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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 14 Feb 11, 23:02 
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George Shearing dies aged 91

George Shearing, the blind musician who became one of the greats of modern jazz, has died in New York at 91.

Born in south London to a coal delivery man and a night railway-carriage cleaner, Shearing started playing piano professionally in a pub in Lambeth. Later he woud record with Nat King Cole, Peggy Lee, Mel Torme, Stephane Grappelli and Billy Eckstine. Four years ago, he was knighted by the Queen for his services to music.

Announcing the death due to heart failure at Shearing's home in Manhattan, his agent, Dale Sheets, said: "He was a totally one of a kind performer. It was something wonderful to see, to watch him work."

The youngest of nine children, Shearing was born blind but started to learn piano at the age of three. After developing his skills at a school for the blind, he started playing for "25 bob a week" – £1.25p in modern terms - at the Mason's Arms, joined an all blind band, and was heard on the BBC in 1937 while still a teenager. In 1947 he moved to the US, where he remained.

Adept at jazz and classical, he composed more than 300 titles, most famously Lullaby of Birdland (a legendary jazz spot in New York named after Charlie "Bird" Parker) in 1952, recorded by artists from Ella Fitzgerald to Bill Haley, and September in the Rain. His distinctive style aimed at what he called a "full block sound".

He performed for three US presidents, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan, as well as at a Royal Command Performance in London, and was the first artist to receive the American music award, presented by the National Arts Club in New York in 1998.

Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 01 Mar 11, 15:54 
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Mark Ryan: Guitarist with Adam and the Ants who became a successful playwright

By Lewis Davies

Tuesday, 1 March 2011



Mark Ryan was a restless musician and dramatist who played in a number of experimental punk bands before joining Adam and the Ants in time for their debut performance at the ICA restaurant in May 1977. He was in the line-up to record Plastic Surgery and appeared with the band in the Derek Jarman film Jubilee in the same year. However, soon at odds with the management, he was fired and joined The Photons with Steve Strange.

Ryan was born in Tottenham, London, in 1959 to a London Irish Catholic family originally from Limerick. His mother trained as a nurse and midwife, while his father worked as a university lecturer. Ryan left school at 16 and worked in various factory jobs until his adventures with music gave him some scope for his talents.

After the brief flare of punk faded Ryan moved to obtain a more classical education, studying music at Dartington College of Arts. He developed his interest in music to performance in the theatre and began to write plays, librettos and musicals. It was at Dartington that he met Meryl Hopwood, who was studying drama. They later married. Ryan and his first wife, Jo Rothon, had separated amicably during his time at Dartington. They remained on good terms. After touring with Horse and Bamboo Theatre, Ryan moved to Cardiff, where he developed a successful career as a dramatist and occasional actor, designer and tutor.

He was the author of over 20 plays, employing a rare combination of music, visual set-pieces and words to arrive at his own distinct style. He worked through theatre in education with Spectacle, for young people with the Sherman and in a variety of forms with Made In Wales and Equinox. Ryan's subjects were diverse: a one-woman show on Dorothy Squires, an opera, Castradiva, and many successful theatre works for children such as Sonya the Dancing Bear, and The Lazy Ant, which won Best Script and Best Production at the International Children's Theatre Festival in Shanghai. Many of his plays were performed at the Chapter Arts Centre in Cardiff, where his popularity in the Welsh theatre world ensured a strong support.

His most successful work was The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde as told to Carl Jung by an inmate of the Broadmoor Asylum, a play which received publicity as the longest title at the Edinburgh Fringe in 1998 but soon garnered five-star reviews and a sell-out run, with further performances in London, Cardiff and San Francisco. His last play was Sean Tyrone, which premiered in Cardiff in 2010. He was working on several more theatre productions at the time of his death, and had also finished his first novel.

In recent years Ryan had suffered from ill-health, and succumbed to complications caused by liver damage.

Mark Ryan, playwright and musician: born London 2 March 1959; married firstly Jo Rothon, secondly Meryl Hopwood (one son, one daughter); died Cardiff 31 January 2011. Independent


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 02 Mar 11, 13:29 
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Jane Russell obituary

Voluptuous star of The Outlaw and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes



Jane Russell in a publicity shot for The Outlaw Jane Russell in a publicity shot for The Outlaw. The experience made her savvy about the vulgarity of the film industry. Photograph: Snap/Rex Features

The actor Jane Russell, who has died aged 89, was among the most desired women of the 20th century. She had great erotic force and great likability. Russell made just over 20 films, but only a handful of those are remembered: her first film, The Outlaw (1943); the comedy western The Paleface (1948), with Bob Hope; and the musical Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), co-starring Marilyn Monroe.

