Sunday, August 31, 2025

Kelsey Bateman obit

'Rock of Love'Kelsey Bateman Dead at 39 ...

Starred on Season 3 of Reality Show 

She was not on the list.


Kelsey Bateman -- a contestant on Bret Michaels' reality show 'Rock of Love' -- has died ... TMZ has learned.

A family sources tells us ... Kelsey passed away unexpectedly recently -- though it's unclear at this time exactly what caused her untimely death. We've reached out to local authorities for more information.

If you don't know "Rock of Love with Bret Michaels," it was a reality television show that ran from 2007 to 2009 ... and followed 25 contestants as they all vied to be Michaels' girlfriend.

Kelsey starred in the third and final season of the show -- titled "Rock of Love Bus with Bret Michaels" -- on which the ladies lived on tour buses and traveled with Michaels.

Kelsey made it all the way to the final nine women ... but was eliminated in dramatic fashion in the 7th episode.

Bateman showed up to the elimination drunk with several other contestants ... telling the cameras she laid on a speed bump and broke down in tears because of the pressures of the show before showing up to the elim.

Bret said he felt Kelsey's actions showed she simply wasn't making smart decision for herself before sending her back to Salt Lake City, Utah.

Bateman was 39.

 

RIP

Charles Bierbauer obit

Charles Bierbauer, former CNN correspondent, dies at 83

 

He was not on the list.


Former CNN correspondent Charles Bierbauer has died, his family announced on Sunday. He was 83 years old.

Bierbauer retired from CNN in 2001 after two decades covering news in Washington, DC, and around the world.

He joined CNN in 1981 to cover the Pentagon as a defense correspondent. He was then the network’s senior White House correspondent for nine years, covering the administrations of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. He also served as the network’s senior Washington correspondent, highlighting his deep knowledge of the US presidency, policy and politics.

The veteran journalist traveled with presidents to all 50 states and more than 30 nations, and he served as president of the White House Correspondents’ Association from 1991 to 1992. He also covered presidential campaigns between 1984 and 2000, as well as the Supreme Court.

Bierbauer won an Emmy for his coverage of the 1996 Olympic Park bombing in Atlanta. He also anchored CNN’s “Newsmaker Saturday,” a weekly show featuring interviews with top newsmakers, for a decade.

“Charles Bierbauer was a cherished member of the CNN family, who covered everything from the White House and the Pentagon to the Supreme Court during his two decades with the network,” said a CNN spokesperson Sunday. “A tireless reporter and wonderful colleague, Charles will be remembered for his outstanding journalism and his willingness to help others.”

Longtime CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer said in a statement Sunday Bierbauer had been a mentor to him.

“Charles inspired me and helped me throughout my assignments at the Pentagon and the White House. He was a good friend, colleague, and mentor, and I will certainly miss him,” Blitzer said.

Before joining CNN, Bierbauer had an extensive career spanning more than a decade as an international journalist. He was the ABC News Moscow bureau chief and correspondent beginning in 1978, and he later served as the network’s bureau chief in Bonn, Germany. He had previously worked in London, Bonn and Vienna for Westinghouse Broadcasting.

Versed in coverage of Eastern Europe during the Cold War, Bierbauer covered all US-Soviet summits, starting in 1975 with President Gerald Ford and the Soviet Union’s Leonid Brezhnev through the 1992 meeting between Presidents George H.W. Bush and Boris Yeltsin.

He started his career as a radio reporter in his native Allentown, Pennsylvania, and later wrote for the city’s local newspaper.

Bierbauer graduated in 1966 from Pennsylvania State University, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in Russian and bachelor’s and master’s degrees in journalism. He has been recognized as a distinguished alumnus and alumni fellow by the university.

Bierbauer became the first dean of the University of South Carolina’s College of Mass Communications and Information Studies in 2002. He stepped down from the role in 2017.

Bierbauer is survived by his wife Susanne Schafer, a former journalist at the Associated Press, and his four children.

Saturday, August 30, 2025

David Travis obit

David Travis Dies: Home Video Pioneer & Longtime Marketing Exec Was 79

 

He was not on the list.


David Travis, a pioneer in the home-video field who became a marketing executive for several Silicon Valley companies, has died. He was 79. A family rep said Travis died August 30 of metastasized colorectal cancer at the Motion Picture & Television Fund home in Woodland Hills, CA.

Travis was married for 44 years to Kathy Garver, who starred as Cissy on the 1960s sitcom Family Affair and went on to a long screen career.

Born on March 14, 1946, in Omaha, NE, Travis was president of his class at San Jose State University. In 1975, he was hired at General Recorded Tapes, a manufacturer of reel-to-reel, 8-track and cassette tapes that acquired several record labels amid its success. As compact discs began replacing that older technology, Travis worked for the up-and-coming Atari, traveling internationally to enhance the home recording market overseas.

He is crediting with being among the first to bring home videos to the domestic and international marketplaces. By the mid-1980s, he was international sales manager at Dynabyte Corp. Travis then moved to fellow Silicon Valley companies Acadia Corp from 1990-98 and United Mercantile Agency from 1998-2000, working in their marketing units. After that, he became VP Sales at Attorney Recovery Systems in the Bay Area from the turn of the century until his retirement in 2019.

Along with his wife, Travis is survived by sons Scott Travis and Reid Garver Travis and daughter-in-law Megan Stafford.

Trax Colton obit

Trax Colton, Jayne Mansfield’s Co-Star in ‘It Happened in Athens,’ Dies at 96

Like Rock Hudson, Tab Hunter and Troy Donahue, he was discovered (and given a studly stage name) by talent agent Henry Willson.

 He was not on the list.


Trax Colton, who starred opposite Jayne Mansfield in It Happened in Athens after being discovered (and renamed) by the same talent agent who did the same for Rock Hudson, Tab Hunter and others, has died. He was 96.

Colton died Aug. 30 of natural causes in Monte Nido, California, his son Ryan Morelli told The Hollywood Reporter. “I couldn’t have scripted a better parent,” he said. “He was the most generous, greatest father ever.”

New Jersey-born Louis Morelli was driving in a convertible on Olympic Boulevard going to meet a friend for lunch in Beverly Hills when another car driven by talent agent Henry Willson pulled up next to him.

Willson asked him if he would be open to a screen test, and Morelli said he would be, even though he had never done any acting.

