[DeadCelebrityAlert] Tobe Hooper, ‘Texas Chain Saw Massacre’ and ‘Poltergeist’ Director, Dies at 74

 


Tobe Hooper, the horror director best known for helming "The Texas Chain Saw Massacre" and "Poltergeist," died Saturday in Sherman Oaks, Calif. He was 74.

The Los Angeles County Coroner's Office said it was reported as a natural death.

The 1974 "Texas Chain Saw Massacre" became one of the most influential horror films of all time for its realistic approach and deranged vision. Shot for less than $300,000, it tells the story of a group of unfortunate friends who encounter a group of cannibals on their way to visit an old homestead. Though it was banned in several countries for violence, it was one of the most profitable independent films of the 1970s in the U.S. The character of Leatherface was loosely based on serial killer Ed Gein.

Hooper also directed the 1986 sequel "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2," which took a more comedic approach, as part of his Cannon Films deal.

The 1982 "Poltergeist," written and produced by Steven Spielberg, also became a classic of the genre. The story of a family coping with a house haunted by unruly ghosts starred JoBeth Williams and Craig T. Nelson. The film was a box office success for MGM and became the eighth-highest grossing film of the year.

RELATED

Horror Directors Lead Hollywood Tributes to Tobe Hooper: 'Your Legacy Lives On'

After "Poltergeist," Hooper directed two movies for Cannon Films, "Lifeforce" and "Invaders from Mars," a remake of the 1953 alien movie.

His 1979 CBS miniseries adaptation of Stephen King's bestselling novel "Salem's Lot" is considered by many fans to be a high-water mark in televisual horror. Combining the intrigue of a nighttime soap opera with the gothic atmosphere of a classic horror film, the two-part program was eventually reedited and released theatrically throughout Europe.

He continued working in television and film throughout the 1990s and 2000s, but none of the films had the impact of his early works. His last film, the 2013 "Djinn," was set in the United Arab Emirates and produced by Image Nation. His other more recent works included "Toolbox Murders," "Mortuary" and two episodes of "Masters of Horror."

Among his other works was the music video for Billy Idol's "Dancing With Myself." In 2011 he co-authored a post-modern horror novel titled "Midnight Movie" in which he himself appeared as the main character.

Willard Tobe Hooper was born in Austin, Texas and taught college before starting out in documentaries.

He is survived by two sons.

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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Jay Thomas, 69

 

"Ray Donovan" star Jay Thomas has lost his battle with cancer. He was 69.

The sad news comes from his agent and longtime friend Don Buchwald.

"Jay was one of a kind, never at a loss for words and filled with so much fun and wonderfully whacky thoughts and behavior," wrote Buchwald, who repped Thomas for 35 years.
Thomas' wife Sally and his sons Sam, Jake and J.T. were by his side at his Santa Barabara, Cali. home when he passed.

Thomas was perhaps best known for playing Jerry Gold on "Murphy Brown" from 1989-1998.

He also played Rhea Perlman's TV husband Eddie LeBec on "Cheers" from 1987-1989 before his character was run over by a Zamboni.

Thomas starred on the hit sitcom "Love & War" from 1992-1995.

Talk show fans remember Thomas from his holiday visits on "Late Night with David Letterman" where he and the host would try
and knock a meatball off the top of a Christmas tree by throwing footballs.During that annual visit, Thomas would always tell what
became known as "The Lone Ranger" story in which he had a bizarre encounter with actor Clayton Moore,
who played the masked cowboy in the classic western series. Thomas' "Late Night" Christmas tradition started in 1998 and ended in 2014, shortly before Letterman retired.

Thomas also hosted a popular radio show on SiriusXM.











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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Jerry Lewis, Comedy Legend, Dead at 91

 

"Legendary entertainer Jerry Lewis passed away peacefully today of natural causes at 91 at his home with family by his side," family says in statement  
  "Legendary entertainer Jerry Lewis passed away peacefully today of natural causes at 91 at his home with family by his side," his family said in a statement to the Las Vegas Review-Journal writer John Katsilometes.

