Thursday, February 26, 2026

Drusilla Beyfus obit

Drusilla Beyfus obituary: doyenne of English manners

Author and editor who blazed a trail for legions of women journalists with her keen eye for social mores and seemingly effortless fashion, dies aged 98

She was not on the list.


When her quartet of books entitled The Done Thing began to appear in 1992, Drusilla Beyfus dedicated the one on business to her businesswoman sister, the ones on parties and courtship to her son, and the one on sex “to M, with love” — unmistakably her husband Milton Shulman, the theatre critic.

“Etiquette and sex, on the surface, are strange bedfellows,” began her insightful little volume. “Nevertheless, collaboration between the two has always been fruitful.”

Beyfus was the doyenne of English manners for five decades. Her instinct for knowing how people ought to behave in any social situation sprang not from upper-crust snobbery — even though her mother had once “danced with the Prince of Wales”, as in the 1920s song — but from her instinctive good sense and desire to keep everyone happy. She would ask, what are manners for otherwise? “Manners are the happy way of doing things.”

Her essential volume Lady Behave: A Guide to Modern Manners, written with wit and humour in collaboration with her fellow Express journalist Anne Edwards, first appeared in 1957. This was an era when much that passes unnoticed today — commenting on people’s clothes, asking how much things cost or what others get paid — was firmly unacceptable. Such conventions of traditional etiquette were about to slip out of fashionable use in the 1960s, yet by the time the updated edition of Lady Behave appeared in 1969, instruction was still needed. And by 1993, The Done Thing had to deal with “Condom Etiquette”, “Gay Coupledom”, and even “Tactful Behaviour when the sex wasn’t all that good, or a fiasco”.

One piece of advice Beyfus was especially qualified to give. “Take a tip from the author,” she wrote. “The odder your name, the more boldly it must be uttered. When the major domo at a formal banquet asks for your name at the door, stifle the impulse to whisper it quietly into his ear.” She knew that the result, in her case, might be a master of ceremonies booming out “Miss Priscilla Byfish”.

The name Drusilla was taken from a cafĂ© in Sussex, she claimed, which later became a zoo. Beyfus is pronounced Bye-fuss. Having an unusual name impelled her to advise readers not only how to introduce the Buccleuchs to the Leveson-Gowers (an unlikely circumstance) but, as Beyfus said in her book Modern Manners, to resist correcting other people’s pronunciation: “Never a good idea … It leaves a feeling of discomfiture, and is never forgotten.”

Drusilla Norman Beyfus was born in London in 1927, the elder daughter of Norman Beyfus, a City wool broker who aspired to become a poet, and his wife Florence Noel Barker, known as Noel, who had been a singer and dancer in Gerald du Maurier’s company. The family lived in Chelsea and Drusilla attended the Glendower School, the Royal Naval School at Richmond, and finally boarded at the Channing School, evacuated to Ross-on-Wye in 1943.

Her parents’ marriage fell apart when her father lost his money (suddenly) and his sight (gradually) but as a Christian Scientist he could not acknowledge the latter. Noel took her two daughters to live in a rectory near Henley, but there was not enough money to buy blackout material — it was wartime — for the windows. On leaving school, Drusilla went straight to work as a junior reporter on the Reading Mercury. Readers of Monica Dickens’s novel My Turn to Make the Tea, she used to say, would instantly recognise her life as a provincial trainee reporter.

But within a year, after the war was over, she broke into Fleet Street, becoming a star writer on the Daily Express who caught the eye of the proprietor, Max Aitken, Lord Beaverbrook. She remembered one stunt which involved being flown out to what remained of war-stricken Berlin, disguised as a sack of coal, or potatoes, the story varies. She was sent to New York with the photographer Eve Arnold to write about the difference between dating American men and English men. Interviewing the film star Cyd Charisse, who was famous for her legs, she was told by Charisse’s husband: “You have the best legs I have ever seen.”

Another of Beaverbrook’s favoured recruits was his fellow Canadian, Major Milton Shulman, author of Defeat in the West, lately demobbed from intelligence. In 1953, Shulman wrote a series called “Shulman’s Beauties of 1953” that included the gamine, much-sought-after women’s editor Miss Beyfus, then 26 and lately involved with the film critic Derek Monsey.

Shulman invited her on a date, after which she returned to her Shepherd Market flat — shared with Toni Scott, a South African model — and wrote in lipstick on her bathroom mirror: “That man is SO annoying.” It took a girl with spirit — to cope with Shulman’s invincible amour-propre and unstoppable racontage. They were married in 1956 at Caxton Hall with Michael and Jill Foot as witnesses, and were together until Shulman’s death in 2004. Her equable temperament withstood five decades of her husband’s vociferous pontificating, his fondness for betting on the horses and his passion for Jewish jokes: but Beyfus said that having earned her own living since the age of 17, she always felt “determined to make a go of things, including marriage”.

From being women’s editor of the Sunday Express, she moved into a glossier milieu as associate editor of Jocelyn Stevens’s Queen magazine. She went on to be home editor of The Observer, associate editor of the Daily Telegraph magazine, editor of Brides magazine, associate editor of Vogue, editor of Harrods magazine, and a columnist on You magazine — all the while continuing to contribute to or edit pages in Vogue, the Telegraph and the Oldie until well into her nineties. Colleagues agreed: “It was always such fun when she was there. She made the office the nicest place to be.”

She was followed into the glossy magazine world by all three children: Alexandra Shulman, who became editor of British Vogue, Nicola Shulman, writer and critic, who became the Marchioness of Normanby, and Jason Shulman, the artist who started out as a magazine art director.

Combining marriage and family with career was possible in journalism, thanks to its flexibility (“I was finishing an article as I went off to Queen Charlotte’s and drank a bottle of brandy thinking I could disguise the pain”), so motherhood never interrupted her career. In 1968 her first book was called the English Marriage: interviews with 30 couples, some of whom (including the Bakewells and the Andrew Sinclairs) had divorced by the time the book appeared. She could not conclude her book with a ringing endorsement of marriage — “the most personal, volatile and unclassifiable of human bonds — and impossible to computerise”. Nor would she boast of how she combined work with family life. Modesty persuaded her that “the edifice I had built up was, I felt, always teetering on the brink of collapse”.

Beyfus was a perfectionist who brought to magazines her style and originality, her flair for visual innovation linking high fashion photography with contemporary art.

Caroline Clifton-Mogg, who arrived at Brides to be home editor, recalled Beyfus’s willingness to help others: indeed, she taught her to write. “I couldn’t write for toffee, not even 100 words on bathrooms. But that was her generous cast of mind. Like Chanel, she would advise you to take something out. Keep it light, make it funny. She spoke in pronouncements, everything came out as a fully formed thought. You had to be ready to pronounce back.”

For instance, though she accepted feminism (“a statement of the obvious”) she asked the pertinent questions: “All attempts across the world to dispense with the family have failed.” “You may assume that at a certain age, children are ‘off your hands’ — but whose hands are they on?”

Her quick wit earned her a place on radio and TV panels such as My Word! and Call My Bluff. Endlessly curious about people — she said a good definition of bad manners was showing no curiosity about others — she so charmed the artist Raoul Millais, grandson of Sir John Everett Millais, he insisted on her taking Dippersmoor Manor, a beautiful medieval house in rolling Herefordshire farmland, for a peppercorn rent; here the Shulmans spent many family weekends.

“She was the most beautiful woman in Fleet Street, and didn’t seem to know it,” is how Shirley Conran, her Observer colleague, characterised Beyfus’s insouciant beauty. “Like Audrey Hepburn, but more beautiful.”