With a new name and a contract at 20th Century Fox, Trax Colton showed up as a party guest in the comedy The Marriage-Go-Round (1961), starring Susan Hayward, James Mason and Julie Newmar.

He was then given second billing as a Greek shepherd named Spiridon Loues who aims to compete as a marathon runner in the first modern Olympics — the 1896 Summer Games — in It Happened in Athens (1962).

On the comeback trail, Mansfield played a glamorous Greek actress, Eleni Costa, who in a publicity stunt says she will marry the winner of the race.

While the movie was being made, THR’s Mike Connolly wrote that Colton “looms as the studio’s new “combination of Rudolph Valentino-Ty Power” as the star of a potential Blood and Sand remake at Fox. Fellow columnist Dorothy Kilgallen, meanwhile, suggested the actor “may be our next matinee idol.”

However, when the expensive Happened in Athens failed at the box office, Colton and Mansfield were released from their contracts, and he never made another film again. “Trax Colton was handsome and ingratiating, but acting was not his métier,” Eve Golden wrote in her 2021 book, Jayne Mansfield: The Girl Couldn’t Help It.

The second of four kids of Italian immigrants Angelo and Caterina, Morelli was born on May 26, 1929, in Highland Park, New Jersey. When he was 12, he played the violin in an orchestra, and he could handle the guitar and piano as well.

Morelli had worked as a car salesman and studied dentistry before he came west and had his encounter with Willson, who famously helped launch the acting careers of Roy Fitzgerald (Hudson), Arthur Gelien (Hunter), Marilyn Louis (Rhonda Fleming), Merle Johnson (Troy Donahue), Francis McGowan (Rory Calhoun), Krekor Ohanian (Touch/Mike Connors) and Robert Moseley (Guy Madison).

After It Happened in Athens, Colton screen-tested but failed to get the part of the sleazy manager of Joanne Woodward’s showgirl character in The Stripper (1963). Robert Webber went on to play the role. His son Ryan said he would appear on an episode of ABC’s Combat! in the ’60s.

Colton, who spoke several languages, earned his law degree in 1969 and practiced until the early 2000s. Despite his slim acting résumé, he was still getting fan mail until his death.

Survivors include another son, Todd; his grandchildren, Ronan and Quinn; and his brother, Frank. His wife of 48 years, Maureen, died in 2017 of a brain aneurysm at age 70.

Lee Roy Jordan obit

Lee Roy Jordan, champion with Alabama, Dallas Cowboys, dies

 He was not on the list.


DALLAS -- Lee Roy Jordan, a linebacker on the first Super Bowl-winning team for the Dallas Cowboys in the 1970s, has died. He was 84.

The Cowboys announced Jordan's death Saturday without saying when he died or giving a cause of death.

Jordan was a first-round draft pick by Dallas in 1963 after a standout career at Alabama, where he played for the late Paul "Bear" Bryant.

Jordan was a big part of the "Doomsday" defense that carried the Cowboys to a Super Bowl title in a 24-3 victory over the Miami Dolphins during the 1971 season. He retired in 1976, the year before Dallas won its second championship.

A five-time Pro Bowler, Jordan was the first player inducted into the Cowboys' ring of honor after owner Jerry Jones bought the team in 1989.

Jordan is still second on the team's career tackles list with 1,236. Darren Woodson, a safety on the Dallas teams that won three Super Bowls in the 1990s, has 1,350.

"With fearless instincts, leadership and relentless work ethic, Jordan was the embodiment of the Cowboys' spirit," the team said. "Off the field, his commitment to his community was the centerpiece of his life after retiring in 1976."

The Cowboys were known as "next year's champions" after the famous "Ice Bowl" loss to Green Bay in 1967, when the Packers went on to win their second consecutive title in Super Bowl 2. Three years later, Dallas lost to the Baltimore Colts on a last-season field goal in the Super Bowl.

The breakthrough finally came a year later with a linebacking crew led by Jordan and Chuck Howley, along with defensive tackle Bob Lilly, whose 29-yard sack of Bob Griese was the signature play in the Super Bowl win.

Jordan was the defensive leader on Alabama's 1961 national championship team and was an Associated Press All-American a year later. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1983.

The Tide called Jordan a "legend" in a social media post Saturday, saying he would "forever part of Alabama Football history."

The linebacker played for 14 seasons with the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL) from 1963 to 1976. He played college football for the Alabama Crimson Tide and was selected by the Cowboys in the first round of the 1963 NFL draft. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1983.

Jordan excelled as both a linebacker and center at the University of Alabama. In his sophomore season of 1960, he helped the Crimson Tide finish with an 8–1–2 record. In the Bluebonnet Bowl, versus the Texas Longhorns. He was named the game's most valuable player (MVP) in a 3–3 tie.

The following year, Jordan was again an important part of the team as Alabama finished with an 11–0 record, a Southeastern Conference (SEC) championship, and the national championship. The season included six shutouts, which included a 34–0 win over rival Auburn. Led by senior quarterback Pat Trammell (1940–1968), Alabama wrapped up the season with a 10–3 victory over Arkansas in the Sugar Bowl.

In his senior season in 1962, the Crimson Tide fell short of another national championship with a 10–1 record with sophomore quarterback Joe Namath. The loss was by one point at Georgia Tech in mid-November, their first defeat in over two years. In his final game for the Tide, Jordan recorded 31 tackles in a 17–0 victory over Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl, attended by President John F. Kennedy. For his performance, he received his second MVP award in a bowl game. At the end of his senior year, he received unanimous All-American status and the Lineman of the Year award

 

Career history

Dallas Cowboys (1963–1976)

Career highlights and awards

Super Bowl champion (VI)

Second-team All-Pro (1969, 1973)

5× Pro Bowl (1967–1969, 1973, 1974)

Dallas Cowboys Ring of Honor

National champion (1961)

Unanimous All-American (1962)

First-team All-SEC (1962)

Second-team All-SEC (1961)

Career NFL statistics

Interceptions:   32

Touchdowns:   3

Games played: 186


Mark Knoller obit

Mark Knoller, longtime CBS News correspondent, dies at 73

 

He was not on the list.


Longtime CBS News correspondent Mark Knoller has died at the age of 73.

He died in Washington, D.C., according to a close friend. The cause of death was not disclosed, but he suffered from diabetes and had been in ill health.

Knoller was, to put it simply, a legend. For decades, everyone in the White House press corps knew him as the unofficial presidential historian and statistician.

