Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Kevin Klose obit

Visionary NPR leader Kevin Klose, who led network to new heights, has died

 

He was not on the list.


Former NPR President and CEO Kevin Klose, a buoyant and transformative leader who helped to propel the public broadcaster into the top ranks of major U.S. networks, died Wednesday morning in his sleep from complications of Alzheimer's disease. He was 85.

His death was confirmed by WBUR CEO Margaret Low, a family friend and former leader of NPR's news and programming divisions.

Klose demonstrated a keen and personal understanding of the news mission at NPR's core. His shock of white hair bobbed with excitement as he spoke with reporters and editors in the corridors of the network's Washington, D.C. headquarters. He would leave voicemails and fire off emails in appreciation for specific stories. And he was a champion for the central role international news played in NPR's identity.

"Long before it was on the tips of everyone's tongue, Kevin talked about the importance of quality journalism in a healthy democracy," Low said Wednesday.

The job encompassed enormous challenges. It required a vision and strategy for the network, the skills to manage fractious internal divisions and relations with the hundreds of independently owned public radio stations that air NPR's shows. It also demanded a drive to elevate its journalism to the ranks of its commercial and better-financed peers, and a deft touch in raising money to keep it in the black.

"There used to be a belief in some quarters that the job of president of NPR was too large to handle," says the former All Things Considered host Robert Siegel, "except for the example of Kevin Klose."

The network expanded significantly under his leadership, a period of calm after a history of turbulent internal struggles. In the early 1980s, the network stood on the verge of bankruptcy and subsequent leaders were forced to deal with the aftershocks.

Klose shored up the leadership structure and established more competitive pay for the networks' hosts. Klose also encouraged creativity and experimentation seeking to reach new audiences. NPR introduced Day to Day with Slate magazine, The Tavis Smiley Show, and StoryCorps segments on Morning Edition, among other ventures.

The gift that changed NPR

Klose may have left his greatest mark by ensuring the network's financial solvency.

At the urging of a top fundraising official at KPBS, the public broadcaster in San Diego, Klose spent years cultivating a relationship and, ultimately, a friendship with the late Joan B. Kroc, a philanthropist and the widow of McDonald's magnate Ray Kroc.

Over a series of meals, conversations and gifts, they spoke of a shared love of international news, NPR, and the institutions that make up civil society. Asked by an adviser of Kroc, former McDonald's executive Dick Starmann, to think broadly about what he could do with some extra funds, Klose explained what donors could receive for $25,000. Starmann kept urging Klose to think bigger.

Kroc sent Klose a holiday card one year that included a check for the network for $500,000. He was touched and impressed, assuming that would be the weight of her generosity.

As she declined in health, Kroc held a celebratory lunch at her home in California. Klose gave her a lacquered Russian box, a memento of his time as a Moscow bureau chief at The Washington Post earlier in his career.

Kroc's 2003 bequest was valued at more than $200 million at the time. It led to a major NPR presence in Southern California, new reporting positions, expansion of foreign coverage and an endowment that allowed NPR to weather a series of financial crises and political storms.

NPR CEO Katherine Maher paid tribute to Klose in a note Wednesday to NPR staff. "Kevin was deeply idealistic about the role of public media in a democracy," she wrote. "He called independent journalism 'the first partner of building democracy, and helping it stay strong and vital.'"

The Putin interview

Klose arrived at NPR in December 1998 as its sixth permanent president after a distinguished career as a national and foreign correspondent and a senior editor at the Post. He also served as the president of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, the government-funded international broadcaster that serves audiences in Russia and 27 countries, largely in Eastern Europe, central Asia, and the Middle East.

After NPR, Klose went on to become dean of the Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland. He also returned to Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty for two years after a shaky stretch for the government-funded network.

A romantic about the appeal of reporting, Klose was a clear-eyed realist about the stakes.

Among the topics he focused on: the role of dissidents advocating for greater freedom under the repressive Soviet regime. Klose warned a dissident labor leader he could be subject to abuse by the state if he went on the record about the safety and health dangers coal miners were subject to there.

The labor leader, Alexei Nikitin, told him that it was too important and told Klose to report on it anyway, the journalist recounted in later writing and conversations. Nikitin was drugged and brutalized by his captors in the Soviet psychiatric prisons.

Klose drew upon that expertise in 2000, when he arranged for an hour-long, live call-in show hosted by Siegel from NPR's small New York bureau with the newly elected President Vladimir Putin. At the time, the future autocrat was seen as a potential reformer.

"It was a delight to have someone so knowledgeable in the control room signaling his approval at key moments of the interview," Siegel recalled Wednesday.

Putin's security staffers complained about the quality of the men's room serving the bureau. The network later established a new, vastly upgraded bureau with major studios in New York's Bryant Park, thanks in part to the Kroc funds.

Klose's family intends to create The Kevin Klose Memorial Fund for Independent Journalism.

Alexander Morton obit

Tributes paid to Scots BBC Monarch of the Glen actor Alexander Morton

 He was not on the list.


Actor Alexander "Sandy" Morton, who played Golly Mackenzie in the TV series Monarch of the Glen, has died aged 81.

The Glasgow-born actor played the loyal ghillie of the fictional Highland estate Glenbogle in all 64 episodes of the popular BBC Scotland series between 2000 and 2005.

He was also known for playing hard-men and villains in films and series as diverse as Get Carter, The Silent Scream, Valhalla Rising, and Take The High Road.

Morton, who trained at the prestigious Central School of Speech and Drama in London, was also a noted stage actor who founded the Raindog Theatre Company with fellow actors Robert Carlyle and Caroline Paterson.