Invited to make a film for the BBC’s One Pair of Eyes series, Conran chose “Danger — Women at Work” as her subject, featuring Beyfus. “Drusilla never appeared to be a harassed mother. But working mothers were still frowned upon by other women. I remember Drusilla saying, ‘I wish we all had a baboushka like the Russians do’.”

For a time Beyfus took to wearing Issey Miyake’s indigo-dyed shirts, skirts and baggy trousers, which found no favour with her husband — “why dress as a field-worker in some communist country?” — but she carried it off as the height of chic. She once wrote that fashion had never been more flattering than in the postwar 1940s, but she was “way ahead of the crowd in her own style”, said Clifton-Mogg. “In the early 1970s it was long dresses. She wore them with elan.”

In art, theatre, books, cinema and photography as in fashion she was a cultural neophiliac and on the side of experiment. Her daughters were never surprised to be told by a 30-something friend, “I trawled out to an opening at some warehouse in east London and was feeling very cool and hip to be there — when I turned round and there was your mother.”

In widowhood and grandmotherhood (“My mother might not know how to knit,” wrote Alexandra after the birth of her son Sam, “but she’ll be able to explain Anselm Kiefer to him”) she maintained her appreciation of theatre, on the judging panel for the Milton Shulman newcomer prize in the Evening Standard theatre awards.

A letter of condolence, as Beyfus told readers, was the most difficult to write, and impossible to dash off. The example she provided included the words: “Your mother was such a sweet, gay, affectionate and brave person, which is how I — and I am sure everyone who met her — will always remember her.” Words most likely to occur to anyone acquainted with Beyfus herself.

Drusilla Beyfus, author and journalist, was born on March 1, 1927. She died on February 26, 2026, aged 98

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Phil Ryan obit

Legendary lawman Phil Ryan dies at 80

 

He was not on the list.


Phil Ryan, a decorated Texas Ranger who famously hunted serial killers and ushered in professionalism during three terms as Wise County Sheriff, died Wednesday morning.

He was 80.

Ryan had been battling heart disease and other health issues leading up to his death.

He was known on a national scale for his work as a Texas Ranger, where he brought justice to notorious killers, Henry Lee Lucas, Ricky Lee and Sharon Green. The reverence for Ryan in the local law enforcement community was built by how he led the WCSO, and his work to clean up an agency mired in scandals.

In a phone call Wednesday, former Sheriff Lane Akin, said the law enforcement community lost a remarkable role model.

“Phil was the best sheriff Wise County has ever had,” Akin said. “I don’t know how many law enforcement guys I’ve worked with in my career, but he’s the best. He took care of business and did it the way it should be done.”

Ryan was born in Oklahoma on Aug. 10, 1945 and raised in the Houston area. He entered law enforcement in 1966 at age 21 as an officer in Pasadena. He joined the Texas Department of Public Safety in 1968 as a highway patrolman assigned to Houston and Cleveland. Following a stint as a sergeant in Humble, he was promoted to Texas Ranger in 1979 in Wise County.

He stationed in Decatur for nine years, investigating major crimes in Wise, Jack, Montague and Clay counties until his retirement from the agency on Jan. 31, 1989. One of his most notable investigations involved the capture of serial killer Henry Lee Lucas. Akin noted that Lucas had been able to elude police in previous interactions until he met Ryan.

“The whole thing with Henry Lee Lucas, it had turned into a dog and pony show, but Phil was the one with the common sense to question that knucklehead,” Akin said. “He could tell [Lucas] wasn’t telling the truth. A lot of officers were closing their murder cases based on what he was saying, but Phil caught him in his lies.”

In addition to his work on the Lucas case, he was the primary Texas Ranger assigned to the Ricky Lee and Sharon Green case, involving two of the most prolific killers in the county’s history.

Beyond the cases that have been subject of Netflix documentaries and broadcast specials decades later, Ryan was decorated throughout his career. He received two purple hearts, after being shot and stabbed in the line of duty with Texas DPS. He was recognized with the Distinguished Honor from the North Texas Criminal Justice Association and Distinguished Service by the Petroleum Industry Security council for his case work. His specializations and certifications included forensic hypnosis, firearms instruction hostage negotiation, fingerprint identification, scientific interrogation, speed reading and narcotics officer survival.

After a brief stint in the private sector, Ryan ran for Wise County Sheriff in 1992. He defeated Charles Johnson in the Democratic primary, 4,755 to 1,250.He didn’t face a Republican challenger, and after the former sheriff submitted his resignation to commissioners, Ryan took his oath of office as sheriff on March 20, 1992.

Before taking office, the WCSO and former Sheriff Leroy Burch been making headlines for the wrong reasons. Burch and bondsman David Box, were under investigation by state and federal grand juries in connection with an alleged bond scheme that resulted in hundreds of questionable arrests on sex charges at a roadside park, which came to light after investigative reporting from the Dallas Morning News. Additionally, an investigation revealed the sheriff had a side gig pouring concrete out of state. At the time of his victory, the Wise County Messenger editorialized in its election coverage that “hopefully the sheriff of Wise County will make the news for his arrests and crime-fighting rather than concrete-pouring trips to Tennessee and allegations of wrongdoing.”

Ryan lived up to the those expectations.

“It’s time for a good change in Wise County, but I hope there are a lot of people ready to roll up their sleeves and help me,” he told the Messenger in 1992 after his win.

Akin visited with Ryan yesterday. He said Ryan was sick but he didn’t expect for the man that served as a major influence on he and many others in Wise County law enforcement, to pass so soon. He described Ryan as a man of integrity, with quick wits and a big heart who helped people behind the scenes.

“I sat with him for about an hour, he was in and out of consciousness, but we just talked about the things he’s done in law enforcement,” Akin said. “He was the one who persuaded me to come to Decatur to be a Texas Ranger as he was taking office. At the time, there was nothing but corruption at the WCSO. There was a long way to go to build trust in the Wise County community and in law enforcement across North Texas.”

“But he changed things,” Akin added. “I’m so glad that I was here to see what he was doing to turn things around. He brought in people that cared about the community, and when someone wasn’t working like they should be — if they weren’t willing to do it the right way — he got rid of them… There is always some level of ego, some level of [ulterior motive], but with Phil, there wasn’t. I have not ever seen someone like that. He turned things around and made law enforcement what it should be and that has carried on. Phil set the tone.”

Ryan served three terms as sheriff. He campaigned on building trust and making changes that he couldn’t as a Texas Ranger that he felt would make Wise County a safer place to work and live.

Beyond demanding professionalism, he also modernized the WCSO by launching a crime prevention division, starting up the Wise Eyes program, instituting 24-hour patrol and dispatching, a jail industries program and improvements to extend the life of the jail. He also formed a mounted patrol and a color guard, established a vehicle maintenance shop and brought the first computer network to the WCSO.

Bridgeport Police Chief Steve Stanford, one of many officers who were sworn in by Ryan, said the former sheriff was a unique and influential figure.

“Ryan was a Wise County law enforcement legend,” said Bridgeport Police Chief Steve Stanford. “He turned around a very corrupt sheriff’s office in the 90’s. Phil was a heck of a guy, one of a kind…. He’s someone we all could depend on.”

Ryan was a technical consultant to the CBS television series, Walker, Texas Ranger, starring Chuck Norris. He briefly appeared in Little Texas' "God Blessed Texas" video with two other Texas Rangers. He also appeared extensively in the 1995 documentary film, The Serial Killers and the 1995 television documentary Henry Lee Lucas: The Confession Killer.