His frustration over the lack of a central database of daily presidential actions inspired him to take upon himself the enormous burden of keeping meticulous records of every presidential act, movement, and utterance, single-handedly filling an immense void in American history.

As he once put it: "I keep a daily log of everything the president does. I keep a list of speeches. I keep a list of travel – foreign travel, domestic travel. A list of outings. A list of golf. A list of pardons, vetoes, states that he's visited, states that he hasn't visited. Every time he goes on vacation, every visit to Camp David."

"Mark Knoller was the hardest-working and most prolific White House correspondent of a generation," Tom Cibrowski, president and executive editor of CBS News, said. "Everyone in America knew his distinctive voice and his up-to-the-minute reporting across eight Presidential administrations."

As a CBS Radio correspondent, Knoller worked extremely long hours, even without this self-imposed hardship. To keep his encyclopedic records up to date, he worked late into the evening nearly every day, departing the White House long after most of his colleagues had gone home.

And what did Knoller do with this hard-earned gold mine of statistics and numbers? In the extremely competitive world of journalism, you might think he would hoard it for his own use. But no. This remarkably generous man shared it with anyone who asked – reporters on deadline, historians, even White House aides filling gaps in their own administration's records. He believed the public had a right to know.

Born Feb. 20, 1952, in Brooklyn, New York, he knew from a young age that he wanted to be a reporter. After graduating from New York University, he started his career as an intern and copy boy at WNEW Radio in New York, working his way up to weekend reporter. In 1975, he became a reporter at the Associated Press Radio Network, where he remained for 13 years.

In 1988, Knoller's career took an unexpected turn. While covering a trip to Helsinki and Moscow with then-Secretary of State George Schultz, he and CBS News producer Susan Zirinsky chatted about his career. She told him the CBS News Washington Bureau was looking for a new assignment editor.

"Why not take the plunge?" she asked him. So he did.

But after a few years, "alas, he was miserable," Zirinsky recalls. He didn't enjoy sending other people out to cover the news. He wanted to cover the news. So CBS News offered Knoller the position of White House correspondent for CBS Radio – his dream job, and a position in which he went on to win numerous prestigious journalism awards.

In his role, Knoller covered the last year of President George H.W. Bush's term, both terms of Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and the first term of President Trump. He left CBS in 2020.

Over the last decade of Knoller's time at CBS News, his career took another surprising turn. His voice had begun to fail, making it impossible for him to be a full-time radio correspondent. So Knoller reinvented himself. Twitter was in its early years and was quickly becoming a sensation, so Knoller jumped on the Twitter (now X) train. He began posting numerous times daily, sharing White House news, his famous facts and figures, and his entertaining witticisms with an audience that grew to 300,000 followers.

Former CBS News White House correspondents who worked closely with Knoller also offered their heartfelt admiration:

"Mark Knoller was simply the best, a legendary White House journalist who was a delight to be around," said CBS News senior correspondent Norah O'Donnell. "His work was his life. He was kind, funny and always gracious in sharing his encyclopedic knowledge of the presidency. His CBS family adored him, and we will miss our friend."

"Mark Knoller defined what it means to chronicle and cover the White House," said chief White House correspondent Major Garrett. "Mark added value where others never could – myself included. Mark was the most devoted, tenacious and clear-eyed journalist I have ever had the honor of knowing. For as long as I live, I will count among my life's greatest blessings that I was able to work alongside him."

"As impressive as Mark Knoller's sweep of knowledge about the White House and the presidency was – it was surpassed only by his generosity toward his many friends and colleagues…And he always answered with kindness, class, and a sincere desire to help," said Jim Axelrod, chief correspondent and executive editor for CBS News' "Eye on America" franchise.

Mark wasn't just a respected colleague, he was a dear friend. He helped me enormously with his knowledge of the White House, but the Mark I will always remember is the kind, witty, funny, friend with whom I spent many hours debating about one of his favorite topics: which James Bond movies, and actors, were the best and the worst.

Friday, August 29, 2025

John Cummings obit

Founding member of acclaimed San Jose rock band dies at 58

John Cummings was the original drummer for The Odd Numbers

 

He was not on the list.


John Cummings, the original drummer for the acclaimed San Jose rock act The Odd Numbers, died Friday (Aug. 27). He was 58. News of his death was made public through social media posts, including one from The Odd Numbers vocalist-guitarist Dave Baisa. “Sad to let everyone know that John Cummings passed... read full story

"I wanted to have a good time playing rock ‘n' roll music, traveling around,"

Cummings, founding drummer of San Jose rock band The Odd Numbers, has died at age 58.

Cummings co-founded the band in 1988 with fellow Leigh High School alumni. The Odd Numbers gained a following for their blend of power pop, mod rock, soul, and punk.

The cause of death has not been released. Cummings was a significant part of the band's enduring legacy in the San Jose music scene.


Kim Hughes obit

Former Trail Blazers Assistant Kim Hughes Passes Away

The NBA loses a former player and coach. 

He was not on the list.


Former Portland Trail Blazers assistant Kim Hughes has passed away at the age of 73. The news came via the Instagram account of former Blazers center Meyers Leonard who wrote the following remembrance:

You were like a father. You were my coach. You loved me unconditionally. You pushed me, but always followed up with an arm around me. You taught me about basketball, but more importantly, about life. You were a great father and husband, and that’s what I admired most about you. I’ve never seen someone deal with so much heartache and pain, yet you never complained, and always found a way through. You were a straight shooter and as truthful as it gets, yet you knew how to love and protect me. It’s hard to believe you’re gone, and I love you so much Kim Hughes.

I will never forget the day that we had yesterday. We talked man to man, and really, more like father to son. We laughed, we talked about all of our amazing memories together, you ate a little of your favorite foods, you had a smile on your face that I’ll never forget, and we just simply spent quality time with your family. When I helped lay you down for bed last night, I didn’t think it would be my last time ever talking to you. We gave each other a big hug, which almost felt to me like every last bit of strength you had. We met eye to eye and I told you that I loved you so much and that I would see you again in the morning. You told me you loved me so much, and that God willing, I would see you again in the morning. Man.. what I would do to tell you that I love you just one last time.

I promise to carry on your memory. I promise that some day my two boys will know about Kim Hughes, when they’re old enough to understand. I promise to be there for your wife and children, just as you would for me, if roles were reversed for you and I right now.

