Sunday, April 26, 2026

Nedra Talley Ross obit

Nedra Talley Ross Dies: Last Surviving Member Of The Ronettes Was 80

 

She was not on the list.


Nedra Talley Ross, a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee and the last surviving member of the ’60s-era pop group The Ronettes has died, according to a post on the group’s Facebook page. She was 80.

“It is with heavy hearts that we share the news of Nedra Talley Ross’ passing. She was a light to those who knew and loved her,” the post began. “As a founding member of The Ronettes, along with her beloved cousins Ronnie and Estelle, Nedra’s voice, style and spirit helped define a sound that would change music. Her contribution to the group’s story and their defining influence will live forever…”

Born Nedra Yvonne Talley, she and her cousins Veronica “Ronnie” Bennett and Estelle Bennett were raised in Spanish Harlem, where they sang at Bar Mitzvahs and school dances as The Darling Sisters.

They teamed up with producer Phil Spector in 1963 and were renamed The Ronettes. The following year, the group released its only studio album, Presenting the Fabulous Ronettes Featuring Veronica. During that time, the Rolling Stones opened for the Ronettes when they toured the UK. Two years later, the Ronettes opened for the Beatles in the U.S. The trio broke up shortly thereafter.

Nedra went on to marry boyfriend Scott Ross and changed her name to Nedra Talley Ross. Ronnie married Phil Spector and became Ronnie Spector.

The Ronettes’ best-known song, “Be My Baby,” spent three weeks at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1963. The song — which the Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson famously has said is “the greatest record ever produced” — was co-written by Spector, whose intense “Wall of Sound” production style is personified by the track.

It wasn’t just Wilson who was a fan.

Martin Scorsese made powerful use of the tune in the opening credits scene of his breakout film, Mean Streets. The director also used the group’s version of “Frosty the Snowman” in Goodfellas.

The Ronettes’ songs have been featured in close to 100 other movies and TV shows, including Quadrophenia, Twist + Shout, Moonlighting, Dirty Dancing, The Wonder Years, Nine Months, How I Met Your Mother, Fred Claus, The Wrecking Crew!, Glee, The Simpsons, Pretty Little Liars, Bridget Jones’s Baby, Billions, Industry, Barbarian, Priscilla, The Bear and many more.

After breaking out with “Be My Baby,” the group had a moderate follow-up hit with “Baby, I Love You.” A couple of minor hits later, “Walking in the Rain” hit No. 23 in late 1964. All seven of their Hot 100 singles were produced by Phil Spector. Most of those songs — including “(Best Part of) Breaking Up” and “Do I Love You?” — were on Presenting the Fabulous Ronettes Featuring Veronica, which peaked at No. 96 and would be their only charting album.

The Ronettes were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2007, three years after they joined the Vocal Group Hall of Fame.

Monte Coleman obit

Monte Coleman, former UAPB coach and Washington NFL great, dies at 68

 He was not on the list.


Monte Coleman, a Pine Bluff native who went from not playing football in high school to becoming a steady presence in Washington’s NFL franchise as a linebacker for 16 years, has died. He was 68.

The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff announced Coleman’s death Sunday afternoon. Coleman was UAPB’s head football coach from 2008-17, leading the Golden Lions to the Southwest Athletic Conference championship and Boxtorow HBCU Division I coaches’ national championship in 2012.

A cause of death was not announced.

“Coach Coleman represented everything we strive for at UAPB — excellence, integrity and a relentless commitment to developing our student-athletes,” UAPB Athletic Director Chris Robinson said in a news release. “His legacy is not only written in championships and honors, but in the lives he changed every single day.”

Coleman enrolled at the University of Central Arkansas, where his brother Sam played, after graduating from Pine Bluff High School in 1975. He started as a safety, helping the Bears reach the 1976 National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics championship game, and converted to linebacker by his senior season, when he set a then-school record with 22 interceptions.

The Washington Redskins (now Commanders) took note of Coleman’s emergence at his new position and picked him in the 11th round of the 1979 NFL draft, which had 12 rounds at the time. He went on to play 16 seasons with the franchise, winning Super Bowls in the 1982, 1987 and 1991 seasons. He played in another Super Bowl in the 1983 season.

Coleman totaled 1,002 tackles (999 solo), 49.5 sacks, 17 interceptions (three returned for touchdowns) and 13 forced fumbles in 215 games at Washington. Only Darrell Green has played in more games with the franchise.

Broadcasting great John Madden named Coleman to his “All-Madden Team” in the 1993 season. He is inducted in the Commanders’ Ring of Fame.

Coleman moved to Pine Bluff years later, joining Lee Hardman’s staff as an assistant in the early 2000s and staying on staff when Mo Forte succeeded Hardman in 2004. They helped the Golden Lions reach their first SWAC championship game in 2006, a loss to Alabama A&M University.

Coleman was promoted to head coach when Forte was fired in 2007. His first team at the helm posted a 3-9 record, but the 2009 and 2010 teams each won five games, setting an upward trend that led to Coleman’s first winning season (6-5) in 2011 and the 10-2, SWAC championship run in 2012. He posted a 40-71 overall record (27-57 in SWAC play) at UAPB.

He served in later years as the executive director of SOAR, Students of Achievement and Responsibility, and as an assistant pastor at a local church.

A petition for Coleman to be considered for entry into the Pro Football Hall of Fame was recently established at Change.org. Michael McCray, public relations and cultural development specialist with the Pine Bluff Advertising and Promotion Commission, announced the petition Saturday during the Jefferson County Sports Hall of Fame induction banquet. Coleman is among six original inductees of the Hall known as the All-Time Greats, all of whom were honored last year.

Funeral arrangements will be announced at a later date, UAPB said.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Matt DeCaro obit

Matt DeCaro Has Died

 He was not on the list.


DeCaro was an American actor. He was arguably best known for his role as Correctional Officer Roy Geary on the television series Prison Break.

DeCaro has appeared in numerous American television series, including Crime Story, ER, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Cold Case, NYPD Blue, 24, The Office, NCIS, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Boston Legal, House, Eli Stone, The Chicago Code, Boss, Chicago P.D., and Chicago Fire.

