorced while he was still a child, and his father married musical actress Shirley Jones, who would soon be a household name as the star of popular movies including "Oklahoma!" "Carousel," "The Music Man," and "Elmer Gantry." 

David Cassidy followed his parents into show business more directly than most: Shortly after debuting on Broadway at the age of 19, he was cast to costar with his stepmother Jones in her new TV show, "The Partridge Family." 

The series told the fictional story of a suburban California family who form a pop band together and become stars. While Jones brought her already-Oscar-winning star power to the show, the actors who portrayed her children subsequently went on to notable careers of their own – none more so than Cassidy, who was catapulted into stardom as the Partridge Family's lead singer. Though the Partridges were fictional, they released actual records: Their single "I Think I Love You" hit No. 1 on the Billboard charts in 1970, and their Christmas album was the No. 1 selling holiday record of 1971. 

Cassidy released his first solo album, "Cherish," in 1972, and his concert tour was a string of massive, sold-out arena shows: Madison Square Garden, the Astrodome, Wembley Stadium. For a while, "Cassidymania" was a phenomena echoing the early days of the Beatles' fan madness – so much so that, in 1974, fans at a London show stampeded, injuring hundreds and resulting in the death of one. 

Cassidy's pop career continued to flourish in the U.S. and U.K. through the 1970s and '80s, and he starred in several Broadway musical productions.

He toured throughout his life, finally announcing in February 2017 that he would be retiring from live performance this year. He revealed in a story for People magazine and in an appearance on "Dr. Phil" that he was suffering from dementia. 

Cassidy was married three times, and is survived by a daughter, Katie, and a son, Beau.
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