Friday, December 30, 2016

Tyrus Wong obit

Tyrus Wong, artist whose paintings inspired Disney's 'Bambi' and other films, dies at 106
He was not on the list.

In the late 1930s, when few doors were open to the son of a poor Chinese immigrant, Tyrus Wong landed a job at Walt Disney’s studio as a lowly “in-betweener,” whose artwork filled the gaps between the animator’s key drawings. But he arrived at an opportune moment.

Disney’s animators were struggling to bring “Bambi” to the screen. The wide-eyed fawn and his feathered and furry friends were literally lost in the forest, overwhelmed by leaves, twigs, branches and other realistic touches in the ornately drawn backgrounds.
“Too much detail,” Wong thought when he saw the sketches.

On his own time, he made a series of tiny drawings and watercolors and showed them to his superiors. Dreamy and impressionistic, like a Chinese landscape, Wong’s approach was to “create the atmosphere, the feeling of the forest.” It turned out to be just what “Bambi” needed.

Wong, who brought a poetic quality to “Bambi” that has helped it endure as a classic of animation, died of natural causes early Friday morning in his Sunland home, said his daughter Kim Wong. He was 106.

“I can't emphasize how significant a figure he is for L.A. and for the industry,” said filmmaker Pamela Tom, whose documentary about Wong premiered last year. “There will never be another Tyrus Wong.”

Called the film’s “most significant stylist” by animation historian John Canemaker, Wong influenced later generations of animators, including Andreas Deja, the Disney artist behind Lilo of “Lilo and Stitch” and Jafar in “Aladdin.”

“I was 12 or 13 when I saw ‘Bambi.’ It changed me,” Deja told The Times in 2015. “There was something about the way the forest was depicted that had a layer of magic to it.

“Tyrus Wong really made that film look the way it did.”
Wong worked at Disney only a few years, his employment cut short by a strike in 1941. But he quickly was picked up by Warner Bros., where for more than 25 years he drew storyboards and set designs for such movies as “Rebel Without a Cause” and “The Wild Bunch.”

A trained painter, Wong also gained recognition in international art circles.

In 1934, the Art Institute of Chicago held an exhibition of prints from artists around the globe, including a landscape piece Wong had done using the dry-point printmaking technique. Featured in the same exhibit was an etching by Pablo Picasso titled "Two Nudes" and a lithograph by Diego Rivera.

Around that same time, Wong partnered with other artists in Los Angeles — including Japanese American Benji Okubo — to set up local exhibitions, which offered rare moments of visibility for the city’s Asian artists.

When he retired from Warner Bros. in 1968, he continued to paint, turning some of his work into top-selling Christmas cards for Hallmark. He also channeled his artistry into kitemaking and in his 10th decade was still flying his creations — swallows, snow cranes, a 100-foot-long centipede — at Santa Monica State Beach.

In the award-winning documentary “Tyrus,” Wong opened up about racism within the industry, something Tom said the artist didn’t like to dwell on. The discrimination sometimes came in the form of coldness from other artists, but other times it was more direct. On his first day at a now-defunct studio, the art director referred to Wong using an offensive racial slur.

For Tom, a fifth-generation Chinese American who worked at Disney in the ’90s, Wong became a hero. She discovered him almost two decades ago while watching “Bambi” with her young daughter. At the end of the movie, there was a special feature on a man she’d never heard of before.

“I thought, ‘Wait a minute, what? A Chinese artist working in Hollywood in the ’30s, and at Disney of all things?’” she said, adding that she almost immediately tracked him down and invited him to lunch at her family’s restaurant.

By the end of the meal, she said she knew she needed to make a film about him. After some convincing — it wasn’t just about him, she reminded him, but about the history, the art and the Chinese American community — he agreed. The process took more than a decade.

During Wong’s starving artist years, Tom said, he scraped together money in a variety of ways: picking asparagus, working as a janitor, designing greeting cards.

His reputation for creating Christmas cards spread, reportedly even catching the attention of Joan Crawford, who contacted him about making one.

“She wanted me to design an original Christmas card for her, but she didn’t want to pay the $15! Fifteen dollars!” he told The Times in a 2004 interview.

Wong was born in Guangdong province in southern China on Oct. 25, 1910. Pigs and chickens lived under the family roof, which leaked, and food was suspended from a hook in the ceiling “so that the rats wouldn’t eat it,” Wong recounted in “On Gold Mountain,” a memoir by Lisa See.

