[DeadCelebrityAlert] ‘Beetle Bailey’ creator Mort Walker, 94, created laughter ‘nearly every day of his life’

 



MORT WALKER was one of those people whose eyes smiled every bit as brightly as their mouth. And so, when I sat next to the tuxedoed cartoonist at a 2010 Jersey City dinner and asked him whether he ever had trouble coming up with ideas, he got a playful glint in his eye before he replied: "The other day, I took my wife to the doctor. I waited an hour. By the time she came out, I'd written a few dozen jokes."

Even that anecdote was delivered with the snap of an old-school one-liner. Whether he was wearing a military uniform in World War II Italy or black-tie in modern Jersey, Walker was forever determined to find the funny in life..

How else could a true "gag man" succeed over eight decades, graduating from greeting cards to become one of the most-read cartoonists on the planet?

Walker created or co-created such globally popular strips as "Beetle Bailey" and "Hi and Lois," as well as "Boner's Ark" and "Sam's Strip." His work was visually clean and narratively quick, with deft setups and clear targets. He loved wordplay and pratfalls, but mostly, he knew his comic strips needed funny people you could relate to on some level.

And maybe that was the greatest comic gift of Mort Walker, who died Saturday morning at his Stamford, Conn., home after battling pneumonia, according to the National Cartoonists Society. He was 94, and still active in the comics industry.

"I was fortunate to get to know Mort Walker through my membership in the National Cartoonists Society," Bill Morrison told The Washington Post's Comic Riffs on Saturday, noting that as president of the NCS, he presented Walker with the Medal of Honor award in 2016 at the Society of Illustrators in New York.

"Mort was the cartoonist that everyone in our field aspires to be," Morrison says. "He created laughter out of thin air nearly every day of his life, and entertained multiple millions over the course of eight decades with his iconic characters.

"For us doodlers, I don't think it gets any better than that."

When I spoke with Walker in 2010, at the National Cartoonists Society's big Reuben Awards ceremony, he held court in a manner that befit one of the elder statesmen of the room. To a good extent, this was still his room, with an organization he had led a half-century earlier. Walker simply had a warmth and a way that caused him to command attention, whether on the page or the stage.

He sold his first cartoon by age 12, as a Kansas City fifth-grader. He published more than 100 cartoons in magazines while still a teenager, and sold a comic strip to the Kansas City Journal. Soon, he was working for the company that would become Hallmark, and he told his bosses that they needed to provide humorous cards. They listened. "I helped change the industry," Walker told me of his gravitational pull toward writing funny.

He was drafted into the Army Air Corps during World War II, but within the world of Walker, even that sometimes turned comically absurd. He spent time at Camp Crowder, which he said inspired "Beetle Bailey's" Camp Swampy. "I signed up to go into psychiatry," he told me in 2013 of the Army's specialized training program, "and I ended up studying engineering. It was typical Army reasoning."

And even when Walker was put in charge of 10,000 Germans in a prisoner-of-war camp in Naples, he said, "I sort of made up my own rules all the way along."

Walker attended the University of Missouri after the war, and the idea for an Army-themed strip evolved from the original concept inspired by friends. Several years later, "Beetle Bailey" became one of the last comic strips personally approved by famed media magnate William Randolph Hearst. "Beetle Bailey" is syndicated by King Features to this day, nearly 70 years later.

Once Walker landed in New York, his wit and ambition only grew. He helped created the NCS's Reuben Award, he said, and pushed for the group's inclusion of women artists. He launched the "Beetle Bailey" spinoff strip "Hi and Lois" with Dik Browne.

And by the time he was anchored in Stamford, Conn., as noted in writer Cullen Murphy's recent memoir "Cartoon County," Walker's studio was so prolific that it was jokingly referred to as a King Features satellite office. (Walker's sons Brian and Greg would join in producing his strips, and son Neal would join the studio.)

Walker wrote such books as "The Lexicon of Comicana," which is filled with his coinage of comics terms, and he established the nation's first cartoon art museum in the 1970s.