Jeff Galloway obit

Jeff Galloway, Olympian and Pioneer of the Run/Walk Method, Dies at 80

After qualifying for the Olympic Games in the 10,000 meters in 1972, he went on to become an influential running author. 

He was not on the list.


Jeff Galloway, the much-loved mentor of many American runners, who became a formative figure in the running movement by his tireless promotion of the sport and its life benefits, died on Wednesday at the age of 80 from complications from a stroke and brain bleeding, Runner’s World has learned.

As a runner of limited talent and limitless dedication, Galloway embodied the idealism of the amateur first running boom in the 1960s and 1970s. After becoming what he called an “unlikely Olympian,” he applied his teaching skills to his love of running, and for more than 50 years he was ingeniously inventive in finding ways to recruit, inspire, and educate runners. He was a pioneer of the run/walk method, also known as the “Galloway Method” or “Jeffing,” which instructed runners to add walking intervals into their runs.

Galloway founded running stores, running groups, running camps, and running travel. He was involved in creating important races, he was one of the sport’s most sought after speakers, he wrote and marketed its best-selling training book, and he continued to adapt by moving into social media, podcasts, and race promotion.

With this record of innovation and his unequaled reach into the running community, Galloway was probably the most influential single contributor to the evolving running movement in America. Yet he never lost his modesty, his accessibility, or his generous impulse to teach. Many of his followers and clients came to regard him as a personal friend.

Born John F. Galloway (called Jeff), in Raleigh, North Carolina, he was the son of a naval officer, which made for a disrupted childhood. By 1958, in eighth grade, he had attended 14 schools and was, by his own account, an overweight kid with no sports experience who was struggling academically. Trying cross-country, he found that running could be “a boost to my spirit and brain,” and “bestow a sense of hope,” and he discovered the sport’s supportive group dynamics. It took more than two years for him to show any talent, although at Westminster Schools in Atlanta, Georgia, he did eventually run a 4:28 mile and win a state high school 2-mile championship (9:48 at age 17).

Running helped him improve academically, and he went on to Wesleyan University in Connecticut. The lack of a high-pressure track program there brought unexpected bonuses—the friendships of Amby Burfoot and Bill Rodgers as cross-country teammates, opportunity to train indoors at Yale with Frank Shorter, and the freedom to compete on weekends in New England’s extensive choice of road races. “I loved running road races,” Galloway said, and that experience helped him become All-American, improving on the track to a 4:12 mile, and 14:10 for 3 miles.

On graduation, at the height of conscription for the Vietnam War, Galloway opted to sign for the officer program of the U.S. Navy, and did active service for 18 months as a gunnery officer off the coast of Vietnam. On brief shore visits, his priority always was to run, as the best way of relieving the stress of war zone service.

On completing three years’ service, his aspiration was to become a teacher, but he also wanted to test his potential as a runner, although he was still not close to international standard. “I wanted to see what I was made of,” he said later. He therefore chose to enroll for a masters in social studies at Florida State University, mainly for access to its good running trails and opportunity to race with Shorter and Jack Bacheler at the Florida Track Club in Gainesville. Galloway now progressively increased his training until he was running 140 miles a week.

After 12 years of slow improvement, two years of that rigorous regime (including sessions of 30 or 40 x 400m) brought results. He won the inaugural Peachtree 10K Road Race in Atlanta in 1970, a race he helped to create, and at the Boston Marathon he placed 11th in 1971 (2:26:35) and seventh in 1972 (2:20:03). This was still the era of rigid amateurism, so Galloway survived by working part-time in a sandwich shop.

Before the 1972 Olympic Trials in Eugene, Oregon, Shorter arranged for Galloway and Bacheler to join him for two months’ altitude training in Vail, Colorado. Their dedication paid off, and in the 10,000-meter trial, on a hot day, Shorter, Galloway, and Bacheler placed first, second, and fourth, although Bacheler was controversially disqualified for supposed interference as he staggered exhausted around the last lap.

That was the prologue to a famous episode in the Galloway legend. In the marathon trial a week later, Galloway ran the entire distance with Bacheler in equal third place, and then stepped aside at the finish to give his friend the Olympic berth. Galloway thus became an Olympian at 10,000 meters (where he did not reach the final), not the marathon, where he would likely have placed higher than Bacheler’s ninth.

Galloway went on to other successes: fifth at Boston in 1973 (2:21:27), and American 10-mile road record (47:49, 1973), travel with the U.S. track team, a win and a second in the Honolulu Marathon (2:23:02, 1974, 2:19:54, 1975), and quality track PRs of 27:21 for 6 miles and 28:29 for 10,000 meters. At the 1976 Olympic Trials, he improved his marathon to 2:18:29, but that was now only good enough for ninth. He also married Barbara, whom he had met as a track runner at Florida State, and who later ran more than 160 marathons, and became an active partner in his many running-related enterprises.

Those began with America’s first speciality running store, Phidippides, in about 1973, originally in Tallahassee, later moving to Atlanta. By 1978, there were 35 Phidippides stores nationwide. Galloway built their success on making them full-service running centers, providing different levels of training groups, coaching, information, and simple socializing at the store location. Increasing demand from new runners led him to create the first Jeff Galloway Running Camps in 1975, which were rebranded as Weekend Running Retreats.

Other top runners of that era contributed in various creative ways to the growing running movement, but Galloway was unique in the range of his innovations. As the elite recruiter for the early years of Peachtree, he steered that event’s evolution into one of the world’s most competitive, as well as biggest, road races. In 1978, he was among an Atlanta group who took a proposal for an international women’s marathon to the Avon Corporation, sparking the world-changing Avon Running global circuit of women’s road races. In 1982, he opened running to yet another incipient recruitment pool by setting up Atlanta’s Corporate Challenge. He was also a longtime Runner’s World columnist, training consultant for the Disney series of races, and founder of a race pacing service.

Most influential of all were his books, more than 20 of them, especially Galloway’s Book on Running (1984), probably the best-selling running-coaching book of all time. In the early years, he marketed it the hard way, carrying copies to seminars and expos on a specially constructed frame strapped on his back. Those who witnessed that quiet persistence never begrudged his evolution into Galloway Productions, Club Jeff, America’s Coach, Jeff’s Store, and the other manifestations of the reach of his mentorship.

Many revere him as the inventor and promoter of the run/walk method (or Gallowalking), the simple legitimizing of timed walk breaks that has enabled thousands to complete long distance races without exhaustion or injury. That idea was one of many that Galloway formed through his continuing study of the science of running. Like other truly great teachers, he was inspiring partly because his material was so well researched, and because he was so good at explaining the methods he advocated.

Part of his accessibility was his commitment to family. He proudly helped his father, Elliott, become a 2:58 marathoner at age 60, and his mother, Emma Katherine, to be a Peachtree finisher into her 80s. Barbara Galloway has her own books and her own race, Barb’s 5K, and Brennan and Westin, their two sons, both contribute to the multifaceted business.

A near-fatal cardiac episode in April 2021, at age 75, shocked many who regarded Galloway as the ultimate role model for ageless daily running. He quickly made it an opportunity to reaffirm lessons that he learned as a novice high school cross-country runner in 1958, that “running empowers you to overcome challenges,” and that “what matters is not what happens to you, but how you respond.

Ruben Castillo obit

Much loved Ruben Castillo passes away, aged 68

 

He was not on the list.

Former four-time world title challenger Ruben Castillo has passed away.

 

Born in Lubbock, Texas, in December 1957, Castillo made his home in Bakersfield, California, and he fought a string of boxing greats, including Juan Laporte, Julio Cesar Chavez, Salvador Sanchez, and Alexis Arguello.