Morton began working in the 1970s in London and Scotland and he built a long and varied career on stage and screen.

He made an impact as the villain Andy Semple in the Scottish Television soap opera Take The High Road, a part he played for 14 years between 1980 and 1994.

His stage roles included Macbeth, Robert Burns and William Wallace.

He also appeared in River City and Shetland.

Louise Thornton, head of commissioning at BBC Scotland, said: "We're saddened to hear the news about Alexander Morton who made a significant contribution to Scottish television and theatre.

"His portrayal of Golly Mackenzie in Monarch of the Glen was a key part of the long-running drama's success.

"He will be remembered fondly for the depth and authenticity he brought to one of BBC Scotland's most cherished dramas."

Paying tribute to Morton on social media, Robert Carlyle wrote:

"So sad to hear of the passing of the great Sandy Morton. Not only a brilliant actor, but one of the kindest men I ever knew. Working with him through the years with Raindog Theatre Company was an education.

"His unique, naturalistic style was a thing of beauty. So real that you would forget he was even acting at all. I've never seen anyone do it better than Sandy.

"He taught me so much. I owe him so much, and he will forever be in my heart. RIP Alexander Morton."

'Exceptional talent'

Gavin Mitchell, who plays Boaby the barman in Still Game, said: "Such devastating news to hear of the passing of Sandy Morton today from his son Jamie.

"He taught and gave me so much. Warm, wise, encouraging, generous and gentle. An exceptional talent. I was lucky enough to work with him on various things over the years, from the inception of Raindog Theatre Company and One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, panto, radio, Monarch of the Glen, of course, and much more.

"His door was always open and always tales to share. He loved music, history, politics, radio, and remained eternally curious.

"I loved him dearly and I owe him a lot. I'll miss our chats and I'll miss catching him off guard and making him chortle. We've lost one of the best . All my love. Travel well Sandy".

Actor and singer Tom Urie, who played Big Bob O'Hara in River City, wrote: "Sad to hear about the passing of Sandy Morton. Our paths crossed briefly on River City and he was an absolute gentlemen."

 

Film and television credits


1971: Get Carter (film) Hubert – directed by Mike Hodges

1971: Manipulators (TV) written and directed by Mike Hodges

1979: Play for Today (TV): Ploughman's Share – Dave

1980–1994: Take the High Road (TV) – Andy Semple

1981: Play for Today (TV): The Good Time Girls – Alec Park

1984: Minder (TV): Windows – Alex

1985: Taggart (TV): Dead Ringer – David Balfour

1986: Waiting for Elvis (TV) Ike Morrison – directed by Hal Duncan

1987: Extras (TV) – Frank Riley – directed by David Andrew

1987: Bookie (TV) – Ross

1989: Winners and Losers (TV) – Ross

1990: Silent Scream – Don Winters

1992: Rab C. Nesbitt (TV) – Police Inspector Mccrae

1992–1994: Firm Friends (TV) – D.I. Hogg

1993: Between the Lines (TV) – Superintendent Tyrell

1993: Taggart (TV): Death Benefits – John Fraser

1994: Jolly a Man for All Seasons – Police Sergeant Watson

1994: Crime Story – John McVicar

1994: The Tales of Para Handy – John Cruickshank

1996: Bad Boys – Dick

1996: The One that Got Away – Big Bob (credited as Sandy Morton)

1996: Nightlife (TV movie) – D.C.Dave

1997: Looking After Jo Jo – DS Alistair Wright

1997: Bombay Blue – Jack Grey

1997: Love Me Tender (TV) – Tommy

1998: Croupier (film) David Reynolds

1999–2000: Second Sight (TV) – DS Julian

1999: Life Support (TV) – Alan Carswell

2000–2005: Monarch of the Glen (TV) – Golly Mackenzie in all 64 episodes

2005: The Man-Eating Wolves of Gysinge (TV) – Malmberg Nilsson

2006: Casualty (TV)

2006: London to Brighton (film) – Duncan Allen

2007: Kitchen (TV) – Mr. Glasgow

2008: Casualty (TV)

2009: Valhalla Rising (film) – Chieftain Barde

2010: Taggart: (TV) The Rapture – James Hardie

2010: Luther (TV) – Bill Winingham

2012–2015: River City (TV) – Billy Kennedy

2013: Shetland (TV) – Joseph Wilson

2022: River City (TV) – Billy Kennedy

Selected theatre credits

Selected stage productions

Year     Play     Role     Notes

1976    An Me Wi a Bad Leg Tae       Peter    Original production of Billy Connolly's first play, directed by Stuart Mungall

1979    Slab Boys Trilogy       Mr. Curry/Workman    John Byrne's critically acclaimed series of stage plays

1984    William Wallace          William Wallace          Borderline Theatre Company, Directed by Stuart Mungall.

1985    The Bruce       Robert the Bruce         Edinburgh Festival

1986    Robert Burns   Robert Burns   By Joe Corrie, Scottish Theatre Company; Directed by David Hayman

1986    The Gorbals Story       Peter Reilly     By Robert Mcleish. 7:84 Theatre Co. Directed by David Hayman

1989    The Sash         William MacWilliam   By Hector MacMillan. 7:84 Theatre Co. Directed by Gerard Kelly

1991    Red Riding Hood: The Sequel            Wolverine        Directed by Andy Gray.

1991    One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest      R.P.McMurphy            Raindog Theatre Company. Directed by Robert Carlyle