In recent years, "Beetle Bailey" was syndicated to 1,800 newspapers in more than 50 countries.

So as Walker and I spoke in 2013, as he turned 90, what did he think his legacy might be?

"I think a lot of that depends on the rest of the world," he said. "What's the future of newspapers? I might be leaving a legacy of failure to my children. It's like Kodak — nobody buys film anymore. I have a typewriter sitting in the corner that I haven't used in 15 years."

As ever, Mort Walker viewed even life's darker shades through the prism of humor. Everything, even war, was fodder for jokes. It was his way to rewrite the rules, so he made sure to get the last laugh.

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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Robert Dowdell

 

Robert Dowdell as Chip Morton on ABC's 'Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea.'
Earlier, he appeared as Jack Lord's sidekick on 'Stoney Burke,' a TV Western.

Robert Dowdell, the versatile actor who had supporting roles on Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea and Stoney Burke, two ABC series of the 1960s, has died. He was 85.

Dowdell died Tuesday of natural causes in Coldwater, Michigan, family spokeswoman Diane Kachmar told The Hollywood Reporter.  

On 109 episodes of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea from 1964-68, Dowdell portrayed Chip Morton, the lieutenant commander on the submarine Seaview under the command of Adm. Harriman Nelson (Richard Basehart). The series was created by Irwin Allen, based on his 1961 movie of the same name.

The filmmaker later would cast Dowdell in another underwater adventure — City Beneath the Sea (1971) — and on the TV series Land of the Giants and on the 1986 CBS telefilm Outrage.

Stoney Burke ran for 32 episodes in the 1962-63 season. It featured future Hawaii Five-O star Jack Lord in the title role as a rodeo rider, with Dowdell as his sidekick, Cody Bristol, who follows him around the rodeo circuit. (Bruce Dern and Warren Oates also were regulars on the show..) Dowdell received $750 a week for his role.

Dowdell was born on March 10, 1932, in Park Ridge, Illinois. His early jobs were as a pinsetter at a Chicago bowling alley, a mail carrier for the ABC network, a hunting guide in Mexico and a railroad brakeman.

He enlisted with the Army Corps of Engineers, and it was then that he discovered his passion for acting. He appeared on Broadway opposite Joanne Woodward and Hurd Hatfield in The Lovers, a 1956 play that was written by Leslie Stevens; he later would produce and direct for Stoney Burke, and he encouraged Dowdell to audition for the TV show.

Dowdell polished his skills under noted acting coach Wynn Handman. His subsequent theater appearances included Love Me Little opposite Susan Kohner; Viva Madison Avenue! with Buddy Hackett; Five Finger Exerciseopposite Jessica Tandy (with direction by John Gielgud); and The Midnight Sun, helmed by John Frankenheimer, who later cast Dowdell in the 1960 telefilm Fifth Column opposite Richard Burton and Maximilian Schell.

The actor also popped up on the 1950s anthology series Studio One in Hollywood and Buick-Electra Playhouseand on shows including Moment of Fear, Adam-12, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century and CHiPs.

Dowdell was married to actress Sheila Connolly for 14 years until their 1979 divorce.

Survivors include his cousins Harry, Linda and Ted, who noted that Dowdell was "truly amazed so many of you were his fans and told him so, with posts, signed picture requests and cards."

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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Joel Taylor of Discovery Channel's Storm Chasers Dead at Age 38

 



The storm chasing community is reeling from the news of Joel Taylor's sudden death. He was 38.

The Elk City, Oklahoma, native, who starred on Discovery Channel's documentary reality television series Storm Chasers, died on Tuesday, according to his friends who shared the sad news on social media.

Reps for the Discovery Channel did not immediately respond to a request for comment from PEOPLE.

Best friend and former costar Reed Timmer dedicated a touching message to Taylor on Twitter.

"RIP my best friend and storm chasing partner, Joel Taylor. I am shocked and absolutely devastated by the loss of my incredible, caring friend," Timmer tweeted along with photos of them when they were chasing storms together since 2008.