At age 9 he said goodbye to his mother and sister and sailed to America with his father, Look Get Wong. On Dec. 30, 1920, they landed at Angel Island.

His father was free to head to the mainland because he had immigrated earlier and had his papers. Tyrus, however, was confined to the immigration station. As he tried to control his nerves, he recalled chewing on a piece of gum he’d gotten from a guard until it had no taste, before turning it into a toy. “It was just like jail,” he later said of the lonely month he spent there.

Immigration officials quizzed him about his family and home back in China to ascertain if he really was Look Get Wong’s son. On Jan. 31, 1921, they issued his identification papers and he was reunited with his father. He never saw his mother and sister again.

He went to Sacramento, where his father tried to scrape by working for a cobbler. But the elder Wong knew nothing about repairing shoes, so when a better opportunity arose in Los Angeles, he moved there, leaving Tyrus behind until he got settled.

He wound up sending for his son sooner than he had planned. With his father gone, Tyrus started skipping school. Notified of the boy’s delinquency after a month of absences, the senior Wong had him put on a train to L.A..

“When I got off the train,” Wong told See, “my father hit me for doing so badly.”


He placed a high value on education, but he was, Wong later said, “a very, very good father.” He recited classical Chinese poetry to his son and taught him to paint, draw and write calligraphy. Unable to afford proper paper and ink, Tyrus practiced on newsprint with a brush dipped in water.

They lived in Chinatown but he attended school in Pasadena, where he painted posters for school events. His junior high principal was impressed by his artistic ability and helped him obtain a scholarship for one term at Otis Art Institute (now Otis College of Art and Design). Wong later received a full scholarship.

At Otis he studied the giants of Western art, such as Daumier. He spent much of his spare time looking at Japanese and Chinese brush painting, particularly Song dynasty landscapes that conveyed mountains, mist and trees with minimal strokes. 

“I learned that nature is always greater than man,” he said in See’s book. “It is the balance and harmony between man and nature that is important.”

After graduating from Otis  in 1935, he joined the Depression-era Federal Arts Project, creating paintings for public libraries and government buildings.

In 1938 he was hired at Disney but didn’t think he would last long. Being an “in-betweener” required little creativity and a lot of eye-straining tedium.

Then he heard about “Bambi,” based on the book by Felix Salten.

“I said, ‘Gee, this is all outdoor scenery [and] I’m a landscape painter. This will be great,’” he recalled in a video for the Disney Family Museum, which showcased his work in a 2013 exhibit.

When “Bambi” art director Tom Codrick saw Wong’s sketches, Wong recalled later, “He said, ‘Maybe we put you in the wrong department.’” The rest of the team agreed, including Walt Disney.

“I like that indefinite effect in the background — it’s effective. I like it better than a bunch of junk behind them,” Disney said in Thomas’ and Johnston’s book, “Walt Disney’s Bambi: The Story and the Film.” Disney later said that of all the animated films he produced, “Bambi” was his favorite.

“He set the color schemes along with the appearance of the forest in painting after painting, hundreds of them, depicting Bambi’s world in an unforgettable way,” Johnston and Thomas wrote. “Here at last was the beauty of Salten’s writing, created not in script or with character development, but in paintings that captured the poetic feeling that had eluded us for so long.”

In Wong’s last decades he was known for the magnificent kites he made at home in Sunland and flew on the beach to the delight of passers-by.


“You get a certain satisfaction in making them, and you get a certain satisfaction flying them,” Wong said in a 1995 interview with The Times. “Some are attention-getters, but that’s not what I’m after. I used to go fishing a lot, and I love fishing. This is just like fishing, except in fishing you look down. Kite flying, you look up.”

William Christopher obit

William Christopher, Played M*A*S*H's Father Mulcahy, Dead at 84




He was not on the list.

William Christopher, best known for his role as Father Mulcahy on M*A*S*H, has died. He was 84 years old.

Per ABC, the actor passed away on Saturday from lung cancer at his home in Pasadena, Calif.

In addition to his 11-season run on M.A.S.H. (and later, the short-lived After M*A*S*H), Christopher’s TV credits included roles on Hogan’s Heroes, Gomer Pyle: USMC and The Love Boat. He also lent his voice to the 1980s Smurfs. He most recently guest-starred on 11 episodes of Days of Our Lives in 2012.

Christopher leaves behind a wife, Barbara, and two sons, John and Ned.


