Showing posts with label Another Celebrity died. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Another Celebrity died. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Director Gary Winick dies, aged 49

Filmmaker Gary Winick has died at the age of 49.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, the Bride Wars and Letters To Juliet director passed away after suffering from brain cancer.

"He was suffering from brain cancer for quite some time, and it ultimately metastasised throughout his body," explained his manager Rosalie Swedlin.

Swedlin, who said that a memorial service for Winick was being planned, added: "What's remarkable is that after his first surgery, he was able to direct Letters To Juliet. It was a battle that we thought he had won, and ultimately they just didn't get it all."

Winick produced 19 independent films after founding production company InDigEnt in 1999.
His other films as a director include 13 Going on 30, Tadpole and Sweet Nothing.

Friday, February 18, 2011

'Narnia' producer Moore dies, aged 39

Perry Moore has been found dead in his Manhattan apartment at the age of 39.

The Chronicles of Narnia producer was found unconscious by his partner Hunter Hill on Thursday from an apparent overdose of the prescription drug OxyContin and was later pronounced dead on the scene, reports the New York Daily News.

Moore's father Bill told the publication: "We're in shock. He was in a great, great mood [when we spoke the night before]. No-one was expecting this.

"He's been able to reach out and touch a lot of people. He was set to do some mighty good things. Parents are not meant to bury their children."

Authorities have not confirmed the cause of death.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Veteran TV, film actor Khayyam Sarhadi dies

LAHORE – Veteran actor Khayyam Sarhadi died of cardiac arrest during picturisation of a TV play here in the City on Thursday. He was 63. His funeral prayers offered at his residence here after Juma prayers. He started his career from theatre and later joined Pakistan Radio but he got fame from number of TV plays like Waris, Anokha Ladla and Man Chale Ka Soda. The actor also performed in three movies including Dakoo and Bobby but he left the film industry. The actor is survived by two widows and three daughters.

Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani expressed grief and sorrow over his sad demise.
In his condolence message, the premier conveyed his heartfelt condolences and sincere sympathies to the members of the bereaved family.

The PM lauded the invaluable contributions of late Khayyam Sarhadi in the field of performing art, saying that his services will be long remembered.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

John Barry dies, aged 77

OBITUARY: John Barry. Composer. Born York, England, November 3, 1933. Died New York, January 30, aged 77.

JOHN Barry did not get the chance to see any footage and had not read any of Ian Fleming's books when he was called in to work on the music for the first James Bond film, Dr No (1962), for which Monty Norman had originally been commissioned to write the score.

"I was just given a timing and told that it was about this Secret Service guy," said Barry, who'd had a few instrumental hits and was already a minor pop star.

The resulting piece of music became one of the most familiar themes in cinema and also one of the most argued over. The official composer credit went to Norman, though the music, as it is used in the film, has the distinctive mix of twangy guitar and brass that was so characteristic of Barry at that time.
During the next quarter century, Barry composed music for a series of James Bond films. He perfected the formula for the big, ballsy theme song on the third instalment, Goldfinger (1964), with the aid of the lyricists Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley and the singer Shirley Bassey. He combined sweeping strings and aggressive brass, fusing pop, jazz, cabaret and musical theatre in something akin to a mini-opera. His monumental theme tunes and powerful scores became vital elements in the classic Bond movies.

Although Barry is most widely celebrated for Bond, he composed for more than 100 films and television programs. He won five Oscars - best song and musical score for Born Free (1966), The Lion in Winter (1968), Out of Africa (1985) and Dances with Wolves (1990) - but never got a nomination for the Bond films.

Born John Barry Prendergast in York in 1933, he showed early musical talent. His father owned several cinemas and Barry became a keen filmgoer, making notes about the films he enjoyed and why. He played the piano as a boy and developed an interest in trumpet in his teens.

After leaving school he played in a dance band and did his national service as a bandsman in Egypt and Cyprus. He left the army and formed his own band, the John Barry Seven, who became regulars on the BBC pop show Drumbeat (1959), with Barry on trumpet. Barry also wrote and arranged songs for Adam Faith, and this association led to Barry first getting involved in films. Faith was cast in Beat Girl (1959) and Barry composed the music.

He had his first Top 20 hit in 1960 with Hit and Miss, the theme for the popular BBC show Juke Box Jury (1959-67). Other hits followed, a mix of original compositions and cover versions, and he also worked on another Faith film, Never Let Go (1960).