"We chased so many intense storms, and I wish we could have just one more storm chase. I'll miss you forever, Joel. We lost a legend," added Timmer, who attended the University of Oklahoma with Taylor, who studied meteorology. 
Reed Timmer‏Verified account @ReedTimmerAccuFollowFollow @ReedTimmerAccuMore
RIP my best friend and storm chasing partner, Joel Taylor. I am shocked and absolutely devastated by the loss of my incredible, caring friend. We chased so many intense storms, and I wish we could have just one more storm chase. I'll miss you forever, Joel. We lost a legend.

Another friend, Mike Olbinski, remembered Taylor's bright smile.

"I was lucky enough to meet Joel a few years ago at Reed's wedding. He was so kind to me and we got to hang out for a bit during those few days," Olbinski tweeted with a photo from the wedding. "I snapped this photo of him and that just seemed like who he was. A huge smile. RIP Joel Taylor…you will be so missed."

Taylor's storm chasing team also expressed their condolences.

"Our community of Elk City and the Storm Chasing community lost a great guy today. Joel Taylor was truly an inspiration to myself and many who knew him. He was one of the most level headed chasers on the roads and truly a classy guy outside of chasing," Team Western OK Chaser shared on Facebook.

"He didn't chase for the glory he chased because he had a true passion for storms. In the last few years he'd load up with his dad and go chase and not even take a camera," the group said. "Our hearts are hurting for his mom Tracy and dad Jimmy along with his brother and sister and their children. Please know you are in our prayers. RIP Joel."

Storm Chasers was filmed each year in the area known as Tornado Alley due to the frequency and severity of tornadoes occurring there in the central part of the country. Several teams of storm chasers appeared in the series and Taylor joined the cast in early 2008 as part of the team from the website TornadoVideos.Net (TVN) that was led by Timmer.

The show was canceled after five seasons in January 2012.

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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Jim Rodford, Kinks and Argent Bassist, Dead at 76

 


"Jim was not only a magnificent bass player, but also inextricably bound to the story of The Zombies," cousin and bandmate Rod Argent writes
Jim Rodford, a founding member of Argent and bassist for the Kinks and the Zombies, died Saturday at the age of 76. 
Rodford's cousin and longtime band mate Rod Argent confirmed Rodford's death on the Zombies' Facebook page, with Argent adding that Rodford died Saturday following "a fall on the stairs."

"Jim was not only a magnificent bass player, but also from the first inextricably bound to the story of The Zombies. An enormous enabler for us," Argent wrote in his long tribute to Rodford. "To the end, Jim's life was dedicated to music. He was unfailingly committed to local music - an ever present member of the local scene in St.Albans, where he had spent his whole life."

The Kinks, who recruited Rodford following bassist John Dalton's permanent exit from the band in 1978, also paid tribute to Rodford on Twitter. "It is with deep sadness that we have learned that Jim Rodford passed away - he toured and recorded with the Kinks for many years and will be greatly missed. He was much loved by all of us," the band wrote.

Rodford spent 18 years as the Kinks' bassist, performing on every album from 1979's Low Budgetto 1993's Phobia, the band's final LP before their breakup three years later.

As Argent wrote in his tribute to his cousin, Rodford was the first musician Argent attempted to add to his then-fledgling Zombies, but the bassist ultimately turned down the job since he was already a member of the popular British band the Bluetones. However, Rodford was instrumental in the development of the Zombies, lending the group the Bluetones' equipment, orchestrating the Zombies' early shows and "passing judgment" on their breakout 1964 single "She's Not There," penned by Argent.

Rodford also served as bassist in the Mike Cotton Sound before the Zombies' initial breakup in 1967; two years later, Argent would finally unite with his cousin to co-found Argent alongside drummer Bob Henrit and singer/guitarist Russ Ballard. Rodford would appear on all seven Argent albums – including the band's best-known song "Hold Your Head Up" – before that band dissolved in 1976.

Two years later, Rodford embarked on his nearly two-decade-long tenure with the Kinks. Dave Davies tweeted of Rodford Saturday, "I'm devastated Jim's sudden loss I'm too broken up to put words together it's such a shock I always thought Jim would live forever in true rock and roll fashion - strange - great friend great musician great man - he was an integral part of the Kinks later years."

