Sunday, June 30, 2019

Glyn Houston obit

Glyn Houston obituary

Actor who often played soldiers, sailors and police officers in popular films and television drama series


 He was not on the list.


Glyn Houston, who has died aged 93, was never quite as famous as his older brother, Donald, but he enjoyed a film career as a supporting actor, often playing sailors, soldiers or police officers, before television became a natural home to his acting skills.

He took the roles of the miners’ union leader Davy Morgan in the BBC’s 1960 serialisation of How Green Was My Valley and the news editor, Mike Grieves, throughout the newspaper drama Deadline Midnight (1961) before being seen intermittently as Detective Superintendent Arthur Jones in Softly Softly between 1966 and 1969.

Then came one of his best performances, as Bunter – Lord Peter Wimsey’s valet – in three serials adapted from Dorothy L Sayers stories starring Ian Carmichael as the aristocratic sleuth, Clouds of Witness (1972), The Nine Tailors (1974) and Five Red Herrings (1975).

“Mr Houston had everything right,” wrote a New York Times critic. “The lower-class look combined with upper-class hauteur, absorbed over the years from his master; an accent in limbo, not quite upstairs but not downright down; assurance of his own competence in his own station combined with deference to Wimsey’s more exalted place and special talents; and impeccable service in all contingencies, whether mixing the perfect cocktail, reciting railway timetables ... or acting as a sounding board during trips in one of the master’s sports cars.”

Later Houston appeared in the sitcom Keep It in the Family (1980-83) as Duncan Thomas, the literary agent for a cartoonist, Dudley Rush (played by Robert Gillespie). He was at the top of the cast for Robert Pugh’s TV play Better Days (1988), in which he was Edgar, a widowed former miner leaving his community in the South Wales valleys to live with his son, a barrister. The modest star’s moving performance won him a best actor award at the 1989 Monte-Carlo television festival.

Houston was born in the valleys himself, in Tonypandy, Glamorgan, the second of three children of Elsie (nee Jones) and Alex Houston. His father was a Scottish professional footballer who finished his career at Mid Rhondda United after playing for Dundee United and Portsmouth.

When Mid Rhondda went bust in 1928 as South Wales was hit by recession and unemployment, Glyn’s parents moved to London to find work. They could not afford to take all the children, so Glyn was left behind to be raised by his maternal grandmother, Gwenllian. When his mother died three years later, all three children were reunited under Gwenllian’s care.

Glyn left Llwynypia elementary school in Tonypandy at the age of 14 to work on his grandmother’s milk round while Donald – two years his senior – started an acting career. Glyn briefly worked for the Bristol Aeroplane Company before serving in the second world war, from 1944, as an air gunner in the Fleet Air Arm and with the Royal Corps of Signals in Singapore, where he entertained the troops with shows as a stand-up comedian. He then toured India with a Combined Services Entertainment group that included Jimmy Perry, the future writer of Dad’s Army and It Ain’t Half Hot Mum.

On demob in 1947, Glyn harboured ambitions to continue performing comedy, but failed an audition at the Windmill theatre in London. Instead, Donald eventually helped him to get a job as an assistant stage manager with Guildford repertory company in 1949. The following year he made his film debut as a barrow boy in The Blue Lamp (1950), memorable for constantly being told by police to “move on”.

Supporting roles followed in several dozen movies during the 50s, as a sailor in Gift Horse (1952, alongside Trevor Howard), and in The Cruel Sea (1953, with Jack Hawkins), as Joan Collins’s boyfriend in Turn the Key Softly (1953), an army corporal in Private’s Progress (1956, with Carmichael), and a detective in Tiger Bay (1959, with John and Hayley Mills).

A talented footballer and rugby player at school, he was catapulted into a leading role as the star player in The Great Game (1952), a football drama, and enjoyed returning to comedy to act as a foil to Norman Wisdom in Follow a Star (1959), There Was a Crooked Man (1960), The Bulldog Breed (1960) and A Stitch in Time (1963). On radio Houston played two characters – Arthur Evans (1962) and Joe Higgins (1963-66) – in the soap opera The Dales.

