Saturday, August 31, 2013

David Frost obit

Sir David Frost, broadcaster and writer, dies at 74

He was not on the list.


A look back at the life of Sir David Frost


Veteran broadcaster Sir David Frost has died at the age of 74 after a heart attack while on board a cruise ship.

A family statement said he was aboard the Queen Elizabeth on Saturday night where he was to give a speech.


Sir David's career spanned journalism, comedy writing and daytime television presenting, including The Frost Report.


Internationally, he will be remembered for his revealing interviews with former US President Richard Nixon.

A statement said: "His family are devastated and ask for privacy at this difficult time. A family funeral will be held in the near future and details of a memorial service will be announced in due course."


The BBC's Barney Jones edited his Breakfast with Frost programme on the BBC for more than 10 years.


Of his friend and colleague, he said: "David loved broadcasting, did it brilliantly for more than 50 years and was eagerly looking forward to a host of projects - including interviewing the prime minister next week - before his sudden and tragic death. We will all miss him enormously."


Prime Minister David Cameron said: "Sir David was an extraordinary man, with charm, wit, talent, intelligence and warmth in equal measure.

"He made a huge impact on television and politics."

Born in Kent, Sir David studied at Cambridge University where he became secretary of the Footlights club, and met future comedy greats such as Peter Cook, Graham Chapman and John Bird.


After university he went to work at ITV before he was asked to front the BBC programme That Was The Week That Was, which ran between 1962 and 1963.

Casting a satirical eye over the week's news, the show boasted scriptwriters including John Cleese, John Betjeman and Dennis Potter.

The Frost Report brought together John Cleese, Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Corbett in a sketch show which would influence many comedy writers including the Monty Python crew.

Sir David's often-mimicked catchphrase "hello, good evening and welcome" was by now in full use.

One of The Frost Report's most enduring pieces was the "class sketch", featuring Cleese, Barker and Corbett.

The Frost Programme for ITV followed, which saw Sir David move away from comedy into in-depth interviews with political figures, royalty and celebrities.

It was on this programme that he had a terse interview with then prime minister Margaret Thatcher over the sinking of the Argentine cruiser Belgrano during the Falklands conflict.

At the same time, Sir David began work on The David Frost Show in the US.

He later conducted a series of interviews with Mr Nixon, who had resigned the presidency two years earlier, in which the former president came close to apologising to the public for his role in the Watergate scandal.

Their exchanges were eventually made into the film Frost/Nixon - based on a play - which saw Michael Sheen portray Sir David Frost to Frank Langella's Nixon. Sir David himself appeared at the premiere of the film in 2008.


Watch some of the highlights from his Sunday morning show Breakfast with Frost - which ran on the BBC from 1993 until 2005

Playwright Peter Morgan said: "He was a legendary broadcasting figure and a member of the British broadcasting landscape for two generations and in many ways his success was very un-English.

"He was a pioneer. He combined being a satirist and someone who one satirised. It was an extraordinary, four-dimensional, vivid career...and he was a great lunch."

'In love with television'

In the 1990s, Sir David presented Through the Keyhole, which he also produced, alongside Loyd Grossman.


The show saw Grossman take a tour round the home of a celebrity while a panel of guests tried to guess "who lives in a house like this".

Paying tribute to his friend, Grossman said: "He so effortlessly roamed all across the piste... from comedy to current affairs to light entertainment for 50 years.

Sir David and his wife, Lady Carina, had three sons

"Yet in his presence you forgot you were dealing with the Leviathan of broadcasting and just thought here is a wonderful man, generous, enthusiastic and always excited. He was in love with television."

In 1993, the year he was knighted, he began presenting Breakfast with Frost - which had begun life on ITV - a Sunday show on BBC in which he interviewed newsworthy figures.


BBC director general Tony Hall said: "From satire to comedy to the big political interviews, for more than 50 years he brought us the history of the world we live in today, that's the mark of the man."