Partial filmography

    1965: 12 O'Clock High (TV Series, Episode: "Then Came the Mighty Hunter") as Patient
    1965: Hank (TV Series, Episode: "Candidate") as Elwood
    1965: The Andy Griffith Show (TV Series, 2 episodes) as Mr. Heathcote-IRS
    1965: Hogan's Heroes (TV Series, 4 episodes) as multiple characters in 1965, '66 & '68
    1966: The Patty Duke Show (TV Series, Episode: "Three Little Kittens") as Man
    1966: The Fortune Cookie as Intern
    1967: The Perils of Pauline as Doctor (uncredited)
    1968: The Private Navy of Sgt. O'Farrell as Pvt. Jake Schultz
    1968: The Shakiest Gun in the West as Hotel Manager (uncredited)
    1968: With Six You Get Eggroll as Zip - Cloud
    1972–1983: M*A*S*H (TV Series) as Father Francis John Mulcahy
    1975: Hearts of the West as Bank Teller
    1983–1985: After MASH (TV Series) as Father Francis John Mulcahy
    1985: Murder, She Wrote (TV Series, Episode: "A Lady in the Lake") as Burton Hollis
    1994: Heaven Sent as Priest
    1998: Mad About You (TV Series, Episode: "A Pain in the Neck") as Chaplain Olsen
    2012: Days of Our Lives (TV Series) as Father Tobias (final appearance)
 

Thursday, December 29, 2016

Chris Cannizzaro obit

Former MLB catcher Cannizzaro dies at 78

Original '62 Met, first Padres All-Star played 13 seasons

 

He was not on the list.


Chris Cannizzaro, an original 1962 Met and the first All-Star in Padres franchise history, died on Thursday at the age of 78.

The former catcher, who played in the Major Leagues for 13 seasons from 1960-74, had been suffering from lung cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The Padres acknowledged his passing on Friday.

Cannizzaro was born on May 3, 1938, in Oakland. He began his professional baseball career with the Cardinals, making his MLB debut on April 17, 1960.

Before the Mets' inaugural season in 1962, New York drafted Cannizzaro with the 26th pick of the Expansion Draft. Cannizzaro played in 59 games for the Mets that season, and he spent four years in New York, leading the Major Leagues in caught-stealing percentage in '62 and '65.

In March 1969, Cannizzaro was traded to the Padres, who were about to begin their first season in the Major Leagues. Cannizzaro caught the first game in San Diego franchise history, a 2-1 win over the Astros on April 8. He went on to earn his only All-Star nod that season, in which he played a career-high 134 games.

In addition to the Cardinals, Mets and Padres, Cannizzarro also played for the Pirates, Cubs and Dodgers before his retirement in 1974. He finished his career with a .235 batting average and 18 home runs in 740 games, with a 41 percent caught-stealing rate. After retiring, Cannizzaro coached in the Padres, Braves and Angels organizations, as well as at the University of San Diego.

"Life is good when you have a baseball uniform on," Cannizzaro told MLB.com in 2002.

According to The San Diego Union-Tribune, a public memorial for Cannizzaro is being planned for February.

 

MLB statistics

Batting average            .235

Home runs            18

Runs batted in            169

Teams

As player

St. Louis Cardinals (1960–1961)

New York Mets (1962–1965)

Pittsburgh Pirates (1968)

San Diego Padres (1969–1971)

Chicago Cubs (1971)

Los Angeles Dodgers (1972–1973)

San Diego Padres (1974)

As coach

 

Atlanta Braves (1976–1978)

Career highlights and awards

All-Star (1969)

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Debbie Reynolds - # 150

Debbie Reynolds, Wholesome Ingénue in 1950s Films, Dies at 84

She was number 150 on the list.

Debbie Reynolds, the wholesome ingénue in 1950s films like “Singin’ in the Rain” and “Tammy and the Bachelor,” died Wednesday, a day after the death of her daughter, the actress Carrie Fisher. She was 84.

Her death was confirmed by her son, Todd Fisher, according to her agent, Tom Markley of the Metropolitan Talent Agency. Ms. Reynolds was taken to a Los Angeles hospital on Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Fisher told the television station ABC 7 Los Angeles that she had suffered a stroke.

According to TMZ, she had been discussing funeral plans for Ms. Fisher, who died on Tuesday after having a heart attack during a flight to Los Angeles last Friday.

“She’s now with Carrie, and we’re all heartbroken,” Mr. Fisher said from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, where Ms. Reynolds was taken by ambulance, The Associated Press said. He said the stress of his sister’s death “was too much” for his mother.
On Tuesday, Ms. Reynolds had expressed gratitude to her daughter’s fans on Facebook.