No one had any idea just how successful the James Bond films would become when production began on Dr No early in 1962. The producers wanted a piece of music that could serve as a signature theme across several movies. There was talk of bringing in someone of the calibre of William Walton to do further work, but the producers Harry Saltzman and Cubby Broccoli opted for Barry, who was young, cheap and fashionable. Another option was Cliff Richard's group the Shadows.

Crucially, however, Barry had experience of film soundtracks and of arranging pre-existing music. He was hired for a flat fee of pound stg. 250 plus possible involvement in future Bond films.

Although Barry did not get to see any footage, he did meet Norman, who had suggested several pieces of music as the main theme. The basic melody of the eventual theme appears to bear similarity to a piece of music written by Norman for an unproduced stage musical, though the mix of twanging guitar and brass was characteristic of Barry.

Norman retained the composer credit for the tune while Barry and his band recorded it. In 2001, Norman won a libel case against The Sunday Times for an article that falsely suggested Barry had written it. Norman was awarded damages after successfully arguing that the article had damaged his reputation by suggesting that he had wrongly taken credit (and royalties) for the Bond theme.

Goldfinger was the first in a series of theme songs for which Barry wrote the music. Bricusse said later he and Newley tried to match the tongue-in-cheek humour of the action. "I thought it was the silliest lyric I ever wrote," he said. Barry believed the entire score was important, and the Goldfinger soundtrack topped the charts in Britain and the US.

Barry left his first wife for a Swedish woman but that relationship faltered, too, and he enjoyed the single life in London, often in the company of Michael Caine and Terence Stamp.

He wrote his first stage musical, Passion Flower Hotel (1965), with lyricist Trevor Peacock and writer Wolf Mankowitz. The cast included Pauline Collins, Francesca Annis and the 18-year-old Jane Birkin, who had a tiny part in The Knack and would shortly become Barry's second wife, despite the marked gap in their ages. The marriage lasted only a few years.

Barry would go through a third marriage and third divorce by the early 1970s. His fourth marriage, in the late 70s, proved more lasting. He and his wife Laurie, who survives him, lived on Long Island, New York, with their son. Barry had three other children from other relationships.

Some of his best music was for non-Bond projects: the wistful, rolling theme on harmonica from Midnight Cowboy (1969), the haunting score for the BBC mafia drama Vendetta (1966-68), and his optimistic piece The Girl with the Sun in Her Hair (1968), used for a shampoo commercial.

He had another go at musical theatre, teaming up with Alan Jay Lerner in 1971 for a short-lived musical version of Lolita. He fared much better with Billy (1974-76), a West End adaptation of Keith Waterhouse's Billy Liar.

Barry collaborated with several lyricists on the Bond theme songs, including, on Live and Let Die (1973), Paul McCartney. He remained one of cinema's top composers through the 70s and 80s. His last two Bond theme songs, for A View to a Kill (1985) and The Living Daylights (1987), were top 10 hits for Duran Duran and A-ha. His melancholy, nostalgic scores contributed significantly to the Oscar triumphs of Out of Africa and Dances with Wolves.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Bengali Actress Gita Dey And Singer Pintu Bhattacharya Died

Bengali entertainment industry has lost two important artists on Monday. Actress Gita Dey took her last breath at a private hospital in Kolkata at the age of 79 years. As per the hospital sources, she passed away at 12:10 am after staying here for last one-and-a-half month. She was brought to the hospital after a cardiac arrest.

She was a renowned actress of her time with noted films like Ritwik Ghatak's Meghe Dhaka Tara, Satyajit Ray's Teen Kanya, and Komal Gandhar in her kitty. She has also acted in the films like Pareenita, Abhaya o Srikanta, Chirodiner, Prothom Pratisruti, Manjari OperaDey, Phuleswari, Kabi and Byapika Biday. She has around 200 Bengali films and dramas to her credit, which reflects her versatility in acting.

The veteran actress started her acting career only at the age of six in the film Ahuti, which was directed by notable filmmaker Dhiren Ganguly. At the age of 13, she joined the renowned Star Theater and made her association with a well known artist called Sisir Bhaduri.

She received lots of critical acclaims for her performance in Meghe Dhaka Tara. Apart from being cast in the negative roles, Dey has also shown her acting talent in various roles.

