The ALL DEAD Club

Started by Nuke Nixon57 pages

'Reservoir Dogs' actor Michael Madsen’s son dies at 26

The Department of the Medical Examiner in Honolulu told NBC News that Hudson Madsen died there on Sunday by suspected suicide.

The family asked for privacy.

"We are heartbroken and overwhelmed with grief and pain at the loss of Hudson. His memory and light will be remembered by all who knew and loved him," a representative said on behalf of the family.

Hudson was one of three sons Madsen shares with his wife, DeAnna Madsen. He also has children from a previous marriage.

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'Melrose Place' Actor Morgan Stevens Dead at 70

Television Actor Morgan Stevens, who appeared in some iconic shows, passed away at his home Wednesday ... TMZ has learned.

A source close to Stevens says he hadn’t been seen or heard from in a few days, which is when a neighbor called authorities to do a wellness check. Police have confirmed with TMZ ... Stevens was found in his kitchen, where he was pronounced dead. They suspect no foul play, and he most likely died of natural causes.

Morgan was best known for his work on the show “Fame”, in which he played teacher David Reardon for two seasons. He was also a recurring character on “Melrose Place” and “A Year in the Life”. He made guest appearances on a variety of shows, including “Murder, She Wrote”, “One Day at a Time”, and “Murder One”, with “Walker, Texas Ranger” being his last appearance on television.

In the ’90s, Stevens was a victim of alleged police brutality when he was arrested for an alleged DUI. He claimed after 90 minutes of waiting in a jail cell, he refused to hand back the shirt that was given, which is when two jailers kicked and beat him over two dozen times.

Stevens left jail with a broken nose, a fractured cheek, a dislocated jaw and nerve damage as a result. He later sued and an out-of-court settlement was reached.

Morgan was 70 years old.

Howard Hesseman, Prolific Character Actor and Star of ‘WKRP in Cincinnati,’ Dies at 81

Howard Hesseman, a prolific character actor who became a beloved TV mainstay through his roles on sitcoms “WKRP in Cincinnati” and “Head of the Class,” died Saturday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Los Angeles of complications from colon surgery he had undergone last summer. He was 81 years old.

Hesseman’s death was confirmed to Variety by his longtime rep Robbie Kass.

“Howard was a groundbreaking talent and lifelong friend whose kindness and generosity was equaled by his influence and admiration to generations of actors and improvisational comedy throughout the world,” Kass stated.

Born in Lebanon, Ore. on Feb. 27, 1940, Hesseman became a counterculture favorite as he ascended into the world of entertainment in the late 1960’s. In 1965, he joined the improvisational comedy troupe The Committee in San Francisco, serving as a performing member for 10 years. Hesseman continued his start in entertainment as a radio DJ, broadcasting under the name “Don Sturdy” and began to appear in small guest roles on “The Andy Griffith Show,” “Dragnet 1967,” “Soap” and “Sanford and Son.”

With his signature long hair and handlebar mustache, Hesseman found his most iconic role playing radio DJ Dr. Johnny Fever on the CBS sitcom “WKRP in Cincinnati.” The character of a down-on-his-luck rock radio disc jockey (Fever was famously fired from a bigger market for saying the word “booger” on air) rang true with Hesseman, who spent time in radio early in his career.

Hesseman earned two Emmy nominations for his work on “WKRP,” which hailed from MTM Productions and ran on CBS from 1978 to 1982. Hesseman was also well-known for his 1986-1991 starring role as Charlie Moore on ABC’s ensemble comedy “Head of the Class,” playing a teacher at a Manhattan high school for high achievers. He also joined the cast of the long-running CBS comedy “One Day at a Time” for its ninth and final season in 1982-83.

Hesseman logged dozens of TV guest shots from the 1960s until recently, with credits ranging from “The Rockford Files,” “Laverne and Shirley,” “The Bob Newhart Show” and numerous “Saturday Night Live” hosting gigs. Additionally, Hesseman had guest starred on “Fresh Off the Boat,” “Chicago Med,” “Mike & Molly,” “Psych” and “House.” He had recurring roles on “Boston Legal” and “That 70s Show.”

Amid the peak TV production boom, Hesseman also logged numerous made-for-TV movie roles, including “A Christmas in Vermont,” “The Homeless Detective” and “Bigfoot.”