He retired with 67 wins against 10 losses and two draws, eventually retiring in 1997 after a third comeback attempt.

Castillo turned pro, aged 17, in 1975 and went all the way to 43-0 before moving up in weight and running into the brilliant Nicaraguan Arguello.

He was stopped in the 11th by the dynamite-fisted Arguello in a challenge for the WBC’s junior lightweight title, won a fight two months later and a month after that, lost to Sanchez for the WBC’s featherweight title via 15-round decision.

It took him three years to get another title fight, during which time he went 10-1-2 but he then ran into the superb Laporte and lost a 12-round decision.

Six wins later came the Chavez bout, and the great Mexican – one of the best fighters of all time – stopped Castillo in six for the WBC’s featherweight title.

The popular Castillo boxed a couple more times but retired for three years. He came back in 1989 for two fights which ended with him hospitalised from a body punch by Edgar Castro, and when he returned in 1995, Castillo boxed for two years with mixed results.

WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman paid tribute to the fine former four-time world title challenger.

“It is with deep sadness that I have learned of the passing of my dear friend and champion Ruben Castillo,” wrote Sulaiman of the 68-year-old's passing.

“Now he is in the arms of God. May his wife Cindy, family and friends find comfort with the support of the so many who loved Ruben.”

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Ann Godoff obit

Ann Godoff Dies: Legendary Book Editor & Publisher Was 76

 

She was not on the list.


Ann Godoff, the founder, president and Editor-in-Chief of Penguin Press, whose stable of authors included E.L. Doctorow, Henry Louis Gates Jr., Michael Pollan, Tom Brokaw, Salman Rushdie, Zadie Smith, William Styron and Alice Waters, died Tuesday in Albany, NY, Deadline has confirmed. She was 76.

Born on July 22, 1949, in Manhattan, Godoff founded The Penguin Press in 2003 with a mission “dedicated to publishing quality nonfiction and literary fiction … to publish ideas that matter, storytelling that lasts, and books that don’t just start conversations, but detonate them.”

It’s hard to deny Penguin Press’s impact on literature and even the broader culture. It has published five Pulitzer Prize winners (Ghost Wars, by Steve Coll, 2005; Lords of Finance, by Liaquat Ahamed, 2010; Washington, by Ron Chernow, 2011; George F. Kennan, by John Lewis Gaddis, 2012, and Barbarian Days by William Finnegan, 2016).

It is the current literary home of Thomas Pynchon, whose next novel, Shadow Ticket, it will publish in October. Pynchon’s Vineland was the inspiration for Oscar favorite One Battle After Another.

Mary Oliver, Werner Herzog, Gavin Newsom, Aziz Ansari, David Axelrod, Chuck Klosterman, Phil Jackson, Karl Ove Knausgaard, Al Gore, Carolyn Forche and Errol Morris.

Godoff wore many hats throughout her career and had responsibilities on both the business and creative sides of publishing — often simultaneously. She told C-SPAN2 in 2002 that, “The Editor-in-Chief role is the one I’m most comfortable with because it also involves the fostering of editorial talent. Being an editor is a job I love.”

Her talent was recognized by her peers.

“Ann influenced generations of editors and publishers by showing us, through her example, that you can champion works of cultural significance while still being commercially successful,” Jonathan Karp, a former Random House editor in chief and a former publisher, president and chief executive of Simon & Schuster is quoted as saying in the New York Times. “If there were a Hall of Fame for book publishing, Ann would be voted in on the first ballot.”

Ann Godoff first joined the editorial department of Simon & Schuster in 1980, and in 1987 became  Senior Editor at Atlantic Monthly Press; in two years she became Editor-in-Chief. In 1991, Ms. Godoff was appointed Executive Editor at Random House, where she would eventually be named Vice President and Editorial Director. In 1997 she became President, Publisher, and Editor-in-Chief of the Random House Trade Publishing Group and Executive Vice President of Random House, Inc.

Among the many bestsellers she helped find their way into print are John Berendt’s Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil and Caleb Carr’s The Alienist.

Lauren Chapin obit

Lauren Chapin, the Youngest Kid on ‘Father Knows Best,’ Dies at 80

Life wasn't always easy for the actress, who played Kathy "Kitten" Anderson for six seasons.  

She was not on the list.


Lauren Chapin, who portrayed the precocious Kathy “Kitten” Anderson on the iconic 1950s TV series Father Knows Best, has died. She was 80.

Chapin, who said she was molested as a child before dealing with drug abuse, jail sentences, several miscarriages and divorce after her show ended, died Tuesday after a battle with cancer, her son, Matthew, reported on Facebook.

Following appearances on a 1952 episode of CBS’ Lux Video Theatre and in the Judy Garland-starring A Star Is Born (1954), Chapin was hired for Father Knows Best when she was 9.

She said she got the job in part because she bore a strong resemblance to one of star Robert Young’s four daughters, also named Kathy. (Norma Jean Nilsson had played the part on the preceding NBC Radio version.)

Chapin’s older TV siblings were Betty “Princess” Anderson (Elinor Donahue) and James “Bud” Anderson Jr. (Billy Gray), and their mom was the level-headed homemaker Margaret Anderson (Jane Wyatt). Young played Jim Anderson, an insurance salesman.

Father Knows Best ran for six seasons, from October 1954 through May 1960, with two stints at CBS sandwiched around one at NBC. Reruns then aired for another couple of years in primetime on ABC and for decades in syndication, and the cast reunited for a pair of TV specials in 1977.

Chapin was born in Los Angeles on May 23, 1945. Her older brothers, Billy Chapin (The Night of the Hunter) and Michael Chapin (It’s a Wonderful Life), were child actors as well.

She was signed to a contract at Columbia Pictures and studied with choreographers Gower and Marge Champion and famed French mime Marcel Marceau.

When she was about 6, her mom, Marguerite, whom she said was an alcoholic, took her brother Billy to New York to build his stage career, and she was left with her father, William, whom she said molested her. By age 11, she said was a “manic depressive personality” and once attempted suicide.

“It was very difficult to understand how Kathy Anderson could be loved and protected and Lauren Chapin lived a whole different kind of life,” she said during a 1989 appearance on Live! With Regis and Kathie Lee. “I didn’t understand how God could let me suffer.”

Five months after Father Knows Best ended, Chapin appeared on an installment of General Electric Theater alongside Steve Allen and Jayne Meadows, but that would mark her final acting appearance for 16 years.

She dropped out of Pasadena High School as a junior, and on the Regis and Kathie Lee program, she said got married at 16 and divorced at 18; another marriage was annulled after she discovered her husband was still married. Another man she was involved with turned her into a call girl and on to heroin, which she said she did for seven years until she was 25. Along the way, she lost eight children to miscarriages.

She said she also had to sue her mother to claim a portion of the money she had earned from Father Knows Best.

After achieving sobriety in the 1970, Chapin worked as a minister and as a talent manager; on her website, it was noted that actress Jennifer Love Hewitt “got her start in show biz” through Chapin.

She also published a memoir, 1989’s Father Does Know Best, and appeared on a 2016 YouTube series, School Bus Diaries.

Chapin was awarded five Junior Emmys for Best Child Actress. Two of her older brothers were also child stars, Billy and Michael Chapin.

In the early 1980s, Chapin taught natural childbirth and worked for a brokerage firm. She later owned two beauty pageant enterprises and helped manage and start the career of Jennifer Love Hewitt. She was a licensed and ordained evangelist and advocate for Israel.

Chapin had roles in A Star Is Born (1954), The Bob Hope Show (1954), The Ed Sullivan Show (1958), The Amorous Adventures of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza (1976), Scout's Honor (1980), The 36th Prime Time Emmy Awards (1984), and School Bus Diaries (2016).