In a career that spanned vaudeville, radio, television, film and philanthropy, Lewis established the persona of a manic, juvenile jokester, which belied darker, more self-lacerating elements below the surface, giving his seemingly silly performances a fascinatingly edgy undercurrent. That tension powered his artistic life as well, as Lewis modeled himself after earlier filmmakers such as Charlie Chaplin, seeking to gain control over his idiosyncratic, deeply personal art by writing, directing and producing his own material. Revered by everyone from Martin Scorsese to Jerry Seinfeld, Lewis was intimately involved with some of his greatest films, including 1960's The Bellboy and 1963's The Nutty Professor, always with a mind toward challenging himself and entertaining an audience. "I learned from my dad that when you walk in front of an audience, they are the kings and queens, and you're but the jester," he said in 2016. "And if you don't think that way, you're going to get very, very conceited."

Born in March 1926 in New Jersey into a family of entertainers — his father a vaudeville performer, his mother a piano player — Lewis caught the acting bug early, appearing on stage with his parents at a young age. Dropping out of high school and dreaming of breaking into show business, he worked at clubs in the Catskills, worried that his physical appearance would keep him from having a career. As he wrote in his 2005 memoir Dean and Me: A Love Story, "I was tall, skinny, gawky; cute but funny-looking. With the voice God had given me, I certainly wasn't going to be a singer like my dad, with his Al Jolson baritone. I always saw the humor in things, the joke possibilities. At the same time, I didn't have the confidence to stand on a stage and talk." Instead, he realized that playing the broad clown — wearing goofy wigs, pantomiming in an exaggerated fashion — opened up a rich vein of comic possibilities. "God hadn't made me handsome," Lewis wrote, "but he'd given me something, I always felt: funny bones."

Lewis parlayed that rambunctious stage act into a successful odd-couple pairing with Dean Martin, a dashing, suave comic. Starting their partnership in 1946, Martin and Lewis worked their way up from nightclubs to a radio show, eventually costarring in comedy films such as 1949's My Friend Irma. The duo made 16 movies over 10 years, becoming major stars in the process by juxtaposing Martin's leading-man demeanor with Lewis's wizardly screwball tomfoolery.

After the partnership ended in 1956, Lewis focused on film, joining forces with director Frank Tashlin on a series of successful comedies, like 1958's Rock-A-Bye Baby. Soon, though, Lewis's ambitions found him writing, directing and producing his own work, leading to a series of iconic films such as The Nutty Professor, in which he played the nerdy, unattractive chemistry professor Julius Kelp, who creates a formula that transforms him into the charming, debonair Buddy Love. A comedic take on Dr. Jekyll and Mr. HydeThe Nutty Professor was widely read as Lewis's attack on his photogenic old partner Martin, but it was also a hilarious, pratfall-filled film in which the director-star excoriated his own insecurities. For Lewis, his movies were a form of psychiatry. The comic once said of his reason for avoiding going into therapy, "If I find out what's bothering me, I won't be funny any more."

Lewis's popularity declined in the mid-1960s, but he continued to make movies, as well as spent time teaching film at the University of Southern California. This was but one way that he would help shape a new generation of filmmakers, including George Lucas and Steven Spielberg, who took his classes. (Lewis was proud of mentioning, "Steven said one night, 'I get more information from a Jerry Lewis evening than I do from a university.'")

But perhaps his most famous movie of the period was one he never released: a bold 1972 drama called The Day the Clown Cried, about a German clown (played by Lewis) imprisoned in a concentration camp. Lewis never allowed The Day the Clown Cried to be viewed publically, which only made the movie more of a fascinating curio to cineastes. "There's not a day of my life when I don't think about this movie," Lewis once admitted, although he insisted the film was a failure. "It was all bad and it was bad because I lost the magic," Lewis declared at a press conference at the Cannes Film Festival in 2013. "You will never see it, no one will ever see it, because I am embarrassed at the poor work."

While Lewis's career faded, his reputation was growing among French filmmakers like Jean-Luc Godard, who took his work seriously as art. (The Nutty Professor made his list of the Top 10 films of 1963.) And in the early 1980s, Lewis experienced a revival thanks to his great dramatic work in Scorsese's caustic showbiz comedy The King of Comedy, in which he played a Johnny Carson-like talk-show host who's stalked by Robert De Niro's demented aspiring comic Rupert Pupkin. It was a change-of-pace role for Lewis, and it earned him some of his best reviews. "The films Jerry has made over the years, I still screen them," Scorsese said in 2013 of his star. "The visionary aspect, the staging, clarity of the frame, composition, timing — natural timing and physical timing — and the characters in the frame — they are timeless."