Rodford also played bass in the Kast Off Kinks, a group made up of Kinks expats like Mick Avory and Ian Gibbons, beginning in the late 2000s.

Over 40 years after he was first asked, Rodford finally joined the Zombies when Argent and singer Colin Blunstone revived the band in 2004; Rodford and his son, drummer Steve Rodford, remained members of the Zombies' touring unit until the bassist's death. Rodford also appeared on the group's 2015 comeback LP Still Got That Hunger.

Argent continued in his tribute to Rodford, "Jim was a wonderful person, loved by everybody. When Colin [Blunstone] and I, shocked and hardly able to talk, shared the news this morning, Colin said 'I've never heard anyone say a bad word about him...' He will be unbelievably missed. Goodnight and God Bless dear friend."
From Facebook:
It is with deep sadness that I learned this morning that my dear cousin and lifelong friend, Jim Rodford, died this morning after a fall on the stairs.. More details are not yet known about the exact cause of death.

Jim was not only a magnificent bass player, but also from the first inextricably bound to the story of The Zombies. An enormous enabler for us. He was actually the first person ever to be asked to join the band, way back in 1961. Because he was in the top St.Albans band of the time (The Bluetones), he turned us down at first, but from day one helped us chart our course. He loaned us The Bluestones' state of the art gear for our very first rehearsal, arranged the rehearsal space, and even showed Hugh the first kick and snare drum pattern our original drummer ever learned. He was responsible for the first song I ever wrote (for The Bluetones - which they recorded); the person who organised most of our early gigs, and the very first person outside the group ever to hear - and pass judgement on - our first record, "She's Not There"(he loved it). Years later, he became founder member, with me, of Argent; and then, for eighteen years, throughout a hugely successful American period for them, was bass player for The Kinks. 
Jim, always a hugely sought after musician, had also had long stints as bass player with both The Mike Cotton Sound and the Lonnie Donegan band.

When Colin and I put together our second incarnation in late 1999, our first phone call was to Jim. He gave us absolutely unflagging commitment, loyalty and unbelievable energy for eighteen years, and our gratitude is beyond measure.

To the end, Jim's life was dedicated to music. He was unfailingly committed to local music - an ever present member of the local scene in St.Albans, where he had spent his whole life. Often, Colin and I would compare notes a couple of days immediately after a U.S. tour and discuss how long it would take us to recover from an intense, fantastic but exhausting couple of months - only to find out and marvel that Jim had already been out playing with local bands (often, but not always, with "The Rodford Files", made up of talented family members) or giving charity shows or lectures on the St.Albans music scene. 
His dedication was rewarded with Doctorate Of Music, granted to him last year by the University Of Hertfordshire.
Jim was a wonderful person, loved by everybody. When Colin and I, shocked and hardly able to talk, shared the news this morning, Colin said " I've never heard anyone say a bad word about him..."
He will be unbelievably missed. Goodnight and God Bless dear friend. - Rod x

Kinks: the kinks- you really got me

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the kinks- you really got me

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The Zombies: The Zombies feat. Colin Blunstone & Rod Argent - She's Not There

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The Zombies feat. Colin Blunstone & Rod Argent - She's Not There

In January 2011 The Zombies performed a superb set to 120 enraptured guests packed into Metropolis Studios in We...
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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Dorothy Malone, 'Peyton Place' Star and Oscar Winner, Dies at 92

 



She won her Academy Award for 'Written on the Wind' and had memorable roles in 'The Big Sleep,' 'Man of a Thousand Faces' and 'Too Much, Too Soon.'

Dorothy Malone, the matriarch of TV's Peyton Place who received an Oscar for playing the sex-crazed sister of playboy Robert Stack in the 1956 melodrama Written on the Wind, has died. She was 92.

The big-eyed, dark-haired beauty, who flourished in Hollywood soon after she went platinum blonde in the mid-1950s, died Friday morning in Dallas, her manager, Burt Shapiro, told The Hollywood Reporter. She had been ill for the past few years.