Beyond television, Hesseman also appeared across several films over his five-decade-spanning career, with credits including “Salvation Boulevard,” “Police Academy 2: Their First Assignment,” “About Schmidt,” “This Is Spinal Tap,” “Gridlock’d,” “Wild Oats,” “The Rocker,” “All About Steve” and Rob Zombie’s “Halloween II.”
Beyond entertainment, Hesseman enjoyed swimming and gardening in his spare time — “although not simultaneously,” according to Kass’ statement.
Hesseman’s survivors include his wife of 32 years, acting teacher Caroline Ducrocq.

The timeline must have shifted because this is another one of those guys I thought had died a while ago.

Miss USA 2019 Cheslie Kryst jumps to her death from New York City condo building

Cheslie Kryst, the 30-year-old winner of Miss USA 2019, jumped to her death from the 29th floor of the Orion condominium building on Sunday morning, according to the NYPD.

Police were called to the 60-story high-rise in the theater district of Manhattan at 7:05 a.m. on a report that a woman jumped from a terrace.

The NYPD said that they suspect Kryst's death was a suicide, but the medical examiner will ultimately rule on the cause of death after an autopsy. She was pronounced deceased at the scene.

Kryst, a former civil litigation attorney who received her MBA and law degree from Wake Forest University, won Miss USA in 2019.

"She was one of the brightest, warmest, and most kind people we have ever had the privilege of knowing, and she lit up every room she entered," the Miss Universe and Miss USA Organizations said in a joint statement.

"Our entire community mourns her loss, and our thoughts and prayers are with her family during this difficult time."

Originally posted by Nuke Nixon
[b]Miss USA 2019 Cheslie Kryst jumps to her death from New York City condo building

Cheslie Kryst, the 30-year-old winner of Miss USA 2019, jumped to her death from the 29th floor of the Orion condominium building on Sunday morning, according to the NYPD.

Police were called to the 60-story high-rise in the theater district of Manhattan at 7:05 a.m. on a report that a woman jumped from a terrace.

The NYPD said that they suspect Kryst's death was a suicide, but the medical examiner will ultimately rule on the cause of death after an autopsy. She was pronounced deceased at the scene.

Kryst, a former civil litigation attorney who received her MBA and law degree from Wake Forest University, won Miss USA in 2019.

"She was one of the brightest, warmest, and most kind people we have ever had the privilege of knowing, and she lit up every room she entered," the Miss Universe and Miss USA Organizations said in a joint statement.

"Our entire community mourns her loss, and our thoughts and prayers are with her family during this difficult time." [/B]

Originally posted by Nuke Nixon
[b]Miss USA 2019 Cheslie Kryst jumps to her death from New York City condo building

Cheslie Kryst, the 30-year-old winner of Miss USA 2019, jumped to her death from the 29th floor of the Orion condominium building on Sunday morning, according to the NYPD.

Police were called to the 60-story high-rise in the theater district of Manhattan at 7:05 a.m. on a report that a woman jumped from a terrace.

The NYPD said that they suspect Kryst's death was a suicide, but the medical examiner will ultimately rule on the cause of death after an autopsy. She was pronounced deceased at the scene.

Kryst, a former civil litigation attorney who received her MBA and law degree from Wake Forest University, won Miss USA in 2019.

"She was one of the brightest, warmest, and most kind people we have ever had the privilege of knowing, and she lit up every room she entered," the Miss Universe and Miss USA Organizations said in a joint statement.

"Our entire community mourns her loss, and our thoughts and prayers are with her family during this difficult time." [/B]

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Donald May, The Edge of Night Star, Dies at 92

Donald May, an actor best known for his long-running role on The Edge of Night, has passed away at the age of 92. The news of May's passing was first confirmed on a Facebook fan page for The Edge of Night, in a post made by family friend Laurie Noyes. May reportedly passed away peacefully while surrounded by his family on Friday, January 28th. The actor was also known for roles on The Roaring 20s, Falcon Crest, and Texas.

"Don May was a kind and wonderful man and a very good friend to me," the post from Noyes reads. "Just received the sad news from his family that he passed away peacefully on January 28 at home with his wife by his side. Don was [94]. He is survived by his wife, Carla Borelli-May, and two sons, Christopher and Douglas."