In later years, Lewis remained a cultural figure thanks to his annual hosting of The Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day Telethon to benefit the Muscular Dystrophy Association. And his style of anarchic comedy echoed in the inspired, rubber-faced antics of latter-day stars such as Jim Carrey. Plus, Lewis's most iconic film, The Nutty Professor, was remade in 1996 by Eddie Murphy, becoming one of the year's biggest hits and spawning a successful 2000 sequel. Just as significant, Lewis' name became synonymous with a particular kind of divisive artist who's most admired and appreciated overseas. For decades, Lewis has been a revered institution in France, receiving the nation's Legion of Honor award in 2006. ("This is my country," he said about France in 1982. "I only live in America.")

The recipient of the Academy's Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award in 2009, Lewis had largely retired from acting before taking on the lead role of an aging widower in 2016's Max Rose. Until the end, he approached his work as a performer and filmmaker with the innocence of a newcomer.

"What you have to do is to stick a pipe in your ear and let it suck out all memory of what you are supposed to do," he said in 2016 about his creative process. "You do that and then you make the movie. Suck out all of the information in your brain and go and do this as a novice and hope you're OK. It helps with your spontaneity. That's a good actor."

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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Dick Gregory, civil rights activist and comedian, dead at 84

 

Comedian and civil rights activist Dick Gregory, who broke barriers in the 1960s and became one of the first African-Americans to perform at white clubs, died Saturday.

He was 84.
Gregory recently rescheduled an event in Atlanta because he was hospitalized. He died in Washington, his son posted on social media without giving details.
    "The family appreciates the outpouring of support and love, and respectfully asks for their privacy as they grieve during this very difficult time," Christian Gregory said. "More details will be released over the next few days."
    Gregory satirized segregation and racial injustice in his acts, and was arrested several times in the 1960s for joining civil rights rallies.
    He was relatively unknown until 1961, when the prestigious Playboy Club in Chicago asked him to fill in for comedian Irwin Corey one night.
    This comedian single-handedly changed stand-up


    audiences.



    His gig as Corey's replacement was successful. After winning over a majority white audience that night, the Playboy Club offered him a three -year contract, turning him into a headline performer.  
    From there, his fame grew as he appeared on numerous TV shows and recorded comedy albums.
    When he was not making people laugh, he attended marches and parades to support various issues, including civil rights and the opposition to the Vietnam War.
    Gregory was also a health and spiritual advocate and a motivational speaker. He wrote several books, including "Murder in Memphis," which analyzed the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.
    Following the news of Gregory's passing, fellow civil rights activist Rev. Jesse Jackson paid tribute to him.
    "He taught us how to laugh. He taught us how to fight. He taught us how to live," he tweeted. "Dick Gregory was committed to justice. I miss him already."
    In a message to fans posted on his Instagram account after he rescheduled the event in Atlanta, Gregory talked about the political climate in the US.
    "I've so much to say and can't wait to get out of here and say it," he wrote Wednesday.
    Musician John Legend, who produced a play that focuses on Gregory's life last year, took on Twitter to honor Gregory.
    "Dick Gregory lived an amazing, revolutionary life. A groundbreaker in comedy and a voice for justice," Legend tweeted.
    Fellow comedian DL Hughley paid tribute to Gregory after news of his death
    "Heaven just got funnier," Hughley tweeted.  

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    [DeadCelebrityAlert] Glen Campbell, 81

     

    Glen Campbell, the country singer known for hits such as "Rhinestone Cowboy" and "Country Boy," has died at 81.

    Campbell died Tuesday around 10 a.m. in a Nashville facility for Alzheimer's patients. A post on his website confirmed the heartbreaking news:

    "It is with the heaviest of hearts that we announce the passing of our beloved husband, father, grandfather, and legendary singer and guitarist, Glen Travis Campbell, at the age of 81, following his long and courageous battle with Alzheimer's disease ... In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Glen Campbell Memorial Fund at BrightFocus Foundation through the CareLiving.org donation page."
    The family added: "A personal statement from Kim Campbell will follow. The family appreciates your prayers and respect for their privacy at this time."