The Outlaw, produced by Howard Hughes, was famously promoted with a series of publicity stills showing Russell lying in the hay, and bending down to pick up bales. The experience made her savvy about the vulgarity of the film industry. Her breasts were less covered and more fetishised, lit, photographed, designed and dreamed about than any woman's in the cinema had been until that time. Hughes even designed a special bra for her to wear in the film (although she chose not to use it). On the film's much-delayed nationwide release, it was denounced by the church. Surprisingly Russell, a devout Christian since childhood, was unperturbed. Later she would become one of the most regular church attenders in Hollywood and tried to convert Monroe, who went along to one service but said afterwards that it wasn't her thing.

Ernestine Jane Geraldine Russell was born in Bemidji, Minnesota. Her mother was an actor who became a lay preacher. Her father was an office manager whose family came from Inverness. At a young age, Russell moved to the San Fernando Valley in southern California with her parents. She was brought up on a ranch, with four brothers, horses and fruit trees. From the beginning she was a tomboy, preferring a plaid shirt and jeans to dresses; the theme of getting out of trousers and into something slinky, or vice versa, turned up in her more personal films, such as The French Line (1953) and The Fuzzy Pink Nightgown (1957).

Throughout her life Russell hated what she saw as feminine fussiness. She felt that women should be treated the same as men – no special privileges – yet insisted that she was in no way a feminist. "A man should be the head of the household," she once told me, "and a woman should be the heart."

In 1940, a nationwide search by Hughes for a new, voluptuous actress took Russell to Hollywood. She screen-tested, liked what she saw - Hughes and the director Howard Hawks photographed her from above the eyeline, in a way that minimised her solid jawline – and got the part of Rio McDonald, an Irish-Mexican girl caught in a Freudian love triangle between Billy the Kid and Doc Holliday, in The Outlaw.

After the agonising humourlessness of working with Hughes (who was obsessed with her and tried to sleep with her), it was a great relief to Russell to do a comedy, The Paleface, in which she played Calamity Jane. She loved the quick pace of the filming, was delightfully droll with her annihilating put-downs, and she and Hope became lifelong friends. It was he who cracked one of the famous jokes about her, introducing her as "the two and only Miss Russell".

She was next teamed with Robert Mitchum for two RKO films, His Kind of Woman (1951), in which she was entrancing, singing Five Little Miles from San Burdoo, and Macao (1952). He called her "Iron John", and she said that they were like brother and sister. Their shared dark good looks and big boned-ness made them appear alike.

Russell starred again with Hope in a sequel, Son of Paleface (1952), and also made another western, Montana Belle (1952). Her next important film, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, based on the novel by Anita Loos, still dazzles because of the sisterliness of the friendship between Monroe and Russell, playing the showgirls Lorelei Lee and Dorothy Shaw respectively. They were, as the song put it, "just two little girls from Little Rock". Russell's performance is particularly generous and women loved her for it. Her song Ain't There Anyone Here for Love?, performed in a gymnasium against a backdrop of dancing athletes, gained her a large gay following. She later starred in Gentlemen Marry Brunettes (1955), based on another novel by Loos.

In 1943 Russell had married the American football player Bob Waterfield. As the result of an illegal abortion, she was unable to have children. The couple adopted an Irish boy, Thomas, and she became a campaigner for adoption, lobbying for the rights of Americans to adopt children from overseas. They later adopted another son, Robert, and a daughter, Tracy. In 1954, she and Waterfield set up an independent production company, Russ-Field. She read scripts, worked hard and her subsequent films were intelligent. The Tall Men (1955) with Clark Gable was one of the best of her nine westerns, and in the proto-feminist The Revolt of Mamie Stover (1956) she played a prostitute fighting her way.

In the delightful comedy The Fuzzy Pink Nightgown, Russell played a movie star who is abducted, grows to like her kidnappers, swaps dresses for jeans and a plaid shirt and says lines such as "That splendid career of mine? Don't mix me up with the girl in the movies ... all that's only make-believe." Those in the know could see how personal it was, and how sardonic its comments were on Hollywood. The film flopped, Russell got fewer offers, turned down some good films, had an affair, started seeing a psychiatrist and closed down Russ-Field. She and Waterfield divorced and, in 1968, she married the actor Roger Barnett. Just three months after the wedding, he died.