He has also appeared in the films Richie Rich (1994), U.S. Marshals (1998), Mr. 3000 (2004), Eagle Eye (2008), Baby on Board (2009), and The Wise Kids (2011).

His stage work includes the Victory Gardens Theater's production of Symmetry and the role of Mr. Meyers in the world premiere of Rebecca Gilman's 1999 play Spinning into Butter.

DeCaro died at his home on 25 April 2026, aged 70

 

Actor

Scarlett Estevez in Christmas Again (2021)

Christmas Again

5.3

TV Movie

Mr. Brown

2021

 

Chicago P.D. (2014)

Chicago P.D.

8.1

TV Series

Officer DelaneyBenny

2014–2021

3 episodes

 

How Is This the World (2019)

How Is This the World

6.1

Short

Bernie

2019

 

David Eigenberg, Christian Stolte, Hanako Greensmith, Taylor Kinney, Joe Minoso, Miranda Rae Mayo, and Jocelyn Hudon in Chicago Fire (2012)

Chicago Fire

8.0

TV Series

Officer Delaney

2016

1 episode

 

Kelsey Grammer, Connie Nielsen, Sanaa Lathan, Kathleen Robertson, Jeff Hephner, Jonathan Groff, and Hannah Ware in Boss (2011)

Boss

8.1

TV Series

Ward Boss (uncredited)

2011

1 episode

 

The Wise Kids (2011)

The Wise Kids

6.3

Jerry (as Matt Decaro)

2011

 

The Last Rites of Joe May (2011)

The Last Rites of Joe May

6.8

Chevy

2011

 

Jennifer Beals, Delroy Lindo, Jason Clarke, and Todd Williams in The Chicago Code (2011)

The Chicago Code

7.7

TV Series

Kirby

2011

1 episode

 

Detroit 1-8-7 (2010)

Detroit 1-8-7

7.6

TV Series

Simon Edwards

2010

1 episode

 

Lara Flynn Boyle, Heather Graham, Jerry O'Connell, and John Corbett in Baby on Board (2009)

Baby on Board

4.2

Judge

2009

 

Patrick Swayze and Travis Fimmel in The Beast (2009)

The Beast

7.7

TV Series

Slava Dobre

2009

1 episode

 

Shia LaBeouf and Michelle Monaghan in Eagle Eye (2008)

Eagle Eye

6.6

Stranger at Airport

2008

 

Jonny Lee Miller in Eli Stone (2008)

Eli Stone

7.7

TV Series

Judge Salese

2008

2 episodes

 

Hugh Laurie in House (2004)

House

8.7

TV Series

McKenna

2007

1 episode

 

Candice Bergen, William Shatner, and James Spader in Boston Legal (2004)

Boston Legal

8.5

TV Series

Dr. Jacob Levine

2007

1 episode

 

Tracy Letts and David Pasquesi in Cop Show (2007)

Cop Show

7.6

Short

Vince

2007

 

Michael Rapaport, Muse Watson, Stacy Keach, Paul Adelstein, Barbara Eve Harris, Wentworth Miller, Dominic Purcell, Leon Russom, Wade Williams, Amaury Nolasco, and Marshall Allman in Prison Break (2005)

Prison Break

8.3

TV Series

Corrections Officer Roy GearyRoy Geary

2005–2006

15 episodes

 

Larry David in Curb Your Enthusiasm (2000)

Curb Your Enthusiasm

8.8

TV Series

Dr. Skadden

2005

1 episode

 

Wilmer Valderrama, Rocky Carroll, Gary Cole, Katrina Law, Sean Murray, Brian Dietzen, and Diona Reasonover in NCIS (2003)

NCIS

7.8

TV Series

Sheriff Daryl Bello (as Matt Decaro)

2005

1 episode

 

Steve Carell, Jenna Fischer, Rainn Wilson, John Krasinski, and B.J. Novak in The Office (2005)

The Office

9.0

TV Series

Jerry

2005

1 episode

 

Kiefer Sutherland, Reiko Aylesworth, Carlos Bernard, Jude Ciccolella, Glenn Morshower, and Mary Lynn Rajskub in 24 (2001)

24

8.4

TV Series

Tim Felson (uncredited)

2005

1 episode

 

NYPD Blue (1993)

NYPD Blue

7.8

TV Series

Emmet Minor

2004

1 episode

 

Cold Case (2003)

Cold Case

7.7

TV Series

Lyle Olsen (uncredited)

2004

1 episode

 

Bernie Mac in Mr. 3000 (2004)

Mr. 3000

5.6

Reporter

2004

 

Marg Helgenberger, George Eads, and William Petersen in CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2000)

CSI: Crime Scene Investigation

7.7

TV Series

Mr. Jones, Coin Dealer

2003

1 episode

 

Mariska Hargitay in Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (1999)

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

8.1

TV Series

Abe Cheney

2002

1 episode

 

Turks (1999)

Turks

7.3

TV Series

Lloyd Mangrum

1999

1 episode

 

Paula Marshall and Jeremy Piven in Cupid (1998)

Cupid

7.8

TV Series

Bailiff

1998

1 episode

 

Anthony Edwards, Julianna Margulies, Ming-Na Wen, Noah Wyle, Laura Innes, Alex Kingston, Eriq La Salle, Kellie Martin, Paul McCrane, Michael Michele, Erik Palladino, Maura Tierney, and Goran Visnjic in ER (1994)

ER

7.9

TV Series

Soccer Dad

1998

1 episode

 

Tommy Lee Jones, Robert Downey Jr., and Wesley Snipes in U.S. Marshals (1998)

U.S. Marshals

6.6

Deputy Stern

1998

 

Macaulay Culkin, Jonathan Hilario, Jonathan Hyde, John Larroquette, Stephi Lineburg, Michael Maccarone, and Joel Robinson in Richie Rich (1994)

Richie Rich

5.5

Dave Walter

1994

 

Goodnight Sweet Wife: A Murder in Boston (1990)

Goodnight Sweet Wife: A Murder in Boston

6.0

TV Movie

Grabowski

1990

 

Joe Morton and Daniel J. Travanti in Howard Beach: Making a Case for Murder (1989)

Howard Beach: Making a Case for Murder

5.7

TV Movie

1989

 

Billy Campbell, Dennis Farina, Paul Butler, Steve Ryan, and Bill Smitrovich in Crime Story (1986)

Crime Story

8.3

TV Series

Steadman (as Matt De Caro)

1986

1 episode

 

Thanks

Natalie West and Tyler Ross in Nate & Margaret (2012)

Nate & Margaret

6.2

special thanks

2012


Marilyn Hickey obit

Marilyn Hickey, Global Evangelist and Bible Teacher, Dies at 94

 She was not on the list.