If I had to bet, Jim Leonard has already found his way to you, and surely gave you a big hug for looking after me. They always tell me he was the most kind and gentle man. Tall and handsome too. Just like you. Go figure. Thank you for everything. Love you always and forever Kim ❤️💔❤️

Hughes played for the then New Jersey Nets, the Denver Nuggets, and the Cleveland Cavaliers of the NBA after spending a year with the New York Nets of the American Basketball Association. He served as an assistant coach for the Trail Blazers from 2012 to 2015. He was famously fired by then lead executive Neil Olshey for unintentionally leaking the news that free agent LaMarcus Aldridge was leaving the team when Olshey had claimed otherwise publicly.

Blazer’s Edge offers condolences and all our thoughts to the family and friends of Kim Hughes at their time of loss.

Kim grew nine inches at the end of his sophomore year at Freeport, going from a point guard to a center. He averaged 15.5 points as a senior, leading Freeport to the sectional championship.  Kim and his twin brother, Kerry, continued their careers at Wisconsin, where Kim averaged a double-double all three seasons of his varsity eligibility. He was team MVP as a junior and senior. He played in the ABA and NBA from 1975-81 and in Italy from 1981-89.

The 6-foot-11 Hughes played college basketball at the University of Wisconsin from 1971 to 1974, averaging 15 points and 11 rebounds as a senior. His identical twin, Kerry, also 6–11, was also a starter on the Badgers.[1] Hughes was selected by the Buffalo Braves in the third round (ninth pick) of the 1974 NBA draft; immediately, he played professionally in Italy during the 1974–75 season for Olimpia Milano. He spent the 1975–76 season with the New York Nets of the American Basketball Association (ABA), where he averaged eight points and nine rebounds and was named to the First Team ABA All-Rookie Team. The 1976 Nets team, which featured Julius Erving, Swen Nater, Larry Kenon and Brian Taylor, won the ABA championship.

it all started with a growth spurt that transformed Kim Hughes from a point guard into a center, even more dramatically than the way Lakers All-Star center Anthony Davis went from a 6-2 point guard to 6-10 in 18 months.

“We certainly grew out of our clothes,” Hughes said. “Dad always told us, ‘You guys will get taller because you will grow into your feet. And we also always had really big hands. Common sense told us our bodies would fill out. But as other teammates and friends grew and we didn’t, we were worried. Everyone wants to be taller. We hoped we would grow, but it is not something you have control of.”

When they did finally sprout, they grew so fast they had to make sure they didn’t put any more pressure on their bodies — especially their legs — than necessary.

“We did straight leg lifts where you don’t bend your knee,” Hughes said. “It was too painful to move our knee at all. We’d sit on the floor or the couch with five pounds on our ankle and elevate it to 8 or 10 inches to strengthen our quadriceps without infringing on the integrity of the joint, which was painful. We didn’t know if we could play sports. We certainly couldn’t play with that kind of pain and swelling. There was no way.”

As seniors, the twins could play. Now 6-8, they had solid, if unspectacular, senior seasons in 1970. Kim averaged 15.5 points and made first team all-conference. Kerry averaged 12.5 points. Together they led the Pretzels to a second-place finish in the league, one game behind Auburn at 13-3.

The Hughes twins still kept a somewhat low profile. Their only scholarship offer at the end of their senior season was from Lamar, coached by Billy Tubbs, who would go on to win 333 games in 14 years at Oklahoma.

“Because nobody knew who we were, recruiting started really late,” Hughes said. “Billy Tubbs tried to recruit us to Lamar. That wasn’t a great university. I liked Billy and the athletic facilities were fine, but I wasn’t interested in the side benefits other than the full scholarship.”

Does that mean the twins were offered money under the table?

“What I am saying is all colleges cheat,” Hughes said. “That’s unfortunate. That makes me sad that they do it, but that’s the story of the world.”

The twins wound up signing with Wisconsin after coach John Powless saw them in their final game for Freeport, a sectional loss to Sterling.

“He went down there to recruit Mark House,” Hughes said of Sterling’s 6-7 forward who wound up playing for Murray State. “Sterling beat us on a last-second shot that hit the guide wire on the side of the basket, so it shouldn’t have counted, and after I fouled out when we were up by five points. It was just a terrible, terrible game.”

But it was great for the Hughes twins.

“I didn’t know anything about Powless as a coach, but I loved the man. He’s like a father figure to me,” Hughes said.

He picked Wisconsin even though protests were riling campus at the time. Sterling Hall, which contained the Army Mathematics Research Center, was bombed by four anti-Vietnam War protesters in August 1970, damaging 26 buildings and killing a math professor.

“People think protests are hot now; they have no idea of what happened then,” Hughes said. “We didn’t even have classes because police were gassing things so heavily. They lost control.

 

Career information

High school     Freeport (Freeport, Illinois)

College            Wisconsin (1971–1974)

NBA draft        1974: 3rd round, 45th overall pick

Drafted by       Buffalo Braves

Playing career 1974–1989

Position           Center

Number           35, 12, 44, 3

Career history

As a player:

1974–1975      Olimpia Milano

1975–1978      New York / New Jersey Nets

1978–1980      Denver Nuggets

1980–1981      Cleveland Cavaliers

1981–1983      Virtus Roma

1983–1988      Viola Reggio Calabria

1988–1989      Basket Brescia

As a coach:

1998–2003      Denver Nuggets (assistant)

2003–2010      Los Angeles Clippers (assistant)

2010    Los Angeles Clippers (interim)

2012–2015      Portland Trail Blazers (assistant)

2015–2016      Viola Reggio Calabria (assistant)

Career highlights

ABA champion (1976)

ABA All-Rookie First Team (1976)

Italian Serie A champion (1983)


Thursday, August 28, 2025

Ray Mayhew obit

Ray Mayhew, drummer in iconic UK '80s band Sigue Sigue Sputnik dies

 He was not on the list.


Ray Mayhew, who was the drummer in iconic 1980s band Sigue Sigue Sputnik, has died.

His former bandmate Martin Degville posted the news on Facebook: “It is with great sadness that I have been informed today that my best friend and drummer of Sigue Sigue Sputnik, Ray Mayhew, has passed away.

“May God bless you – you will forever be in my thoughts, and also in the hearts of the fans who love you.

“You were a force, a light that shone so brightly. Rest in peace, mate. Love you always.”

It hasn’t been revealed how Mayhew died.