On the same day morning at 5:15 am, another Bengali singer Pintu Bhattacharya also died at the Thakurpukur Cancer Hospital in Kolkata. He was 71 years old and had a very melodious and intense voice. He was a very popular Bengali modern singer during the seventies and eighties. He has worked with music directors like Salil Chowdhury and his contribution to the Bengali music is immense. 'Ek Tajmahal Goro Hridoy Tomar', 'Aami Cholte Cholte Theme Gechi', 'Jani Prithibi Jabe Amay Bhule', 'Mayur Pankhi Chore' are some of his hit music which increased his fan following.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Sherbet guitarist dies from lung cancer

Harvey James has died from lung cancer.
The 58-year-old musician, who was best known as the guitarist of Australian band Sherbet, passed away in a Melbourne hospital on Saturday surrounded by his wife Faye, sons Gabriel and Joshua and daughter Alexandra.

Alexandra wrote on Facebook: "Rest in peace my gorgeous, funny, amazing father.

 We will miss you every day forever." She also thanked family, friends and fans for their support since Harvey began cancer treatment six months ago.

Joshua also wrote: "RIP dad, I love you, you'll always be my hero."

Harvey, who recently said that he was "humbled" by his life, was organising a reunion for the band at the Gimme That Guitar concert before his death.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Actress Anne Francis dies, aged 80

Forbidden Planet actress Anne Francis has died at the age of 80.

The film and TV star passed away on Sunday at a Santa Barbara nursing home, a funeral director confirmed to The AP.

Her daughter said that Francis died of complications of pancreatic cancer, the Los Angeles Times reports.

Francis was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2007.

Forbidden Planet was hailed by critics as one of the best sci-fi films of its time. Francis played Altaira 'Alta' Morbius in the 1956 classic, also starring Walter Pidgeon and Leslie Nielsen.

In 1966, Francis won a Golden Globe and was nominated for an Emmy for her lead role in the TV show Honey West.

She also appeared in several other films, including Blackboard Jungle, Bad Day at Black Rock and Rogue Cop.

Francis made several appearances on TV shows, including Gunsmoke, Studio One and The Golden Girls.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

English actor Pete Postlethwaite dies

English actor Pete Postlethwaite, who worked in Steven Spielberg's movies "The Lost World: Jurrassic Park" and "Amistad", died peacefully in hospital at the age of 64 after a long period of cancer.

Friends said the Oscar nominee passed away peacefully in hospital in Shropshire Sunday. He is survived by his wife, Jacqui, his son, Will, and daughter, Lily, reports guardian.co.uk.

Postlethwaite was once described by Spielberg as "probably the best actor in the world today".

The craggy-featured actor received an Oscar nomination for his performance as Guiseppe Conlon in the 1993 film "In The Name Of The Father", about the wrongful convictions of the Guildford Four.

His notable films included the 1996 film "Brassed Off" in which he played the leader of a colliery band in a Yorkshire community devastated by mine closures. The film was a favourite of the former British deputy prime minister John Prescott, and became the inspiration for a coalfield regeneration programme.

Postlethwaite also played the menacing criminal mastermind Kobayashi in the 1995 hit film "The Usual Suspects".

In recent years he became known as much for his political activism. He was the front man in the climate change film "The Age of Stupid", arriving at the 2009 London premiere on a bicycle.

After the film's release he threatened to hand back the OBE he was awarded in 2004 over the government's controversial decision to give the go-ahead for Kingsnorth coal-fired power station in Kent.

He also adapted his home to become environmentally responsible, installing a wind turbine and other features.

In 2003, he marched against the war in Iraq and was a vocal supporter of the Make Poverty History campaign.

Born in Warrington, he had originally planned to be a priest. He later became a teacher but eventually took to the stage, beginning his career at the Everyman theatre in Liverpool.

In 2008 he returned to play the lead in "King Lear", a role he had always wanted to play. The performance was one of the highlights of Liverpool's year as the European Capital of Culture.

Friday, December 31, 2010

Boney M lead singer Farrell dies aged 61

Bobby Farrell, the only male member of the disco group Boney M, died here aged 61, an official said Thursday.

"A probe (into his death) is underway," the source said without elaborating.

The website of City Concert entertainment agency said Farrell and Boney M were to perform two shows in St. Petersburg Dec 28 and 29, but their location was not disclosed.

Russian media reported that the band was to perform at a private party.

A Russian tabloid, Life News, said Farrell felt ill after a conflict during his show, and died of a heart attack.

A source close to the organizers said Farrell's long-time co-performer, Liz Mitchell, was in tears over his death.

Mitchell's husband, Thomas, who is with his wife and the rest of the group in St. Petersburg, could not be reached by telephone to confirm the cause of the dancer's death.