Born in Chicago, Illinois on February 22, 1927, May went on to graduate with a bachelor of arts from the University of Oklahoma. He then served as an ensign and a gunnery officer in the Navy from 1951 to 1955. Just a year later, the actor got his first credited role, hosting the military anthology series The West Point Story. He then joined the fold of the Western TV series Colt .45 from 1959 to 1960, playing Sam Colt Jr., the cousin of the lead character, Christopher Colt.

May continued to pop up throughout television, gaining a prominent role as newspaper reporter Pat Garrison in The Roaring 20s, as well as Thatcher in the Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color three-parter "The Tenderfoot." On the film side, his work included Kisses for My President and Follow, Me, Boys!.

May became somewhat of a staple in the soap opera world with The Edge of Night, which he starred in as Adam Drake, the law partner of lead character Mike Karr. May would go on to play that role for a full decade, from 1967 to 1977. His soap opera appearances also included stints in All My Children, Dallas, As The World Turns, Another World, and Texas. May's most recent onscreen credit was a 1993 episode of L.A. Law.

"I found my opportunities on television were very few," May explained in a 1984 interview with The Washington Post. "In the movies, there's only a handful of people who do meaningful roles -- the rest is piecework. Doing a soap opera in New York gave me the opportunity to come back to New York, where I really love to live. And there are producing and directing opportunities, which I also do."

"It was an attractive character, Adam Drake," May explained elsewhere in the interview. "I found I could say through that character a lot of things I had a lot of thoughts about. If you're on each day representing the current man -- and that's what the character represented -- that was satisfying."

'Walking Dead' Moses J. Moseley Dead at 31 ... Cops Suspect Suicide

Moses J. Moseley, famous for playing one of Michonne's zombies in "The Walking Dead," has died at just 31 years old ... and cops are investigating the circumstances surrounding his death.

A family member said the police found Moses' body Wednesday in the Hudson Bridge area of Stockbridge, GA ... the bridge covers a freeway. There's currently an active investigation into how the young actor's body ended up in the area -- and whether or not foul play was involved.

A family member said they hadn't heard from Moses since Sunday of last week. They called around to hospitals, to no avail. On Wednesday morning, they filed a missing person's report. They then contacted OnStar which tracked the car and that's where his body was discovered.

The family member said Moses died of a gunshot wound, but investigators are working to find out who pulled the trigger.

Moses got his big break on "The Walking Dead" from 2012-2015 as one of Michonne's zombies that followed her around. He also made appearances on "Watchmen" on HBO and was in "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire" in 2013.

Robert Wall, 9th Deg Black Belt 'Enter The Dragon' Actor Dead At 82

Tang Soo Do master Robert Wall, who trained with and acted alongside Chuck Norris and Bruce Lee in some of the greatest martial arts films of all time has died at the age of 82 ... TMZ Sports has learned.

Wall was a 9th degree Tang Soo Do black belt under Norris ... who is credited with bringing the discipline to the West. The men trained together for many years ... and were business partners.

In addition to being a martial arts master, Wall also played important roles on the silver screen.

Robert appeared in 1972s "Way of the Dragon" and 1973s "Enter the Dragon" -- both starring Lee, the most well-renowned martial artist to ever live.

Wall and Lee had a memorable and very real (albeit one-sided) fight in "Enter the Dragon."

In fact, years after they filmed the fight scene, Bob revealed Lee actually broke his ribs.

"Bob, I wanna hit you, and I wanna hit you hard," Wall revealed Lee told him prior to filming.

The reason ... Bruce -- who'd known Wall for 8 years before filming the movie -- wanted the fight to look as authentic as possible, so the two masters went full-speed.

Wall's family sent us the following statement on Robert's passing.

"Bob was the greatest husband and father. Family was Everything to him. He lived a remarkable life & There is a hole in our hearts that will never be filled. His spirit & legacy will live on forever within us. He was our rock."

Brian Augustyn, longtime DC editor and Batman - Gotham by Gaslight writer dies at 67

Writer/editor Brian Augustyn has died after suffering a stroke, according to a Facebook post from his longtime collaborator and friend, writer Mark Waid. Waid disclosed the news of Augustyn's death on his Facebook page, nothing that Augustyn's family requested for him to make the announcement.

Augustyn made his name in comics as a senior editor for DC from 1987 through 1996, editing major titles including Justice League, Flash, and Wonder Woman, while also working closely with Waid as a fellow editor, and later writer.