“Thank you to everyone who has embraced the gifts and talents of my beloved and amazing daughter,” she wrote. “I am grateful for your thoughts and prayers that are now guiding her to her next stop.”

Ms. Reynolds’s career peak may have been her best-actress Academy Award nomination for playing the title role in “The Unsinkable Molly Brown” (1964), a rags-to-riches western musical based on a true story.

Her best-remembered film is probably “Singin’ in the Rain” (1952), the classic MGM musical about 1920s moviemaking, in which she held her own with Gene Kelly and Donald O’Connor, although she was only 19 when the movie was shot and had never danced professionally before. Her fans may cherish her sentimental good-girl portrayals, like the title role in “Tammy and the Bachelor” (1957), in which she played a Louisiana moonshiner’s wide-eyed granddaughter who spouted folksy wisdom.

Her greatest fame, however, may have come not from any movie role but from the Hollywood scandal involving her husband and a glamorous young widow.

In 1955, Ms. Reynolds married Eddie Fisher, the boyish music idol whose hits included “Oh! My Pa-Pa” and “I’m Walking Behind You,” and the young couple were embraced by fan magazines as America’s sweethearts. Their best friends were the producer Mike Todd and his new wife, the femme-fatale film star Elizabeth Taylor.

When Mr. Todd died in a private-plane crash in 1958, Ms. Reynolds and Mr. Fisher rushed to comfort Ms. Taylor. Mr. Fisher’s comforting, however, turned into a very public extramarital affair. He and Ms. Reynolds were divorced early the next year, and he and Ms. Taylor were married weeks later. That marriage lasted five years. Ms. Taylor left Mr. Fisher for Richard Burton, whom she had met in Rome on the set of “Cleopatra” (1963).

Almost 40 years later, in an interview with The Chicago Sun-Times, Ms. Reynolds said of Ms. Taylor, “Probably she did me a great favor.” In her 1988 autobiography, “Debbie: My Life,” she described a marriage that was unhappy from the beginning.

“He didn’t think I was funny,” Ms. Reynolds wrote of Mr. Fisher. “I wasn’t good in bed. I didn’t make good gefilte fish or good chopped liver. So what did he have? A cute little girl next door with a little turned-up nose. That was, in fact, all he actually ever said he wanted from me. The children, he said, better have your nose.”

Mary Frances Reynolds was born on April 1, 1932, in El Paso. Her father, Ray, worked for the railroad and struggled financially during the Depression. Her mother, Maxene, took in laundry to help make ends meet. As Nazarene Baptists, they considered movies sinful.
With the promise of a better job, Ray moved to California when Mary Frances was 7, and the family soon followed. Her career dream was to go to college and become a gym teacher, she often said, but when she was named Miss Burbank 1948, everything changed. Two of the judges were movie-studio scouts, and she was soon under contract to Warner Bros., which changed her name.