The Dutch consulate in St. Petersburg said it was informed of its citizen's death, but received no official notification from Russian authorities.

Boney M, popular in late 1970s, was the favourite ensemble of disco fan Leonid Brezhnev and still enjoys great popularity in Russia.

Monday, November 29, 2010

'Star Wars' director Kershner dies at 87

American film director Irvin Kershner has died at the age of 87.

Kershner was best known as the director of second Star Wars film The Empire Strikes Back.

According to Yahoo News, Kershner's goddaughter Adriana Santini confirmed his death earlier today following his long illness.

As well as directing the most popular instalment in the long-running science fiction series, Kershner also helmed Robocop 2 and unofficial James Bond film Never Say Never Again.

Despite his advanced years, Kershner was still working on a number of film projects at the time of his death.

Leslie Nielsen dies, aged 84

Leslie Nielsen has died at the age of 84.

The comic actor, best known for his roles in Airplane! and The Naked Gun, passed away at a hospital near his home in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, where he was being treated for pneumonia.

Nielsen's nephew Doug announced the news on Canadian radio station CJOB, saying: "Just in this last 48 hours, the infection has gotten too much and today at 5.30am, with his friends and his wife by his side, he just fell asleep and passed away."

Nielsen's agent John S. Kelly later confirmed the news.

The actor, born in Saskatchewan, served in the Royal Canadian Air Force before making his debut on US television in the late '50s, and eventually appearing in a string of hit comedy films in the '80s and '90s.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Busty 'Queen of Horror' Ingrid Pitt dies at 73

Ingrid Pitt, who shot to fame starring in a number of cult horror classics including 'Countess Dracula', has died at the age of 73.

The Polish-born actress, often dubbed the 'Queen of Horror' for her roles in classic Hammer films, passed away at a South London hospital after collapsing a few days ago, reports the BBC.

Doctors are reported to have told her that she was suffering from heart failure.

Pitt''s daughter Stephanie Blake said that her mother''s death had come as a 'huge surprise'.

"She could be incredibly generous, loving, and she''ll be sorely missed," she said.

Blake added that she wanted her mother to be remembered as the 'Countess Dracula' with the 'wonderful teeth and the wonderful bosom'.

The star''s death comes just weeks after Roy Ward Baker, the director of Pitt''s movie 'The Vampire Lovers', died at the age of 93.

Marcus Hearn, the official historian for Hammer, called Pitt a 'talented actress and fine writer'.

"She was partly responsible for ushering in a bold and brazen era of sexually explicitly horror films in the 1970s, but that should not denigrate her abilities as an actress," he said, adding: "All fans of Hammer and of British horror are going to miss her terribly".

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Actress Jill Clayburgh dies, aged 66

Jill Clayburgh has died at the age of 66 following a long battle with leukaemia.

The Hollywood actress, best known for starring opposite Burt Reynolds in 1979's Starting Over, passed away on Friday at her home in Lakeville, Connecticut.

The AP reports that Clayburgh has been suffering from chronic lymphocytic leukaemia for over 20 years.

During her career, the star was nominated for Academy Awards for Starting Over and 1978's An Unmarried Woman, for which she won the 'Best Actress' prize at the Cannes Film Festival.

Clayburgh has found television roles in recent years, including in Law & Order, Nip/Tuck, Ally McBeal and Dirty Sexy Money.

She is survived by her husband, screenwriter David Rabe, and three children, Lily, Michael and stepson Jason.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Bob Guccione Is No More

Bob Guccione, creator of 'Penthouse' - first American men's magazine to come up with full frontal nudity of its models - has passed away on October 20. He was around 80.

In 1965, Guccione started the magazine with an aim to give competition to Hugh Hefner's already established 'Playboy' magazine. In 2004, he lost the control of this magazine following a series of bad business decisions.

Guccione tried to offer a different kind of editorial content by offering more sensationalistic topic than 'Playboy'.

He took his last breathe in Plano, Texas following a prolonged illness due to lung cancer, as per a statement made by his family. Guccione is survived by two children and his wife April Dawn Warren Guccione. They were present during his last moments.

Guccione was also the founder of SPIN Magazine. Later, his son ran the magazine following a fall out between the father and the son.

He has also helped to launch the career of many renowned media professionals like Anna Wintour, who got her first job as a fashion editor in 'Viva' magazine.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Claire Rayner dies, aged 79

Claire Rayner has died at the age of 79.
The writer, broadcaster and agony aunt failed to recover after undergoing emergency intestinal surgery in May, PA reports.