Thereafter, apart from joining Donald in the 1980 wartime drama The Sea Wolves, his career was consumed by television roles. They included Bob Berris, Leslie Crowther’s darts partner, in the last two series (1972-73) of the sitcom My Good Woman, and Margaret Thatcher’s press secretary, Bernard Ingham, in Thatcher: The Final Days (1991).

He had made his West End stage debut in The Happy Family at the Duchess theatre in London in 1951, but turned down various Shakespearean roles, something that may well have restricted his career on the boards. “I always worried about learning the lines,” he said. “My one regret is that I didn’t become a leading classical actor. I think it’s what you have to do, like Anthony Hopkins. He never liked working in theatre, but he did all those Shakespeare roles.”

He won a Bafta Cymru lifetime achievement award in 2008. A year later his autobiography, A Black & White Actor, was published.

In 1956 he married the actor and model Shirley Lawrence. She died in 2016. He is survived by their two daughters, Leigh and Karen.

Selected filmography

The Blue Lamp (1950) - Barrow Boy (uncredited)

Waterfront (1950) - Sailor (uncredited)

Trio (1950) - Ted (segment "The Verger")

The Clouded Yellow (1950) - Lancastrian Bus Conductor (uncredited)

Home to Danger (1951) - Minor Role (uncredited)

High Treason (1951) - Railway Shunter (uncredited)

I Believe in You (1952) - Passerby (uncredited)

Wide Boy (1952) - George

The Gift Horse (1952) - Assistant Engineer (uncredited)

Girdle of Gold (1952) - Dai Thomas

The Great Game (1953) - Ned Rutter

The Cruel Sea (1953) - Phillips

Turn the Key Softly (1953) - Bob

Stryker of the Yard (1953)

Hell Below Zero (1954)[16] - Borg

River Beat (1954) - Charlie Williamson

The Rainbow Jacket (1954) - (uncredited)

The Sleeping Tiger (1954) - Bailey

Betrayed (1954) - Paratrooper Corporal (uncredited)

The Sea Shall Not Have Them (1954) - Knox

The Happiness of Three Women (1954) - Morgan

Passage Home (1955) - Charley Boy

Lost (1956) - Bus Driver (uncredited)

Private's Progress (1956) - Corporal on Sick Call (uncredited)

Who Done It? (1956) - Arresting Policeman (uncredited)

The Long Arm (1956) - Detective-Sergeant in 'Q' car

High Flight (1957) - Controller Leuchars

The Birthday Present (1957) - Police Officer in Court (uncredited)

The One That Got Away (1957) - Harry 'Hurricane' (uncredited)

A Night to Remember (1958) - Stoker (uncredited)

A Cry from the Streets (1958) - Police Sergeant (uncredited)

Nowhere to Go (1958) - Box Office Clerk (uncredited)

Tiger Bay (1959) - Detective at Police Station (uncredited)

Breakout (1959) - Man in pub (uncredited)

Jet Storm (1959) - Michaels

Four Desperate Men (1959) (aka Siege of Pinchgut) - Navy Rating (uncredited)

Follow a Star (1959) - Fred (Steam Cleaner) (uncredited)

Sink the Bismarck! (1960) - Seaman on 'Prince of Wales' (uncredited)

The Battle of the Sexes (1960) - 2nd Porter

Circus of Horrors (1960) - Carnival Barker (uncredited)

There Was a Crooked Man (1960) - Smoking Machinist

The Bulldog Breed (1960) - Gym Instructor (uncredited)