Augustyn also broke new ground for DC as the writer of Batman: Gotham by Gaslight, the very first 'Elseworlds' title from DC's former alt-reality-focused line. Alongside co-writer Waid, Augustyn also redefined the origins of the Justice League in JLA: Year One, which adapted the team's earliest adventures for a modern context. He also teamed with Waid again for an extended, fan-favorite run on The Flash, which brought Wally West to the forefront of the DC Universe.

Aside from his primary work at DC, Augustyn wrote comics for Marvel, Dark Horse, Wildstorm, Chaos, and more.

Augustyn is survived by his wife Nadine, and daughters Carrie and Allie. Waid's announcement of Augustyn's death requests that condolences and messages of support be sent to Waid, who has volunteered to pass them along to Augustyn's family on their behalf.

"This one hurts unimaginably: Brian Augustyn, rest in peace. The Augustyn family has asked me to let Brian’s friends and fans know that Brian left us today after suffering a sudden, severe stroke over the weekend," reads Waid's statement.

"I have spent a lot of time these last few hours writing a great deal about Brian, and I’ll share those thoughts soon, but for now I simply wanted to let everyone know. Comics has lost a very kind, very talented man who has been my big brother and one of my very best friends for nearly 35 years."

"If you’ve ever been a friend, colleague, or fan of Brian’s - or, frankly, a fan of the work done by Humberto Ramos, Mike Wieringo, Mike Parobeck, Oscar Jimenez, Howard Porter, Travis Charest, or any of the many, many other creators who owe their careers to Brian, myself included - I’m asking you to send a card or a note to his wife Nadine and daughters Carrie and Allie to express your condolences and tell them what he meant to you," Waid continues.

Monica Vitti: 'Queen of Italian cinema' dies at 90

Paying tribute, Culture Minister Dario Franceschini described her as the "queen of Italian cinema" and "a great artist and a great Italian".

Vitti was best known for her work with director Michelangelo Antonioni on classics like 1960's L'Avventura, which earned her a Bafta nomination.

Her English-language roles included the title part in 1966's Modesty Blaise.

Following her death, Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi said Vitti had "made Italian cinema shine around the world".

He added: "An actress of great wit and extraordinary talent, she conquered generations of Italians with her spirit, her bravura, her beauty."

Born in Rome, Vitti started out in the theatre, where she was spotted by Antonioni. The legendary film-maker went on to put her at the heart of The Night (1961), Eclipse (1962) and The Red Desert (1964).

She told Italian TV in 1982 she was "lucky enough to start my career with a man of great talent", who was also "spiritual, full of life and enthusiasm".

That relationship brought her worldwide acclaim and led to her first role outside Italy, opposite Terence Stamp and Dirk Bogarde in spy comedy Modesty Blaise.

After returning to her home country, she cemented her status as a screen icon and was particularly known for her comedies. Vitti was awarded a career Golden Lion award at the Venice Film Festival in 1995.

In the 1990s, an autobiography titled A Bed is Like a Rose became a best-seller and a set text in Italian schools and universities.

"Its success is the most wonderful thing that has happened to me, a thousand times better than winning an Oscar," she said at the time.

Originally posted by Nuke Nixon
[b]Monica Vitti: 'Queen of Italian cinema' dies at 90

Paying tribute, Culture Minister Dario Franceschini described her as the "queen of Italian cinema" and "a great artist and a great Italian".

Vitti was best known for her work with director Michelangelo Antonioni on classics like 1960's L'Avventura, which earned her a Bafta nomination.

Her English-language roles included the title part in 1966's Modesty Blaise.

Following her death, Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi said Vitti had "made Italian cinema shine around the world".

He added: "An actress of great wit and extraordinary talent, she conquered generations of Italians with her spirit, her bravura, her beauty."

Born in Rome, Vitti started out in the theatre, where she was spotted by Antonioni. The legendary film-maker went on to put her at the heart of The Night (1961), Eclipse (1962) and The Red Desert (1964).

She told Italian TV in 1982 she was "lucky enough to start my career with a man of great talent", who was also "spiritual, full of life and enthusiasm".

That relationship brought her worldwide acclaim and led to her first role outside Italy, opposite Terence Stamp and Dirk Bogarde in spy comedy Modesty Blaise.

After returning to her home country, she cemented her status as a screen icon and was particularly known for her comedies. Vitti was awarded a career Golden Lion award at the Venice Film Festival in 1995.