1992    Macbeth: In the Scots Tongue Macbeth          Raindog Theatre Company. Best Director Award: Robert Carlyle

1994    Dick Wittington           King Rat          With Christopher Biggins. King's Theatre, Glasgow

1995    Follow Follow: The Rangers Story     Max Factor      King's Theatre Glasgow/Glasgow Rangers FC; Directed by Ron Bain

1996    The Architect   Leo Black        Directed by Philip Howard, Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh

1998    Buried Treasure           Frank McCoig Directed by Robin Lefevre, Lyric Theatre, London

Radio credits

Selected BBC Radio plays

Year     Title     Role     Notes

1982    The Thirty Nine Steps Franklin P. Scudder     Considered the most faithful adaptation of John Buchan's book.

1988    Death of a Fly Alec Bodine    Murder mystery told from the perspective of a fly.

1995    The Serpent's Back     Cully   First adaptation of Ian Rankin's Cully series

1998    Tunes of Glory            Basil Barrow  

1999    Let It Bleed     DI John Rebus First adaptation of Ian Rankin's Rebus books

2004    Dr Korczak's Example            Dr. Janusz Korczak     BBC Radio 4 Saturday Play directed by Lu Kemp

2005    The Tragical Comedy or Comical Tragedy of Mr. Punch  Swatchell         BBC Radio 3 The Wire directed by Lu Kemp

2007    Voyage of the Demeter           Count Dracula Morton offers a terrifying rendition of the Prince of Darkness

2008    They Have Oak Trees in North Carolina   Ray      BBC Radio 4 Friday Play directed by Gaynor Macfarlane

2011    Occupation Kenny Gall      BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play directed by Gaynor Macfarlane


Tuesday, April 14, 2026

John Fitzgerald obit

Former Cowboys center John Fitzgerald passes away at 77

 He was not on the list.


John Fitzgerald, the man in the middle of the Dallas Cowboys offensive line throughout most of the 1970s, passed away this morning. He was 77.

Selected by the Cowboys in the fourth round of the 1970 NFL Draft, Fitzgerald had played both offensive guard and defensive tackle during his three varsity seasons at Boston College, which earned him induction into the school's Athletic Hall of Fame in 1982. He spent his rookie effort with Dallas on the taxi squad, where he was originally slotted in on the defensive side of the ball before finding a home with the offense.

A backup guard in the Cowboys' Super Bowl campaign of 1971, Fitzgerald was then converted to center for the 1972 season and took over as the starter the next year. From 1973 to 1980, he would help pave the way for an offense that finished among the NFL's top 10 for total yards in each of those eight seasons and ranked in the top three for five of those years.

Beginning in 1975, Fitzgerald was the foundation for head coach Tom Landry's reintroduction of the famed shotgun offense, easily handling the transition of hiking the ball a farther distance to quarterback Roger Staubach. Thus would begin a stretch of three times in four seasons that the Cowboys would reach the Super Bowl, winning it all in 1977 with a 27-10 defeat of the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XII.

In fact, over his 12 seasons in Dallas from 1970-81, Fitzgerald was never associated with a losing team as the Cowboys reached the playoffs 11 times, appeared in nine NFC Championship Games, did battle in five Super Bowls and won two Lombardi Trophies. Overall, he played in 19 postseason games, tied for 19th in franchise history books, with 13 starts.

Fitzgerald was also credited with one of the greatest nicknames in the history of the game after describing the Cowboys' offensive line of 1979-80 as "Four Irishmen and a Scott." That was in reference to himself at center, left tackle Pat Donovan, right guard Tom Rafferty, right tackle Jim Cooper and left guard Herb Scott.

Prior to the 1981 season, though, Fitzgerald was placed on injured reserve due to a knee problem, one of several injuries he would largely play through during his career. He then retired in January 1982.

Overlooked for the Pro Bowl, Fitzgerald is nonetheless part of a great lineage of centers who have worn the Star, a group that includes Dave Manders, Rafferty, who took over at center in 1981, Mark Stepnoski, Andre Gurode and Travis Frederick.

Dan Wall obit

Dan Wall, Longtime Professor of Jazz Piano, Dies at 72

Gifted keyboardist and teacher influenced the lives and careers of countless Oberlin students. 

He was not on the list.


Dan Wall, an Associate Professor of Jazz Piano who taught at Oberlin from 2001 until his retirement in 2025, has died. He was 72.

"Dan Wall was a deeply beloved teacher, colleague, and friend," says Dean of the Conservatory Bill Quillen. "He transformed countless lives through his quiet mentorship and very deep goodness. He will be deeply, deeply missed."

Wall proved to be a prodigious keyboard talent from a young age: While in high school, he led a jazz combo at the Carousel club in his hometown of Atlanta. At 17, he won a Hall of Fame Scholarship from DownBeat magazine and went on to study at the Berklee College of Music. For many years, he performed in venues throughout the world and collaborated with a long list of jazz greats including Eddie Gomez, Joe Lovano, Kenny Wheeler, and Billy Drummond. Beginning in 1991, Wall played Hammond organ for the John Abercrombie Trio, which earned critical acclaim for its first two recordings, While We're Young and Speak of the Devil. 

He won DownBeat’s International Critics’ Poll an incredible 16 times.

At Oberlin, Wall was regarded as an extraordinary teacher who touched the lives of students and colleagues alike. He was a fixture at the keyboard for memorable faculty concerts in Finney Chapel and at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York City, and a friendly presence around his Kohl Building base of operations. He earned Oberlin’s Excellence in Teaching Award for 2014-15.