The film industry had changed and Russell felt that she had been left behind. She started drinking and was briefly imprisoned for drink-driving. In the 70s, she also started to appear in Playtex bra advertisements on television, once more becoming a household name. She married her third husband, John Peoples, in 1974.

I got to know her in the late 90s when she and John came to Scotland. She was exactly as Mitchum described her: no-nonsense and down to earth. She did her make-up in five minutes, laughed a lot and was unforgettably generous with her time and stories. My first glimpse of her was in her hotel – no make-up, shower-cap over her head. She visited Edinburgh Castle and took a train to Inverness to see where her relatives came from. Over dinner she would talk about Mitchum and the director Raoul Walsh, and John, a Texan vegetarian, would tell stories of barbecues on the White House lawn for presidents. They were both fervently anti-Clinton Republicans and her last words to my girlfriend were "get married". Russell came to our home, drank iced tea and left her shocking pink lipstick on the glass, which I still have, unwashed.

Russell said that in the whole of her movie career she had had little creative satisfaction. She always worked with macho film-makers and wished she had worked with a "woman's director" such as George Cukor. When John died in 1999, she was on her own again. I asked her once how often she was happy. She replied: "Sometimes life is a valley of tears and sometimes it's the top of the mountain." How often the top of the mountain? "Oh, often, very often."

She is survived by Thomas, Tracy and Robert, and her grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

• Ernestine Jane Geraldine Russell, actor, born 21 June 1921; died 28 February 2011 Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 23 Mar 11, 16:24 
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Screen icon Dame Elizabeth Taylor dies

Dame Elizabeth Taylor, one of the 20th Century's biggest movie stars, has died in Los Angeles at the age of 79.

The double Oscar-winning actress had a long history of ill health and was being treated for symptoms of congestive heart failure.

Her four children were with her when she died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, her publicist said.

In a statement, her son Michael Wilding called her "an extraordinary woman who lived life to the fullest".

"We know, quite simply, that the world is a better place for Mom having lived in it," he continued.

"Her legacy will never fade, her spirit will always be with us, and her love will live forever in our hearts."

BBC


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 20 Apr 11, 11:15 
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Michael Sarrazin: Actor best known for playing opposite Jane Fonda in ‘They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?’
By Tom Vallance Independent


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 20 Apr 11, 11:31 
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'It was a joy to know her': Doctor Who writer Russell T Davies leads the tributes to Sarah Jane star Elisabeth Sladen
By GEORGINA LITTLEJOHN Mail - video clips with this link


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 23 Apr 11, 20:31 
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Only Fools and Horses writer John Sullivan OBE dies

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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 02 May 11, 15:30 
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Sir Henry Cooper obituary

His warmth and indomitable personality gave him a popularity far beyond the world of boxing's normal boundaries
Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 08 May 11, 20:25 
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Radio presenter Big George dies

George Webley, the presenter of the weekday overnight programme on BBC London 94.9, has died aged 53.

Big George, as he was known, had presented the show for the past five years. He won a gold Sony Award in 2002 for best music presenter and was formerly with BBC Three Counties Radio.

He died in the early hours of Saturday, his family said.

He also had a long career as a musician and composed TV theme tunes, including Have I Got News For You.

The cause of death is not known at this stage, the BBC said.

Big George was also a band leader, performer and composer.

BBC London 94.9 Editor David Robey said: "Big George lived up to his name in every sense, a larger than life character with a radio personality to match.

"He was a truly distinctive broadcaster who will be terribly missed by his many devoted listeners and his colleagues at BBC London 94.9."

BBC


RIP George, we all loved you !


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 10 May 11, 20:55 
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John Walker: Singer with the Walker Brothers, whose fame briefly rivalled the Beatles’

By Spencer Leigh Independent


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 22 May 11, 1:26 
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Kathy Kirby: Singer best known for 'Secret Love' and her appearance in the Eurovision Song Contest

By Alan Clayson

Kathy Kirby: Singer best known for 'Secret Love' and her appearance in the Eurovision Song Contest

By Alan Clayson

If steeped in the conventions of traditional British showbusiness, Kathy Kirby thrived as a solo vocalist in an age of beat groups.