Survivors also include her daughter, Summer.

“If I could be on television again, I would pray for a series like Father Knows Best,” she told People magazine in 1981, “one that has no violence, no sex and shows nothing but purity and love.”

Actress

School Bus Diaries (2016)

School Bus Diaries

7.7

TV Series

Mama Bev

2016–2017

8 episodes

 

Gary Coleman in Scout's Honor (1980)

Scout's Honor

5.9

TV Movie

Ace's Mom

1980

 

Robert Young, Lauren Chapin, Elinor Donahue, Billy Gray, and Jane Wyatt in Father Knows Best: Home for Christmas (1977)

Father Knows Best: Home for Christmas

7.5

TV Movie

Kathleen 'Kathy Kitten' Anderson

1977

 

Lauren Chapin in The Father Knows Best Reunion (1977)

The Father Knows Best Reunion

7.7

TV Movie

Kathy Anderson

1977

 

The Amorous Adventures of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza (1976)

The Amorous Adventures of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza

4.4

Josephina

1976

 

Ronald Reagan in General Electric Theater (1953)

General Electric Theater

6.8

TV Series

Karen Fletcher

1960

1 episode

 

Father Knows Best (1954)

Father Knows Best

7.4

TV Series

Kathy Anderson Katrina Kathy

1954–1960

201 episodes

 

Tension at Table Rock (1956)

Tension at Table Rock

6.5

Little Girl (uncredited)

1956

 

Fireside Theatre (1949)

Fireside Theatre

7.5

TV Series

Peggy

1955

1 episode

 

Lux Video Theatre (1950)

Lux Video Theatre

7.5

TV Series

TrinaMidge BaxterDaugther

1952–1955

3 episodes

 

Judy Garland and James Mason in A Star Is Born (1954)

A Star Is Born

7.5

Little Girl at Boarding House (uncredited)

1954

 

Soundtrack

Father Knows Best (1954)

Father Knows Best

7.4

TV Series

performer: "Happy Birthday To You"performer: "Good Night, Ladies"performer: "The New-England Boy's Song about Thanksgiving Day" (uncredited, uncredited) ...

1956–1960

4 episodes


Monday, February 23, 2026

Sondra Lee obit

Sondra Lee Dies: Actor In Original Broadway Productions Of ‘Peter Pan’ And ‘Hello, Dolly!’ Was 97

 She was not on the list.


Sondra Lee, a Broadway actor whose petit size allowed her, at 26, to convincingly play the Native American child princess Tiger Lily in Peter Pan opposite Mary Martin on Broadway and in the treasured 1955 TV presentation, died Monday, February 23, of natural causes in her New York City apartment. She was 97.

Her death was announced by her friend and colleague Rev. Joshua Ellis, a former Broadway press agent who is now an Interspiritual minister.

In addition to creating the role of Tiger Lily, Lee was the first “Minnie Fay,” the energetic young shop assistant, in Hello, Dolly!, originating the role in the iconic 1964 musical starring Carol Channing.

In her later life, Lee would inspire and nurture as a coach for scores of working professionals in theater, film, cabaret and dance. A partial list of her actor clients includes Jane Fonda, Sally Field, Marlon Brando, Dustin Hoffman, Natalia Makarova, John Malkovich, Amy Adams, Matt Dillon, Cyndi Lauper, Joan Jett, Van Halen and John Lloyd Young.

Born Sondra Lee Gash in Newark, New Jersey, on September 30, 1928 – not, her friend Ellis notes, 1930. “Almost all internet biographies have an incorrect birth year,” he said. “Sondra wanted to correct the error but never got around to it.” Lee specifically asked him to set the record straight for her obituary.)

Throughout her nine-decade career, Lee won awards as a dancer, actor, teacher, author, stage director, playwright, theater and film consultant and painter. She was a consultant to film directors on more than a dozen motion pictures including Places in the Heart starring Sally Field, John Malkovich and Danny Glover; The Last of the Mohicans starring Daniel Day Lewis; and The Morning After starring Jane Fonda, Jeff Bridges and Raul Julia.

A sickly child who received growth hormones because she of her small size, Lee, growing up with a younger brother Saul, lived in a dream world of she would describe as “tutus and glitter.” She studied ballet, with the endorsement of prima ballerina Alexandra Danilova, at Studio 61 in Carnegie Hall with Vera Nemtchinova and Edward Caton.

As a teenager Lee “waltzed right into the YMHA Players” in Newark, and joined the revue Hi, Neighbor Revue in the Catskills. There, she was befriended by comics Buddy Hackett, Red Buttons, Jack Carter and Joey Adams. Back in New York City, she moved into a boarding house on West 58th Street where she quickly became pals with fellow tenants Wally Cox, Maureen Stapleton, and a previous acquaintance named Marlon Brando.

In 1947, while walking along Shubert Alley, Lee heard about an audition for a new Broadway musical called High Button Shoes to star Phil Silvers and Nanette Fabray. That choreographer was Jerome Robbins. Lee would later recall, “I entered the stage door [of the Shubert Theater] asked, ‘Who’s Robbins? Out of nowhere this guy comes forward, ‘I’m Robbins. Who are you?’

‘I’m Sondra Lee, and I’d like to audition for this.’

‘The audition is over.’

She responded, jokingly, ‘Oh, I just auditioned for Agnes de Mille for Allegro, and they found I was too short, so they let me go. So, I’m going home to commit suicide.’

‘Don’t go home and commit suicide,” Robbins said. “Come over here and dance for me.’”

Thus began Lee’s Broadway career and a lifelong friendship. She and Robbins reunited for Peter Pan in 1954 and collaborated on the creation of the role Tiger Lily. Lee would later say that critics took “too much notice” of her performance, which pulled focus from star Martin. When Brando came to see the show, she remembered, he asked Lee “why she pushed Mary Martin offstage.”

In 1955, Peter Pan became the first full-length Broadway production filmed for color television, and would rival The Wizard of Oz in the memories of a young TV-viewing generation. Lee’s performance as Tiger Lily was watched by a then-record audience of 65 million viewers.

In one of Lee’s returns to Broadway, she created the role of Minnie Fay in Hello, Dolly!, performing opposite a procession of big-name Dolly Levis: the original Carol Channing, then Ginger Rogers, Betty Grable, and, her personal favorite, Martha Raye, with whom Lee toured as part of USO shows during the Vietnam War.

In 1957 Lee joined Roland Petit’s La Revue des Ballets de Paris with Zizi Jeanmarie, and at the invitation of Jerome Robbins was part of his “Ballets: U.S.A.” troupe performing in Spoleto, Florence, Trieste, the Brussels World’s Fair, and eventually Broadway. At Spoleto, she gained the attention of Federico Fellini, who cast her as an American ballerina for the final party scene in La Dolce Vita (1960).

Let returned to Broadway in the 1957 Feydeau farce Hotel Paradiso starring Bert Lahr and Angela Lansbury (another lifelong friend); and then in 1961’s Sunday in New York starring Robert Redford.

Several years later came Hello, Dolly!, directed and choreographed by Gower Champion and produced by David Merrick. The musical opened at the St. James Theatre on January 16, 1964, with Lee chosen because of what she’d describe as Champion’s vision of a central trope of larger-than-life actors who were, individually, scene-stealers but as an ensemble kept each other in check.

In development, Champion insisted that the characters Dolly Levi and Minnie Fay never physically touch, their relationship conveyed through dance. Costume designer Freddy Wittop gave Lee a special hat for Minnie Fay, one that symbolized the character’s endless curiosity and naivetĂ©, with a feather in the shape of a giant question mark.