Sir David joined broadcaster Al-Jazeera in 2006 when it launched its English-speaking service.

He married his second wife, Lady Carina Fitzalan-Howard, in 1983 and they had three sons.

'Learnt from David Frost'

He worked closely with a number of charities over the years, including Alzheimer's Research Trust, the Motor Neurone Disease Association and health charity Wellbeing of Women.




The latter's chairman, Sir Victor Blank, said: "It's a sad day and David's tremendous contribution over the last half century to television will be honoured.




"David was also a marvellous husband, father and friend, but not often recognised is the time, generosity and support he gave to so many charities, not least the 25 years he has spent helping Wellbeing of Women."




And the BBC's Andrew Marr added: "David Frost changed British broadcasting not once but twice. He was a prime mover in the satire boom of the 1960s. A lot of that was down to him and his drive and shaping, influence and personality.




"And then he changed the whole style of political interviewing, what could be said, how it was done, the whole approach. And I think today there are two types of political interviewer - those who've learnt from David Frost, and second rate interviewers."

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Larry Pennell obit

 Actor and baseball player Larry Pennell dead

He was not on the list.


Lawrence Kenneth "Bud" Pennell was an American television and film actor, often remembered for
Throughout his career, Pennell continued to appear in a variety of genres in television including series and movies made for television. He was cast in a lead role in the CBS series Lassie as Keith Holden in 1972. He made guest starring appearances in shows including Mannix, Mission Impossible, The Streets of San Francisco, McMillan and Wife, Magnum, P.I., Silk Stalkings, Diagnosis Murder, Quantum Leap and Firefly and soap operas including General Hospital and The Young and the Restless.
Pennell met his wife Patricia Throop, a fashion model, actress, former Miss Oregon and finalist in the Miss America Pageant, when shooting a film. Throughout his life he enjoyed sports of all kinds such as baseball, football, tennis, boxing, running and horseback riding. Also he was an avid historian and a patriot with ancestral links in the American Revolution and the Mayflower Compact.
his role as "Dash Riprock" in the television series The Beverly Hillbillies. His career spanned five decades, including starring in the first-run syndicated adventure series Ripcord in the leading role of Ted McKeever, as well as playing Keith Holden in the television series Lassie. He was also a former baseball player, playing on scholarship for the University of Southern California and later professionally for the Boston Braves.


His Filmography

Select film credits
Year       Title       Medium               Role       Notes
1955      Seven Angry Men             Western film      Oliver Brown     
1955      The Far Horizons               Western film      Wild Eagle          
1955      Hell's Horizon    Drama film          Buddy Lewis      
1955      The Court Jester               Comedy film       Novice Knight    Uncredited
1956      The Vagabond King          Musical film        Soldier Uncredited
1957      The Devil's Hairpin           Adventure film Johnny Jargin    
1958      The Space Children          Science fiction film          Major Thomas  
1959      The FBI Story      Drama film          George Crandall[16]       
1965      Our Man in Jamaica         Adventure film Ken Stewart (as Alessandro Pennelli)      
1965      Old Surehand     Western film      General Jack O'Neal       
1970      The Great White Hope   Drama film          Brady   
1970      Brother, Cry for Me         Adventure film Jim Noble           
1972      Journey Through Rosebud            Drama film          Sheriff  
1972      The Revengers Western film      Arny      
1972      Lassie: Joyous Sound      TV movie             Keith Holden     
1976      Helter Skelter    Made for TV movie          Sgt. White          
1976      Midway                War film               Captain Cyril Simard       
1978      Matilda                 Drama film            Lee Dockerty     
1979      Elvis       Made for TV movie                         
1980      The Man with Bogart's Face         Comedy film       George
1980      Marilyn: The Untold Story             Made for TV movie          Clark Gable        
1982      Personal Best     Drama film          Rick Cahill           
1982      Superstition        Drama film          George Leahy   
1983      The Night the Bridge Fell Down Action film          Chief Barrett     
1983      Metalstorm: The Destruction of Jared-Syn            Science fiction film          Aix         
1987      Ghost Chase[3] Drama film          Bum      
1989      Another Chance                Drama film          Clark Gable        
1991      The Borrower    Horror film          Captain Scarcelli              
1992      Mr. Baseball       Film       Howie Gold        
1999      The Fear: Resurrection   Horror film          Grandfather      
1999      Forgiven               Short film            Potter  
2001      The Cross             Drama film          Man with Lamb                
2001      5 Minutes            Short film            Harkness             
2001      Jackpot                 Comedy drama film         Truck driver       
2002      Rogue   Drama film          The Voice           
2002      Bubba Ho-Tep   Comedy horror film         Kemosabe          
2005      Last Confession Short film            Father Conklin  
2006      Seasons of Life Film       Lauren's Father
2011      The Passing         Horror film          Charles (final film role)