In the 1990s, an autobiography titled A Bed is Like a Rose became a best-seller and a set text in Italian schools and universities.

"Its success is the most wonderful thing that has happened to me, a thousand times better than winning an Oscar," she said at the time. [/B]

dank

Ivan Reitman, producer, 'Ghostbusters' director, dies at 75

Ivan Reitman, the influential filmmaker and producer behind beloved comedies from “Animal House” to “Ghostbusters,” has died. He was 75.

Reitman died peacefully in his sleep Saturday night at his home in Montecito, Calif., his family told The Associated Press.

“Our family is grieving the unexpected loss of a husband, father, and grandfather who taught us to always seek the magic in life,” children Jason Reitman, Catherine Reitman and Caroline Reitman said in a joint statement. “We take comfort that his work as a filmmaker brought laughter and happiness to countless others around the world. While we mourn privately, we hope those who knew him through his films will remember him always.”

Known for big, bawdy comedies that caught the spirit of their time, Reitman’s big break came with the raucous, college fraternity sendup “National Lampoon’s Animal House,” which he produced. He directed Bill Murray in his first starring role in “Meatballs” and then again in “Stripes,” but his most significant success came with 1984’s “Ghostbusters.”

Not only did the irreverent supernatural comedy starring Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis, Ernie Hudson, Sigourney Weaver and Rick Moranis gross nearly $300 million worldwide, it earned two Oscar nominations, spawned a veritable franchise, including spinoffs, television shows and a new movie, “Ghostbusters: Afterlife,” that opened this last year. His son, filmmaker Jason Reitman directed.

“A legend,” comedian and actor Kumail Nanjiani said on Twitter. “The number of great movies he made is absurd.”

Among other notable films he directed are “Twins,” “Kindergarten Cop,” “Dave,” “Junior” and 1998′s “Six Days, Seven Nights.” He also produced “Beethoven,” “Old School” and “EuroTrip,” and many others, including several for his son.

He was born in Komárno, Czechoslovakia, in 1946 where his father owned the country’s biggest vinegar factory. His mother had survived Auschwitz and his father was in the resistance. When the communists began imprisoning capitalists after the war, the Reitmans decided to escape, when Ivan Reitman was only 4. They traveled in the nailed-down hold of a barge headed for Vienna.

“I remember flashes of scenes,” Reitman told the AP in 1979. “Later they told me about how they gave me a couple of sleeping pills so I wouldn’t make any noise. I was so knocked out that I slept with my eyes open. My parents were afraid I was dead.”

The Reitmans joined a relative in Toronto, where Ivan displayed his show biz inclinations: starting a puppet theater, entertaining at summer camps, playing coffee houses with a folk music group. He studied music and drama at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, and began making movie shorts.

With friends and $12,000, Reitman made a nine-day movie, “Cannibal Girls,” which American International agreed to release. He produced on a $500 budget a weekly TV revue, “Greed,” with Dan Aykroyd, and became associated with the Lampoon group in its off-Broadway revue that featured John Belushi, Gilda Radner and Murray. That soon led to “Animal House.”

By the time 1990′s “Kindergarten Cop” came around, Reitman had established himself as the most successful comedy director in history. Though not even being the father of three children could have prepared him for the arduous task of directing 30 children between the ages of 4 and 7 in the Arnold Schwarzenegger comedy.

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The political comedy “Dave,” starring Kevin Kline as an ordinary man who has to double for the US President, provided a bit of a departure for Reitman. Roger Ebert wrote at the time that “The movie is more proof that it isn’t what you do, it’s how you do it: Ivan Reitman’s direction and Gary Ross’ screenplay use intelligence and warmhearted sentiment to make Dave into wonderful lighthearted entertainment.”

Reitman slowed down as a director after “Six Days, Seven Nights,” the 1998 adventure comedy with Harrison Ford and Anne Heche — only four films would follow “Evolution,” “My Super Ex-Girlfriend,” “No Strings Attached” and “Draft Day,” from 2014.

But he continued producing and, with “Ghostbusters: Afterlife,” even found himself on the press circuit with his son, providing emotional moments for both with the passing of the baton.

When asked late last year why the 1984 film continued to fascinate, Reitman told the AP that it was hard to define.