Sigue Sigue Sputnik burst onto the UK music scene in 1986 with hits, Love Missile F1-11, which was featured in the movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off, and 21st Century Boy.

Formed four years previously, the glam new wave band were famous for their outlandish outfits.

But their initial success faded soon after. They continued to have reunion tours until 2004.


David Keighley obit

David Keighley Dies: Key Force Behind Imax’s Global Rise Was 77

 

He was not on the list.


David Keighley, a long-tenured champion of the Imax Experience and a pioneer in film presentation, died in New York August 28 following a battle with cancer. He was 77.

His death was announced by Imax CEO Rich Gelfond.

Keighley has served for the last 15 years as Imax’s first-ever Chief Quality Officer, rounding out several decades of work with the company. He oversaw post-production for more than 500 Imax films ranging from blockbusters to nature documentaries, and was a trusted partner to some of the world’s most lauded filmmakers, including Christopher Nolan.

“We are deeply saddened by the passing of our dear friend David, a treasured member of the Imax family for more than 50 years,” said Gelfond. “David was as close to the human embodiment of Imax as there has ever been, relentless in his drive to deliver awe-inspiring images to audiences around the globe. He was incredibly energized and proud of his work on the upcoming The Odyssey, completing his review of the dailies just days before his death in a bittersweet but fitting capstone to a remarkable career. We extend our deepest condolences to David’s wife, Patricia, and his family, and our enduring gratitude to David for everything he’s done for Imax and the art of filmmaking.”

Keighley first entered the giant screen industry in 1972, alongside his wife and business partner, Patricia. Inspired by their experience watching Imax’s North of Superior, the newlyweds founded large-format post-production company David Keighley Productions. In 1972, the Keighleys co-directed the Imax film Catch the Sun. They quickly formed a lasting partnership with Imax, working on every one of the company’s releases thereafter. For decades, no Imax film print left the lab without Keighley’s personal approval.

In 1988, DKP 70MM was acquired by Imax, and both Keighleys formally joined its team. Keighley’s exacting work helped grow the company from a niche short film format to a global leader in premium cinema experiences. At the Imax offices in Los Angeles, the company’s premier theater is named the “David Keighley Theater,” dedicated in a ceremony by Christopher Nolan in 2015. Just three weeks ago, Keighley completed work reviewing the dailies for Christopher Nolan’s upcoming The Odyssey, which will be the first theatrical release ever shot entirely with Imax film cameras.

Said Nolan in a statement, “His keen eye and uncompromising standards meant that audiences were treated to the best possible experience of our films — a massive part of their impact.”

Keighley was a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and a participant in its Science & Technology Awards Committee. He was a member of the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC), a Life Fellow of the SMPTE and a recipient of its Herbert T. Kalmus Gold Medal for Outstanding Achievement in Color Motion Pictures. He received the Giant Screen Theater Association’s inaugural Special Achievement in Film Award, and he was later honored alongside his wife with the organization’s Outstanding Achievement Award, in recognition of their lasting impact on the industry.

“Some people are irreplaceable,” said Dune director Denis Villeneuve. “David Keighley is one of them. Cinema is mourning one of its most brilliant technical masters.”

Keighley is survived by his wife Patricia, children Geoff, Chris and Jennifer, and grandchildren Sam and Eli.

Randy Boone obit

Randy Boone, Actor on ‘The Virginian,’ Dies at 83

He sang and played guitar on the NBC show and was a regular on ‘It's a Man's World’ and ‘Cimarron Strip’ as well. 

He was not on the list.


Randy Boone, who rode his own horse and portrayed the singing and guitar-playing ranch hand Randy Benton on the long-running NBC series The Virginian, has died. He was 83.

Boone died Thursday, his wife, Lana, told The Hollywood Reporter. She did not want to divulge any other details.

The North Carolina native also was a regular on two other 1960s series, but each of those lasted just one season: the 1962-63 NBC comedy-drama It’s a Man’s World and the 1967-68 CBS Western Cimarron Strip, starring Stuart Whitman.

And in the 1963 Twilight Zone episode “The 7th Is Made Up of Phantoms,” Boone starred as one of the National Guardsmen (Warren Oates and Ron Foster are the others) who somehow are sent back in time to take part in the Battle of the Little Bighorn.

A contract player at Universal, Boone joined The Virginian, which starred James Drury and Doug McClure, midway through its second season in February 1964. He stuck around for 46 episodes through the end of the fourth season in April 1966 before he was let go.

“I was told that [producer] Frank [Price] thought I was window dressing and wasn’t needed on the show, but I feel that I was needed as much as anybody,” he said in Paul Green’s 2006 book, A History of Television’s The Virginian, 1962-1971.

“I think a show suffers when you make big changes and you lose the actors that caused the people to fall in love with it.”

Clyde Randy Boone was born Jan. 17, 1942, in Fayetteville, North Carolina. He graduated from Fayetteville Senior High School in 1960 and spent a brief time at North Carolina State College in Raleigh, where he played guitar at house parties and rarely went to class.

He told Green that he had a plan. “I’m going to take my guitar and I’m going to hitchhike around the country and have some fun until the Army drafts me and then I’ll let them beat some discipline into me,” he said. “I couldn’t wait to get out of school and have a good time.”

After traveling around the country for 18 months, he ended up in Los Angeles in 1962. When someone he was playing music with told him a TV producer was looking for a young man to play a folk-singing college student on a new series called on It’s a Man’s World, he auditioned and was hired.

Boone signed a contract with Universal Studios and was cast as Vern Hodges, who shares a houseboat on the Ohio River with two friends (Glenn Corbett, Ted Bessell) on It’s a Man’s World.

The show, though admired by critics, was canceled after just four months on the air amid tough competition. Boone and future That Girl star Bessell went across the country on a barnstorming campaign to save it, to no avail.

Boone was advised that knowing how to ride a horse would come in handy in the age of TV Westerns, so he bought one named Clyde and became an expert rider. That skill — and the fact he was still under contract — led Price to sign him up for The Virginian.

Boone said he would let Universal use his horse for free if he could board him at the studio, and executives agreed. He noted that Clyde wasn’t a Hollywood-trained animal, so “he acted very much like a real horse, and I got a lot of fan mail about how he didn’t stand still.”

Boone was introduced to viewers of The Virginian on the episode “First to Thine Own Self,” which premiered in February 1964. His character, a drifter, finds a home at Shiloh and a friend in Betsy Garth (Roberta Shore) after he protects a young girl whose father had been murdered.