Claire passed away yesterday in hospital near her home in Harrow, north-west London. She is survived by her husband of 53 years Des, her three children and four grandchildren.

Des said: "I have lost my best friend and my soulmate. I am immensely proud of her. Through her own approach to life she enabled people to talk about their problems in a way that was unique.

"Right up until her death she was being consulted by both politicians and the medical profession about the best way to provide the health services the nation deserved and nothing mattered to her more than that. Her death leaves a vacancy which will not be filled."

Over the weekend, the former nurse and patients' rights campaigner told her family that she wanted her last words to be: "Tell David Cameron that if he screws up my beloved NHS I'll come back and bloody haunt him."

Claire will be given a humanist funeral service for close friends and family only.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Sir Norman Wisdom dies, aged 95


Sir Norman Wisdom has died, aged 95.
The legendary British comedian's son confirmed his death to BBC News.

Wisdom, who retired from acting in 2004, was known for parts in films such as Trouble In Store and A Stitch In Time, as well as TV roles including a nine-year stint on Last of the Summer Wine.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Hollywood director Arthur Penn dies

Arthur Penn, the legendary director best known for directing Bonnie and Clyde in 1967 has died at the age of 88, the Los Angeles Times reported on Wednesday.

Penn died Tuesday night at his New York home, his daughter Molly told the paper.

Penn's work is credited with ushering in a new American film aesthetic, which showed more realistic portrayals of violence rather than the idealized portrayals that had preceded him.

Penn made his first feature film, The Left-Handed Gun, in 1958 after directing numerous live television dramas. He got his first Oscar nomination for The Miracle Worker in 1962, in which Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke both won acting Oscars.

He was nominated again for Bonnie and Clyde, which starred Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway as the notorious American bankrobbers. The film's ending, in which the couple dies in a relentless hail of police machine-gun fire, is considered one of the great moments of movie history and ignited a critical hailstorm as its violent finale drew comparisons with the Vietnam War.

Penn's other films included The Chase, Mickey One, Alice's Restaurant, Little Big Man, Night Moves, The Missouri Breaks and Four Friends.

"Had he only directed Bonnie and Clyde, he'd be a director of note," film critic Leonard Maltin told The Times. "But that was simply the most successful of these highly individual, often idiosyncratic films that he made in his heyday."

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Comedian Greg Giraldo dies, aged 44

Greg Giraldo has died at the age of 44.
The American comedian was pronounced dead on Wednesday, just days after he was hospitalised following an accidental drug overdose.

According to WENN, Giraldo was found unconscious by a friend after mixing up prescription medication on Saturday night.

Giraldo was best known for judging NBC's Last Comic Standing, as well as participating in a number of celebrity roasts for Comedy Central.

Producers of Last Comic Standing commented: "Greg was one of the most talented comedians of our time. He was truly brilliant. His work will surely continue to influence and inspire us. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family."

A Comedy Central statement read: "The tragic news of Greg's passing hits us very, very hard. Greg has been a close member of the Comedy Central family for years, injecting his energy and wicked sense of humour into countless projects. The comedy community lost a brother today. Our thoughts are with his family."

Friday, October 1, 2010

Tony Curtis dies, aged 85

Tony Curtis has died at the age of 85.

A representative for his daughter Jamie Lee Curtis confirmed the news of her father's death to ET today.

Born Bernard Schwartz on June 3, 1925, Curtis was best known for his roles in 1959 comedy Some Like It Hot and the following year's Spartacus.

He was hospitalised in July after suffering an asthma attack but reportedly went home after a few days.

Curtis is survived by his sixth wife, Jill Vandenberg Curtis, whom he married in 1998. He was married to fellow screen star Janet Leigh for 11 years from 1951 to 1962.

Monday, September 27, 2010

'Titanic' actress Stuart dies, aged 100

Titanic actress Gloria Stuart has died at the age of 100.
The Oscar nominee passed away last Sunday in Los Angeles after suffering from lung cancer for several years, according to The Washington Post.

Stuart became the oldest Oscar nominee ever in 1997 when she was nominated for playing an older version of Kate Winslet's character Rose in James Cameron's hit film Titanic.

"When I graduated from Santa Monica High in 1927, I was voted the girl most likely to succeed. I didn't realise it would take so long," she joked in her memoir I Just Kept Hoping, published in 1999.

The actress appeared in more than 40 films in the 1930s.
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