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Re: Passages

Posted: Sat Mar 18, 2017 2:33 am
by Donald Brown
Numero Trois wrote:Underground cartoonist Jay Lynch. And his NY Times obit.
And now his colleague, Skip Williamson.

Re: Passages

Posted: Sat Mar 18, 2017 10:13 pm
by The Fanciful Norwegian
Chuck Berry, per the police department of St. Charles County, Missouri. One of my big regrets is living for years in St. Louis and never attending one of his monthly shows at Blueberry Hill.

Re: Passages

Posted: Sat Mar 18, 2017 10:32 pm
by bearcuborg
Caught his show many years ago. I thought he'd never die...

Re: Passages

Posted: Sat Mar 18, 2017 11:03 pm
by Rayon Vert
Hail, hail.

Re: Passages

Posted: Sun Mar 19, 2017 4:38 am
by hearthesilence
I know he was 90, and we should all be lucky enough to get that far, but man this sucks. I can't imagine enjoying life as much as I do when so much of the music I love and the recording artists I listen to can be traced back to his records.

Re: Passages

Posted: Sun Mar 19, 2017 5:46 am
by Rayon Vert
Exactly. Without Chuck there would have been no Stones, no Beatles arguably - not much of anything...

Re: Passages

Posted: Sun Mar 19, 2017 6:08 am
by Gregory
bearcuborg wrote:Caught his show many years ago. I thought he'd never die...
Were you named in his will or something?

Re: Passages

Posted: Sun Mar 19, 2017 9:14 am
by Numero Trois

Re: Passages

Posted: Sun Mar 19, 2017 9:38 am
by Numero Trois
Donald Brown wrote:And now his colleague, Skip Williamson.
He announced he was terminal just days ago in the comments threads for a Lynch interview. Hopefully the documentary about him making the rounds will be as worth the time as his comics.

Re: Passages

Posted: Sun Mar 19, 2017 1:16 pm
by dx23
Numero Trois wrote:Bernie Wrightson.
Was about to post this. Another one that hits me hard because I've known Bernie and his wife Liz for several years now due to my comic book industry ties. He was ana amazing artist but also an incredible person. I was saddened when earlier this year his wife announced that Bernie had retired due to complications from his battle with brain cancer. Still, they were optimistic that he would be working on projects and would recover from this fight. Sadly, we lost him.

Re: Passages

Posted: Sun Mar 19, 2017 3:08 pm
by lacritfan

Re: Passages

Posted: Sun Mar 19, 2017 4:08 pm
by mfunk9786
David D'Amato, subject of last year's excellent doc Tickled

Re: Passages

Posted: Tue Mar 21, 2017 10:46 am
by FrauBlucher

Re: Passages

Posted: Wed Mar 22, 2017 7:11 am
by fdm

Re: Passages

Posted: Wed Mar 22, 2017 8:40 pm
by mfunk9786

Re: Passages

Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2017 5:21 pm
by antnield

Re: Passages

Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2017 10:51 pm
by Ashirg

Re: Passages

Posted: Fri Mar 24, 2017 12:16 am
by Cinephrenic
VIP Tomas. Thank you for your contribution to the polizzettechi genre.

Re: Passages

Posted: Fri Mar 24, 2017 2:43 am
by colinr0380
antnield wrote:Tomas Milian.
He was absolutely fantastic in Django, Kill! too. Also in those Sergio Sollima spaghetti westerns The Big Gundown (with Lee Van Cleef), Run Man Run and Face To Face.

He had an amazing and varied series of roles for lots of different directors: in Don't Torture A Duckling for Lucio Fulci; La Luna for Bertolucci, one of the leads in Antonioni's Identification of a Woman; in Abel Ferrara's Cat Chaser; Oliver Stone's JFK; the great American political thriller Winter Kills; Syndey Pollack's Havana; in Spielberg's Amistad; and was also the head honcho Mexican general behind all of the drug running in Soderbergh's version of Traffic!

Plus he's in a couple of episodes of the Oz TV series!

Re: Passages

Posted: Fri Mar 24, 2017 7:36 pm
by Fred Holywell
colinr0380 wrote:
antnield wrote:Tomas Milian.
He had an amazing and varied series of roles for lots of different directors:
including some impressive early work in Italian arthouse films for directors such as Luchino Visconti (Boccaccio 70), Mauro Bolognini (La notte brava; Il bell'Antonio), Francesco Maselli (I delfini; Gli indifferenti) and Valerio Zurlini (Le soldatesse), among many others.

Re: Passages

Posted: Fri Mar 24, 2017 8:14 pm
by Perkins Cobb
Lola Albright.

Michael Tuchner, director of Villain and Fear Is the Key.

Re: Passages

Posted: Sun Mar 26, 2017 3:49 pm
by Feego
Jean Rouverol, actress and blacklisted screenwriter, at age 100. She co-starred as W.C. Fields' daughter in It's a Gift and wrote screenplays the Robert Aldrich films Autumn Leaves and The Legend of Lylah Clare.

Re: Passages

Posted: Mon Mar 27, 2017 8:25 am
by Alphonse Tram
Maestro Alessandro Alessandroni.

An giant of Italian film soundtracks. Not only was he a great composer, he was most notably responsible for the iconic sound of the Italian western. That whistling you hear in Morricone scores, that's him. The twangy guitar you hear in those Morricone scores, that's him. The choir singing in those Morricone scores, that's him and his choir, I Cantori Moderni di Alessandroni. I Cantori Moderni di Alessandroni featured Edda dell'Orso, the haunting female voice that helped define the Morricone sound.

Other than, perhaps, Bruno Nicoali, there's no one more important to the way early Morricone sounded than Alessandro Alessandroni.

Re: Passages

Posted: Mon Mar 27, 2017 2:24 pm
by MichaelB
David Storey, Booker Prizewinning novelist, playwright and regular source of material for Lindsay Anderson (This Sporting Life, Home, In Celebration).

Re: Passages

Posted: Tue Mar 28, 2017 6:08 pm
by pet42