Boone said that he wrote many of the songs that he performed on the show, saying he wanted to “feel like I’m putting something special into the work.” He signed away the rights to the songs but was surprised and delighted to receive royalties years later.

(He and Shore were featured on a 1965 Decca album, The Singing Stars of The Virginian, and he followed with a solo effort, Ramblin Randy.)

He played deputy U.S. marshal/aspiring reporter Francis Wilde on Cimarron Strip.

Boone also showed up on episodes of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, Wagon Train, Bonanza, The Fugitive, Combat!, Hondo, Emergency!, Kolchak: The Night Stalker, Kung Fu, Gunsmoke and Highway to Heaven and in such films as Country Boy (1966), Terminal Island (1973), Dr. Minx (1975) and The Wild Pair (1987).

He left acting in the late 1980s and worked in construction.

Boone was born in Fayetteville, North Carolina, and enrolled at North Carolina State College as a mathematics major. He began performing as a folk singer at a bar and eventually dropped out of school to play guitar and sing. That decision led to 18 months of traveling around the United States, primarily by hitchhiking. He used his musical talents to barter, with his performances providing meals and sleeping quarters. He entered contests to win additional money.

 

Actor

The Wild Pair (1987)

The Wild Pair

4.4

Farkas

1987

 

Michael Landon in Highway to Heaven (1984)

Highway to Heaven

6.9

TV Series

Dave

1985

1 episode

 

Kurt Russell and Tim Matheson in The Quest (1976)

The Quest

7.0

TV Series

Kelso

1976

1 episode

 

Edy Williams in Dr. Minx (1975)

Dr. Minx

4.3

Brian Thomas

1975

 

Kung Fu (1972)

Kung Fu

7.6

TV Series

Spiff

1975

1 episode

 

James Arness, Amanda Blake, Milburn Stone, and Dennis Weaver in Gunsmoke (1955)

Gunsmoke

8.1

TV Series

Hub Miller

1975

1 episode

 

Kolchak: The Night Stalker (1974)

Kolchak: The Night Stalker

8.4

TV Series

Gene the Fiddler

1974

1 episode

 

Andy Griffith in Savages (1974)

Savages

6.7

TV Movie

Deputy Dickie Haycroft

1974

 

Emergency! (1972)

Emergency!

7.9

TV Series

Bill Stagg

1973

1 episode

 

Terminal Island (1973)

Terminal Island

5.3

Easy

1973

 

Jon Provost, Tommy Rettig, Lassie the Dog, and Lassie in Lassie (1954)

Lassie

6.6

TV Series

Johnny Piper

1973

1 episode

 

Stuart Whitman in Cimarron Strip (1967)

Cimarron Strip

7.1

TV Series

FrancisFrancis Wilde

1967–1968

23 episodes

 

Ralph Taeger in Hondo (1967)

Hondo

7.2

TV Series

Sean Gallagher

1967

2 episodes

 

Bonanza (1959)

Bonanza

7.3

TV Series

Colter Preston

1966

1 episode

 

Combat! (1962)

Combat!

8.4

TV Series

Jim Hummel

1966

1 episode

 

Randy Boone, Skeeter Davis, Tompall Glaser, Lois Johnson, Grandpa Jones, Ray Pillow, Sheb Wooley, Lonzo and Oscar, Chuck Glaser, Jim Glaser, and The Glaser Brothers in Country Boy (1966)

Country Boy

6.3

Link Byrd Jr.

1966

 

James Drury, Doug McClure, and John McIntire in The Virginian (1962)

The Virginian

7.6

TV Series

Randy Benton

1964–1966

70 episodes

 

The Hanged Man (1964)

The Hanged Man

5.9

TV Movie

The Boy

1964

 

David Janssen in The Fugitive (1963)

The Fugitive

8.1

TV Series

Benjy

1964

1 episode

 

Rod Serling in The Twilight Zone (1959)

The Twilight Zone

9.0

TV Series

Pvt. Michael McCluskey

1963

1 episode

 

John McIntire in Wagon Train (1957)

Wagon Train

7.5

TV Series

Noah BancroftPvt. JamieDavid Garner

1963

3 episodes

 

Alfred Hitchcock in The Alfred Hitchcock Hour (1962)

The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

8.5

TV Series

Pete Tanner

1963

1 episode

 

Ted Bessell, Randy Boone, Michael Burns, Glenn Corbett, Harry Harvey, and Peter Tewksbury in It's a Man's World (1962)

It's a Man's World

7.8

TV Series

Vern Hodges

1962–1963

19 episodes

 

Thanks

The Audition (2021)

The Audition

4.2

Short

special thanks

2021

 

Soundtrack

Backtrack! (1969)

Backtrack!

5.9

performer: "We're Gonna Raise a Ruckus Tonight"

1969

 

James Drury, Doug McClure, and John McIntire in The Virginian (1962)

The Virginian

7.6

TV Series

performer: "Rye Whiskey", "That's Where It's At"writer: "That's Where It's At"performer: "Dulcie" ...

1964–1966

24 episodes

 

Self

Hee Haw (1969)

Hee Haw

7.1

TV Series

Self

1980

1 episode

 

Dolly Parton, Roy Acuff, Johnny Cash, Loretta Lynn, and Porter Wagoner in The Nashville Sound (1972)

The Nashville Sound

7.0

Self

1972

 

Gypsy (1965)

Gypsy

7.8

TV Series

Self - actor

1966

1 episode

 

Where the Action Is (1965)

Where the Action Is

8.2

TV Series

Self - Musical Guest

1966

1 episode

 

What's This Song? (1964)

What's This Song?

7.0

TV Series

Self

1965

1 episode

 

Archive Footage

Backtrack! (1969)

Backtrack!

5.9

Randy (archive footage)

1969

 

Hondo and the Apaches (1967)

Hondo and the Apaches

5.5

TV Movie

Sean Gallagher (archive footage)

1967


Randy Moffitt obit

Randy Moffitt, major league reliever and brother of Billie Jean King, dies at 76

 He was not on the list.

L


ONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) — Randy Moffitt, a reliever who played 12 seasons in Major League Baseball and was the younger brother of tennis great and equality advocate Billie Jean King, has died after an extended illness. He was 76.

Moffitt died on Thursday in Long Beach, California, according to a representative of the family.

Moffitt was drafted by the San Francisco Giants in the first round in 1970 and made his major league debut with the team in 1972.