Select television credits
Year       Title       Medium               Role       Notes
1956      General Electric Theater                Television series               Ealter Kellen      
1956      Studio 57             Television series               Bruce   
1956-1957          The West Point Story      Television series               Bob Matson and Marson[23]       1 w/ Leonard Nimoy
1956      Wire Service       Television series               Johnny
1957      Schlitz Playhouse             Television series               Bob       
1958-1960          The Millionaire Television series               Larry Maxwell   
1958      Tombstone Territory       Television series               Bill Doolin           
1958      Steve Canyon     Television series               Lt. Hawk Cameron          
1958      The Rough Riders             Television series               Creed Pearce    
1958      Cimarron City     Television series               Drew McGowan               
1959      Have Gun – Will Travel   Television series               Henry Carver     
1959      Adventures in Paradise Television series               Dr. Patrick Donovan       
1960      The Alaskans      Television series               Harry Seattle     
1960      Tales of Wells Fargo        Television series               Ben Hardie         
1960      The Aquanauts Television series               Tyler Sack            Episode: "The Paradivers"
1960      Death Valley Days            Television anthology series          Roner Maxwell Episode: "Queen of the High-Rollers"
1960      Klondike               Television series               Rule Lukas          
1960      Zane Grey Theater           Television series               Jason Tully          Episode: "The Black Wagon" with Esther Williams
1961      Outlaws                Television series               Bob Dalton         
1961      Thriller Television series               Larry Weeks       "Late Date"
1961      The Case of the Dangerous Robin              Television series                              
1961      Bat Masterson   Television series               Cal Beamus        
1961      Sea Hunt              Television series               Steve / A counterfeiter leader    Episode: "The Meet"
1961–1963          Ripcord                 Television series               Paradiver Theodore (Ted) McKeever       76 episodes
1963      General Hospital               Television series               Hank Pulaski       Unknown episodes
1964      Wagon Train      Television series               Marshal Trace McCloud                 Episode: "The Trace McCloud Story"
1964      The Outer Limits               Television series               Dr. Evan Marshall             Episode: "The Mutant"
1964      Mr. Broadway    Television series               John Chambers
1964-1967          The Virginian      Television series               Carl Rand / Wally Koerner            2 episodes
1965      Kraft Suspense Theatre Television series               Phil Scanlon       
1965-1969          The Beverly Hillbillies      Television series               Dash Riprock      10 episodes
1965      Branded               Television series               Tuck Fraser        
1966      Blue Light            Television series               Nick Brady          
1967      The Big Valley    Television series               Jack Kilbain        
1967      Rango   Television series                              
1967      Three for Danger              Television series               Chris     
1967      Custer   Television series               Chief Yellow Hawk          
1967      Cimarron Strip   Television series               Rapp     
1968      Dragnet 1967     Television series               John Anzo / A Police Commissioner         
1968-1974          Gunsmoke          Television series               Ben Akins / John Woolfe               2 episodes
1969      My Friend Tony                 Television series                              
1969      Mayberry R.F.D.                Television series               Chuck   
1969      Land of the Giants            Television series               Guard   
1969      Bracken's World               Television series               Chuck   
1969-2+71           Mannix                 Television series               Agent Barnes / Troy McBride      2 episodes
1970      Mission: Impossible        Television series               Karl Burroughs
1970      Family Affair       Television series               Ken Granger      
1971      City Beneath the Sea       Television movie               Bill Holmes         
1971      Longstreet          Television series               Ward Blakeman               
1971-1972          O'Hara, U.S. Treasury      Television series               Charles Donaldson / S.A. Peter Wade      2 episodes
1971-1974          McMillan & Wife              Television series               Agent Cushing   Unknown episode
1972-1973          Lassie    Television series               Keith Holden      21 episodes
1973      The Young and the Restless         Television series               Judge Chet Ashford        
1973      Banacek               Television series               Pete Biesecker
1973-1974          The Streets of San Francisco        Television series               Becker / A High School coach      2 episodes
1974      Apple's Way       Television series               Sam Ferguson   
1974      Owen Marshall: Counselor at Law             Television series               Sargeant Bill Carrington                
1974      The Rookies        Television series               Henry Glass       
1974      Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color                Television series               Dave Fletcher    
1977      Hunter Television series               Michael Orlin    
1977      Little House on the Prairie            Television series               Ben Griffin         
1979      Salvage 1             Television series               Street   
1979      BJ and the Bear Television series               Mary Ellen          
1982-1986          Magnum, P.I.     Television series               Jack Martin / Norm Vogel             2 episodes
1993      Quantum Leap Television series               Clark Gable         Episode: "Good-Bye, Norma Jean"
1997      Diagnosis: Murder           Television series               Dr. Arthur            Episode: "Looks Can Kill"
1997      Silk Stalkings       Television series               Dr. Kurland         Episode: "The Wedge"
2002      Firefly    Television series               Murphy                Episode: "Shindig"
 