“I always had a sort of sincere approach to the comedy,” he said. “I took it seriously even though, it was a horror movie and a comedy, I felt you had to sort of deal with it in a kind of realistic and honest way.”

Actor Pepper Martin dies at age 85

Superman II Actor and Pro Wrestler Pepper Martin Has Died at 85 Martin was probably best known for his role in the Christopher Reeve movie SUPERMAN II where he played the obnoxious truck driver bully who beats the crap out of the depowered Clark Kent.

Friday the 13th Part 2’ Actor Jack Marks Has Passed Away

Jack Marks played Deputy Winslow in Friday the 13th Part 2, who chases an adult Jason Voorhees through the woods. Arriving at his shack, Jason kills the Deputy with a hammer.

Prior to becoming a member of the Friday the 13th family, Jack Marks had a role in the 1976 TV movie Der gross Horizont, subsequently appearing in the TV series “Ryan’s Hope” and the 1988 film Anna. His final appearance on screen was in the TV series “Tattinger’s” in 1989.

Linda Marks writes in a note shared by Bill Randolph, “I am sorry to inform you that my dear husband, Jack Marks, died last week after a long, slow decline from congestive heart failure. I know many of you have known him in passing as he loved to entertain fellow elevator passengers and trade quips with security guards and neighbors, en route to wherever he was going.

“He spent his last two years mostly at home managing to enjoy his increasingly sedentary existence and keeping in touch with close friends. He received hospice care at home and briefly in Brooklyn, before he died peacefully, just short of 87 years old. We had been together 39 years.

“Jack had a substantial acting career, both before and after we moved to Westbeth, twenty-odd years ago. He mostly did off-Broadway and regional theatre. His biggest venues were touring nationally as the father in Briton Beach Memoirs and dying heroically in the movie Friday the 13th Part 2. He was proudest of his starring dual performance in Athol Fugard’s play, Valley Song, which he performed on Martha’s Vineyard. He also relished performing the old man, Lazar Wolf, in three different out-of-town productions of Fiddler on the Roof.

“When acting work became more difficult to get, he took up writing, producing hundreds of vibrant short stories and a few poems.”

All of us here at Bloody Disgusting send our deepest condolences to Linda Marks, and to all of Jack’s family members, friends, and colleagues. May he rest in eternal peace.

British actor Peter Bowles dies at 85

Peter Bowles, a dapper British character actor who was best known for his role as an arriviste in the popular British television sitcom “To the Manor Born,” died on Thursday. He was 85.

The cause was cancer, according to a statement to the BBC from his agent. No further information was available.

In a six-decade career, Mr. Bowles, who was the son of servants and grew up without indoor plumbing, appeared in a merry-go-round of productions in television, film and onstage, alternating between comedy and drama, hapless heroes and villains. Whatever character he played, he often projected the air of what his agent called “the archetypal English gent.”

Mr. Bowles’s well-known television credits included roles in “Rumpole of the Bailey,” “The Bounder,” “Only When I Laugh” and the recent series “Victoria.” He wrote and starred in “Lytton’s Diary,” about the life of a newspaper gossip columnist. And he achieved success in “The Irish R.M.,” in which he played a British Army officer sent to Ireland as a resident magistrate. The New York Times called the show “devilishly hilarious.”

But he was best known for his portrayal of Richard DeVere in “To the Manor Born.” DeVere, the son of Czech-Polish émigrés, is the nouveau-riche owner of a supermarket who buys a grand English manor house from its original owner, Audrey fforbes-Hamilton, played by Penelope Keith. She moves to a nearby small cottage, from which she eyes DeVere’s activities with considerable disapproval.
“The show was a reflection of the disruptions to the English class system by the recently elected Margaret Thatcher, a shopkeeper’s daughter who had poshed up her voice but was committed to social mobility,” Mark Lawson wrote in an appreciation of Mr. Bowles in The Guardian on Thursday.

“The casting of the charming Bowles,” he added, “helped to offset the potentially nasty snobbery of the premise.”

The sitcom aired from 1979 to 1981 in Britain, where it routinely drew audiences of 20 million, astronomical by British standards. Like other British series he was in, it later aired in the United States on PBS.

Peter Bowles was born in London on Oct. 16, 1936. His father, Herbert Reginald Bowles, was a valet and chauffeur to a son of the Earl of Sandwich; his mother, Sarah Jane (Harrison) Bowles, was a nanny employed by the family of the Duke of Argyll in Scotland. (The two met when they both worked for the family of Lord Beaverbrook, the newspaper baron and cabinet minister under Winston Churchill.)