He went on to play 10 seasons with the Giants, before spending one each with the Houston Astros and Toronto Blue Jays. He went 43-52 with 96 saves and a 3.65 ERA in 534 appearances in the majors, all but one in relief.

He was added to the San Francisco Giants Wall of Fame in 2008 and inducted into the Long Beach State University Athletics Hall of Fame in 1986.

Randall James “Randy” Moffitt was born on Oct. 13, 1948, in Long Beach, the son of Bill and Betty Moffitt.

He is survived by two daughters — Miranda Harrah and her husband, Rusty, and Alysha Gosse and her husband, James — and four grandchildren, along with King and her wife, Ilana Kloss.

Moffitt was drafted by the Giants in the 1st round (18th pick) of the 1970 amateur draft. After a successful year as a starting pitcher for the Class-A Fresno Giants (9–6, 1.60) he was converted to relief with the Triple-A Phoenix Giants in 1971. He was called up to the big club in 1972, making his Major League Baseball debut on June 11.

In 1979, during his eighth year with the Giants, Moffitt contracted Cryptosporidia enteritis. By the end of the season, he was easily exhausted, vomiting frequently and lost around 25 pounds. His physicians were unable to determine what was causing his illness, with one suggesting that his problem was mental. Following a bloody stool incident during a plane trip in 1980, Moffitt had a colonoscopy done and a biopsy of a bleeding ulcer revealed the presence of Cryptosporidium parasites. According to a Sports Illustrated article, "it's reasonable to assume he caught it from a horse—although nobody knows how." Moffitt's recovery was slow and he was released from the Giants on August 4, 1981.

He was a dependable relief pitcher for many years, and finished in the National League Top Ten four times for saves and three times for games pitched. During the 1970s he partnered first with Elías Sosa and later with Gary Lavelle to give the Giants one of the league's better bullpens. In 534 career pitching appearances (all but one in relief) he finished 306 games including 96 saves.

Walfredo de los Reyes Sr. obit

Walfredo de los Reyes Sr., Famed Cuban-Born Percussionist, Dies at 92

Two of his sons continue on as drummers with Chicago and the Zac Brown Band. Another son, actor Kamar de los Reyes, lost a battle with cancer in 2023.

 He was not n the list.


Walfredo de los Reyes Sr., the Cuban-born musician who created a bigger beat by blending hand percussion instruments from his native country with the modern drum set, died Thursday in Concord, California, his family announced. He was 92.

During his six-decade career, de los Reyes performed with the likes of Frank Sinatra, Wayne Newton, Tito Puente, Tony Bennett, Sammy Davis Jr., Cachao, La Lupe, Rita Moreno, Juliet Prowse, Ben Vereen, Bernadette Peters, Dionne Warwick and Debbie Reynolds, and he spent decades on stages throughout Las Vegas.

Two of his sons, Walfredo Reyes Jr. and Daniel de los Reyes, are percussionists with Chicago and the Zac Brown Band, respectively, and a granddaughter, Lilliana de los Reyes, is a vocalist and percussionist now performing with guitarist George Benson.

His “rhythm, joy and spirit will live on through his family and the countless musicians he inspired around the world,” the family said in a statement.

Another of his sons, actor Kamar de los Reyes, known for his work on the ABC soap opera One Life to Live and in Call of Duty video games, died on Christmas Eve in 2023 after a brief battle with cancer.

Born in Havana on June 16, 1933, de los Reyes came from a lineage of musicians — his father, trumpeter Walfredo de los Reyes II, helped found the Casino de la Playa orchestra, which bridged Cuban popular music and the sound of American big bands starting in the 1930s.

De los Reyes Sr. went on to pioneer techniques that inspired generations of drummers as a musician and an educator, and he received the Gon Bops Lifetime Achievement Award in 2017. His story is preserved through the NAMM Oral History Program with an interview that was recorded in 2011.

Survivors also include his wife, Debbie; his daughters, Lillian and Ildemarie; another son, Johnny; and his other grandchildren, Charlene, David, Antonio, Natalie, Christian, Christopher, Joseph, Gabriel, Daniel, Caylen, John and Michael.

Details regarding a celebration of life event will soon be disclosed.

Rami Heuberger obit

Rami Heuberger, Israeli actor in Schindler’s List and Golda, dies at 61

Heuberger, a prominent figure in Israeli theater and television, dies after bout with cancer; he gained international recognition with roles in Spielberg’s Schindler’s List, the biopic Golda and the acclaimed series In Therapy

 

He was not on the list.


Rami Heuberger, a celebrated Israeli actor and director best known for his work in the satirical sketch series The Cameri Quintet and roles spanning stage, television and film, died late Wednesday after a battle with cancer. He was 61.

Heuberger died in a Tel Aviv hospital, his family said. He is survived by two children from his first marriage and two more from a later relationship with artist Dana Yahalomi.

Born in Tel Aviv in 1963, Heuberger studied at the Nissan Nativ Acting Studio after graduating from Ironi Aleph High School. Though he would go on to become one of Israel’s most recognized actors, he often recalled that as a boy, he never imagined a life in theater. “Every morning I would walk past the Cameri Theater on my way to school and dream dreams,” he told Ynet in 2013. “But who thought I would become an actor or a man of culture? I didn’t grow up in that kind of environment.”

He began his film career with small roles, including in Yehuda Barkan’s 1985 movie Smell and Smile, before making his mark in theater. He performed at Israel’s leading venues, including the Cameri, where he appeared in productions such as Macbeth, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Glengarry Glen Ross, Hamlet and Scenes from a Marriage.

His breakthrough came in the early 1990s with The Cameri Quintet, a biting satirical sketch program that became a cult favorite and cemented his place in Israeli pop culture alongside fellow performers Keren Mor, Dov Navon, Menashe Noy and Shai Avivi.

On screen, Heuberger starred in Israeli classics including the comedy Operation Grandma, the TV drama The Bourgeoisie and the internationally acclaimed series In Therapy. His film credits included Steven Spielberg’s Schindler’s List, Hagai Levi’s Snow in August, the television hit Checkout, and the 2023 biopic Golda. He continued acting into his final years, with appearances in series such as TV police drama Manayek.

In a 2013 interview, Heuberger described acting as an endless pursuit. “I want to challenge myself, to reach places I’ve never been,” he said. “Creation is dynamic, and the learning process never ends. You’re always in the first year of a school that never finishes.”

