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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 23 Feb 12, 17:50 
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Marie Colvin: Award-winning foreign correspondent hailed for her courage and compassion Undependent


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 09 May 12, 22:42 
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'The Chanel Of Hair' Sassoon Dies Aged 84

Celebrity hair stylist Vidal Sassoon has died at his home in Los Angeles at the age of 84.
Los Angeles police spokesman Kevin Maiberger said he died of natural causes. His family was present.

Sassoon was reported last year to have been suffering from leukemia.

He styled the hair of royalty, film stars and models during a career in which he revolutionised hairdressing.

But he was also prominent in a campaign on behalf of Jewish ex-servicemen, and in 1982 founded the Vidal Sassoon International Centre for the Study of Anti-semitism, a non-political organisation.

Sassoon was born to Jewish parents in London on January 17, 1928.

His father abandoned the family, who then moved to the East End of London with his aunts.

But he was soon sent to an orphanage in Maida Vale where he spent six years, before being evacuated during the war to Trowbridge, in Wiltshire.

On his return, aged 17, his mother had him apprenticed to a hairdresser.


Sky News


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 05 Jun 12, 15:58 
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Kathryn Joosten obituary

American actor best known for her roles in Desperate Housewives and The West Wing


The two most memorable characters played by the actor Kathryn Joosten, who has died of lung cancer aged 72, were crotchety and sometimes cranky, but ultimately lovable. Joosten came to prominence playing Dolores Landingham, the gruff and protective secretary to President Jed Bartlet, in The West Wing, but her character died in a car crash towards the end of the second season. She then moved on to Desperate Housewives, in which, as Karen McCluskey, she observed her neighbours in Wisteria Lane with a sharp eye and gossipy tongue, winning Emmy awards in 2005 and 2008. Last month, as Desperate Housewives reached the end of its eight-year run on the ABC network in America, McCluskey's death was the centrepiece of the final show.

Joosten was born in Eustis, Florida, and worked as a psychiatric nurse with disturbed teenagers in Chicago. She married a psychiatrist and began to raise their two sons, Jonathan and Timothy, in suburban Lake Forest, Illinois. In 1980 she and her husband divorced and Joosten began a new career, inspired by what her mother had told her was her greatest regret in life – not pursuing her dreams.

Joosten began taking acting classes at the Steppenwolf theatre company, while supporting her family by hanging wallpaper and painting houses, and using those houses as a location scout for films and magazines. In A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, the author Dave Eggers wrote that Joosten hung paper in his bedroom when he was a child.

She advanced into semi-professional theatre, and had a few bit parts in films and TV series produced around Chicago. In 1992 she went to an open audition for performers at Disney World, was offered a job, and moved to Orlando. When that gig ended, she again acted in the theatre and had odd jobs such as bartending.

In 1995 she moved to Los Angeles, and five months later landed a part in the comedy series Family Matters. She began working regularly, in further comedies such as Murphy Brown, Frasier and The Drew Carey Show, dramas including NYPD Blue and ER, and commercials. In 1999 she had a regular part as Mrs Sturges in the short-lived series Thanks, and was hired for The West Wing.

In 2001 she appeared in Scrubs, as a woman coming to terms with death; the episode, entitled My Old Lady, won a Humanitas prize for screenwriting. That year, Joosten underwent her first operation for lung cancer. She became a regular on the comedy Dharma & Greg and continued to be an in-demand character actor, joining the cast of Joan of Arcadia, a series about a teenaged girl to whom God speaks directly. She had a recurring role in the daytime soap opera General Hospital and parts in the films Wedding Crashers, Hostage, and Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel.

She became active in lung cancer charity work and anti-smoking campaigns, playing characters who were trying to quit the habit in the series My Name Is Earl and Grey's Anatomy.

In 2009, as discussions for a Desperate Housewives spin-off, to star Joosten and Lily Tomlin, were under way, her cancer recurred, requiring more surgery and extensive chemotherapy. A battle with lung cancer then became part of McCluskey's story on the show. In 2011, Joosten appeared on the 6,000th episode of the daytime soap The Bold and the Beautiful, discussing her life with two of the programme's actors, who had also suffered from cancer.

"Some people in Hollywood think of me as a model for dramatic midlife transitions: suburban housewife to Emmy-winning actress," Joosten wrote on her website, "but I never plotted a master plan for following my dreams."

She is survived by her sons.

• Kathryn Joosten, actor, born 20 December 1939; died 2 June 2012

Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 28 Jun 12, 22:04 
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Nora Ephron: Screenwriter and author who became the doyenne of Hollywood romantic comedies Independent


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 04 Jul 12, 15:41 
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Eric Sykes Dead: Rewatch 'The Plank' And Other Classic Clips www.huffingtonpost.co.uk


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 16 Jul 12, 23:57 
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Jon Lord obituary


Organist who infused Deep Purple with classical influences, helping to make them one of the world's biggest rock bands



'We're as valid as anything by Beethoven," declared Jon Lord of his band, Deep Purple, in an interview with the New Musical Express in 1973. Lord, who has died aged 71 after suffering from pancreatic cancer, was not merely adopting a rebellious stance. An accomplished classical composer as well as rock musician, he believed with some justification that his group's music was as profound in structure and as significant in cultural impact as any work from the symphonic canon. At the time, Deep Purple were among the world's biggest rock bands, having built an enormous fanbase on the strength of their classically influenced songs, which lent further weight to Lord's statement.

Born in Leicester, Lord studied classical piano from the age of five. In his teens, the then-new rock'n'roll and R&B movements made a deep impression on him, in particular the music recorded by blues pianists and organists such as Jimmy McGriff and Jerry Lee Lewis. The contemporary combination of Hammond B3 and C3 organs with Leslie speakers appealed to him, and this became an instrumental setup that remained integral to Lord's signature keyboard style for the rest of his career.