During World War II, when Peter was 6, the family moved to one of the poorest working-class districts of Nottingham, in the English Midlands, where their house had an outside toilet and no bath.

After appearing in amateur plays in Nottingham, Peter won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London, where his fellow actors included Alan Bates, Peter O’Toole and Albert Finney, with whom he shared a flat.

Mr. Bowles started onstage with the Old Vic Company in 1956 with small parts in Shakespeare dramas. Over time, he starred in 45 theatrical productions. He was seen in the early 1990s by the director Peter Hall, who then cast him in a string of plays in London’s West End.

Tom Parker: The Wanted singer dies aged 33

The singer told fans in October 2020 that he had an inoperable tumour.

His wife Kelsey Hardwick wrote on Instagram: "Our hearts are broken." The pair had two young children together.

She added: "Tom was the centre of our world. We can't imagine life without his infectious smile and energetic presence. We are truly thankful for the outpouring of love and support and ask that we all unite to ensure Tom's light continues to shine for his beautiful children. Thank you to everyone who has supported in his care throughout, he fought until the very end. I'm forever proud of you."

The couple married in 2018 and had a daughter, Aurelia Rose, and a son, Bodhi.
The band said they were "devastated" by Parker's death and that they were with him and his family at his side when he died.

The Wanted formed in 2009, with Parker, Max George, Siva Kaneswaran, Nathan Sykes and Jay McGuiness. They had two UK number one singles - Glad You Came and All Time Low - and eight other top 10 hits including Chasing The Sun, Heart Vacancy and Lightning.

Paul Herman Dies: ‘The Sopranos’, ‘Goodfellas’ Actor Was 76

The Brooklyn-born actor who appeared in such classic mob movies as Goodfellas, Once Upon a Time in America and The Irishman but is probably best known for his portrayal of club owner Peter “Beansie” Gaeta in The Sopranos, died Tuesday. He was 76.

His death was announced on Instagram by Sopranos co-star Michael Imperioli. A cause of death was not disclosed.

“Our friend and colleague Paul Herman has passed away,” Imperioli wrote. “Paulie was just a great dude. A first class storyteller and raconteur and one hell of an actor. Goodfellas, Once Upon a Time in America, The Irishman and of course The Sopranos are some highlights. Paulie lived around the corner from me the last few years and i am glad we got to spend some time together before he left us. I’ll miss him. Lots of love to his family, friends and our community of actors and filmmakers.”

Herman began his movie career in 1982’s Dear Mr. Wonderful starring Joe Pesci, following that up with roles in Once Upon a Time in America, The Pope of Greenwich Village, The Cotton Club, The Purple Rose of Cairo, The Last Temptation of Christ, The Color of Money, Radio Days, Billy Bathgate, Bullets Over Broadway, Cop Land, Goodfellas, Casino and Silver Linings Playbook as well as TV shows including Miami Vice, Spencer For Hire and The Equalizer.

His most memorable character came in 2000 with his first Sopranos appearance in the recurring role of Beansie Gaeta, a former drug dealer and one-time friend and associate of DiMeo crime family capo Richie Aprile (David Proval). In one particularly indelible Sopranos moment, Aprile, newly out of prison, attacks his former friend Beansie with a pot of hot coffee before running him over with a car, leaving Beansie paraplegic.

After the Sopranos, Herman recurred on the HBO series Entourage from 2004-10 as Marvin, the accountant of main character Vince Chase (Adrian Grenier).

Rocky King, American professional wrestler and referee dead at 64

His passing on March 27, 2022, after battling health issues for the last few years — a stroke, blind in one eye, kidney issues — leaves a huge hole in the greater Atlanta area, where the former wrestler, referee, trainer and promoter gave of himself again and again to help others.

Helping the homeless was a particular passion of King’s, and he knew the cause intimately, having experienced homelessness himself. Atlanta station WXIA-TV once dubbed him “King of the Streets” for his efforts.

Born in 1960, and growing up in Richbourg, South Carolina, William Boulware Jr., was homeless for a time in the early 1980s, “often eating from garbage bins” and surviving as best he could.

“I promised God if I made it, I’d feed the homeless,” King told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution in 2015.