Moreover, she remained a source of fascination at odds with her mere handful of chart entries. These were adjuncts to the earnings she had accrued as a stage (and then television) performer since 1956, when she had fronted a ballroom orchestra under the baton of Bert Ambrose, her mentor (and rather elderly boyfriend) until his death in 1971. Then came perhaps the most extraordinary phase of Kirby's career, underscored as it was by a disastrous marriage, bankruptcy and tabloid exposure of a turbulent private life.

Born Kathleen O'Rourke, one of three siblings, in Ilford, Essex, her bel canto soprano and selections from the classics ensured victory in local talent contests. On leaving convent school in 1954 she sang semi-professionally while holding down a day job as a telephonist with the Ilford Recorder newspaper. Her repertoire now embraced music hall favourites as well as items from the newly-established New Musical Express record sales and sheet music charts.

Her local popularity was brought to the attention of Ambrose by her stepfather, who worked in the West London hotel where the famous bandleader was a guest. However, it was her moist-lipped resemblance to Marilyn Monroe – emphasised by dyeing her naturally red hair platinum blonde – as much as other talents that led to the 18-year-old's recruitment by Ambrose, who was impressed by her unscheduled renderings of "Love Me Or Leave Me" from her girlhood idol Doris Day's latest movie, and Johnnie Ray's "All Of Me" with the ensemble one night at Ilford Palais.

On adopting her familiar stage alias, Kirby's stock-in-trade was a certain daredevilry with standards fromas far back as the 1930s, though Ambrose permitted concessions to relatively current pop, instancedby cover versions of Teresa Brewer's 1955 hit "Let Me Go Lover" andDoris Day's 1954 million-seller, "Secret Love". He also allowed his protégée stints with other big bands beforeher headlining cabaret seasons in Madrid and London – notably, six months at Mayfair's Blue Angel club – and, later, on round-Britain package tours with Cliff Richard and Duane Eddy after her television debut on ITV's Cool For Cats to mime her maiden single, "Love Can Be".

In 1963, a lively vocal arrangement of The Shadows' "Dance On" took her to the edge of the Top Ten. This breakthrough coincided with a residency on ITV's long-running Stars And Garters variety show, broadcast on Saturday evenings to counterpoise BBC's Billy Cotton Band Show.

She had surfaced as Stars And Garters' main attraction when an upbeat and big-voiced overhaul of "Secret Love" came within an ace of topping the charts early in 1964, and an album, 16 Hits From Stars And Garters, was a moderate success during a year that closed with Kirby as Top Female Singer in the New Musical Express readers' poll. Backing musicians on Kirby recordings at this time included Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones, then awaiting their destinies with Led Zeppelin.

Two more Top 20 hits – "Let Me Go Lover" and "You're The One" – were followed by "I Belong", England's Eurovision Song Contest entry on 20 March 1965. While Kirby finished second, "I Belong" crawled to only No 36, and was her domestic chart farewell. Nevertheless, that summer's "The Way Of Love" penetrated the lower reaches of the US Hot 100 in the wake of a plug on the nationally-networked Ed Sullivan Show – and there was much airplay for her title theme to the BBC drama Adam Adamant Lives.

By then, hits had become secondary to TV viewing figures: a spot on 1965's Royal Command Performance and two prime-time BBC series, The Kathy Kirby Show and Kathy Kirby Sings. Tellingly, however, her guest list was dominated by such as The Beverley Sisters, Lonnie Donegan, Billy Fury, Adam Faith and others likewise disenfranchised by the beat boom.

Like Faith, Kirby was wondering about a future as a film actor, but this progressed no further than discussions. And Ambrose's managerial arrogance and old-fashioned values so annoyed BBC and ITV executives that TV appearances had petered out by 1970, when revivals of Kay Starr's pre-rock'n'roll "Wheel Of Fortune" and Frank Sinatra's "My Way" indicated a sense of retrospection and prefaced Kirby's "wilderness years".

Confused by post-Ambrose administrative chaos, Kirby was embroiled in writs for breach of contract,cash-flow problems and a steady gnawing away of work with little peaks and troughs. Yet "house full" signs would still go up, and she was kept in the public eye with occasional showcases like an assured recital in 1974 on ITV's Wheeltappers And Shunters Social Club, that, like Stars And Garters, flashed the beery joviality of a pub into your living room.