Malone also starred in the biopic Man of a Thousand Faces (1957), playing opposite James Cagney as Lon Chaney's emotionally charred first wife, and was the moody and tempestuous Diana Barrymore in Too Much, Too Soon (1958), with Errol Flynn as her father, acting legend John Barrymore.

She was lots of fun as Dean Martin's love interest in the Lewis & Martin musical comedy Artists and Models(1955). And for her final credit, she had a brief but memorable cameo in Basic Instinct (1992) as a released murderess befriended by Sharon Stone.

Earlier, Malone stirred the film noir faithful with a brief scene in The Big Sleep (1946), when, as a bookstore proprietress, she closed up her shop, seductively removed her glasses and shared a bit of whiskey with Philip Marlowe (Humphrey Bogart) on a rainy night.

For millions of Americans, however, the Dallas-reared Malone was best known for playing overprotective single mother Constance MacKenzie on ABC's Peyton Place, the first primetime serialized drama on U.S. television.

The half-hour show, which ran for five seasons on ABC from 1964-69 — and three times a week at its peak — was based on the sensational 1956 novel of the same name by Grace Metalious and preceded by a 1957 movie that starred Lana Turner as Constance. The TV version was one of the first to deal frankly with sex and as such didn't air until 9:30 p.m., when the kids were presumable asleep.

Malone, whose daughter on Peyton Place was played by Frank Sinatra's soon-to-be wife Mia Farrow, suffered a pulmonary embolism while working on the series in 1965, and she underwent seven hours of life-saving surgery after more than 30 blood clots were found in her lungs. Lola Albright temporarily replaced her on the show.

After complaining her character was being slighted in storylines, Malone was written out of the series in 1968. She sued 20th Century Fox for $1.6 million, and the case was settled. She returned to the franchise in the 1977 NBC telefilm Murder in Peyton Place.

In Douglas Sirk's steamy Technicolor masterwork Written on the Wind (1956), Malone lit up the big screen as Marylee Hadley, the sexy but spiteful sister of off-the-wagon oil heir Stack who lusts after Rock Hudson's character — but he's in love with Stack's pregnant wife (her Big Sleep co-star Lauren Bacall). Jack Lemmon presented her with her supporting actress Oscar at the Pantages.

She was back with Sirk, Hudson and Stack in The Tarnished Angels (1957); co-starred with Robert Taylor in Tip on a Dead Jockey (1957); played opposite Fred MacMurray in Quantez (1957); and starred in Robert Aldrich's The Last Sunset (1961) as a cattleman's wife engaged in messy romantic entanglements with Hudson, Kirk Douglas and Joseph Cotton.

Dorothy Eloise Maloney was born in Chicago on Jan. 30, 1925. As a child, her family moved to Dallas, and she modeled and signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures at age 18 while attending Southern Methodist University and planning to become a nurse.

After that deal lapsed, Warner Bros. noticed her, shortened her name from Maloney to Malone and placed her in Howard Hawks' noir detective thriller The Big Sleep.

After she lowers the shade on the front door of the Acme Book Shop and removes a clip from her hair, she tells Bogart, "Looks like we're closed for the rest of the afternoon," as the scene fades to black.

Hawks said later that he put the scene in the movie "just because the girl was so damn pretty."

Malone also stood out in Battle Cry (1955), a World War II story in which she played a lonely, seductive wife who falls in love with a young Marine (Tab Hunter), and became a sought-after leading lady.

Her film credits also include Janie Gets Married (1946), Night and Day (1946), Two Guys From Texas (1948), One Sunday Afternoon (1948), Colorado Territory (1949), South of St. Louis (1949), The Killer That Stalked New York(1950), Young at Heart (1954), Loophole (1954), Pushover (1954), Sincerely Yours (1955), Fast and the Furious(1955), Pillars of the Sky (1956), Warlock (1959), Beach Party (1963) and Winter Kills (1979).