As a young man, he did his initial wrestling training in Lancaster, South Carolina. He made his way to Atlanta, and told people that he would become a professional wrestler. The dream came true.

“I used to go down to the TV station (WTBS) hanging around the wrestlers and was thrown out every time,” he told The Atlanta Voice in 2004.

Molding himself into a 6-foot-1, a 220-pound man, working as a day laborer, he debuted in the early 1980s, and working primarily for Jim Crockett Promotions.

He particularly improved in the Florida territory. It was in Championship Wrestling From Florida that King struck up a friendship with Pez Whatley, who died in 2005. “When I met him, I was doing jobs, travelling around the country,” King recalled after Whatley’s death. “I came to Tampa, and [Florida promoter] Eddie Graham gave me my first full-time job. Pez was already working there. We struck up a friendship. His momma called me son, and I called her mom.”

There aren’t many names of the era that he didn’t face, especially as a punching bag of sorts. The Four Horsemen, in particular, often found themselves beating down King.

Tommy Angel was another JCP enhancement talent. He recalled King as a “was just a fun loving, happy guy with an infectious personality. All the boys loved him and also had great respect for his work. He was a jobber that earned his way up the ranks, so much so, the office was putting him over in some house shows and I worked him several times putting him over. He was a fan favorite amongst our talent level. One of the good guys. He will be missed.”

“What people fail to see is that on TV, you go against the very best,” King told Tom Sorensen of the Charlotte Observer in 1987. “The people I wrestle are like the N.Y. Mets — they’re on TV all the time because they’re world champions. They’re hard to beat.”

His highest profile time might have been as Little Richard Marley, roadie/manager/valet for the Fabulous Freebirds (Michael Hayes and Jimmy Garvin), though it didn’t last very long.

“When you are the greatest rock ‘n’ roll band in the world, it allows you a few special perks, and right now we’re going to show you one,” crowed Hayes, bringing Marley.

In 2004, King opened Rocky King Used Cars in Atlanta, and ran a restaurant at the Westgate Shopping Center called the Chicken Coop.

He set up a wrestling school and the associated promotion he ran put on upwards of 150 shows a year for a time, in schools, churches, at Boys & Girls Clubs. Most were fundraising based, and Habitat for Humanity was a particular charity King and company supported. The WWA was proudly family-friendly, and its old website promoted: “We run traditional wrestling shows and shows for Charities. The shows have great wrestling, great role models, and great inspiration. There are no curse words, no sick soap operas, no porno. You will be proud to take your 7 year olds and have no fear they will see anything X Rated.”

“Some of the guys I knew in the business laughed at me,” King told The Atlanta Voice. “They said I was a fool to offer to do wrestling matches for charity. They said I’d be out of business in a year.” For a time, the promotion was called Boulware Wrestling, in tribute to his late brother, Michael.

Estelle Harris, ‘Seinfeld’ and ‘Toy Story’ Series Actress, Dies at 93

Estelle Harris, who memorably played George’s mother Estelle Costanza on “Seinfeld” and was the indelible voice of Mrs. Potato Head in the “Toy Story” franchise, died on April 2 of natural causes at 93 years old, her representative Michael Eisenstadt confirmed to Variety.

Harris was best known for her distinctive voice and comedic timing, forever cemented by her role as the mother of George (Jason Alexander) in “Seinfeld,” where she appeared on 27 episodes. Her foil was Jerry Stiller, who played Frank Costanza, and the three characters engaged in countless scenes of lovable bickering.

She also had a robust voice career, anchored by her work as Mrs. Potato Head in the second, third and fourth chapters of the “Toy Story” series. Channelling the verve of her “Seinfeld” role, she had a loving and nagging relationship with Mr. Potato Head, perfectly voiced by Don Rickles. From there, she popped up in many animated projects large and small, including films such as “Brother Bear” (2003) and “Tarzan II” (2005) and series like “Hercules,” “The Wild Thornberrys” and “Godzilla: The Series” (all from 1998).

Harris’ career started with commercial work and two small roles in the 1977 films “Looking Up” and “Summerdog,” with bit parts in larger projects starting in the mid-’80s, including a small part in Sergio Leone’s “Once Upon a Time in America” (1984), a recurring role on “Night Court” and a guest spot on “Married… With Children.” More and more character work continued until her first episode of “Seinfeld” in 1992, which became her signature role.