Less welcome was publicity centred on her divorce from the policeman-turned-journalist Frederick Pye;a spell in a mental hospital in 1979 after arrest for an unpaid hotel bill (of which she was innocent); and her cohabitation with another woman. Next, Kirby sold a three-edition story of her downfall to a Sunday newspaper, and attempted a comeback in 1981 as an intermission act in a Kentish bingo hall. There was also a new single, "He", a recalibration of Charles Aznavour's "She".

"I'm not going to write off my career," she promised, "I've still got one asset left – my voice." This was true enough, but she amassed a new and younger thanks to an image that many regarded as the ultimate camp for a dissolving of outlines between "quality" and kitsch.

Kirby retired as a professional entertainer in December 1983 witha televised performance in a Blackpool theatre-restaurant. Her remaining decades were unremarkable inthe teeth of strange stories, mostconspicuously, one about her as aLondon down-and-out, sleeping in shop doorways.

In fact she dwelt in a South Kensington flat, eking out state benefits and dwindling returns from CD compilations like 1996's The Very Best Of Kathy Kirby, and giving infrequent – and articulate – interviews to such disparate organs as Record Collector and in spring 2009, the Daily Express. She may have salvaged some contentment, too, from continued interest exemplified by a musical play, Whatever Happened To Kathy Kirby?, from London's New Stagers Theatre Club in 1996, and the adaptation into a stage production of the 2005 biography, Secrets, Loves And Lip Gloss.

Kathleen O'Rourke (Kathy Kirby), singer: born Ilford, Essex 20 October 1938; married Frederick Pye (marriage dissolved); died 19 May 2011.
Independent


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 06 Jun 11, 23:16 
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It Ain't Half Hot Mum's Donald Hewlett dies at 90

------------------------ Image

The actor, who played Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Reynolds in the show, had been ill for some time, his wife told the BBC.

He died at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in west London on Saturday, Therese McMurray-Hewlett said.

Hewlett was also known for his role as master of the house, Lord Meldrum, in 1990s BBC sitcom You Rang M'Lord?

The actor began his on-screen career with a small part in the 1954 comedy film Orders are Orders starring Peter Sellers, Donald Pleasence and Sid James.

He went on to have roles in numerous TV shows including The Saint, The Avengers, Doctor Who and Coronation Street.

But it was his turn as the commanding officer in It Ain't Half Hot Mum which made his name.

The series, set in British India and Burma towards the end of World War II ran on BBC One from 1974-1981.

Hewlett last appeared on TV in ITV sitcom The Upper Hand in 1995.

He is survived by his wife, Therese, and five children including daughter Siobhan, who is also an actress.


BBC


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 07 Jun 11, 0:07 
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Miriam Karlin: Actress and left-wing campaigner best known as the militant shop steward Paddy in 'The Rag Trade'

By Anthony Hayward


One of the first actresses to bring a strong female role to television comedy, Miriam Karlin made her name as the stereotypical, "militant" shop steward Paddy in the 1960s sitcom The Rag Trade.

"Everybody out!" was her cry, as Paddy battled with the boss at Fenner Fashions, played by Peter Jones in a suitably long-suffering manner.

The BBC programme was recorded on Sunday evenings, allowing the producer, Dennis Main Wilson to cast many West End stage performers who were usually unavailable on other nights of the week. As a result, Karlin became a star on the basis of this one situation comedy, in which her cohorts included Sheila Hancock, Esma Cannon, Judy Carne, Barbara Windsor, Ann Beach and Toni Palmer.

Almost 30 years later, she returned as a sitcom star in So Haunt Me, playing a ghost. This was appropriate because, she recalled, "Many people think I really am dead, as I hadn't been on television lately."

Born Miriam Samuels in Hampstead, north London, with relatives on her mother's side of the family who died at the Nazi concentration camp in Auschwitz, she was brought up as a traditional Orthodox Jew. Her father, Henry Samuels, was a barrister who wrote books about trade unions. After attending South Hampstead High School and training at Rada during the Second World War, the large, overweight teenager found herself playing character parts – and men. She then performed with the forces entertainment organisation, Ensa, and went into repertory theatre, adopting the surname Karlin professionally.