With her Broadway success, Lee soon found herself coaching other performers, and in 1965 she was handed an unusual assignment: She was to work with choreographer John Butler on the newly created touring division of the Metropolitan Opera, ensuring that death scenes evoked an appropriate audience response.

Lee went on to direct a number of cabaret shows based on the music of Stephen Sondheim. Among them: I Know Things Now: My Life in Sondheim’s Words performed by Jeff Harnar, #Sondheim Montage performed by Harnar and KT Sullivan, and Another Hundred People performed by Harnar and Sullivan.

Lee’s last public appearance was at Carnegie Hall on June 23, 2025, on the occasion of the Transport Group’s Hello, Dolly! In Concert. As the musical’s last surviving original principal artist, she received a prolonged standing ovation.

Her book, I’ve Slept with Everybody: A Memoir, (Bear Manor Media, 2009) chronicled her more than 50 years in show business, as well as her lifelong friendship with Brando and romantic flings with the famous and not-so-famous. At the time of her death, she was deep into writing her second book, Snapshots Redux.

According to her friend the Rev. Ellis, a celebration of her life and career will occur sometime this year.

Lee married Sidney Armus on October 16, 1953. He died in 2002.

She made a hobby of using items that she described as mostly "just junk" to decorate her apartment in New York City. Some items were gifts, including a Victorian sofa that someone anonymously left at her door and she reupholstered and an old clock that her parents gave her and she gilded. In other instances, she used her acting skills to obtain used items from shop owners at the lowest possible price.

Lee was a member of the casts of three DuMont Television Network programs. The S.S. Holiday (1950) was a two-hour variety program that was converted to a one-hour program and retitled Starlit Time, featuring performances at night clubs in New York City.   Once Upon a Tune (1951), was a musical anthology series that presented a complete musical (usually adapted from a Broadway show) in each episode. She also developed choreography for The Voice of Firestone and adapted children's stories that she wrote into dances for television. She performed in NBC productions of Hansel and Gretel (1958) and Peter Pan (1959).

 

Actress

Backstage Babble (2020)

Backstage Babble

Podcast Series

Guest

2020

 

New York Television Theatre (1965)

New York Television Theatre

6.2

TV Series

1969

1 episode

 

Lincoln Center/Stage 5

TV Series

Dancer

1967

1 episode

 

Ed Sullivan in The Ed Sullivan Show (1948)

The Ed Sullivan Show

7.9

TV Series

Jazz Dancer

1961

1 episode

 

Maureen Bailey, Sondra Lee, Kent Fletcher, Edmund Gaynes, Luke Halpin, Benedict Herrman, David Komoroff, Mary Martin, Jacqueline Mayro, Cyril Ritchard, Norman Shelly, Bill Snowden, Joey Trent, and Carson Woods in Peter Pan (1960)

Peter Pan

7.4

TV Movie

Tiger Lily

1960

 

William Shatner in The Robert Herridge Theater (1960)

The Robert Herridge Theater

6.5

TV Series

1960

1 episode

 

Walter Matthau in Play of the Week (1959)

Play of the Week

7.2

TV Series

Rusty

1960

1 episode

 

Marcello Mastroianni and Anita Ekberg in La Dolce Vita (1960)

La Dolce Vita

8.0

Ballerina in Spoleto (uncredited)

1960

 

Tactic

5.5

TV Series

Dance Performer

1959

 

Hansel and Gretel (1958)

Hansel and Gretel

7.5

TV Movie

Moe

1958

 

Pinocchio (1957)

Pinocchio

7.2

TV Movie

Gepetto's Cat

1957

 

Producers' Showcase (1954)

Producers' Showcase

7.4

TV Series

Tiger Lily

1955–1956

2 episodes

 

Mary Martin in Peter Pan (1955)

Peter Pan

8.2

TV Movie

Tiger Lily

1955

 

Additional Crew

Paul Newman in Nobody's Fool (1994)

Nobody's Fool

7.3

dialogue coach

1994

 

Daniel Day-Lewis in The Last of the Mohicans (1992)

The Last of the Mohicans

7.6

acting coach

1992

 

A Dry White Season (1989)

A Dry White Season

7.0

consultant: to the production

1989

 

Jeff Goldblum and Cyndi Lauper in Vibes (1988)

Vibes

5.7

consultant: Mr. Kwapis

1988

 

Nadie escuchaba (1987)

Nadie escuchaba

8.2

consultant

1987

 

Michael J. Fox and Joan Jett in Light of Day (1987)

Light of Day

5.6

consultant: Mr. Schrader

1987

 

Sally Field, Yankton Hatten, and Gennie James in Places in the Heart (1984)

Places in the Heart

7.4

consultant to Mr. Benton

1984

 

Soundtrack

Maureen Bailey, Sondra Lee, Kent Fletcher, Edmund Gaynes, Luke Halpin, Benedict Herrman, David Komoroff, Mary Martin, Jacqueline Mayro, Cyril Ritchard, Norman Shelly, Bill Snowden, Joey Trent, and Carson Woods in Peter Pan (1960)

Peter Pan

7.4

TV Movie

performer: "Indians", "Ugg-a-Wugg", "I Gotta Crow" (reprise)

1960

 

Self

My Fair Mother: A Dancer Named Maxine Berke (2024)

My Fair Mother: A Dancer Named Maxine Berke

10

Short

Self

2024

 

Jamie De Roy in Great Performances (1971)

Broadway: Beyond the Golden Age

7.9

Self

2021

 

You Might Know Her From (2019)

You Might Know Her From

Podcast Series

Self - Guest (voice)

2020

1 episode

 

Marlon Brando in Marlon Brando: An Actor Named Desire (2014)

Marlon Brando: An Actor Named Desire

6.9

TV Movie

Self

2014

 

Theater Talk (1996)

Theater Talk

7.5

TV Series

Self - Guest

2014

1 episode

 

The Annual Anglo-American Cultural Gala Awards

TV Special

Self

2010

 

American Masters (1985)

American Masters

8.2

TV Series

Self

2009

1 episode

 

Biography (1987)

Biography

7.7

TV Series

Self

2005

1 episode

 

Nadie escuchaba (1987)

Nadie escuchaba

8.2

Self - Narrator

1987

 

Lamp Unto My Feet (1948)

Lamp Unto My Feet

6.6

TV Series

Self - Dancer

1962

1 episode

 

Ed Sullivan in The Ed Sullivan Show (1948)

The Ed Sullivan Show

7.9

TV Series

Self

1958

1 episode


Jim “Boomer” Gordon obit

Jim “Boomer” Gordon Dies: Longtime NHL Radio Host Was 55

 

He was not on the list.


Jim “Boomer” Gordon, longtime host of The Point with Boomer Gordon on SiriusXM NHL Network Radio, died Monday after a 3½-year battle with cancer. He was 55.

His death was announced Monday on the satellite radio channel at the time when his show always started. Many of his longtime colleagues and friends joined in a tribute to the unique host, who could be laconic or acerbic, self-deprecating or in attack mode, talk hockey or golf or football or just about any sport. During the tribute, many of Gordon’s colleagues noted how “he would have hated this,” preferring that they just talk hockey on the Toronto-based channel.

“We are deeply saddened to share the news of the passing of our friend and SiriusXM NHL Network Radio host Jim Boomer Gordon,” SiriusXM NHL Network Radio wrote on social media. “After a courageous battle with cancer, Boomer passed away this week, surrounded by his loved ones. He will be greatly missed by us all, on and off the air.”