"By every metric, Dan Wall was exceptional," says Professor of Jazz Guitar Bobby Ferrazza, a close friend of Wall. "He was a humble, generous, warm person. He was a musician so special that he inspired almost everyone who heard him play.

"All of these attributes changed lives for the better for so many of us who had the privilege to know him—students and colleagues alike. We called each other “brother,” and I feel a great loss. All we can do is try to carry forward all the beautiful life and music lessons that he taught all of us."

A memorial honoring Wall will be planned for a later date; details will follow in the Campus Digest.

Joy Harmon obit

Joy Harmon Dies: Actress Famous For Seductive ‘Cool Hand Luke’ Scene Was 87

 She was not on the list.


Joy Harmon, the actress who memorably and without a word stole a scene in the Paul Newman classic Cool Hand Luke, has died. Deadline confirmed the news with a business associate. She was 87.

Harmon, then 27, played “Lucille” in Cool Hand Luke, and in her three-minute appearance, she outshines Newman, a young Dennis Hopper and even the film’s eventual Best Supporting Actor Oscar winner George Kennedy. In it, she plays a young, unnamed woman who washes her car wearing only a tattered, tight fitting floral dress. Nearby is a chain gang of convicts digging a ditch in the hot, midday sun. Her character seems to enjoy their attention as she uses a very soapy sponge and, at times, her body to clean the car.

At one point, Kennedy’s character begins calling her “Lucille.”

Newman’s Luke asks him, “Lucille. Where’d you get that?”

Kennedy’s character answers, “Anything so innocent and built like that just gotta be named Lucille.”

Her appearance in the film was so memorable that EW celebrated the actress’ three minutes of screentime with a tribute on the film’s 50th anniversary in 2017.

Harmon told EW that director Stewart Rosenberg’s instructions were simple.

“He just worked it like—’Now, get the sponge, and squeeze it, and wash the car’ and so forth. I just followed [his instruction]. The shots were all like kind of broken up, you know, how he wanted me to do it. It was easy. It was so easy.”

She didn’t fully understand the import of the scene.

“I was just washing a car to my best ability and having fun with it, with the sponge and everything,” she said. “My concept of the [scene] was not like what came out. I was not aware that there were two meanings to things that I was doing, and I’m still not really that much aware of what they all were.”

Audiences sure were.

Harmon began her screen career with appearance opposite Groucho Marx on You Bet Your Life and Tell It to Groucho. Throughout the ’60s she worked on TV staples such as The Beverly Hillbillies, Gidget, Gomer Pyle U.S.M.C, Batman, Bewitched and The Monkees.

Her big-screen career included an uncredited roles in The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit and The Yum Yum Tree (opposite Jack Lemmon), as well as more prominent parts in The Young Dillinger, One Way Wahine, Angel in my Pocket and Village of the Giants, in which she played a 30 foot-tall teen.

1967’s Cool Hand Luke turned out to be Harmon’s penultimate film role.

Later in life, she launched Aunt Joy’s Cakes out of the kitchen of her home, supplying cakes to her niece’s coffee shop. According to the company’s bio, Harmon soon started supplying desserts to the Disney lot. Eventually, she built Aunt Joy’s into brick-and-mortar business located in Burbank.

Harmon was married for 30 years to producer and film editor Jeff Gourson before the couple divorced. She is suvived by her three children and nine grandchildren.

Her family has established a GoFundMe page to help pay for medical expenses.

Filmography

Film roles

The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1956) – Minor Role (uncredited)

Let's Rock (1958) – Pickup Girl

Mad Dog Coll (1961) – Caroline

Under the Yum Yum Tree (1963) – Ardice (uncredited)

Roustabout (1964) – College Girl (uncredited)

Young Dillinger (1965) – Nelson's Girl

One Way Wahine (1965) – Kit Williams

The Loved One (1965) – Miss Benson (uncredited)

Village of the Giants (1965) – Merrie

A Guide for the Married Man (1967) – Party Girl in Bar (uncredited)

Cool Hand Luke (1967) – Lucille, The Girl

Angel in My Pocket (1969) – Miss Holland

Television roles

Tell It To Groucho (1961) Co-Host Series

The Beverly Hillbillies (1963) – Kitty

My Three Sons (1964) – Joanne Grant

Burke's Law (1964–1965) – Barbara Sue / Belle Sue Walsh

Gidget (1965) – Blonde Girl Dancing / Midge (uncredited)

Batman (1966) – Julia Davis (uncredited)

Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. (1966) – Barbara

Bewitched (1966) – Francie

The Rounders (1966) – Rosetta

Occasional Wife (1967) – Model

That Girl (1967) – Miss Bridges

The Monkees (1967) – Cashier in S2:E2, "The Picture Frame"

The Monkees (1967) – Zelda in S2:E14, "Monkees on the Wheel"

Love, American Style (1972) – Rosalie (segment "Love and the Secret Habit")

The Odd Couple (1972) – Waitress

Thicker Than Water (1973) – (final appearance)


Monday, April 13, 2026

Patrick Campbell Lyons obit

Much-loved guitarist who founded original Nirvana dies as tributes paid

The musician was a founding member of the band, which launched in 1966 and performed until 1971, before reuniting in 1985 – two years ahead of rock group Nirvana forming their own group

 

He was not on the list.


Patrick Campbell Lyons, the guitarist from British 60s psychedelic band Nirvana, has passed away at the age of 82. The musician was a founding member of the band, which launched in 1966 originally as a duo, and performed until 1971, before reuniting in 1985 – two years ahead of Nirvana, the rock version, forming their own group.