How Green Was My Valley (1960, TV series) - Davy Morgan

Mill of Secrets (1960, TV series) - Douglas Wallace

Deadline Midnight (1961, TV series) - Mike Grieves

Payroll (1961) - Frank Moore

The Wind of Change (1961) - Det. Sgt. Parker

The Green Helmet (1961) - Pit Manager

Flame in the Streets (1961) - Hugh Davies

Emergency (1962) - Inspector Harris

Mix Me a Person (1962) - Sam

Solo for Sparrow (1962) - Inspector Sparrow

A Stitch in Time (1963) - Cpl. Welsh, St. John's Ambulance Brigade

Panic (1963) - Mike

One Way Pendulum (1965) - Detective Inspector Barnes

The Secret of Blood Island (1965) - Berry

The Brigand of Kandahar (1965) - Marriott

Invasion (1965) - Police Sergeant Draycott

Gideon's Way Episode: 'Fall High, Fall Hard' (TV series 1965) - Det. Sgt. Carmichael (his actor brother Donald Houston also appeared in the episode)

Headline Hunters (1968) - Gresham

Are You Being Served? (1977) - Cesar Rodriguez

A Horseman Riding By (1978, TV Series) - John Rudd

The Sea Wolves (1980) - Peters

If You Go Down in the Woods Today (1981) - Ticket Collector

Conspiracy (1989) - William Brain

Old Scores (1991) - Aneurin Morgan

The Mystery of Edwin Drood (1993) - Grewgious


Friday, June 28, 2019

Paul Benjamin obit

Paul Benjamin, Actor in 'Do the Right Thing,' Dies at 81



He was not on the list.


He also appeared in 'Midnight Cowboy,' 'Across 110th Street,' 'Escape From Alcatraz' and 'The Station Agent.'

Paul Benjamin, the veteran actor who portrayed one of the three wise Brooklyn "cornermen" in Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing, has died. He was 81.

Benjamin died June 28, Lee announced on Instagram. No other details of his death were immediately available.

His other noteworthy roles included those of a bank robber who rips off the mafia in Across 110th Street (1972), the father of a folk singer (Roger E. Mosley) in Leadbelly (1976), the embittered prisoner English in Escape From Alcatraz (1979) and Henry, the owner of the model train hobby shop in The Station Agent (2003).

Benjamin also starred in the 1979 CBS telefilm I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, based on Maya Angelou's book, and appeared for Robert Townsend in The Five Heartbeats (1991), for John Singleton in Rosewood (1997) and for Bill Duke in Hoodlum (1997).

In Do the Right Thing (1989), written and directed by Lee, Benjamin played ML alongside Frankie Faison as Coconut Sid and Robin Harris as Sweet Dick Willie. The trio gather every day against a brick wall under a beach umbrella and serve as a sort of Greek chorus, commenting on the events of the day.

Born the youngest of 12 children on New Year's Day 1938 in South Carolina, Benjamin was the son of a preacher. He moved to New York and studied acting at Herbert Berghof's studio and made his film debut playing a bartender in Midnight Cowboy (1969).

He appeared on Broadway in Sam Shepard's Operation Sidewinder in 1970 and had small roles in two 1971 releases, The Anderson Tapes, directed by Sidney Lumet, and Born to Win (1971), starring George Segal.

Benjamin then lent an air of authority to the blaxploitation films The Education of Sonny Carson (1974) and Pam Grier's Friday Foster (1975).

His film résumé also included Richard Pryor's Some Kind of Hero (1982), Barbra Streisand's Nuts (1987) and Clint Eastwood's Pink Cadillac (1989).