Born in 1970 in Hamilton, Ontario, Gordon got his nickname from a colleague based on his resemblance to ex-Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Dave “Boomer” Wells. He started on the XM channel then known as Home Ice as a producer on Phil Esposito’s show, before the Hall of Famer became the radio color commentator for the Tampa Bay Lightning. Gordon was on the air from the earliest days of channel in late 2005, and did his last episode of The Point with Boomer Gordon on January 13. Before that, he had struggled to host the show live from 1-3 p.m. ET every day but the Fridays when he was undergoing chemotherapy. Hahn hosted the show in Gordon’s absence.

Gordon was a huge music fan and began The Point every day with Moby’s “Extreme Ways,” the theme song of the Jason Bourne movies. The show’s second hour always began with The Rolling Stones’ “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking?” and bumper music often was from Gordon’s beloved Canadian bands The Tragically Hip, Our Lady Peace, Bachman-Turner Overdrive and The Guess Who.

Gordon was beloved among his colleagues and fans for his gritty yet laid-back, so-very-Canadian delivery and always having an informed and generally unbiased opinion. One of his bits was “dropping a bomb” — complete with explosion sound effect — on NHL players he felt were underperforming. As his colleagues noted in the tribute show, many of the players he would call out stepped up their game soon afterward.

A skilled interviewer who often asked questions his heard-it-all guests hadn’t heard, Gordon was NHL Network Radio’s go-to guy during the summer, when hockey was off-season and most of its other hosts were on vacation. He filled hours of airtime with annual features about every NHL team including “Team Previews,” “GM Scorecards” and the popular “Hey Bud, What’s Your Problem,” when Gordon would list what each team needed to improve, punctuated by a reading of the titular line from Sean Penn’s Jeff Spicoli in Fast Times at Ridgemont High.

During the NHL season, Gordon and longtime co-host and former intern Jake Hahn would break down the previous night’s games, preview that night’s matchups and deliver humorous but informed takes on the news of the day. In his tell-it-like-it-is style, he often delivered “My Non-Hockey Thought That Is a Hockey Thought,” opining on his gripes and/or observances.

Here’s hoping Boomer was able to watch the Olympic gold medal games, though he would have been crushed by Team USA’s wins over Canada in both the men’s and women’s tournaments.

He is survived by his mother, Christine; stepfather David Peddle; sisters Susan and Heather; brother-in-law Ian Thornton; and several nieces and nephews. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations be made in Gordon’s honor to Hockey Fights Cancer or the Ontario SCPA and Humane Society.

Monti Rock III obit

Las Vegas bon vivant Monti Rock III dies at 86

 not on the list.


A beloved actor from the 1977 film classic Saturday Night Fever has died, leaving behind a performance that helped define one of the decade’s most iconic films.

The groundbreaking drama, which starred John Travolta as Tony Manero, became a cultural phenomenon, capturing the pulse of 1970s Brooklyn nightlife and launching a disco-era soundtrack that topped charts worldwide. The film not only cemented Travolta’s status as a Hollywood leading man but also helped define an entire generation’s style and music.

While Travolta’s star-making turn remains central to the film’s legacy, fans also remember the supporting characters who gave the story its emotional weight and authenticity. One of these actors was Monti Rock III, who played the beloved DJ Monti at the disco the characters visited, The 2001 Odyssey.

Rock is best remembered from a scene where he calls out to Travolta and his fellow dancers. He says, “Hello, again! This is beautiful Monti, your delicious DJ!”

According to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, Rock died at his home in Las Vegas, Nevada. The site confirmed Rock’s death via a longtime friend, Lucille Thaler. She added that he had been diagnosed with COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) in the years before his death.

Thaler also stated that in December 2024, Rock suffered a broken hip, for which he received surgery.

The Las Vegas Review featured a retrospective of Rock’s career via YouTube, posted in 2020. In the series of video clips, the entertainer’s Saturday Night Fever scene, as well as his numerous appearances on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, are visible.

In an undated interview with the website Ultimate Classic Bands, Rock discussed his career, including his work with Disco-Tex and the Sex-O-Lettes, a disco group that had two hit singles, “Get Dancin'” (1974) and “I Wanna Dance Wit’ Choo (Doo Dat Dance)” (1975), per AllMusic. The group later earned a lyrical nod from the Pet Shop Boys on their 1996 album Bilingual, with the song “Electricity” referencing them in the line, “It’s the greatest show with the best effects, since Disco Tex & the Sex-O-Lettes.”

To Ultimate Classic Rock, the entertainer claimed the group had sold “seven million records” and released three albums before Saturday Night Fever producer Robert Stigwood recruited him to appear in the now-classic film. Of his role in Saturday Night Fever, Rock said, “It made me legit in many ways. Robert Stigwood liked me basically.”

He added, “It changed my life, actually. I had three years of premieres and talk shows, and I made a lot of money. I did a few other bad films.”

Rock offered candid words of wisdom about his long career to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, reflecting that “the talent of surviving is a talent. Life has a way of, you either sink or swim. And I’ve been able to sink more times than swim. I’m the world’s most successful failure.”

Monti Rock III died on February 23, 2026. He was 86.

 

Actor

Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas in Miami Vice (1984)

Miami Vice

7.6

TV Series

Manager

1986

1 episode

 

The Comeback Trail (1982)

The Comeback Trail

5.9

Monti Rock

1982

 

Robert Vaughn and Stuart Whitman in Cuba Crossing (1980)

Cuba Crossing

4.0

Man at Bar (as Monti Rock the III)

1980

 

Racquet (1979)

Racquet

3.5

Scotty

1979

 

Barry Gibb, Peter Frampton, Maurice Gibb, Robin Gibb, and The Bee Gees in Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1978)

Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

4.3

Our Guests at Heartland (as Monte Rock III)

1978

 

John Travolta and Karen Lynn Gorney in Saturday Night Fever (1977)

Saturday Night Fever

6.8

The Deejay

1977

 

2000 Years Later (1969)

2000 Years Later

6.4

Tomorrow's Leader

1969

 

Soundtrack

Tales of Television Centre (2012)

Tales of Television Centre

8.5

TV Movie

performer: "I Wanna Dance Wit' Choo" (as Disco-Tex and the Sex-O-Lettes)

2012

 

Uutishuone (2009)

Uutishuone

7.6

TV Series

performer: "Get Dancing" (as Disco-Tex and the Sex-O-Lettes)

2009

1 episode

 

Michael Winsor in The Basil Brush Show (2002)

The Basil Brush Show

6.5

TV Series

performer: "I Wanna Dance Wit' Choo" (as Disco-Tex and the Sex-O-Lettes)

2003

1 episode

 

Julie Kavner, Nancy Cartwright, Dan Castellaneta, and Yeardley Smith in The Simpsons (1989)

The Simpsons

8.6

TV Series

performer: "Get Dancin'" (as Disco-Tex and the Sex-O-Lettes, uncredited)

1990–2001

2 episodes

 

Olivia d'Abo and David Cassidy in The Spirit of '76 (1990)

The Spirit of '76

5.8

performer: "Get Dancin'" (as Sir Monti Rock III, "Get Dancin'", as Disco-Tex and the Sex-O-Lettes)

1990

 

Barry Gibb, Peter Frampton, Maurice Gibb, Robin Gibb, and The Bee Gees in Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1978)

Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

4.3

performer: "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" (Finale)

1978

 

American Bandstand (1952)

American Bandstand

7.5

TV Series

performer: "I Wanna Dance Wit'Choo" (as Disco-Tex and the Sex-O-Lettes)

1975

1 episode

 

Changes

7.0

performer: "Getting Off" (opening song)writer: "Getting Off" (opening song) (as Monti Rock, as Monti Rock)

1970


Oliver Power Grant obit

Oliver Power Grant, Wu-Tang Clan co-founder, dies at 52

 He was not on the list.