She performed on live TV during the 1950s when she was between motion pictures. She did installments of Omnibus (with Jack Benny), Four Star Playhouse and Fireside Theatre and guested on The Rosemary Clooney Show. She later appeared on such series as The Untouchables, Ironside, Rich Man, Poor Man and Matt Houston.

In 1959, Malone married French actor Jacques Bergerac (the former husband of Ginger Rogers and fourth of her five) while she was in Hong Kong filming The Last Voyage (1960). That marriage ended in a contested and very public divorce.

She married businessman Robert Tomarkin in April 1969, but that union was annulled within weeks after she claimed he was out to swindle her. (Years later, he pleaded guilty to grand larceny and served time in jail.) A final marriage, to Dallas motel executive Charles Huston Bell, lasted from 1971-74..

Survivors include her two daughters with Bergerac, Mimi and Diane. Her younger brother Will died at age 16 in 1955 when he was struck by lightning on a Dallas golf course.

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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Bradford Dillman, Actor in 'Compulsion' and 'The Way We Were,' Dies at 87

 



He also appeared in the original Broadway production of 'Long Day's Journey Into Night' and in a pair of Dirty Harry movies.

Bradford Dillman, who starred with Dean Stockwell in the taut 1959 crime drama Compulsion and portrayed Edmund in the original Broadway production of Eugene O'Neill's Long Day's Journey Into Night, has died. He was 87.

Dillman died Tuesday in Santa Barbara due to complications from pneumonia, family spokesman Ted Gekis announced.

The lanky, dark-haired Dillman also played Robert Redford's best friend J.J. in The Way We Were (1973), and his daughter Pamela said that it was this movie that "perfectly captured the essence" of her father, particularly during the scene on a boat when the actors reminisce about their lives and best moments.

Dillman also appeared opposite Clint Eastwood in the Dirty Harry films The Enforcer (1976) and Sudden Impact(1983).

In director Richard Fleischer's Compulsion, derived from the infamous Leopold & Loeb case of the 1920s, Dillman and Stockwell starred as the brazen killers Arthur A. Straus and Judd Steiner, respectively, who think they have committed the perfect murder.

Dillman, Stockwell and Orson Welles (who played their attorney) shared best actor honors at the 1959 Cannes Film Festival. The Fox film was an adaptation of a Broadway hit, with Dillman taking on the role that Roddy McDowall had originated on the stage.

Dillman's family said that he was most proud of his work in Compulsion, along with his portrayal of Willie Oban in O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh (1973), an adaptation directed by John Frankenheimer for the American Film Theater.

Dillman had made his Broadway debut in 1956 in Long Day's Journey into Night, creating the role of the author's alter ego, Edmund Tyrone, for 390 performances and winning a Theater World Award in the process..

However, it was Stockwell who played Edmund in Sidney Lumet's 1962 movie version.

Dillman was born on April 14, 1930, in San Francisco, the third of the four children. He grew up in the city but spent his summers in Santa Barbara acting in local theater productions.

He attended boarding school at the Hotchkiss School in Connecticut and Yale University, where he studied English and drama, then entered the U.S. Marine Corps and served as a lieutenant in the Korean War.

After an honorable discharge, Dillman auditioned for Lee Strasburg and entered the Actors Studio alongside fellow classmates James Dean and Marilyn Monroe.

Following Long Day's Journey Into Night and a role in Katharine Cornell's Hallmark Hall of Fame production of Robert E. Sherwood's Pulitzer Prize-winning There Shall Be No Night, Dillman was signed by 20th Century Fox. He was cast in the 1958 films A Certain Smile and In Love and War and received the Golden Globe for most promising newcomer — male in 1959.

In 1961, Dillman had the title role in Francis of Assisi, directed by Michael Curtiz.

Omnipresent on television throughout the 1960s and '70s, Dillman had a recurring role on Dr. Kildare, starred with Peter Graves in the short-lived series Court Martial and guest-starred on shows including The Name of the Game; The Wild, Wild West; Mission: Impossible; The Man From U.N.C.L.E.; Columbo; Ironside; Barnaby Jones; and The Mary Tyler Moore Show.