Monday, August 26, 2013

Gerard Murphy obit

Gerard Murphy obituary


He was not on the list.


Gerard Murphy, who has died of prostate cancer aged 64, was a rare sort of full-hearted actor, always on the front foot. He could flood a theatre with passion and squeeze the juice out of the most recalcitrant prose. Barrel-chested and large- (but not big-) headed, he looked and sounded like a rampaging farmer, with his distinctive carrot-coloured hair and stinging, musical, sardonic, Northern Irish vocal inflections. He once said that acting was like a drug and that doing it was an "inexplicable fusion of need and possession". The ferocity of his acting was all part of his intellectual valour; he loved debating at school and university, and could stand up and argue with anyone, usually having the last word.

He made several films, including Waterworld (1995) and Batman Begins (2005), and appeared in lots of television, most recently in the BBC's Spooks. However, his province was the stage, where his flame burned with magnificent intensity over four decades, from the Glasgow Citizens theatre and the Royal Shakespeare Company, where he was an associate artist, to the Royal Exchange in Manchester, the West End and the Almeida in Islington.

A key figure for several years in the Citizens company, alongside such remarkable peers as Ciarán Hinds, David Hayman, Suzanne Bertish, Sian Thomas, Gary Oldman and Rupert Everett, he then switched successfully, and unusually, to the RSC – the Citizens was temperamentally and artistically opposed to everything the RSC stood for. He opened the new Barbican theatre as Prince Hal in Henry IV Parts 1 and 2 in 1982 and appeared in the first RSC season at the Swan theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, four years later.

The oldest of three children, Murphy was born and raised in Newry, County Down. His father, Peter, served in the merchant navy, and his mother, Dympna, was a teacher and librarian. Murphy was educated at the Abbey Christian Brothers' grammar school in Newry and Queen's University Belfast, where he studied music, psychology, literature and anthropology.



In Belfast, he hung around the Lyric theatre. He had already appeared in school and amateur productions in Newry, and he always played piano and guitar. He walked on in the RSC's Coriolanus, with Nicol Williamson, directed by Trevor Nunn at the Aldwych, and took a small role in David Rudkin's Cries from Casement, starring Colin Blakely, in an RSC production at the Place in London.