    Campbell was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2011, though he had been suffering from short-term memory loss for years. He lived full-time in the Nashville care facility where he was cared for by a family friend and personal sitter named Brody along with his main caregiver. His wife, Kim Woolen, visited him daily.

    A heartbreaking documentary released in 2015, "Glen Campbell: I'll Be Me," followed the singer and his family on his 2011 tour as his memory declined.

    The Arkansas-born musician released more than 70 albums, sold over 45 million records, was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame and won 10 Grammy Awards and 10 Academy of Country Music Awards.

    He has performed with a slew of legendary musicians, including Dean Martin, Nat King Cole and Elvis Presley. Campbell also had several acting roles to his name -- he starred in "True Grit" with John Wayne and "Norwood" with Joe Namath. He hosted his own variety show, The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour on CBS from 1969-72.

    Campbell is survived by his wife of 35 years Kim, daughters Ashley, Debbie and Kelli and sons Cal, Dylan, Kane, Shannon and Travis.


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    [DeadCelebrityAlert] Goldy McJohn, founding member of Steppenwolf, dead at 72

     

    Goldy McJohn, founding member of Steppenwolf, dead at 72


     THE CANADIAN PRESS

    FIRST POSTED: FRIDAY, AUGUST 04, 2017 09:47 AM EDT | UPDATED: FRIDAY, AUGUST 04, 2017 12:49 PM EDT

    Steppenwolf. (Handout)Steppenwolf. (Handout)


    Goldy McJohn, a Canadian founding member of Steppenwolf whose roaring organ sounds and big hair brought a powerful presence to the group behind the classic-rock staples "Born to be Wild" and "Magic Carpet Ride," has died.

    The keyboard player, whose given name was John Goadsby, died on Tuesday of a heart attack, according to a post on his Facebook page. He was 72.

    A funeral service is scheduled for next Friday in Seattle.

    McJohn and husky voiced lead singer John Kay were among the founding members of Steppenwolf. The group, which also included Canadians Jerry Edmonton on drums and Nick St. Nicholas on bass among its core members, got its start in Toronto as the Sparrows.

    Rockabilly musician Ronnie Hawkins recalls them playing at his club, the Hawk's Nest, above the Le Coq d'Or Tavern on Yonge Street in Toronto.

    "They were just starting when they were at the Hawk's Nest but I remember them and the piano player had that afro or whatever you call that great big head of hair," Hawkins said by phone Friday from his home in Peterborough, Ont.

    "(The crowd) loved them. That's what got them started. They were so good at the Hawk's Nest, they started getting jobs everywhere."

    After securing a deal with Columbia Records, the Sparrows spent time in New York and then migrated west to the San Francisco Bay area and Los Angeles, where they broke up and reformed as Steppenwolf.

    "I kept needling the guys. I said, 'Man, I saw what's going on out on the West Coast,"' Kay recalled in an interview with The Canadian Press last October.

    "I saw the formation of the Byrds and numerous other hot bands out there."

    The group's self-titled debut album released in 1968 was a hit and included the iconic track "Born to be Wild," written by Mars Bonfire, who was the Canadian guitarist for the Sparrows and the brother of Edmonton.

    "It came out and boy, that's what put 'em on top," said Hawkins.

    "It became a big one and it's still getting work for them. You still hear that song. It sounded like one of them wild, teenage things."

    The gritty biker anthem, as well as the group's hit cover of Hoyt Axton's "The Pusher," were on the soundtrack for Dennis Hopper's cult classic 1969 film "Easy Rider."

    Steppenwolf also achieved success with the psychedelic "Magic Carpet Ride" and subsequent tracks including "Rock Me," "Straight Shootin' Woman" and "Move Over."

    In '72, Steppenwolf "had kind of burned out" and disbanded, said Kay.

    While they did reform with the core lineup, putting out a few more albums, they eventually broke up again.

    "Toward the end of the '70s, my daughter was at a certain age and I said, 'let's disband the band,' so we went our separate ways," Kay said, noting St. Nicholas and McJohn had been kicked out of the band in the preceding years "for a variety of reasons."

    Since then there have also been various incarnations of the group, including John Kay & Steppenwolf.

    McJohn also went on to play in other groups including Manbeast and Humble Pie.

    Last year, Steppenwolf was shortlisted for inclusion into the 2017 induction class for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame but ultimately was not selected.

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