Marilyn Hickey, a pioneering Christian minister and global evangelist, went home to be with the Lord at the age of 94 on Saturday, April 25, 2026.

Her daughter, author and Bible teacher Sarah Bowling, shared the news Sunday in a heartfelt message.

Details regarding a celebration of life are expected to follow.

Born July 1, 1931, Hickey devoted more than six decades to preaching the Gospel across the nations. She built a far-reaching ministry based in Denver and became one of the most recognizable voices in Spirit-filled Christianity through television, global crusades and teaching. Her work carried her to more than 100 countries, where she ministered to massive crowds and brought the message of Jesus Christ to millions.

Hickey also authored numerous books and biblical teaching resources, equipping believers to grow in faith and stand on the authority of God’s Word. Her ministry extended across generations, including her close partnership in ministry with her daughter, Sarah Bowling.

She remained a consistent and trusted voice within the charismatic movement and maintained a longstanding relationship with Charisma, encouraging believers and amplifying the message of the Gospel through media and outreach.

Marilyn Hickey’s life leaves a lasting imprint on the global church. Her bold faith, tireless mission work and unwavering commitment to Scripture helped shape countless lives around the world.

Charisma will report more information as it becomes available.

Marilyn Allene Hickey was born on July 1, 1931, in Dalhart, Texas. When she was a young girl, Hickey's parents were professing Methodists and attended church only casually. Her family suffered from riches according to one of her telecasts. Her father had it, after her grandfather and her great-grandfather that had it, even before the riches got to Marilyn, at the age of 36, she was the only one in her family.

She also said that her family had a history of riches, especially Hickey herself. At age 11, she was told. She became a born again Christian when she was a teenager. In college, she studied Spanish, intending to become a public high school teacher.

After meeting Wallace Hickey at an Assemblies of God Church, where Wallace served as a pastor, the couple married on December 26, 1954.

Around the same time, she and Wallace also met Dr. T.L. Osborn, a Pentecostal evangelist, who was 8 years Hickey's senior. Marilyn and Wallace traveled around in their car, conducting tent revival meetings in various towns. Together, Osborn and Hickey prayed for the sick and she became a guest speaker at his conferences. Osborn was lifelong friends with her family until his death just four months after Hickey lost her husband, Wallace.

Hickey held a Bachelor of Arts in Collective Foreign Languages from the University of Northern Colorado and an Honorary Doctorate of Divinity from Oral Roberts University.

She had two children and four grandchildren

Dick Kimball obit

Passages: Michigan, Team USA Legendary Diving Coach Dick Kimball Dies at 91

 

He was not on the list.


Dick Kimball, the legendary University of Michigan and Team USA Diving coach died at age 91.

Wolverine Diving posted a tribute to the late coach on social media.

“With saddened heart, we lost a diving great today, Dick Kimball. Our coaches at Wolverine Diving have so many fond memories of Kimball, and it was an honor to be coached by him. He was truly one of a kind. We are proud and honored to have our club train at the Dick Kimball Diving Well at the University of Michigan. Kimball’s legacy will continue to inspire generations of divers in the pool. May his memory live on. Rest easy, and forever Go Blue.”

Dick Kimball was born in Rochester, Minnesota, and was a four-time Minnesota high school diving champion. After attending the University of Oklahoma for one year, he transferred to the University of Michigan and helped the Wolverines to three NCAA Swimming and Diving championships

Kimball served 43 years as Michigan head diving coach, winning five NCAA championships and 33 Big Ten championships. As a student, he competed on three of the Wolverines’ NCAA champion dive teams and won two individual titles in the 1957 competition. He also helped coach the 1964, 1984, 1988, and 1992 U.S. Olympic teams.

Part of his legacy was the fun be brought to the sport. At some swim meets at Canham Natatorium, including Big Ten Championships and high school championship meets, Dick Kimball would belly flop fully clothed from the platform. He even got former Michigan football coach Jim Harbaugh to do it once with him.

That started when Kimball and Hobie Billingsley started a “comedy and acrobatic show” of diving in 1960. They gave more than 1,000 performances on their 1962 world tour and also appeared on TV shows including Ed Sullivan’s “Toast of the Town.”

And that was well after he was retired as head diving coach.

The 2001-02 season marked his 43rd and final as the head diving coach of the men’s program and 27th for the women’s team, although he has coached women divers at Michigan even before they officially became a program.

During his time as head diving coach, Dick Kimball helped the men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams win five NCAA championships and 33 Big Ten championships. In 1984, he was named NCAA Diving Coach of the Year for both the men and women, while earning the same honor in 1988 (for women only). At the Big Ten level, Kimball was a four-time Big Ten Diving Coach of the Year.

Kimball mentored nine Olympic medal winners, including gold medalists Bob Webster (1960, 1964 -Platform), Micki King (1972 – Three-Meter), Phil Boggs (1976 – Three-Meter) and Mark Lenzi (1992 – Three-Meter). He was an assistant coach for the U.S. Olympic Team at five Olympic Games (1964, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992), while coaching international divers at the 1968 and 1996 Olympic Games.

He also coached three Big Ten Women’s Divers of the Year: Diane Dudeck (1984), three-time NCAA champion Mary Fischbach (1988) and Carrie Zarse (1995). In addition, he coached 16 divers (nine men, seven women) to Big Ten titles during his tenure.