On television, Benjamin played homeless man Al Ervin on several episodes of ER; showed up on such series as Police Story, Kojak, Law & Order and The Shield; and appeared in telefilms including 1977's One in a Million: The Ron LeFlore Story with LeVar Burton, 1980's Gideon's Trumpet with Henry Fonda and 1987's The Man Who Broke 1,000 Chains with Val Kilmer.
Filmography

    Midnight Cowboy (1969) - Bartender - New York
    The Anderson Tapes (1971) - Jimmy
    Born to Win (1971) - Fixer
    Across 110th Street (1972) - Jim Harris
    The Deadly Trackers (1973) - Jacob
    The Education of Sonny Carson (1974) - Pops
    Distance (1975) - Sgt. Elwood Horne
    Friday Foster (1975) - Sen. David Lee Hart
    Leadbelly (1976) - Wes Ledbetter
    One in a Million: The Ron LeFlore Story (1978) - John LeFlore
    I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1979, TV Movie) - Freeman
    Escape from Alcatraz (1979) - English
    Gideon's Trumpet (1980, TV Movie) - Artis
    Some Kind of Hero (1982) - Leon
    Deadly Force (1983) - Lester
    Nuts (1987) - Harry Harrison
    Do the Right Thing (1989) - ML
    Pink Cadillac (1989) - Judge
    The Five Heartbeats (1991) - Mr. King
    The Super (1991) - Gilliam
    Drop Squad (1994) - Wellington Cosbie
    The Fence (1994) - Del Reston
    Rosewood (1997) - James Carrier
    Hoodlum (1997) - Whispers
    The Breaks (1999) - Clerk
    Stanley's Gig (2000) - Teddy Branson
    The Station Agent (2003) - Henry Styles
    Back in the Day (2005) - Cody
    Ascension Day (2007) - Sam
    The Tall Man (2011) - Dallas
    Occupy, Texas (2016) - Mr. Goodman

Wednesday, June 26, 2019

Beth Chapman obit

Beth Chapman, 'Dog the Bounty Hunter' star, has died



She was not on the list.



Beth Chapman, who with her husband Duane "Dog" Chapman starred in the popular reality series "Dog the Bounty Hunter," died Wednesday morning in a Honolulu hospital, a spokesperson for the family confirmed to CNN.
She was 51.
Gillian Sheldon told CNN that Chapman was surrounded by her family.

She was recently placed in a medically induced coma as she battled cancer.
Chapman and her husband were the stars of the hit reality show, which chronicled the adventures of their family-owned bounty hunting business and aired from 2004 to 2012.
Duane Chapman shared the news of her passing on social media.
"It's 5:32 in Hawaii, this is the time she would wake up to go hike Koko Head mountain," he tweeted. "Only today, she hiked the stairway to heaven. We all love you, Beth. See you on the other side."
Born in Denver, Beth Chapman was the youngest woman to ever to receive a bail license in her home state, a record that was later broken by her daughter, Baby Lyssa.
Chapman was devoted to the bail bond business in which she worked for more than 30 years.
According to the "Dog the Bounty Hunter" site, Chapman served on the executive board of the national association before winning a bid for its presidency in February 2016.
But it was the love story between the Chapmans, as much as their adventures hunting fugitives, that enthralled viewers.
The couple raised 12 children together and split their time between homes in Hawaii and Colorado.
The pair and their son Leland starred in CMT's reality series, "Dog and Beth: On the Hunt," for three seasons from 2013 to 2015.
In September 2017, the couple used the official Facebook account to confirm a report that she had been diagnosed with Stage 2 throat cancer.
They later revealed during the A&E special, "Dog & Beth: Fight of Their Lives," that the cancer had been removed and she was cancer-free.
But the disease returned last year and Chapman began keeping supporters updated on her cancer battle via social media.
Her husband told Us Weekly in December that his wife was exploring alternative treatments and fighting to gain back her health.
"Beth will not take anything the doctors want to give her. Even the doctor told me he doesn't want her to have seizures if the pain is that bad, but she won't do it," he said. "She takes over-the-counter pain meds. She will not take anything prescription."
Beth Chapman told the Star Advertiser newspaper in January that she was committed to regaining her health.
"I'm a fighter, I'm a strong fighter -- big-time survivor -- and I'm gonna fight this as vigorously as it's fighting me," she said.
In April, her husband released a statement stating she had been admitted to the hospital and later released.
He solicited prayers for his wife on June 23 and the following day shared a photo from her bedside at the hospital.
WGN America had been slated to debut a new series featuring the couple, "Dog's Most Wanted," next year.