Bandmate Keith Smart confirmed the heartbreaking news, posting on Instagram alongside three photographs: "Just heard some very sad news. My dear friend Patrick Campbell Lyons has left us. Been playing guitar with him in Nirvana since 1980. He had been ill the last few years. Blessings to his family and friends, may he rock in peace."

Fans and friends quickly paid their respects, with one commenting: "Man, so many fun times with him." Another wrote: "Saddened to read this Keef. I know how much Patrick meant to you." While a third added: "Sorry for your loss Keith."

Patrick helped to create beloved tracks including singles Tiny Goddess and Pentecost Hotel, along with several albums such as All Of Us and Black Flower.

He went on to release a wealth of material and previously revealed to The Strange Brew that he was afforded "full creative freedom," adding: "After the first couple of recording sessions we abandoned the concept of having a group.

"Which retrospectively probably was a big mistake because if we'd had a proper group I do believe that we'd have been a world famous band very quickly. Instead we took the 40 year road to "cult" status via Seattle and other destinations around the world."

He praised the songs, saying: "The songs have lived on stronger now than they were. A new young band have recorded the 'Rainbow Chaser' backing track.

"It's the first track on their album. They're massive - a band called Rizzle Kicks. They do their own thing on top it's called 'Dreamers'. We don't push it. It just comes. It's the strength of music and word of mouth."

In 1992, the band took legal action against American group Nirvana over the use of their name, eventually settling the dispute out of court. Both bands could continue using the name and issue new recordings without any packaging disclaimers or caveats to distinguish one Nirvana from the other. Music writer Everett True claimed that Cobain's record label paid $100,000 to the original Nirvana to permit Cobain's band continued use of the name.

In a gesture of reconciliation towards Kurt Cobain, Courtney Love and the rest of Nirvana, the original Nirvana later paid homage to the late rock legend by covering "Lithium" on their album Orange and Blue following Cobain's death.

Moya Brennan obit

Irish musician Moya Brennan dies aged 73

 

She was not on the list.


Moya Brennan, best known as the lead singer of the Grammy and BAFTA-winning group Clannad, died peacefully yesterday, surrounded by her family, at the age of 73.

An Irish music icon, the Celtic folk singer, songwriter and harpist from Gaoth Dobhair in the Donegal Gaeltacht, recorded more than 30 albums and sold millions of records worldwide.

The eldest of nine children in the renowned Ó Braonáin family, Moya (née Máire Ní Bhraonáin) came to prominence when she began performing with her family in Clannad.

Moya and her siblings, Pól and Ciarán, along with their twin uncles Noel (1949-2022) and Pádraig Ó Dúgáin (1949-2016), started performing regularly in the family pub in Mín na Leice.

The band, formed in 1970, became one of the world's foremost traditional Irish acts, and Moya's melodic tones brought them global acclaim.

After winning the Letterkenny Folk Festival in 1973, they embarked on a touring schedule, finding initial success in Europe, especially Germany.

Their music blended Irish traditional songs with contemporary influences of the day, such as The Beach Boys, The Beatles, The Mamas and the Papas, and Joni Mitchell.

Their breakthrough, and the beginning of worldwide acclaim, came in 1982 when their theme song for the TV miniseries Harry's Game became an international hit, and it brought Irish-language music to a global audience.

Written for the TV drama, which was set against the Troubles in Northern Ireland, Harry's Game became a UK chart success. Clannad also became the first band to perform in Irish on Top of the Pops, where their haunting harmonies drew global attention.

The song won an Ivor Novello Award for Best Television Soundtrack, was subsequently featured in the film Patriot Games, and formed part of a Volkswagen advertising campaign in the US.

Moya also hosted Music of Ireland: Welcome Home, which won a New York Emmy in 2011 in the Entertainment: Program/Special category.

Clannad's style became synonymous with Celtic music, blending traditional and original songs with modern arrangements, harmonies and new age sounds.

Subsequent studio albums and soundtrack work for television and films followed, along with BAFTA, Grammy and Billboard awards.

Moya's sister Eithne, also known as Enya, spent several years with Clannad before pursuing a solo career.

Clannad's music also featured in film and television, including The Last of the Mohicans, The Angel and the Soldier Boy, Robin of Sherwood, Message in a Bottle and A Big Bold Beautiful Journey.

Some of Clannad's albums included Crann Úll, Fuaim, Macalla, Sirius, Anam, Banba, Ring of Gold, Landmarks and Rogha.

A final studio album, Nádúr, was released in 2013.

Moya also enjoyed a career as a solo singer, beginning with her 1992 album Máire. She published an autobiography, The Other Side of the Rainbow, in 2000.

From an early age, she was steeped in the traditions of the Irish language.

Her father, Leo Ó Braonáin, was the leader of the Slieve Foy travelling showband, and her mother, Máire 'Baba' Uí Bhraonáin (née Ní Dhúgáin), taught music and ran the local choir.

While Moya performed with many acclaimed artists, she remained a familiar presence in Teach Leo in West Donegal, where she curated open mic nights with new and established artists.

She began Clubeo in 2013, giving upcoming artists an opportunity to be on a live stage, with guest performances ranging from music legends to local rising stars.

Clannad released In a Lifetime to mark the band's 50th anniversary in 2020 and later completed their 50th Anniversary In a Lifetime Farewell Tour in October 2024, with a final show in London's Royal Albert Hall.

U2 singer Bono, who duetted with Moya on the Clannad song In a Lifetime, previously said she had "one of the greatest voices the human ear has ever experienced".

Former President Michael D Higgins, who presented her with the RTÉ Folk Awards Lifetime Achievement Award in 2019, said that "her name would be forever etched in the history of Irish music."