"I was a fat, Jewish, black-haired monster," she recalled. "I knew I could do it all but no one was interested. You see, I've never been a juvenile and was too young to be a character lady. I was told to bide my time. That forced me into variety and radio work."

On BBC radio, she had supporting roles in It's a Great Life (1948, 1950), featuring the American screen star Bonar Colleano as a bit-part film actor never quite finding fame, and Leave Your Name and Number (1950), in which the Canadian husband and wife Bernard Braden and Barbara Kelly played actors auditioning for the stage in Britain.

Karlin made her television début as Cook in Alice: Some of Her Adventures in Wonderland (1946), adapted by George More O'Ferrall from Clemence Dane's dramatised version and starring Vivian Pickles as the heroine of Lewis Carroll's fantasy. In the same year, she appeared on the London stage for the first time, as Lorene in Time of Your Life (Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith, 1946), and then played Miss Sharpe in Separate Rooms (Strand Theatre, 1947).

Karlin slimmed down, losing four stone in four weeks, after beingcast as Lina Szczepanowska in Bernard Shaw's Misalliance (Lyric Theatre, 1956), when the director recommended her to a doctor so that she could fit into a pair of trousers. A string of West End roles followed, including Lilly Smith in Fings Ain't Wot They Used T'Be (Garrick Theatre, 1960), Golde in Fiddler on the Roof (Her Majesty's Theatre, 1967), Madame Dubonnet in The Seagull (Haymarket Theatre, 1975), Arkadina in the same play (Haymarket Theatre, 1976) and Judith Bliss in Hay Fever (Haymarket Theatre, 1976).

Cinema also provided Karlin with plenty of work, in films such as Room at the Top (1958), Carve Her Name with Pride (1958), The Entertainer (1960) and Heavens Above! (1963), but it failed to make her famous.

Television finally brought the actress national celebrity. Although she had starred alongside Sid James in the sitcom East End – West End (1958), set in London's Jewish business community, it was the role of Paddy in The Rag Trade (1961-63) that captured the public's imagination. As the machinist and union representative in a dressmaking workshop, she was frequently embroiled in shop-floor rows with her hapless boss, Mr Fenner (Peter Jones), and Fenner Fashions' foreman, Reg (Reg Varney). Her rallying call, "Everybody out!", became a national catchphrase, and Karlin even starred in a West End stage version (Piccadilly Theatre, 1962).

The BBC series, written by Ronald Wolfe and Ronald Chesney, came hot on the heels of the British film comedy I'm All Right, Jack, which satirised union-employer relations. Over two years and 35 episodes of The Rag Trade, Fenner was seen running his business in an unscrupulous way while his all-women workforce looked for every opportunity to increase their wage packets by a few pounds.

New-found fame resulted in Karlin being invited to Australia half a dozen times and appearing in The Mavis Bramston Show (1965), that country's version of the satirical British sketch-show series That Was the Week That Was. She also spent a year in Sydney and Melbourne in the revue Is Australia Really Necessary? (1964-65). When The Rag Trade was revived by ITV for a further 22 episodes a decade later (1977-78), Karlin and Jones reprised their original roles.

But there was another long gap before Karlin returned to regular TV work, in the sitcom So Haunt Me (1992-94) as Yetta Feldman, the chicken soup-making ghost of a Jewish woman who had died 20 years earlier and frightened off everyone who came to live in her house. She finally finds friends when the Rokeby family moves in, enjoying the company of Sally (Tessa Peake-Jones) and her son David (Jeremy Green), although Sally's husband Pete (George Costigan), and daughter Tammy (Laura Simmons), are unable to see the sharp-tongued Yetta.

Karlin's other, infrequent television roles included that of the actress Mrs Patrick Campbell in The First Night of Pygmalion (1969), about the Bernard Shaw play that caused a stir because Campbell, as Eliza Doolittle, had to say the line: "Not bloody likely." She also appeared in the television films The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank (1988), Jekyll & Hyde (as the money-mad brothel keeper Mrs Hackett, 1990) and Utz (based on Bruce Chatwin's novel, 1992), and she guest-starred in Holby City (1999), The Bill (2001) and Agatha Christie: Marple (2006).

Her other films included the shocking cult classic A Clockwork Orange (1971), in which she played the Cat Lady, who is bludgeoned to death with one of her phallic sculptures by the gang-leader Alex (Malcolm McDowell), the director Ken Russell's musical biopic Mahler (1974) and The Man Who Cried (2000), about the threat to a Russian Jew (Christina Ricci) in wartime Paris when the Nazis march in.