Oliver “Power” Grant, the visionary business architect behind hip-hop’s most legendary collective, passed away yesterday at 52. The Wu-Tang Clan co-founder and creator of the groundbreaking Wu Wear clothing line shaped an empire that redefined artist control in the music industry.

Quick Facts

Age at passing: 52 years old, born November 3, 1973 in Jamaica

Wu-Tang role: Executive producer and business architect, not a performing member

Wu Wear launch: Founded in 1995 as one of hip-hop’s first artist-owned streetwear brands

Method Man tribute: Wu-Tang member posted Instagram condolence saying “Paradise my Brother safe Travels!!”

The Architect Behind Wu-Tang’s Empire

Oliver “Power” Grant was born in Jamaica but raised in New York City, where he became an early supporter of the Staten Island collective forming around RZA‘s visionary direction. Though not a performing member, his impact proved immeasurable. When the group prepared to release Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) in 1993, Grant secured studio access and crucial financial backing.

His work built the business infrastructure that allowed the Clan to maintain unusual leverage in recording contracts during an era when artists held minimal power. Grant worked behind the scenes while the world watched the nine-man collective dominate hip-hop. His strategic thinking established a template that artists still follow today.

Grant launched Wu Wear in 1995, creating one of the first artist-inspired streetwear brands in hip-hop history. The line grew from mail-order concept into a global enterprise with retail locations in New York and Los Angeles. By the late 1990s and early 2000s, Wu Wear generated tens of millions in annual sales and appeared in major department stores nationwide.

The brand became a cultural phenomenon, proving artists could control their own fashion destiny. Method Man, Cappadonna, and RZA supported the launch with the Wu Wear theme song. Grant’s business acumen transformed raw lyricism into sustainable commercial enterprise, creating a blueprint other musicians copied for decades.

Building a Hip-Hop Legacy

Grant served as executive producer on multiple Wu-Tang-related projects, expanding the brand into touring, film, and merchandising. He co-starred alongside Method Man in the films Belly in 1998 and Black and White in 1999, carrying the Wu-Tang brand into Hollywood. Despite internal disputes and legal conflicts within the extended Wu-Tang network, Grant maintained his role as the steadfast presence.

Industry observers credit Grant with translating the group’s raw street aesthetic into legitimate business ventures. He rebranded Wu Wear as Wu-Tang Brand in 2008, later relaunching it in partnership with Live Nation Merchandise in 2017. His imprint on hip-hop commerce remains visible across modern artist-led brands.

Method Man’s Powerful Tribute

Method Man confirmed Grant’s passing on Instagram with an emotional message. The core Wu-Tang member wrote: “Paradise my Brother safe Travels!!” along with a photo of the two legends. Fans and industry figures flooded social media with remembrances of Grant’s quiet but transformative influence.

Though Grant stood behind the curtain while performers claimed the spotlight, his absence will reshape how the industry remembers Wu-Tang’s construction. Born in Jamaica, raised in New York, Grant proved that hip-hop greatness required business genius as much as musical talent. His legacy transcends music into entrepreneurship and cultural innovation.

What Was Oliver “Power” Grant’s Greatest Achievement?

Beyond Wu-Tang Clan’s nine Grammy nominations and cultural dominance, Grant’s supreme achievement was creating the business model that allowed artists unprecedented control. He proved streetwear brands could be artist-owned during an era when major labels called the shots. Other executives noted Grant’s methodology when launching their own ventures years later.

His imprint endures in every artist collective, clothing brand, and independent record label established by musicians. Grant showed that quiet visionary work matters as much as stage presence. The Wu-Tang way, built on Grant’s commercial infrastructure, inspired a generation of entrepreneurs who refused to surrender creative control to corporate interests.

Sources

HOT 97 – Breaking news coverage of Oliver “Power” Grant’s death and Method Man’s statement

Wikipedia – Biographical information, Wu Wear launch date, and career timeline

HipHopWired – Wu-Tang Clan legacy and founding member tributes

Bobby Douglas obit

In Memory Of Bobby Douglas

 He was not on the list.


AMES, Iowa – Bobby Douglas, one of the most influential figures in collegiate wrestling history and Iowa State head wrestling coach from 1993-2006, passed away on Monday at the age of 83.

Douglas' impact on the sport of wrestling is immeasurable and his tenure as the Cyclone leader produced 52 All-America performances, 10 individual NCAA titles, three runner-up NCAA finishes and 198 dual victories.

He was inducted into the Iowa State Athletics Hall of Fame in 2023.

A native of Bridgeport, Ohio, Douglas had already established his legacy before arriving In Ames. The first black U.S. wrestler at the Olympics (1964, 1968), Douglas had a fourth-place featherweight finish at the 1964 Tokyo Games and captained the U.S. Olympic team in Mexico City (1968).

After beginning his coaching career in 1973 at Cal-Santa Barbara, Douglas spent 19 years as the head coach at Arizona State (1975-92), leading the Sun Devils to incredible heights, including a national title in 1988 in Hilton Coliseum. It marked just the third time since 1968 where either Iowa State or Iowa weren't crowned NCAA champions.

It was a major coup when ISU convinced Douglas to leave ASU and take over the reins of the Cyclone wrestling program prior to the 1992-93 season.

Seven times ISU finished in the top-6 at the NCAA Championship, including the three runner-up finishes (1996, 2000, 2002) under Douglas' tutelage. The 1995-1996 squad went to the NCAA Championship with only five qualifiers, but all five earned All-America status and three made the finals to shock the nation with a second-place finish.

In 1999-2000, the Cyclones recorded a 20-2 dual mark, won the National Duals and narrowly lost to Iowa at the NCAA Championship, as four Cyclones made the finals. Douglas' 2001-02 Cyclone squad was second at the NCAA Championship behind three NCAA champions.

Douglas coached the greatest collegiate wrestler in Cael Sanderson, who won four NCAA titles, was a three-time Hodge Trophy recipient and became the first undefeated four-year wrestler with a 159-0 career record at Iowa State (1999-2002). Sanderson was also the Outstanding Wrestler at the NCAA meet four times.

Including Sanderson, Douglas mentored three four-time All-Americans (Sanderson, Joe Heskett, Dwight Hinson) at ISU and a Cyclone was the outstanding wrestler at the conference meet seven times in his 14 seasons.

Douglas was twice named Big Eight/12 Coach of the Year (1993, 2000), was the 2000 NWCA National Coach of the Year and the USA Wrestling Freestyle Coach of the Year in 2004.

Douglas resigned after the 2005-06 season to pass the baton to his assistant, Sanderson, who continued the tradition of Cyclone wrestling. Douglas won 198 dual matches in his outstanding Cyclone career, second only to the legendary Harold Nichols.

One of only four coaches in wrestling history to win over 400 career dual matches, Douglas' contributions go far beyond collegiate wrestling. He was a loyal and dedicated coach for USA Wrestling for many years. He was the head coach for the U.S. Olympic Team in 1992, as the U.S. team had six medalists, including four golds. He was an assistant coach on six U.S. Olympic teams (1976, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1996, 2004), helping Cyclones Kevin Jackson and Sanderson win Gold Medals.

He was also the head coach for a pair of U.S. World Teams (1989, 1991).

The 1992 USA Wrestling Man of the Year, Douglas is also a member of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame, Glen Brand Wrestling Hall of Fame, NAIA Hall of Fame, West Liberty Hall of Fame and Arizona State Hall of Fame.