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Re: Passages

Posted: Wed Oct 14, 2009 6:23 am
by Rufus T. Firefly

Re: Passages

Posted: Wed Oct 14, 2009 6:50 pm
by flyonthewall2983

Re: Passages

Posted: Wed Oct 14, 2009 11:17 pm
by domino harvey
Cuing up "Captain Lou"

Re: Passages

Posted: Thu Oct 15, 2009 5:39 am
by GaryC
Actor, TV director and producer Barry Letts, best known as the producer of Doctor Who 1970-74, the Jon Pertwee era.

Re: Passages

Posted: Thu Oct 15, 2009 5:42 am
by The Elegant Dandy Fop
domino harvey wrote:Cuing up "Captain Lou"
Anyone besides me watching the Super Mario Bros. Super Show in his memory? It hasn't aged well (now that I've grown up, I can see it just was an other eighties cartoon meant to sell a product), but damn they're good memories.

Re: Passages

Posted: Thu Oct 15, 2009 5:02 pm
by Murdoch
The Elegant Dandy Fop wrote:Anyone besides me watching the Super Mario Bros. Super Show in his memory? It hasn't aged well (now that I've grown up, I can see it just was an other eighties cartoon meant to sell a product), but damn they're good memories.
While I didn't watch an episode, I did watch the opening credits/theme song on youtube. It was fun just to see Capt. Lou dancing while that terrible song played.

Re: Passages

Posted: Fri Oct 16, 2009 3:51 am
by dad1153
Jules Power, creator/producer of the original "Mr. Wizard" (NBC) as well as "Discovery" (ABC) children's show.

Re: Passages

Posted: Sun Oct 18, 2009 6:58 pm
by Antares

Re: Passages

Posted: Mon Oct 19, 2009 2:53 am
by Rufus T. Firefly

Re: Passages

Posted: Mon Oct 19, 2009 11:03 am
by Polybius
Antares wrote:George Tuska
One of those guys (like Werner Roth and Don Heck, just to name a couple) who sometimes get lost in the shuffle of Marvel history.

Re: Passages

Posted: Mon Oct 19, 2009 11:28 am
by HerrSchreck
Murdoch wrote:
The Elegant Dandy Fop wrote:Anyone besides me watching the Super Mario Bros. Super Show in his memory? It hasn't aged well (now that I've grown up, I can see it just was an other eighties cartoon meant to sell a product), but damn they're good memories.
While I didn't watch an episode, I did watch the opening credits/theme song on youtube. It was fun just to see Capt. Lou dancing while that terrible song played.
I always remember him with the band NRBQ during an appearance on the great old Uncle Floyd Show, singing with the band their tribute song, entitled--curiously-- Captain Lou Albano! I wish they had not only that appearance but a lot more full episodes.. hell seasons... of Floyd.

Mr. Bill... OH NOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Re: Passages

Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2009 7:23 am
by Rufus T. Firefly
Joseph Wiseman
Joseph Wiseman, a longtime stage and screen actor most widely known for playing the villainous title character in "Dr. No," the first feature film about James Bond, died on Monday at his home in Manhattan. He was 91.

His daughter, Martha Graham Wiseman, confirmed the death, saying her father had recently been in declining health.

Re: Passages

Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2009 8:33 am
by MichaelB
Ludovic Kennedy - primarily a highly distinguished British television journalist, but also with two important film connections: Ten Rillington Place (1970) was based on his research, and he had a very long and by all accounts extremely happy 56-year marriage to The Red Shoes' Moira Shearer, which lasted until her death in 2006.

He also presented very possibly the scariest television programme I've ever seen in my life. A Guide to Armageddon went out in the BBC's QED strand on 26 July 1982, and consisted of a scrupulously dispassionate account of precisely what a nuclear war between the US and Russia (which seemed highly plausible at the time) would entail in terms of collateral damage. Kennedy's intro, in which he stressed that the programme "is not trying to make any political point", has permanently lodged itself in my mind.

(You can watch it on YouTube if you're feeling masochistic, but this version is the later one without Kennedy's intro).

Re: Passages

Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2009 9:36 pm
by fdm

Re: Passages

Posted: Thu Oct 22, 2009 6:35 pm
by colinr0380

Re: Passages

Posted: Thu Oct 22, 2009 9:08 pm
by fdm

Re: Passages

Posted: Thu Oct 22, 2009 10:34 pm
by Props55
The article doesn't mention Paxton's work as founder of a regional theatre group which performed for decades around Highlands. I had the pleasure of working with her in 1987 when she had a small bit in the Hallmark production of FOXFIRE with Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy. Standing behind the counter of a small country store I at first thought she was a local getting her 15 minutes of fame. Yet she looked vaguely familiar and seemed too briskly professional to be a neophyte. Finally I broke down and asked producer Dorothea Petrie where I could possibly have seen her before. She smiled and said, "Perhaps you saw her in TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD?" Instantly I realized who she was! It's one of those performances that everyone remembers. She's also quite memorable in that very weird adapation of Ray Bradbury's THE JAR produced for ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS.

Re: Passages

Posted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 4:17 am
by fdm

Re: Passages

Posted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 9:28 pm
by colinr0380
Troy Kennedy-Martin original writer of Z-Cars, Edge of Darkness (the TV series), the original Italian Job, Kelly's Heroes and, ahem, contributor to screenplay of Red Heat.

Re: Passages

Posted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 9:36 pm
by ellipsis7
Perkins Cobb wrote:Troy Kennedy Martin, author of the brilliant The Italian Job.
Already recorded some while back - but glad to repeat again IMHO Troy was a great man who gave me generously professional help and advice twice several years apart, both when I needed it...

Re: Passages

Posted: Sun Oct 25, 2009 5:44 am
by esl
Actor Lou Jacobi Dies at 95

Re: Passages

Posted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 7:50 am
by Rufus T. Firefly
Yoshiro Muraki
Art director and production designer Yoshiro Muraki died of heart failure at his home in Setagaya, Tokyo, on Monday night. He was 85.

Muraki was known for working on many films by director Akira Kurosawa, including "Kagemusha" in 1980 and "Ran" in 1985, both of which earned him Academy Award nominations for Best Art Direction. Before those, Muraki received a joint nomination for the same award in 1970 for his contribution to "Tora! Tora! Tora!," as well as a nomination for the Academy Award for Costume Design for "Yojimbo" in 1961.

Besides the Kurosawa movies he worked on, Muraki's credits include Shiro Moritani's "Japan Sinks" in 1973 and Kon Ichikawa's "47 Ronin" in 1994.

Re: Passages

Posted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 4:27 pm
by The Elegant Dandy Fop
How terrible. On all the It's Wonderful to Create shorts, he's always the most energetic and youthful one they interview. I specifically remember in the Ran interview, he must in his late seventies but he's happily wearing a Guns N' Roses shirt. Not to even mention how much his sets contributed to Kurosawa's films.

Re: Passages

Posted: Tue Nov 03, 2009 4:27 pm
by Perkins Cobb
Jose Luis Lopez Vazquez, one of the great Spanish character actors and the star of Carlos Saura's Peppermint Frappe and The Garden of Delights.

Re: Passages

Posted: Wed Nov 04, 2009 11:57 pm
by Antares