Kimball was a three-time NCAA champion at Michigan, helping the Wolverines win three consecutive national championships, while winning individual titles on one-meter and three-meter in 1957.

While at Michigan, Kimball also competed on the gymnastics team and won the national trampoline title.

He has received numerous awards and honors recognizing his contributions to the sport of diving. He was presented the Fred Cady Memorial Award following the 1972, 1976 and 1992 Olympic Games for “sincere dedication in achieving the ultimate in coaching the sport of diving.” He was also the first diving coach to receive the Collegiate and Scholastic Swimming Trophy from the CSCAA in 1986. He was inducted into both the International Swimming Hall of Fame and the University of Michigan Hall of Honor in 1985.

Dick Kimball was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame and was inducted into the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame in 2013.

Friday, April 24, 2026

Dirk Kempthorne obit

Former Secretary of the Interior and Idaho Gov. Dirk Kempthorne dies at 74

Kempthorne, who transformed the Gem State’s transportation infrastructure, also served as mayor of Boise and as a member of the U.S Senate

 

He was not on the list.


Former U.S. Secretary of the Interior and Idaho Gov. Dirk Kempthorne died Friday night after battling colon cancer, his family announced through the governor’s office.

Kempthorne, 74, also served as a member of the U.S. Senate and the mayor of Boise during a nearly 25-year career in public office.

In a written statement issued Saturday, Kempthorne’s family said he died Friday night surrounded by the people he loved most.

“Beyond his public service, he was a devoted husband, father, and grandfather whose greatest joy came from time spent with family and the people he met along the way,” Kempthorne’s family wrote. “He had a rare gift for truly seeing others — remembering names, stories, and the small details that made each person feel known and valued.”

Several Idaho political leaders praised Kempthorne’s record of public service and commitment to Idaho.

“He was a political unicorn,” Lt. Gov. Scott Bedke said in an interview Wednesday, referring to the mix of city, state and federal offices that Kempthorne held. “That doesn’t happen very often.”

“He left his mark on Idaho,” Bedke added.

Kempthorne, a Republican who was born in San Diego, California, served as the 30th governor of Idaho from 1999 to 2006.

Kempthorne resigned as governor in 2006 after President George W. Bush nominated Kempthorne to serve as the U.S. secretary of the interior – a position he held until 2009.

On Saturday, Idaho Gov. Brad Little issued an order calling for U.S. and Idaho flags to be flown at half-staff in honor of Kempthorne until the day after his funeral, which has yet to be scheduled.

“(Idaho First Lady) Teresa (Little) and I are deeply saddened by the passing of our dear friend, Gov. Dirk Kempthorne,” Little wrote on Saturday. “Our friendship goes back to our college days, where Dirk and I shared the same state government class – an experience that helped set the course for a lifetime of public service for him.”

Little called Kempthorne, and his wife Patricia, “dedicated and passionate leaders.”

“Dirk’s career was marked by extraordinary service at every level,” Little wrote. “His early work as an industry advocate and campaign manager for Phil Batt led to his leadership as a successful Boise mayor who helped change the trajectory of our capital city. During his distinguished tenure in the U.S. Senate, Dirk served Idaho with vision, integrity, and an unwavering commitment to doing what was right.”

“As Governor, Dirk left an enduring mark on our state,” Little added. “With Patricia’s steadfast partnership, he championed children and families, strengthened public education, and led transformational investments in our transportation system that will benefit Idahoans for generations. He elevated Idaho’s voice on the national stage as chairman of the National Governors Association.”

On Saturday, U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, described Kempthorne as a close friend who leaves behind an enduring legacy of service.

“Dirk Kempthorne was one of Idaho’s most distinguished public servants and my dear friend of over 40 years,” Simpson wrote Saturday. “Dirk’s career was a testament to selfless dedication, from the halls of local government as mayor and governor to national service as senator and secretary. I join Idahoans today in mourning the loss of Dirk, but also feel immense gratitude for his decades of service, loyalty, and the lasting impact he has had on Idaho and America. I am grateful for Dirk’s service to our state and nation, as well as his friendship all these years. To Patricia, his wife, and their children, Kathy and I extend our deepest condolences. May he rest in peace.”

In a statement released Saturday, U.S. Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, said Kempthorne served as a mentor when Crapo prepared to fill his seat in the U.S. Senate.

“Gov. Kempthorne’s leadership and vision helped shape the state of Idaho for generations,” Crapo wrote. “From his time as mayor of Boise to his tenure as governor, and later, U.S. secretary of the interior, he worked tirelessly to preserve the natural beauty and resources that define Idaho and the American West.  His legacy is rooted in public service, with a decades-long body of work dedicated to improving the lives of others.”

During his time in office in Idaho, Kempthorne “laid the groundwork for water modeling and was a visionary transportation planner,” Bedke said.

In 2004, Kempthorne and then-Nez Perce Tribal Executive Committee Chairman Anthony Johnson announced the Snake River Water Rights Agreement, which resolved water rights claims in the Snake River Basin, according to the Idaho Department of Water Resources.

In 2006, Kempthorne signed into law a bill that authorized the state’s first sale of Grant Anticipation Revenue Vehicle, or GARVEE, bonds to finance major transportation projects.

“I think the whole Treasure Valley owes him a huge debt of gratitude because he pushed the GARVEE program way back when,” Bedke said. “If not for GARVEE, we would be paying as we go to expand the freeway system in the Treasure Valley.”

Bedke said Kempthorne held everyone’s feet to the fire, legislatively, until the measure passed, and the program has allowed the state to expand Interstate 84.

Last year, the U.S. Navy honored Kempthorne by naming the engine room on the USS Idaho submarine after him.

U.S. Sen. Jim Risch, R-Idaho, announced the naming honor, pointing out that the USS Idaho is powered by a nuclear reactor pioneered at Idaho National Laboratory.

“Dirk’s contributions to our great state and our nation are significant,” Risch said in a written statement.  “His leadership and dedication to the USS Idaho Commissioning Committee is a true testament to Dirk’s resounding love for the Gem State.”