Max Wright obit


Max Wright, ‘Alf’ Star and Veteran Actor, Dead at 75


He was not on the list.



Max Wright, the actor who portrayed the father on the Eighties sitcom Alf, has died. He was 75. On Wednesday, Wright’s son Ben confirmed his death to the Hollywood Reporter. TMZ first reported the death, adding that Wright died at his home in Hermosa Beach, California following a long battle with cancer. He was diagnosed with Lymphoma in 1995, but was reportedly in remission for several years.

As the news broke of Wright’s death, those in the industry paid tribute to the veteran star on social media. “RIP Max Wright – A hilarious and talented actor,” Seth McFarlane tweeted. “Sad news to hear of his passing. Who will keep ALF in check now?”



“RIP to Alf’s dad Max Wright,” the longtime Simpsons writer and showrunner Al Jean wrote. “Always a pleasure to work with.”


Wright, born in Detroit on August 2nd, 1943, racked up numerous credits for film, TV and theater. He made his Broadway debut in the original 1968 production of The Great White Hope and appeared in a number of stage production across the country. His 1998 portrayal of Pavel Lebedev in Ivanov earned a Tony nomination for Best Actor in a Play.

Wright’s career took off in the late 1970s and early Eighties with a run of roles on both the big and small screens. His eclectic film credits include the 1979 musical drama All That Jazz, the 1980 Alan Arkin comedy Simon, Warren Beatty’s 1981 historical drama Reds, 1983 comedy The Sting II, 1986 dramedy Touch and Go, 1986 comedy Soul Man, 1994 action-adventure The Shadow (1994), a 1999 adaptation of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and the Oscar-nominated 1999 mystery Snow Falling on Cedars.

Outside of his famous role as Willie Tanner on Alf, Wright appeared in a number of major television shows, including Taxi, WKRP in Cincinnati, Cheers and Friends (as the manager of coffee shop Central Perk). His other sitcom roles include the early Eighties NBC show Buffalo Bill and Norm MacDonald’s ABC project The Norm Show (later renamed Norm), which ran from 1999 to 2001.

Filmography

Film

Year    Title    Role    Notes             Ref.

1979 Last Embrace

Second Commuter             Mystery-thriller film directed by Jonathan Demme

Based on the novel The 13th Man by Murray Teigh Bloom

            All That Jazz

Joshua Penn            Drama-musical film directed by Bob Fosse and written by Robert Alan Aurthur & Fosse

1980 Simon

Leon Hundertwasser         Comedy-science fiction film directed ans written by Marshall Brickman

1981 Reds

Floyd Dell     Biographical-historical drama directed by Warren Beatty and written by Beatty & Trevor Griffiths

1983 The Sting II

Floor Manager        Crime film directed by Jeremy Paul Kagan

1985 Fraternity Vacation

Millard Tvedt           Comedy film directed by James Frawley

1986 Touch and Go

Lester            Romantic film directed by Robert Mandel

            Soul Man

Dr. Aronson Romantic film directed by Steve Miner

1988 Going to the Chapel          Howard Haldane    Comedy film directed by Paul Lynch

1994 The Shadow

Berger           Action-adventure film directed by Russell Mulcahy

1995 Grumpier Old Men

County Health Inspector Comedy film directed by Howard Deutch

1999 A Midsummer Night's Dream

Robin Starveling     Comedy film directed and written by Michael Hoffman

Based on William Shakespeare comedic play of the same name

            Snow Falling on Cedars

Horace Whaley       Mystery film directed by Scott Hicks and written by Ron Bass & Hicks

Based on the novel of the same name by David Guterson

2002 Easter

Zaddock Pratt          Comedy film directed and written by Richard Caliban

Based on Will Scheffer's play of the same name