Filmography
Alice (TV show) Felicia Blake (Actress)
Year       Title       Role       Notes    References
1948      June Bride           Boo's Girlfriend at Wedding         Uncredited        
1950      The Daughter of Rosie O'Grady Maureen O'Grady                           
Three Little Words           Helen Kane                        
Two Weeks with Love     Melba Robinson                               
1951      Mr. Imperium    Gwen                    
1952      Singin' in the Rain            Kathy Selden                     
Skirts Ahoy!        Herself Uncredited        
1953      I Love Melvin     Judy Schneider / Judy LeRoy                       
The Affairs of Dobie Gillis              Pansy Hammer                 
Give a Girl a Break           Suzy Doolittle                    
1954      Susan Slept Here              Susan Beauregard Landis                             
Athena Minerva Mulvain                             
1955      Hit the Deck       Carol Pace                          
The Tender Trap               Julie Gillis                           
1956      Meet Me in Las Vegas    Herself Uncredited        
The Catered Affair           Jane Hurley                        
Bundle of Joy     Polly Parish                        
1957      Tammy and the Bachelor              Tammy                
1958      This Happy Feeling           Janet Blake                        
1959      The Mating Game            Mariette Larkin                
Say One for Me Holly LeMaise, aka Conroy                           
It Started with a Kiss       Maggie Putnam                               
The Gazebo        Nell Nash                            
1960      The Rat Race      Peggy Brown                     
Pepe      Cameo                 
1961      The Pleasure of His Company      Jessica Anne Poole                          
The Second Time Around              Lucretia 'Lu' Rogers                        
1962      How the West Was Won               Lilith Prescott                    
1963      My Six Loves       Janice Courtney                               
Mary, Mary         Mary McKellaway                           
1964      The Unsinkable Molly Brown       Molly Brown                      
Goodbye Charlie               Charlie Sorel/Virginia Mason                      
1966      The Singing Nun                Sister Ann                           
1967      Divorce American Style Barbara Harmon                              
1968      How Sweet It Is!                Jenny Henderson                            
1969      Debbie Reynolds and the Sound of Children         Herself TV movie            
1971      What's the Matter with Helen? Adelle                  
1973      Charlotte's Web                Charlotte A. Cavatica (voice)                       
1974      Busby Berkeley                 Documentary    
That's Entertainment!                    Compilation film              
1987      Sadie and Son    Sadie     TV movie            
1989      Perry Mason: The Case of the Musical Murder     Amanda Cody    TV movie            
1992      Battling for Baby               Helen    TV movie            
The Bodyguard Herself Cameo
1993      Jack L. Warner: The Last Mogul                  Documentary    
Heaven & Earth                 Eugenia                               
1994      That's Entertainment! III                               Compilation film              
1996      Mother                 Beatrice Henderson                       
Wedding Bell Blues          Herself                 
1997      In & Out               Berniece Brackett                            
1998      Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas   Herself (voice)                  
Kiki's Delivery Service     Madame (voice, Disney English dub)                       
Zack and Reba   Beulah Blanton                 
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: The Movie      Mrs. Claus / Mitzi – Rudolph's Mother / Mrs. Prancer – School Teacher (voice)                 
Halloweentown                Splendora Agatha "Aggie" Cromwell        TV movie            
The Christmas Wish         Ruth      TV movie            
1999      A Gift of Love: The Daniel Huffman Story               Shirlee Allison    TV movie            
Keepers of the Frame                     Documentary    
2000      Rugrats in Paris: The Movie          Lulu Pickles (voice)                         
Virtual Mom       Gwen    TV movie            
Rugrats: Acorn Nuts & Diapey Butts         Lulu Johnson (voice)                      
2001      These Old Broads             Piper Grayson    TV movie            
Halloweentown II: Kalabar's Revenge      Splendora Agatha "Aggie" Cromwell        TV movie            
2002      Cinerama Adventure      Herself (interviewee)     Documentary    
Generation Gap                                TV movie            
2004      Connie and Carla              Herself                  [103][104][105]
Halloweentown High      Splendora Agatha "Aggie" Cromwell        TV movie            
2006      Return to Halloweentown            Splendora Agatha "Aggie" Cromwell        TV movie
Cameo appearance        
Lolo's Cafe           Mrs. Atkins (voice)           TV movie            
2007      Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project      Herself (Interviewee)     Documentary    
2008      Light of Olympia               Queen (voice)                   
The Jill & Tony Curtis Story           Herself Documentary    
The Brothers Warner                      Documentary    
Fay Wray: A Life                                Documentary    
2012      One for the Money          Grandma Mazur                                [103][104][105]
In the Picture     Aunt Lilith           Short    
2013      Behind the Candelabra Frances Liberace               TV movie            
2016      Bright Lights: Starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds                Herself Documentary    

Short subjects

    A Visit with Debbie Reynolds (1959)
    The Story of a Dress (1964)
    In the Picture

Partial television credits
Year       Title       Role       Episodes              References
1981      Aloha Paradise Sydney Chase    8 episodes         
1991      The Golden Girls               Truby    "There Goes the Bride: Part 2"   
1994      Wings    Dee Dee Chapel                "If It's Not One Thing, It's Your Mother"
1997      Roseanne            Audrey Conner "Arsenic and Old Mom"                
1999–2006          Will & Grace       Bobbi Adler         12 episodes       
2000–2002          Rugrats                 Lulu Pickles         10 episodes       
2003      Tracey Ullman in the Trailer Tales              Herself TV comedy special          
2003–2007          Kim Possible       Nana Possible    4 episodes         
2010      The Penguins of Madagascar       Granny Squirrel (voice) "The Lost Treasure of the Golden Squirrel"           
RuPaul's Drag Race          Self (guest judge)                            
2015      The 7D Queen Whimsical (voice)              "Big Rock Candy Flim-Flam / Doing the 7D Dance"             

Radio broadcasts
Year       Program               Episode/source
9/8/1952             Lux Radio Theatre            Two Weeks With Love