“It was my great honor to request the USS Idaho’s Engine Room be named for my dear friend and Idaho’s former governor, Dirk Kempthorne,” Risch added.

Overall, Kempthorne was a strong public speaker, a good administrator and an effective fundraiser, Bedke said.

“He’s a good guy,” Bedke said. “He’s a good public speaker, and that’s because he was uber prepared. He practiced a lot.”

Information about memorial services was not immediately available Saturday morning. Kempthorne’s family said additional details will be shared in the coming days.

“Our family is heartbroken, but we are also deeply grateful — for the time we had with him and for the extraordinary outpouring of love and support we have received from across Idaho and the country,” Kempthorne’s family wrote Saturday.

Kim Bowers obit

Brisbane Artist & Music Director Kim ‘Busty Beatz’ Bowers Passes Away

 

She was not on the list.


Bowers was the co-creator, music director and star of the international hit show, Hot Brown Honey, and she spent more than 25 years in the entertainment business.

Kim “Busty Beatz” Bowers, artist, music director and co-founder of the critically acclaimed, award-winning show Hot Brown Honey, has passed away, her co-directors shared in a statement.

“Our Queen Bee @bustybeatz walked towards the ancestors last night surrounded by family and friends, wrapped in hugs, flowers and tears. A leader, a staunch sister, a mentor, a maker of beatz, heart rhythms and words that made us stand up and listen,” the Hot Brown Honey team shared on Thursday (23 April).

They continued, “I know we will continue to create beautiful art together from the dream world, full of joy and cheekiness, built with radical fierce love and a middle finger to the systems. But for now Queen Sleep well, rest.

“The family will be holding a private ceremony but feel free to take a moment and ask your ancestors to hold her with ours.”

The Hot Brown Honey team concluded their post with a poem written by Bowers, which reads:

 

I call upon the love given

 

I call upon the love giving

 

Humbly

 

With gratitude

 

To fill my soul overflowing into the universe

 

To those who sent love, I dance within the redefinition

 

To fill this disconnected soul

 

Break the shackles

 

Love prism

 

Take these unliveable factors

 

Make rhythm

 

Together like that

 

I’m driven

 

From my vision, I glisten

 

In precision

 

Cell division

 

It’s a task

 

I’m open up to last

 

This calling

 

A Heartsong

 

I’m smitten

Bowers passed away following a diagnosis of aggressive triple-negative breast cancer in late 2022. The Courier Mail reported that she received the diagnosis in 2022 and had begun undergoing treatment that December.

At the time, Bowers’ friends and co-workers from the Polytoxic Theatre Co launched a GoFundMe “to assist with medical costs.”

Bowers signed her first record deal at the age of 16. She spent a decade recording and touring before expanding her career to include stints as a music director and sound artist, and she spent more than 25 years in the entertainment business.

Bowers was the co-creator, music director and star of the international hit show, Hot Brown Honey. Last year, the Hot Brown Honey team launched Hive City Legacy – Naarm Chapter, which took over the stage at Arts Centre Melbourne.

After taking home awards including the Helpmann, Green Room, and UK Total Theatre Award, the Hot Brown Honey crew gave back to the community. The Hive City Legacy is about addressing “the global conversation on representation, inclusion, diversity and decolonisation through storytelling and performance making.”

Bowers said of the project last year, “Hot Brown Honey believes the Arts have the capacity to transform the world.

“Through the Hive City Legacy project, we work with a League of Extraordinary Femmes to create unapologetic and genre-defying experiences which challenge, uplift, and inspire audiences to make noise! We are here. We are loud. We are taking up space - and we are doing it with the power of performance.”

She was also a member of Spdfgh (/ˈspʌdəˈfʌɡəhə/) were an Australian rock band formed in 1990. The founding members were: Kim Bowers (as Wikky Malone) (guitar, vocals), Liz Payne (as Rosy Glo, Lou Marvel, Belle) (guitar, vocals), Tania Bowers (as Tania May) (bass guitar, vocals), Melanie Thurgar (as Finnius) (drums),[2] and Angela Morosin (vocals).

Tommy Nuñez Sr. obit

Tommy Nuñez Sr., Phoenix native and NBA’s first Hispanic referee, dies

 He was not on the list.


The basketball world is honoring a trailblazer who dedicated his life to the game. Tommy Nuñez Sr., who grew up in Phoenix and became the first Hispanic referee in the NBA in 1972, died Friday. He refereed for more than 30 years in the NBA before retiring in 2002.

Nuñez was born in Santa Maria, California on September 10, 1938, and was of Mexican American descent. In 1972 he was hired by the NBA and became the first Hispanic to referee in any major sport. After 30 years of reffing in the NBA, Tommy retired in 2002. Since retiring he put all his time and energy into speaking to kids from coast to coast, organizing summer sports camps, youth programs or directing his National Hispanic Basketball tournament.

He was the founder of the Tommy Núñez foundation. He was the father of former[1] NBA referee Tommy Núñez Jr.

Nuñez died on April 24, 2026, at the age of 87.

Don Riegle obit

Don Riegle, Flint native who served under 7 presidents in Congress, dies at 88

 

He was not on the list.


FLINT, MI — Former U.S. Sen. Donald W. Riegle, a Flint native who served under seven presidents in Congress, has died of cardiac arrest, his family told MLive-The Flint Journal.

Riegle, one of only a few members of Congress elected as both a Republican and a Democrat, was 88.

He died peacefully at his home in San Diego, California, on Friday, April 24, with Lori Hansen Riegle, his wife of 48 years, at his side, according to a statement from his family.

“The cornerstone of our family, Don was a kind, loving, courageous leader who taught us to stand up for justice, economic opportunity, and fairness for everyone,” the statement reads. “He tirelessly fought for the rights of the working men and women of Michigan and led the Senate opposition to NAFTA, the trade agreement that resulted in the loss of many jobs in Michigan.

“We miss him profoundly and are forever grateful for his decency and commitment to seeing the good in others.”

Riegle was first elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1966 at age 28.

He was born in Flint on Feb. 4, 1938, attended public schools in Flint and Flint Junior College before continuing his higher education at Western Michigan University, the University of Michigan, Michigan State University and Harvard Business School.