Tánaiste and Fine Gael leader Simon Harris said he was "deeply saddened" to hear of Moya's passing, describing her as "musical icon with a unique voice of extraordinary beauty" who brought Irish music to an international audience through her work with Clannad.

Moya collaborated with artists including Bono, Mick Jagger, Paul Brady, Bruce Hornsby, Paul Young, Shane MacGowan, Dónal Lunny, The Chieftains, Brian Kennedy, Ronan Keating, Tríona Ní Dhomhnaill and Mairéad Ní Mhaonaigh.

She worked with Hans Zimmer on the film score for King Arthur and achieved huge global success with Chicane's Saltwater.

With her long-time musical collaborator, harpist Cormac De Barra, Moya released four critically acclaimed Voices & Harps albums.

Moya was also part of trad vocal supergroup T With the Maggies, alongside her peers and lifelong friends Maighread & Tríona Ní Dhomhnaill and Mairéad Ní Mhaonaigh.

Her many performances included collaborating with the Republic of Ireland football team on Put 'Em Under Pressure ahead of Italia 90 and singing before Pope John Paul II and 2.7 million young people at the World Youth Prayer Vigil in Rome in 2000.

She also recorded many charity singles supporting a range of causes, including homelessness, addiction, and mental health issues.

Dublin City University awarded Moya an honorary doctorate in May 2022. Dr Síle Denvir of DCU's Scoil na Gaeilge described Moya as having "an innate ability to find the heart of music, to reach the essence of a song or a tune, and to make the ordinary extraordinary."

Moya was awarded Donegal Person of the Year in April 2024 when she was fittingly described as "the first lady of Celtic music."

The following month, along with her brothers, Ciarán and Pól, Clannad were conferred with the Freedom of Donegal in recognition of their contribution to highlighting the county around the world.

She was diagnosed with pulmonary fibrosis in later years.

Moya is survived by her husband, Tim Jarvis, and her two children, Aisling and Paul, who both toured and recorded with their mother.

 

Al Gunn obit

Former Men Without Hats Bassist Alain Lefebvre, aka Al Gunn, Has Died

 He was not on the list.


Former Men Without Hats bassist Alain Lefebvre, aka Al Gunn, has passed away. The news was shared by the new wave band on Facebook.

“It is with great sadness that we regret to inform you of the passing of Al Gunn, former bass player for Men Without Hats,” they wrote. “Al (Alain Lefebvre) was a larger than life character, immortalized in the song Pop Goes The World (‘Send Al Gunn to see the doctor BEN!’). He was a childhood friend, a loyal supporter, and a talented luthier to several generations of Montreal guitarists (The Guitar Hospital). He has left us much too soon, and will be dearly missed. RIP Al Gunn.”

Gunn got his first guitar at 13 and wrote that he was fascinated by music and the tools to make it for his whole life. He started his musical career in 1976 doing freelance playing and tech work. Gunn was a member of the Men Without Hats, known for their hit “The Safety Dance,” in 1985 during their Freeways tour. Notably, he’s featured on the 1985 concert film “Live Hats.” As the band mentioned, he once again took up guitar repair and building, launching his own business in April 1991. He was a pillar of the Montreal guitar repair scene for 35 years.

Our thoughts are with the family and friends of Al Gunn.

Donald K. Donald obit

Canadian record producer, promoter Donald K. Donald dies at 82

 He was not on the list.


Donald K. Tarlton, better known as Donald K. Donald, has died, CTV News has learned.

He was 82.

Donald spent 40 years bringing some of the world’s top musical artists to Montreal.

From humble beginnings, he became one of Canada’s most successful impresarios, bringing many big name acts like The Rolling Stones to Montreal.

Former longtime Montreal broadcaster Terry DiMonte says everyone who attended a concert from the 60s to the 2000s did so because of Donald K. Donald productions, so it’s a big loss for the city and for him personally.

“I haven’t seen Donald in a number of years … his health wasn’t the best. He was a trooper and if you ever knew or met Donald you knew besides the fact that he always let you know that ‘there were plenty of great seats still available’ he was just a bundle of energy both in business and his personal life,” DiMonte told CTV News on Monday.

“I got to know him on a personal level, which was an absolute treat. He and his wife, Annie, are just the most wonderful people and it’s another one from the era gone.”

Donald leaves behind his wife.

Dave McGinnis obit

Former Cardinals head coach Dave McGinnis dies at 74

 

He was not on the list.


Former Arizona Cardinals head coach and defensive coordinator Dave McGinnis died of an illness on Monday at the age of 74.

McGinnis led the Cardinals from 2000-03, ending his Arizona tenure with the unforgettable last-second win to eliminate the Minnesota Vikings on Dec. 28, 2003.

Quarterback Josh McCown found wide receiver Nate Poole in the end zone for the win, and in the locker room after the game, McGinnis’ emotional speech became renowned.

“This was a tremendous, tremendous demonstration of men that not only love each other but believed, believed, believed. I’ll never, ever give up on you. I love you,” McGinnis said to his players.

McGinnis took over head coaching duties during the 2000 season, as he previously served as the defensive coordinator since 1996 under Vince Tobin. McGinnis coached Pat Tillman during his four-year NFL career before Tillman joined the army. He was also on the sidelines for the Cardinals’ 1998 playoff berth and wild card round win over the Dallas Cowboys.

In McGinnis’ head coaching tenure, the Cardinals went 7-9 in 2001, 5-11 in 2002 and 4-12 in 2003.