His autobiography, Are You Anybody?: An Actor's Life, was published in 1997.

A lifelong fan of the San Francisco 49ers, Dillman was invited in the late '70s by coach Bill Walsh and owner Eddie DeBartolo to sit in on NFL Draft sessions, and he gave the team a suggested pick for the next 20 years. He wrote a book about another NFL team, Inside the New York Giants, in 1995.

Survivors include his children Jeffrey, Pamela, Charlie, Christopher and Dinah and stepdaughter Georgia. He was married to Frieda Harding McIntosh and, from 1963 until her death in 2003, model and actress Suzy Parker, whom he met in London while they made A Circle of Deception (1960).

The family asks that a donation in his memory be made to Visiting Nurse and Hospice Care in Santa Barbara.

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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Doreen Tracey, an Original Mouseketeer, Dies at 74

 



After 'The Mickey Mouse Club,' she worked at Warner Bros. Records doing promotion for the likes of Frank Zappa, Tower of Power and The Doobie Brothers.

Doreen Tracey, one of the original Mouseketeers on the fabled kids' program The Mickey Mouse Club, has died. She was 74.

Tracey died Wednesday at Los Robles Hospital and Medical Center in Thousand Oaks, California, after a two-year battle with cancer, Disney publicist Howard Green announced.

A kid with a vivacious personality, Tracey appeared on Disney's Mickey Mouse Club throughout its original 1955-59 run on ABC. The series then lived on for decades in syndication.

"Our Dodo, as we lovingly nicknamed her, always had a smile on her face," fellow Mouseketeer Tommy Cole said in a statement. "She never failed to make us all feel good, and we will miss her."

Tracey was born in London on April 3, 1943. Her parents, Bessie Hay and Sid Tracey, were Americans who had a vaudeville dance act known as Tracey & Hay.

When Tracey was 4, the family returned to the U.S., and her father opened a dance studio in Hollywood. It was there that Tracey learned to sing and dance, and she had an uncredited part in The Farmer Takes a Wife(1953), starring Betty Grable and Dale Robertson.

At age 12, Tracey auditioned for a job on The Mickey Mouse Club — she sang a Patti Page number called "Cross Over the Bridge" — and was hired.

While a Mouseketeer, Tracey also was cast in the Disney feature Westward Ho the Wagons! (1956), starring Fess Parker. She also appeared on The Mickey Mouse Club's Annette serial and on The Donna Reed Show and toured Australia with the Mouseketeers.

In the 1960s, Tracey visited American military bases in South Vietnam and Thailand with her own act. Later, she worked in promotions at Warner Bros. Records with acts including Frank Zappa, Tower of Power and The Doobie Brothers.

In the 1980s, '90s and 2000s, Tracey co-starred with former Mouseketeers in several Mickey Mouse Clubreunion shows at Disneyland and at Disney conventions. She last celebrated the show's 60th anniversary in 2015.

Survivors include her son, Bradley, and grandchildren Gavin and Autumn

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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Donnelly Rhodes, 'The Flash' and 'Soap' Actor, Dies at 80

 



Canadian actor Donnelly Rhodes, best known for character roles like the hapless escaped con Dutch Leitner on ABC's soap opera spoof Soap and Doc Sherman Cottle on Battlestar Galactica, has died. He was 80..

Rhodes died Jan. 8 after a battle with cancer at the Baillie House Hospice in Maple Ridge, British Columbia, according to a statement from the Northern Exposure talent agency. Rhodes' other major TV credits include Vancouver-shot series like The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow, Da Vinci's Inquest and Tron: Legacy.

Rhodes was born Dec. 4, 1937, in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and first tried his hand in theater while in the Royal Canadian Air Force. After studying at the Manitoba Theatre Center and the National Theatre School, he joined the Stratford Festival in 1963, where he played Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire.

After roles on varied CBC TV series, Rhodes went to Hollywood and became a contract player for Universal Pictures, where he appeared in movies like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and TV series like Wagon Train, Dr. Kildare, Golden Girls and Mission Impossible. In 1973, Rhodes boarded the American soap opera The Young and the Restless.