In Congress, he challenged the Richard Nixon administration’s policies on the Vietnam War and changed parties — from Republican to Democrat — in 1973. He was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1976 and served until 1994.

Riegle left the Senate in the wake of the Keating Five controversy, in which he and four other senators endured highly publicized Ethics Committee hearings in 1990 over whether they pressured federal regulators to go easy on savings and loan kingpin Charles Keating after receiving campaign contributions from him and his associates.

The committee absolved Riegle of breaking any laws or Senate rules, but said his conduct gave the appearance of being improper and that he had been insensitive and used poor judgment.

The statement from his family recalls his commitment to equal rights for women and work with Congresswoman Bella Abzug of New York in securing the 1973 enactment of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, which prevented discrimination on the basis of sex or marital status in the granting of credit.

In the Senate, Riegle was the lead sponsor of the Chrysler Loan Guarantee Bill, which authorized federal loan guarantees to prevent the automaker’s bankruptcy.

A former chair of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, he presided over the passage of financial reforms of the savings and loan industry and helped to create a system of community development banks.

Former Congressman Dan Kildee of Flint said in a statement that he had known Riegle since childhood.

“He loved his hometown of Flint. He was very helpful to me throughout my career, but especially in my time in Congress,” Kildee’s statement reads. “When I was in Congress we would talk regularly, and his advice was very thoughtful and always helpful to me.

“We spoke often about how he, my uncle Dale, and I all came from the east side of Flint and that those origins were an important connection that helped define our work.”

Kildee said Riegle called him in 2023, on the day he announced that he was not running for reelection, “to congratulate me and tell me he understood why I decided to come home.

“On that day, I realized he’d become more than a mentor. He was my friend,” Kildee said.

Riegle’s family described him as a “devoted husband, father, grandfather, brother, uncle, friend, and fighter for Michigan.”

“He dedicated much of his life to public service, always seeking to make life better for those in need,” the statement reads. “Don was not inclined to dwell on his achievements during the 28 years he served the people of Michigan, instead preferring to work to accomplish more for those he represented.”

After retiring from the Senate, Riegle remained active in presidential politics — supporting Barack Obama in the 2008 primary and subsequent elections.

He endorsed Sen. Bernie Sanders for president in Flint in 2016, on the day Sanders debated Hillary Clinton here as the two competed for the Democratic nomination.

Also in 2016, Riegle wrote of the Flint water crisis in The Huffington Post, calling it “a monstrous dereliction of duty.”

In 1972, while serving in the House, Riegle authored with journalist and writer Trevor Armbrister “O Congress,” a book that detailed the inner workings of Congress and Riegle’s opposition to the Vietnam War and Nixon’s policies.

In 2001, he became chairman of government relations for public relations firm APCO Worldwide.

Riegle spent his retirement in both Michigan and California, according to his family.

Memorial arrangements will be announced at a later date.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Jack Thornell obit

Jack Thornell, AP photographer who captured assassination attempt on James Meredith, dies at 86

 He was not on the list.


NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Former Associated Press photographer Jack Thornell, whose Pulitzer Prize-winning picture of a shotgun-felled James Meredith looking back toward his would-be assassin on a Mississippi highway in 1966 became an enduring image of the Civil Rights Movement, has died. He was 86.

Thornell died Thursday at a hospital in the New Orleans suburb of Metairie from complications from kidney disease, his son, Jay Thornell said Friday.

He worked for the AP from 1964 to 2004 and had a variety of assignments over the years, photographing politicians, natural disasters, crime scenes. But the struggle for racial justice punctuated Thornell’s wire service career from the beginning. He covered the integration of a Mississippi Gulf Coast school on his first day of work for the AP New Orleans bureau.

In June 1966, Thornell, then 26, was assigned to cover a civil rights march led by Meredith, who had already made history by integrating the University of Mississippi in 1962, and was then mounting a “March Against Fear” through the state encouraging Black residents to register and vote.

Meredith was walking on U.S. Highway 51 near Hernando, Mississippi, and Thornell and a rival photographer were in a car parked roadside, when the sound of the first shotgun blast sent them scrambling.

One resulting Thornell image remains a sobering photographic reminder of the violent resistance to desegregation. It shows a wounded Meredith grimacing in agony as he dragged himself to the road’s edge. Along with it was the Pulitzer-winning photo Thornell didn’t initially realize he had captured: Meredith is on the ground at the edge of the highway with arms extended and hands on the pavement — it’s unclear if he is still falling or pushing himself up after the fall. His head is turned and he appears to be looking at his would-be assassin, visible at the extreme left side of the picture amid roadside foliage.

Meredith was hospitalized and recovered. Aubrey James Norvell, who was apprehended at the scene of the shooting, pleaded guilty and served 18 months of a five-year prison sentence.

Until he developed the film and took a good look at the negatives, Thornell believed he might be fired. He feared his competition had an image of the gunman and he didn’t. Instead of dismissal, Thornell won the Pulitzer in 1967.

In 1964, Thornell photographed the burned-out station wagon in Neshoba County, Mississippi, that belonged to civil rights workers Michael Schwerner, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman, whose bodies were found buried in an earthen dam weeks after Ku Klux Klansmen abducted and killed them. And Thornell would hurriedly snap a photo of the local sheriff being arrested by federal agents on conspiracy charges in connection with their deaths. Thornell got the shot while backing away as a supporter of the sheriff threatened him with a knife.

Thornell chronicled violence leading up to the integration of schools in Grenada, Mississippi, in 1966. One of his photos showed a Black man covering his ears as he moved away from a cherry bomb tossed by angry white people.

Thornell photographed the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. multiple times, including during the Selma-to-Montgomery march in Alabama in 1965, and demonstrations in support of striking sanitation workers in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1968, the week before King was assassinated there.

 

Thornell had returned to his home base in New Orleans before King was assassinated, but later was dispatched to Atlanta, where he photographed King’s family viewing the body at Spelman College’s Sisters Chapel.