“We were deeply saddened to learn of Dave McGinnis’ passing and extend our heartfelt condolences to all who knew and loved him,” Cardinals owner Michael Bidwill said in a statement. “As Dave often said, he was a ‘ballcoach’ through and through, and no one ever filled that role with more passion, enthusiasm and charisma. Coach Mac truly loved the game and everything — and everyone — associated with it, especially his players. He was one of a kind and will be greatly missed.”

McGinnis became a linebackers coach for the Tennessee Titans from 2004-11 and then assistant head coach of the St. Louis/Los Angeles Rams from 2012-2016. McGinnis had been working as a broadcaster for the Titans since 2017 before his death.

Titans reporter Jim Wyatt wrote that McGinnis had been hospitalized since March 4 and received visits from coaches and players from his three-decade NFL coaching career.

“Even in the hospital, people would stop by to see him, and he would ask about their families, their grandkids, even when he could barely speak. He made a big impact on so many people,” former Titans head coach Jeff Fisher told Wyatt.

Career information

High school     Snyder (Snyder, Texas)

College            TCU

Career history

Texas Christian (1973–1974)

Graduate assistant

Missouri (1975)

Graduate assistant

Missouri (1976–1977)

Defensive backs coach

Indiana State (1978, 1980–1981)

Defensive backs coach

Texas Christian (1982)

Defensive backs coach

Kansas State (1983–1985)

Defensive backs coach

Chicago Bears (1986–1995)

Linebackers coach

Arizona Cardinals (1996–2000)

Defensive coordinator

Arizona Cardinals (2000–2003)

Head coach

Tennessee Titans (2004–2011)

Linebackers coach

St. Louis/Los Angeles Rams (2012–2016)

Assistant head coach

Head coaching record

Regular season            17–40 (.298)


Sunday, April 12, 2026

Frank Stack obit

 

Frank Stack – RIP

He was not on the list.


Frank Stack, artist, cartoonist, educator, and pioneer of underground comics, passed away on April 12, 2026, at MU’s University Hospital.

Stack is widely recognized as one of the founders of the underground comics movement. Working under the pseudonym Foolbert Sturgeon, he published The Adventures of Jesus in 1964, a work regarded by many as the first underground comic. A comic strip, Dorman’s Doggie, was syndicated nationally by the Underground Press Syndicate from 1976 to 1978. From 1986 to 2001, he was a regular contributor to Harvey Pekar’s American Splendor and illustrated Our Cancer Year, written by Pekar and Joyce Brabner, which won the 1995 Harvey Award for Best Original Graphic Novel. In 2025 he was inducted into the Comic-Con’s Hall of Fame as a founder of the underground comics movement.

Stack devoted nearly four decades to teaching art and printmaking at the University of Missouri, where he taught from 1963 until his retirement in 2001 and was later named professor emeritus. He was a lifelong mentor to hundreds of young artists, remembered for his intellectual rigor, generosity, and unwavering commitment to personal vision. Until his stroke a few years ago he could regularly be seen, sketching local people and places, or sitting cross-legged with watercolor materials on his lap, capturing the landscapes of mid-Missouri in his imaginative and distinctive style. In the studio, his skillfully rendered figure drawings and paintings demonstrated a rare versatility.

Word on social media is that Professor of Art, University of Missouri-Columbia, Frank Stack has passed away. Stack was more widely known as an underground cartoonist under his pseudonym Foolbert Sturgeon.

Frank Stack’s career in art, humor, and comix began at the Texas Ranger, University of Texas-Austin. Comixjoint tells of Frank’s work at the college humor magazine:

in the mid ’50s, the Texas Ranger was suffering from low circulation and staff turmoil, resulting in three editors leaving the magazine within one year for various reasons. Enter Frank Stack. He enrolled at UT in 1956 as an art student and almost immediately joined the Ranger as a staff member and cartoonist. He experienced the magazine hitting its low point and contributed to its resurrection in 1957 and ’58. Stack became editor of the Ranger for the 1958-59 school year and published Gilbert Shelton’s first cartoons in the magazine in 1959, when he was a sophomore majoring in social sciences.

Stack tried to put out a mag with sharp but factual satire in the manner of the New Yorker and The Harvard Lampoon, as opposed to the bawdy tone of Playboy, but good intentions wouldn’t keep him out of trouble with the Texas Student Publications Office at the university. In an interview with Richard Holland, author of The Texas Book, Stack said, “Under my editorship I tried to work around the censors, and was annoyed by the censorship system…. But there were some staffers, then and later, who relished the challenge of sneaking dirty stuff through.”

After graduation and serving two years of active duty in the army Stack began drawing comics about Jesus. A little later he began his career as an art teacher.

From the University of Missouri:

Stack has been on the faculty of the University of Missouri since 1963/1964: 1963/1964 to1967/1968, Instructor of Art; 1968/1969 to 1947/1974, Assistant Professor of Art; 1974/1975 to 1977/1978, Associate Professor of Art; and 1978/1979 to 2001, Professor of Art. Stack is currently Professor Emeritus.

Back to M. Steven Fox and Comixjoint:

He began drawing his satirical comics about Jesus Christ and the New Testament in 1961, but back then the comics were too controversial (read blasphemous) to be published in any college-sanctioned humor magazine.

By 1964, Stack had earned his master’s degree and landed a job as an art professor at the University of Missouri. But he kept drawing the Jesus comics and would send copies of the strips to his buddy and former fellow student in Austin, Gilbert Shelton, who had also served as the editor of The Texas Ranger. After Shelton had received a dozen Jesus strips, he arranged to have about 40 sets of the comics photocopied and stapled into a booklet to share with friends on campus. Shelton drew a simple front cover for the booklet and entitled it The Adventures of Jesus, with a byline that stated “Written and Illustrated by F.S.”