On stage, Karlin achieved her ambition by performing for a season with the Royal Shakespeare Company (1982) in Stratford-upon-Avon productions of Twin Rivals (with the role of the madame and wife Mrs Mandrake making the most of her comedy talents), The Witch (as the pauper Elizabeth Sawyer, who was tried as a witch) and Money.

Throughout her life, Karlin – who never married – was a fervent campaigner for the oppressed and organisations such as the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and the Anti-Nazi League, and worked tirelessly for the actors' union, Equity.

"I can't imagine being anything but left-wing," she once said. "I was brought up in a home where justice was the most important quality. I'm part of a race that has survived 2,000 years of persecution. I think, if I'd had any ambition at all, I would like to have been the first female British Prime Minister. I would have been a rather lovely English Golda Meir, a benevolent dictator. I am, shall I say, a Utopian socialist. I have an idealistic dream of a wondrous socialist world where there will be a real brotherhood of man. I know it will never happen, but it doesn't hurt to have such belief, and it keeps me going."

Karlin, who never married, was appointed OBE in 1975 for her union and charity work. Her autobiography, Some Sort of Life, was published in 2007.

Miriam Samuels (Miriam Karlin), actress: born London 23 June 1925; OBE 1975; died London 3 June 2011.
Independent


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 Post subject: Re: Obituaries
PostPosted: 09 Jun 11, 0:32 
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Josephine Hart: Novelist best known for ‘Damage’ who was also a producer, presenter and a passionate advocate for poetry

bY Peter Guttridge


"Damaged people are dangerous. They know they can survive." Josephine Hart is best known for her début novel Damage, which she wrote in six weeks and which was translated into 23 languages and sold one million copies around the world. It was alsomade into a successful film, directed by Louis Malle, scripted by David Hare and starring Jeremy Irons, Miranda Richardson, Juliette Binoche and Rupert Graves.

Perhaps Josephine Hart should have been a character in one of her best-selling novels. Perhaps she was. As Lady Saatchi, wife of Maurice of the advertising dynasty that, among other things, helped Mrs Thatcher win power and keep it for so many years, she moved in influential political circles. As the best-selling author of Damage she brought a degree of literary class to the "bonkbuster" sub-genre. As a theatre producer she took risks on work by Lorca and Iris Murdoch. As a passionate advocate of poetry she called on her friends in the acting world to help bring often difficult work to a wider audience. And all this flowed from a childhood rocked by tragedy after tragedy.

Josephine Hart was born in 1942 in Mullingar, County Westmeath, daughter of a garage manager. She had six siblings. She attended convent school in Carrickmacross in neighbouring County Monaghan; the nuns encouraged her to recite verse at Irish festivals. By the age of 12 she knew by heart Shakespeare sonnets, Yeats poems, and poetry by Auden, Eliot and Gerard Manley Hopkins.

She had a desolate childhood.Her brother Charles died whenshe was six; her younger sister, Sheila, was brain-damaged and paralysed from the age of two because of meningitis and died when Hart was 16.Another brother, Owen, blew himself up experimenting with chemicalssix months later. She said later that after that she stayed at home for four years, finding consolation in literature. "I made a bargain with life," she said. "I'd behave honourably but would not make a serious contribution or do anything creative."

Many years later she indicated how important poetry had been to her at that time. She wrote: "Poetry, this trinity of sound, sense and sensibility, to me gives voice to experience like no other literary art form. It has been a source of joy, sometimes a lifeline. At various times it has given me a key to understanding, expressed what I believed inexpressible, provided me, as a girl with no sense of direction, with a route map through life."

In 1964 she moved to London to take acting classes at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. She took these in the evenings while working for Thomson newspapers in sales during the day. However, she is said to have abandoned the acting classes because delving into personal emotion was too painful. In that year Michael Heseltine set up the Haymarket Press; Hart joined the company and in due course became its first female director.

Her future husband, Maurice Saatchi, joined Haymarket straight from university in 1967. For a brief period Josephine Hart was his boss. He stayed until 1970, when he left to form a new advertising agency with his brother, Charles. Hart married the Haymarket director Paul Buckley and in the mid-1970s they had a son, Adam. The marriage lasted seven years.