But he emerged most powerfully at the Citizens between 1974 and 1977, as Piraquo in a spaghetti western kitsch version of The Changeling by Thomas Middleton and William Rowley; in the British premiere of Mikhail Lermontov's Maskerade (the rewriting of Masquerade was deliberate), a salon world of fops and gamblers updated to the 1890s with lashings of Rachmaninov; and as a touching Miss Prism in an all-male The Importance of Being Earnest.



The Citizens in this period under Giles Havergal, Philip Prowse and Robert David MacDonald, was the most exciting, most "European" theatre in the land, slashing and re-energising the classics with style, verve and sexy actors, a very long way from most British theatre and the bourgeois earnestness of the founding father of the Citizens, James Bridie.


Their credo was articulated in MacDonald's Chinchilla (1977), directed by Prowse, in which Murphy played the Russian impresario Sergei Diaghilev (known as "Chinchilla" because of a white flash in his dark, satiny hair), hunched and dying in a fur coat on the Venice Lido, while replacing Vaslav Nijinsky with Léonide Massine in his personal and professional affections at the Ballets Russes. On a bare white stage with waves lapping, music playing and boys dancing, this was the most beautiful aesthetic presentation of an aesthetic statement imaginable. Murphy's Diaghilev spoke for the Citizens itself in his "passion for reform, passion for power, passion for beauty, a thirst to show, a lust to tell, a rage to love".

Chinchilla was revived, with Murphy still as Diaghilev, at the 1979 Edinburgh international festival. In the same year in Glasgow, he played Macbeth opposite Hayman as Lady M in a stripped-back, spartan version of Shakespeare's tragedy, one of Murphy's finest (and favourite) performances. In almost the last RSC season at the Aldwych in 1980, he was Johnny Boyle opposite Judi Dench in Nunn's exquisite naturalistic revival of Seán O'Casey's Juno and the Paycock; and in the Barbican Henry IV in 1982 his Falstaff was Joss Ackland and his father, Henry IV, was Patrick Stewart (their deathbed scenes were electrifying).

He teamed once more with Prowse and MacDonald, as director and translator respectively, on Phedra, in true-to-Racine rhyming alexandrines, at the Old Vic in 1984; he was a grizzled, growling Theseus to Glenda Jackson's stupendous, sex-raddled incestuous queen. When Prowse directed a season at Greenwich theatre in the same year, he was a blood-curdling, murderous Brachiano in The White Devil by John Webster.

Staying with his predilection for extravagant roles and theatre, he went on to play Oberon, Petruchio and Oedipus in RSC productions in Stratford-upon-Avon, London and on tour, and directed not only a double-bill of Jean Genet plays in the Pit of the Barbican, but also Simon Russell Beale as Marlowe's Edward II at the Swan in 1990.

Born in 1948 in Newry, County Down, Northern Ireland, Murphy began his career on stage with the Glasgow Citizens Theatre. He branched out into television work with roles in Z-Cars, Doctor Who, Minder, Heartbeat, Father Ted, Dalziel and Pascoe and The Bill. He narrated the BBC Radio version of Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings.

His film roles include the pirate and spy "The Nord" in Waterworld, and as the corrupt High Court Judge Faden in Batman Begins.

Onstage, Murphy portrayed Hector in Alan Bennett's The History Boys, a role previously played by Richard Griffiths, in a national tour co-produced by the West Yorkshire Playhouse and Theatre Royal, Bath and directed by Christopher Luscombe.

In addition, he played Salieri in a 2007 production of Amadeus directed by Nikolai Foster.Although suffering in 2012 from spinal cord compression due to prostate cancer, Murphy appeared in Glasgow Citizens Theatre's production of Krapp's Last Tape by Samuel Beckett.

Murphy died on 26 August 2013 in Cambridge, of prostate cancer, which he had battled for more than two years.He was 64.