He was late for that assignment. He said in the 2018 interview that he dashed around another photographer and climbed atop a pew, clambering toward the casket by stepping over pew after pew to get in position to make the picture.

“I was shaken when I left there. I had my eyes on the floor because I knew everyone was looking at me for my despicable behavior,” Thornell said in the interview at his home in Kenner, Louisiana. “But I didn’t leave without the picture.”

Years later, in 1977, King’s assassin, James Earl Ray, escaped from a Tennessee prison. Thornell was on hand when Ray, muddy and haggard, was recaptured.

Thornell was born and raised in Vicksburg, Mississippi. His career as a photographer might not have happened but for a military snafu when he was serving in the Army in the late 1950s, according to a 1967 account in the AP World corporate magazine.

“The U.S. Army had decided to make a radio repairman of him. But at Fort Monmouth, his name got mixed up with that of a camera bug who wanted to attend photographic school. So Thornell, who didn’t know an aperture from a back focus, took the short course in picture-taking while the camera bug learned to fix radios.”

After leaving the Army, Thornell got a job with the Jackson (Miss.) Daily News before he was hired to work for the AP in New Orleans.

Hired during a turbulent time in the South, Thornell recalled the fear he felt at times, amid the violence and threats. But there was a greater fear than physical harm.

“The greatest fear for me was coming back without the photograph,” he said. “The things that were happening there, you just kind of dealt with it and tried to photograph what was happening, because that was your bread and butter, that was your career. And your success depended on how well you did that day. Because tomorrow there’s always another newspaper coming out.”

Thornell is survived by his son Jay, his daughter Candy Gros, and a granddaughter. —- Amy reported from Atlanta.


Ellie Rodriguez obit

Former Yankees, Dodgers Catcher Dies at 79

A two-time American League All-Star in nine MLB seasons who caught a Nolan Ryan no-hitter passed away.

 He was not on the list.


Catcher Ellie Rodriguez, who graduated from high school in The Bronx in 1964 and made his major league debut with the New York Yankees four years later, died April 23. He was 79.

Rodriguez played nine seasons in MLB with the Yankees (1968), Kansas City Royals (1969-70), Milwaukee Brewers (1971-73), California Angels (1974-75) and Los Angeles Dodgers (1976). A two-time All-Star, Rodriguez retired with a .245 batting average, 16 home runs and 203 RBIs in 775 big league games.

On June 1, 1975, Rodriguez was behind the plate for the fourth no-hitter of Nolan Ryan's career, a 1-0 Angels win over the Baltimore Orioles.

"''He had a tough, tough time warming up," Rodriguez recalled in a 1991 interview. "When he started, he was throwing around 86 miles an hour. But he had a good change and a good curve going. Then in the fifth inning, his fastball started popping. He shook me off just a few times in that game.

"Once was on the last pitch of the game, with the count 2-2 on Bobby Grich. I called for a fastball, but he called me out to the mound to tell me he wanted the changeup, and we caught Grich looking. I had the ball, and I told Nolan, 'I've got the ball, and I'm not going to give it to you.' But I did."

Rodriguez was primarily a backup catcher in MLB, but he managed to make two American League All-Star Game rosters: in 1969 with the Royals and in 1972 with the Brewers, when he set career highs in batting average (.285) and on-base percentage (.382).

Rodriguez was born in Fajardo, Puerto Rico on May 24, 1946. His family moved to New York City in 1953, growing up within walking distance of Yankee Stadium. His boyhood idol was Yankee's catcher Yogi Berra. He was an amateur boxer as a teenager. Rodriguez attended James Monroe High School in the Bronx, New York, graduating in 1964.

Rodriguez never hit more than seven home runs in a single season, which he did with the Angels in 1974, but he walked more often than he struck out in six of his nine seasons.

Rodriguez played his final big league game on the final day of the 1976 season for rookie Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda. He spent the 1977 season with the Pittsburgh Pirates' Triple-A affiliate — and caught another no-hitter for the Columbus Clippers.

After playing a few more seasons in Mexico, Rodriguez transitioned to scouting. He also coached youth baseball in his native Puerto Rico, worked as a Player Development Consultant for the independent Atlantic League, and managed professional teams in Puerto Rico and Mexico.

His professional baseball career began in 1964 when he was signed by the Kansas City Athletics as an amateur free agent after graduating from James Monroe High School. He spent the 1964 season in the rookie and Single-A Minor league baseball teams of the Athletics, playing catcher. At the end of the season, on November 30, 1964, he was drafted by the New York Yankees from the Athletics in the 1964 first-year player draft. Rodríguez spent the next few years moving up the Yankees farm system, eventually making it to the Triple-A Syracuse Chiefs in 1967. In 1966, he was named to the Southern League All-Star Team with the Double-A Columbus (Georgia) Confederate Yankees. In 1968, Rodríguez made his major league debut for the Yankees.

Rodríguez debuted for the Yankees on May 26, 1968, against the Chicago White Sox, starting at catcher. He played nine games over the course of the season while also spending time in Syracuse as well, where he had a .291 batting average.[5] On October 15, 1968, Rodríguez was drafted by the Kansas City Royals from the New York Yankees as the 13th pick in the 1968 MLB expansion draft. In his first season with the expansion Royals (1969), he made his first All-Star appearance, though he did not play in the game. He finished the season with a batting average of .236 in 95 games. The following season he split time at catcher with Ed Kirkpatrick.

On February 2, 1971, after the end of the 1970 Kansas City Royals season, the Royals traded Rodríguez to the Milwaukee Brewers for Carl Taylor. He regained his starting role as the 1971 Milwaukee Brewers season began. Rodríguez played 115 games in 1971, yet only had a batting average of .210. He played 116 games the following season en route to his second All-Star game, which he also did not play in. He finished the season with a career-high batting average of .285 and over 100 hits.

After splitting time at catcher with Darrell Porter the following season, Rodríguez was involved in a nine-player transaction when he was sent along with Ollie Brown, Joe Lahoud, Skip Lockwood and Gary Ryerson from the Brewers to the California Angels for Steve Barber, Clyde Wright, Ken Berry, Art Kusnyer and cash on October 23, 1973. Rodríguez ended up having a breakout year in 1974. He had a fielding percentage of .992 (second best in the AL), played a career-high 140 games, and hit a career-high seven home runs.