In 1959, he moved to London to pursue acting, which he studied at the Central School of Speech and Drama. He played the piano and Hammond organ in clubs to pay the bills, initially with a jazz band called the Bill Ashton Combo and then with Red Bludd's Bluesicians, featuring the vocalist Art Wood. While recording occasional sessions (he contributed keyboards to the Kinks' 1964 hit You Really Got Me), Lord pursued pop success in the Art Wood Combo, who later renamed themselves the Artwoods and appeared on TV. I Take What I Want was the group's only charting single.

Lord discovered his trademark sound when he formed Santa Barbara Machine Head, which also featured Wood's brother and future Rolling Stone, Ronnie Wood. The key to this group's success was its powerful, organ- and guitar-driven formula, which pointed at the future musical recipe of Deep Purple, and also the meeting of Lord and the bassist Nick Simper. The duo were the backbone of Deep Purple, who formed when the businessman and manager Tony Edwards invested in the new group and auditioned the cream of London's young talent – the guitarist Ritchie Blackmore, the singer Rod Evans and the drummer Ian Paice among them. This quintet formed Purple's first lineup in 1968.

Deep Purple spent the following eight years on a path that took them around the world on several occasions, playing the world's largest stadiums and issuing a series of classic LPs – In Rock (1970), Fireball (1971), Machine Head (1972) and Burn (1974) among them. Personnel came and went, but Lord and Paice remained constant members until the group's dissolution amid a haze of drug addiction and exhaustion in 1976.

Of the great British rock bands of the 70s, only Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath and the Stones were able to operate on as grand a scale: unlike any of those groups, Deep Purple took regular time out to indulge in classical projects initiated and directed by Lord. The most notable of these was the live Concerto for Group and Orchestra, recorded at the Royal Albert Hall in 1969.

It was this equal passion for rock bombast and classical finesse that made Lord such an unusual musician. During Deep Purple's glory days, he often infused the songs with classical influences, as in the song April from the group's eponymous album in 1969. His organ playing, which often counterpointed Blackmore's virtuoso lead guitar, was unique and often copied.

After the split, Lord formed a group with the rock singer Tony Ashton and Deep Purple's ex-drummer Paice entitled Paice, Ashton & Lord. They released one album, Malice in Wonderland, in 1977. He then joined Whitesnake, the band formed by Deep Purple's last lead singer, David Coverdale. This group, not to be confused with the 1980s reincarnation that played stadium rock and met with huge success, was an earthy, blues-rock band in which Lord's organ playing was an essential element. His stint in Whitesnake ended when he rejoined a reformed lineup of Deep Purple in 1984 alongside Blackmore, Paice, the singer Ian Gillan and the bassist Roger Glover.

Many solo projects and collaborations came during and between Lord's membership of these bands, including Before I Forget (1982), which featured classical piano music; a commission to compose the soundtrack of Central Television's 1984 series The Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady; and guest spots on albums by rock luminaries such as Lord's Oxfordshire neighbour George Harrison and Pink Floyd's David Gilmour.

Eight more years of recording and tours followed before Lord felt he had had enough of life on the road. In a letter to his bandmates in 2002, he requested that Deep Purple take a year off. When this request was declined, he amicably left the group. Solo projects followed, including a collaboration in 2004 with sometime Abba singer Anni-Frid Lyngstad, and the formation of a blues band, Hoochie Coochie Men, three years later. In 2010, Lord was made an honorary fellow of Stevenson College, Edinburgh, and the following year he was awarded an honorary doctorate of music by the University of Leicester.

He is survived by his wife, Vicky, and their daughter, Amy; and a daughter, Sara, by his first wife, Judith, from whom he was divorced.

• Jonathan Douglas Lord, rock and classical musician and composer, born 9 June 1941; died 16 July 2012

Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 01 Aug 12, 16:13 
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Gore Vidal - Probably the Most Important Man of American Letters Since Mark Twain huffingtonpost


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 25 Aug 12, 21:23 
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Astronaut Neil Armstrong Dies Aged 82

Astronaut Neil Armstrong has died aged 82, according to reports in the US.

Armstrong had heart-bypass surgery earlier this month to relieve blocked coronary arteries.

As commander of the Apollo 11 mission in July 1969, he became the first human to set foot on the moon.

SkyNews


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 25 Aug 12, 21:28 
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Pan's People dancer dies aged 63

Louise Clarke, one of the founding members of Top Of The Pops dance troupe Pan's People, has died at the age of 63, her publicist said.

Ms Clarke, who formed the group with Flick Colby, Babs Lord, Ruth Pearson, Dee Dee Wilde and Andi Rutherford in 1966, died from heart failure after suffering poor health for two years.

She is the second member of the group to pass away following the death of Ms Colby at the age of 65 in May last year.


YorkPress


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 14 Dec 12, 11:15 
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Report Reveals Major Gender Gap In 'Notable Deaths' Coverage www.huffingtonpost.com


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 16 Feb 13, 23:25 
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John Ammonds obituary
BBC producer and director with a key role in the success of Morecambe and Wise
www.guardian.co.uk


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 18 Feb 13, 15:37 
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Richard Briers, The Good Life star, dies aged 79 BBC


So sad to hear of Richard's death, Ever Decreasing Circles is one of my favorite shows EVER... :angel:


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 19 Feb 13, 9:32 
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Mr & Mrs gameshow host Derek Batey dies aged 84 BBC


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 22 Feb 13, 9:58 
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Soft Machine founder Kevin Ayers dies www.bbc.co.uk


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 22 Feb 13, 19:47 
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Bob Godfrey, Roobarb animator, dies aged 91 www.bbc.co.uk


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