That was followed by a stint on the CBC crime drama Sidestreets back in Canada. His other major roles included Dr. Grant Roberts on Danger Bay and Detective Leo Shannon on the CBC drama Da Vinci's Inquest.

Rhodes also had recurring roles on another CBC drama, Street Legal, and on Battlestar Galactica as Dr. Cottle from 2004 to 2009. Battlestar Galactica writer-producer Ronald Moore on his Twitter account expressed his sadness at Rhodes' passing, writing: "He was a lovely man and I so enjoyed writing for him. Admired his work ever since Soap. He will be missed."

Fellow Battlestar Galactica actor Tricia Helfer added on her Twitter account: "Saddened to hear of Donnelly Rhodes passing. Loved working with him on BSG. A lovely man who made a terrific Doc Cottle. RIP."

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[DeadCelebrityAlert] Astronaut John Young has died at age 87

 



Astronaut John Young  -- the first man to make six trips to space and the ninth to walk the moon -- died Friday night from complications from pneumonia. He was 87.

Young was one of the nation's longest-serving astronauts, spending 47 years leading missions in the Gemini, Apollo and space shuttle programs.

"Today, NASA and the world have lost a pioneer," NASA Administrator Robert Lightfoot said. "Astronaut John Young's storied career spanned three generations of spaceflight; we will stand on his shoulders as we look toward the next human frontier."

Young's bravery and commitment "sparked our nation's first great achievements in space. But, not content with that, his hands-on contributions continued long after the last of his six spaceflights -- a world record at the time of his retirement from the cockpit," Lightfoot said in a prepared statement.

He served in the U.S. Navy for 25 years, retiring as a captain in 1976. The pilot joined NASA in 1962 in the second astronaut class, known as the "New Nine." Young was inspired to join NASA by President John F. Kennedy's 1961 call to land a man on the moon.

"I thought returning safely to Earth sounded like a good idea," said Young, according to a NASA statement.

Lightfoot noted that Young commanded the Gemini 10, the first mission to rendezvous with two separate spacecraft; orbited the moon in Apollo 10; landed on the moon as commander of the Apollo 16 mission; and, on his final mission, landed the STS-9 with a fire in the back end.

In early 1973, Young became chief of the Space Shuttle Branch of the Astronaut Office at Johnson Space Center. The following year, he was named chief of the Astronaut Office, a post he held until May 1987.

During his decades, he received a Congressional Space Medal of Honor, three NASA Distinguished Service Medals, the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal, two Navy Distinguished Service Medal and dozens of other awards, including four honorary doctorate degrees.

He was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame in 1988.

Young, who lived in El Lago near Clear Lake, retired in 2004 after logging 835 hours in space.

"I've been very lucky, I think," Young said at his retirement from NASA in 2004. As to which moment was most memorable, he says simply, "I liked them all."

Around his retirement, Young recounted his first trip to the moon on Apollo 10 with the Houston Chronicle. "The impressive thing about the back side of the moon is how many darn craters it has," he said. "If the back side of the moon was facing us, I think human beings would be far more adaptive, far more educated, about (asteroid or comet) impacts on planet Earth."

Former President George H. W. Bush mourned the loss of the astronaut in a statement Saturday, saying that Young was a good friend and also "a fearless patriot whose courage and commitment to duty helped our Nation push back the horizon of discovery at a critical time."

Bush went on to say that Young, "represented the best in the American spirit — always looking forward, always reaching higher" and "leaves a tremendous legacy of accomplishment, in addition to his wonderful family."

Former NASA astronaut Terry Virts shared his sadness about Young's death, tweeting on Saturday: "You were one of my heroes as an astronaut and explorer and your passion for space will be missed."

Retired NASA astronaut Scott Kelly, who spent 340 days on a mission to the International Space Station, called Young "a true legend" and "the astronauts' astronaut," in a statement posted to Facebook Saturday.

"Fair winds and following seas, Captain," he wrote.

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