Of course, the “F.S.” in the byline stood for Frank Stack, but as a college professor with some standing in the community, Stack was not eager to associate his name with such nefarious comic strips. He devised the pseudonym Foolbert Sturgeon to obscure the identity of “F.S.”, at least for a few years.

So began the underground (ug) comix legend known as Foolbert Sturgeon. And according to that above Comixjoint article it would result in “three of the funniest social and religious satire comic books in history during the golden age of underground comics.”

With the emerging popularity of underground comix in the late 1960s Foolbert Sturgeon returned with The New Adventures of Jesus. That popularity led to more characters and comix like Dr. Feelgood, and Dorman’s Doggie, both of which would star in comic strips syndicated to ug newspapers by the Rip Off Press Syndicate from 1977 to 1979.

Denis Kitchen expands on Stack’s career as Professor and cartoonist:

So for many years he drew his cartoons under the unlikely nom de plume of Foolbert Sturgeon. His early comix work included The Adventures of Jesus(1962), Amazon Comics(1972), Dorman’s Doggie (1979), Feelgood Funnies (1972), The New Adventures of Jesus(1969), Jesus Meets the Armed Services[#2](1972) and Jesus Comics #3. Stack also contributed to such anthologies as Blab!, Hydrogen Bomb Funnies, Radical America Komiks, Rip Off Comix, Rip Off Review of Western Culture and Snarf. Some, including his old Texas friend Gilbert Shelton, regard Stack’s Adventures of Jesus in 1962 to be the very first underground comic, though it was a 14-page Xerox zine circulated only among a small group of friends and never offered for sale. Nonetheless, Stack’s status as one of the pioneer underground cartoonists is unquestioned.

More recently (2022) Cayli Yanagida for The Columbia Missourian profiled Frank.

When Frank Stack arrived in Columbia in 1963 to teach art at MU, he did not plan to stay, let alone build a career and family in Missouri.

Now, nearly 60 years after he moved here, Stack, 85, has built a rich history as an artist and is credited with pioneering the graphic novel. He was among the first to create the underground comic genre with cartoons well-known for their relevance and satirical content.

“He pushed boundaries,” said his daughter, Joan Stack. “I’m not sure he even knew how much he was pushing them.”

Over the years, Stack has also confronted multiple health complications.

Bob Hall obit

Bob Hall, the father of wheelchair racing and a 2-time winner of the Boston Marathon, dead at 74

BOSTON (AP) — Bob Hall, a childhood polio survivor who became known as the father of wheelchair racing after twice winning the Boston Marathon and then going on to build racing chairs for the generations of competitors that followed, has died. He was 74. 

He was not on the list.


BOSTON (AP) — Bob Hall, a childhood polio survivor who became known as the father of wheelchair racing after twice winning the Boston Marathon and then going on to build racing chairs for the generations of competitors that followed, has died. He was 74.

The Boston Athletic Association said on Sunday that Hall's family confirmed his death after a long illness.

In 1975, Hall convinced Boston Marathon organizers to let him into the race and was promised a finishers’ certificate like the one the runners got if he completed the 26.2-mile distance in under 3 hours. (In 1970, Vietnam War veteran Eugene Roberts, who had lost both of his legs in the war, needed more than six hours to finish.)

Hall crossed the line in 2:58.

“It had nothing to do with, per se, the marathon, but it was about the inclusion,” Hall said last year, when he served as the grand marshal in Boston on the 50th anniversary of his pioneering ride. “It was that I was bringing people along.”

Hall returned to the Boston race in 1977, when it was designated as the site for the National Wheelchair Championship, and prevailed in a field of seven. As they crested Heartbreak Hill, eventual men's winner Bill Rodgers and fifth-place finisher Tom Fleming slowed to encourage him.

“The interaction was a sign that we were fully accepted as athletes,” Hall said.

Hall, who lost the use of both legs from childhood polio, sued in 1978 to have wheelchair racers admitted into the New York Marathon, a fight that wasn’t settled until the race created men’s and women’s wheelchair divisions in 2000.

“Bob Hall is an incredible man,” five-time Boston winner and eight-time Paralympic gold medalist Tatyana McFadden said last year. “I’m so thankful for him. And I think we all are, as wheelchair racers, because he really paved the way.”

Hall finished in the top three in Boston three other times, and remained active with the race. More than 1,900 wheelchair racers have followed him from Hopkinton to Boston; this year’s race on April 20 will include 50 more, along with 50 others in eight para divisions competing for more than $300,000 in prize money.

The BAA said that Hall taught “how we can continue to ensure athletes of all abilities have competitive opportunities on the highest stage here in Boston.”

“Bob designed innovative wheelchair equipment, raced with courage, and was proud to be a two-time Boston Marathon champion,” the BAA said. “He helped lead a technological change, transforming simple wheelchairs into racing chairs built for peak athletic performance. Bob’s influence and effort five decades ago led to the global circuit of wheelchair racing today.”

Many of the competitors — including McFadden and seven-time Boston winner Marcel Hug — learned to race in chairs built by Hall.

“Because of him crossing that finish line, we’re able to race today. And it’s evolved so much since then,” McFadden said last year. “It was him. It was him being brave and saying, ‘I’m going to go out and do this because I believe that we should be able to race Boston Marathon just like everyone else.’ So he had the courage to do that.”