Hart moved into theatre production, bringing to the stage, among other things, an acclaimed, Evening Standard Award-winning production of Lorca's The House of Bernarda Alba, a revival of Noël Coward's The Vortex and a production of Iris Murdoch's The Black Prince.

Hart and Buckley divorced and in 1984 she married Maurice Saatchi. They had a son, Edward a year later.

In the late 1980s she applied her entrepreneurial talents to poetry performance, albeit in the rarefied atmosphere of a Cork Street art gallery. She was, she said, "tired of boring people to death at dinner parties by saying that I couldn't understand why there were no public readings of great poetry". The first reading, in 1987, had Gary Bond reading Auden. For subsequent "Gallery Poets" she persuaded many star actors – including Alan Bates, Eileen Atkins, Edward Fox and Robert Stephens – to participate.

Also in 1987 she put a two hour TS Eliot programme together for the Lyric, Hammersmith, and Let Us Go, Then, You And I went into the West End for a six-week run. In 1989 she presented the Thames TV series Books By My Bedside in which she interviewed various personalities about the books they were currently reading.

By 1990 she was feeling the urge to be more actively creative. She and her husband lived in a mock-Tudorcastle, Old Hall in Sussex, set in 60 acres of parkland. The story goes that her husband walked her into the study of that mansion and told her just to get on and write. That morning she wrote the first two chapters of her first novel, Damage. She wrote the rest in six weeks.

So-called bonkbusters were at the height of their popularity and the concept for Damage seemed to fit entirely with that kind of novel: a senior politician has an affair with his son's fiancée and wrecks his family and his career. But Damage was more than popular fiction. The writing was spare yet intense. The Washington Post thought it a masterpiece; the poet Ted Hughes described it as "really a poem". It became a sensation, selling more than a million copies worldwide in 26 languages. It spent 11 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list in hardback and seven in paperback. The film was released in 1992.

Her second novel, Sin, concerning the moral consequences of a woman having an affair with her adopted sister's husband, came out in the same year. Oblivion (1995), The Stillest Day (1998) and The Reconstructionist (2001) were all ambitious and shared her trademark terse style but it was only with The Truth About Love in 2009 that she equalled the power of her début novel – and that was because she seemed finally to be able to approach those tragedies from her childhood.

The Truth... begins with the dying agonies of a boy fatally injured in an explosion caused by his home chemistry experiments. She said of the response to the novel: "It has been a balm to the soul, because it was so hard and so painful and it has taken me so long."

She had shifted her poetry performances in 2004 into the "West End Poetry Hour", then the "Josephine Hart Poetry Hour" at the British Library. (And also at the Royal Society, The New York Public Library and Harvard.) Highlights included Sir Roger Moore reciting Kipling, Ralph Fiennes reading Auden, Juliet Stevenson presenting Emily Dickinson and, perhaps most spectacularly, Harold Pinter reciting Philip Larkin.

Virago published two collections with accompanying CDs. Catching Life By The Throat: Poems from eight great poets (2008) was distributed free of charge at Hart's expense to every school in the UK for students 12-18. The British Library sent Words That Burn out to schools via its website. She explained her passion for poetry in this way: "Poetry has never let me down. Without poetry, I would have found life less comprehensible, less bearable and infinitely less enjoyable."

As part of the literary establishment she was a Booker, Whitbread, Irish Times, Forward Poetry and Costa Book Awards prize judge.

She kept her illness secret for two years; her agent, Ed Victor, said he only found out how ill she really was the day before she died. Last week her latest poetry project opened at the Donmar Warehouse, a week-long series of readings, including Jeremy Irons and Felicity Kendal performing Paradise Lost. Victor added that Josephine Hart's passion for literature and poetry "burned with the purest flame".

Josephine Hart, writer, theatricalproducer and television presenter:born Mullingar, County Westmeath,Ireland 1 March 1942; married firstly Paul Buckley (marriage dissolved; one son), 1984 Maurice Saatchi (one son); died London 2 June 2011.
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Columbo star Peter Falk dies at 83

Peter Falk, the stage and movie actor who became identified as the rumpled detective Columbo in the hit series which spanned 30 years of prime-time television, has died at the age of 83.

Falk died at his Beverly Hills home on Thursday night, according to a statement released by family friend Larry Larson.

In a court document filed in December 2008, Falk's daughter Catherine Falk said her father was suffering from Alzheimer's disease.

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