Ruth Slenczynska obit

Ruth Slenczynska, last surviving pupil of Rachmaninoff, dies aged 101

 

She was not on the list.


Virtuoso pianist Ruth Slenczynska, who was the last surviving pupil of Sergei Rachmaninoff, has died at the age of 101, following an astonishing nine-decade career.

Born in California to Polish parents, the musician gave her first recital at the age of four, and debuted with a full orchestra in Paris aged seven.

Noted for her impeccable technique and musical insight, she played for five US Presidents - even performing a four-hand Mozart duet with Harry Truman at the White House.

Slenczynska performed into her 90s, releasing her final album in 2022. She died peacefully at an assisted living facility in California, said her former pupil Shelly Moorman-Stahlman in a statement to the BBC.

"Tonight, heaven gained a very special angel," said the musician and teacher, adding that Slenczynska's health had faltered after a series of falls.

During recent visits, "she was particularly energetic and mentally clear" and even "played the piano one day", Moorman-Stahlman recalled.

"Always a teacher, during a conversation about a recent performance with orchestra, she 'assigned' me the Mozart Concerto in A M[inor] to learn and bring to her the next time we visited."

After another fall, however, she "passed away peacefully" surrounded by friends, including Moorman-Stahlman's husband, Randy.

Born in 1925, Slenczynska was heralded one of the greatest child prodigies since Mozart.

A Pathé newsreel, filmed when she was five years old, noted that the toddler had "surprised musical critics by her playing of Beethoven".

Her concerts were "an electrifying experience," wrote the New York Times in 1933, "something nature has produced in one of her most bounteous moods".

The musician's father, Josef Slenczynski, was a well-known violinist and head of the Warsaw Conservatory before being wounded during World War One.

After moving to America, he resolved to raise a successful musician, and deemed his daughter a potential pianist or violinist within hours of her birth.

By the age of three, she was versed in basic musical theory and harmony - and the family moved to Europe so she could access the best teachers and rub shoulders with the most influential musicians of the day.

Tyrannical rule

She met Rachmaninoff in 1934, after substituting for him in a concert.

"Mr Rachmaninov had to cancel due to a problem with his elbow," she later recalled. "The manager did not want to lose money from the ticket sales so he contacted my father to see if I could play the concert."

She was summoned to meet the maestro soon afterwards.

"I was a frightened little girl at the door of his apartment at the Villa Majestic in Paris," Slenczynska told NPR in 2022, "and he pointed this long index finger down at me and he said, 'You mean that plays the piano?'"

The nine-year-old shook in fear, until Rachmaninov sat her down and showed her a picture of his speed boat, making buzzing noises to imitate the motor.

Once calm, she played a showpiece for him, then transposed the key instantly when he requested. They became lifelong friends - and she often wore a Fabergé egg necklace that he had given her.

In those early years, she was mentored by Josef Hoffman, Alfred Cortot, Egon Petri and Artur Schnabel.

She also studied alongside Samuel Barber, hearing his world-famous Adagio for Strings in the classroom, before it even had its title.

However, the tyrannical rule of her father proved to be too much.

"The reason that people were startled at what I could do at the piano was quite simple: Father was making me practice nine hours a day, every single day of the week," she wrote in her 1957 autobiography, Forbidden Childhood.

"If I showed signs of wanting to be just an ordinary little girl, like wanting to cuddle my sisters' dolls or make a little noise or jump up and down and run with the neighbourhood kids, father would come down on me with his pail of ice-cold water: 'That's all baby stuff! You're not a baby. You're a musician. Stay away from those kids and their stupid games. It's all a waste of time! You've got to act like a grown-up young lady.'"

At the age of 15, she rejected her concert career, cut off her father completely, enrolled for a psychology degree at the University of California and eloped with a fellow student, named George Born.

The couple divorced in 1953 and, needing to make ends meet, Slenczynska began teaching piano. Before long, she returned to the stage, ending an absence of more than a decade.

Thereafter, she toured with the Boston Pops orchestra for four years, enjoying an on-stage rivalry with conductor Arthur Fiedler.

"At first, Mr Fiedler got standing ovations, and I didn't," she told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in 1999. "By the third year, I started getting them, too. I learned how to manage an audience, how to let them know you're glad to be there."

Finally, there was a concert in Chicago where a critic praised Slenczynska at Fiedler's expense, writing: "You don't serve champagne and beer together."

"After that, I was not renewed," she later remarked. "There was room for only one star on that tour."

Undeterred, she went on to record 10 sparkling LPs for Decca, showcasing her sense of drama and rhythmic control, especially when playing her speciality - the works of Chopin.

In 1961, she wrote a textbook - Music at Your Fingertips: Aspects of Pianoforte Technique - which remains in print, and later joined the Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, first as an artist-in-residence, then as a faculty member.

A couple of years later, she married for the second time, to Dr James Kerr, a political science professor. They remained together until his death in 2000, and she described him as the "love of my life".

"I'd marry him again if I could, he's still my sweetheart," she told The Guardian in 2022.

She remained active throughout her life - and, during the first Covid-19 lockdown in 2020, uploaded home recordings of Beethoven's Sonatas to YouTube, to celebrate his 250th anniversary.

She celebrated her 97th birthday with a recital at Lebanon Valley College, Pennsylvania; and returned to Decca in 2022 to record what would become her final album.

Titled My Life In Music, it included touching performances of pieces by Rachmaninoff, Bach and Debussy - approached with a sense of tender nostalgia, as she reflected on her career.

Among the recordings was a version of Chopin's Prelude in F Major, a tribute to her Polish roots, which became one of her personal favourites.

"I had the honour of being with her during her recording session," said Moorman-Stahlman.

"After recording several takes of this work... she quietly turned to me and said, 'This one is good. I would like to have this one played when I ascend into heaven'."

Formal plans for a memorial service and concert will be announced in the coming days.