Heuberger’s career was not without controversy. In 2007, he was investigated by police after a makeup artist accused him of inappropriate touching, though prosecutors closed the case citing lack of evidence. In February 2024, he was dismissed from a planned stage adaptation of Operation Grandma after reports he made abusive comments toward colleagues, including telling an actress, “If you miss the cue, I’ll rape you.”

In his later years, Heuberger spoke candidly about his struggles with depression, which he said began during the COVID-19 pandemic and developed into clinical depression that left him physically and emotionally debilitated. In a 2023 interview with 7 Nights, he said thoughts of his four children had kept him alive at his lowest points. “Even if life became unbearable, there were four beings who mean the most to me in the world,” he said. “They kept me going. Without a doubt.”

Writer

Back of the Nation (2015)

Back of the Nation

7.7

TV Series

writer

2016

1 episode

 

Mo'adon Layla (2006)

Mo'adon Layla

7.7

TV Series

writer

2006

6 episodes

 

Actor

Kupa Rashit (2018)

Kupa Rashit

8.7

TV Series

Oren Kushtai

2020–2023

4 episodes

 

Golda (2023)

Golda

6.0

Moshe Dayan

2023

 

Moran Rosenblatt in The Good Person (2022)

The Good Person

7.1

Uzi silver

2022

 

Shalom Assayag and Amos Tamam in Manayek (2020)

Manayek

8.0

TV Series

Shaul Katz

2020–2022

20 episodes

 

Reymonde Amsellem, Imri Biton, and Nika Bak in The House on Fin Street (2021)

The House on Fin Street

7.1

2021

 

Roy Nik in Normal (2020)

Normal

8.1

TV Mini Series

Udi Ashkenazi

2020

8 episodes

 

Sand Business (2020)

Sand Business

Short

François

2020

 

Stockholm (2018)

Stockholm

7.8

TV Series

Haim Rinski

2020

5 episodes

 

Ze Lo HaGil (2019)

Ze Lo HaGil

6.5

TV Series

Shmulik

2019–2020

20 episodes

 

Rivka Bahar, Shmil Ben Ari, Ilan Dar, Haim Frank Ilfman, Einat Glaser-Zarhin, Eli Gorenstein, Rami Heuberger, Rafi Rothstein, Shemi Shoenfeld, Erez Tadmor, Nelly Tagar, Eran Pesach, Shem Shoenfeld, Evelin Hagoel, Eyal Rozales, Moshe Edery, Leon Edery, Tom Antopolsky, Roy Assaf, Daniel Miller, Aviv Ben Shlush, Liron Edery, and Jean-Loup Pinson in The Art of Waiting (2019)

The Art of Waiting

7.0

Tali's father

2019

 

Yaël Abecassis, Moshe Ferster, Hana Laslo, and Maisa Abd Elhadi in A Tramway in Jerusalem (2018)

A Tramway in Jerusalem

5.1

2018

 

Joy Rieger in Virgins (2018)

Virgins

6.2

Shmuel Siso

2018

 

Miri Aloni in Killing Grandma (2015)

Killing Grandma

7.8

TV Series

Shaul Zelig

2015

3 episodes

 

Fire Birds (2015)

Fire Birds

7.2

Tatoo Man

2015

 

What Could Possibly Go Wrong? (2015)

What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

6.0

Shalom Franko (as Rami Hoiberger)

2015

 

Good Family (2014)

Good Family

8.0

TV Series

Ohad

2014

1 episode

 

Dawn (2014)

Dawn

6.5

Gideon

2014

 

Uri Gavriel, Moshe Ivgy, Shlomi Koriat, Tzion Baruch, and Shalom Michaelshwilli in The Arbitrator (2007)

The Arbitrator

8.1

TV Series

Ido Viner

2013

1 episode

 

Prime Minister's Children (2011)

Prime Minister's Children

8.0

TV Series

Shaul Agmon

2011–2012

18 episodes

 

Closed Season (2012)

Closed Season

7.0

Avi

2012

 

Naomi (2010)

Naomi

6.1

Oded Safra

2010

 

Another Life (2010)

Another Life

7.1

TV Series

Rav Meir

2010

1 episode

 

Miral (2010)

Miral

6.2

Belly Dance Club Customer

2010

 

Laharog Dvora (2010)

Laharog Dvora

7.0

Short

Canaan

2010

 

Hakol Dvash (2007)

Hakol Dvash

7.5

TV Series

Ron

2007–2010

11 episodes

 

Yossi Alfi, Gila Almagor, Lior Ashkenazi, Michal Bat-Adam, Nir Bergman, Assi Dayan, Shira Geffen, Meirav Gruber, Rami Heuberger, Dror Keren, Hagai Levi, Assi Levy, Maya Maron, Moni Moshonov, Yisrael Poliakov, Ayelet Zurer, Alma Zack, Tali Sharon, Tali Rubin, Lillian Barto, Eliko Zuzot, Shimrit Lustig, Guy Kresner, Idan Raz, and Niv Zilberberg in In Therapy (2005)

In Therapy

8.2

TV Series

Micha'el Neuman

2005–2008

15 episodes

 

Walk the Dog (2007)

Walk the Dog

6.0

TV Mini Series

Avner

2007

3 episodes

 

Nathan Ravitz in The Little Traitor (2007)

The Little Traitor

6.9

Father

2007

 

Dear Mr. Waldman (2006)

Dear Mr. Waldman

7.2

Moishe

2006

 

Mischak Machur (2004)

Mischak Machur

8.0

TV Series

Panelist

2005–2006

3 episodes

 

Winning with Miki (2004)

Winning with Miki

2004

 

Gift from Above (2003)

Gift from Above

5.8

Bakho

2003

 

The Bourgeoisie (2000)

The Bourgeoisie

7.8

TV Series

Yoni

2000–2004

1 episode

 

Rami Heuberger, Ami Smolartchik, and Tsach Shpitsen in Operation Grandma (1999)

Operation Grandma

7.9

TV Movie

Alon 'Krembo' Sagiv

1999

 

Shai Avivi, Rami Heuberger, Keren Mor, Dov Navon, and Menashe Noy in Ha-Hamishia Hakamerit (1992)

Ha-Hamishia Hakamerit

8.7

TV Series

Various

1992–1997

11 episodes

 

Dogs Are Color Blind (1996)

Dogs Are Color Blind

7.0

Claude - The Cop

1996

 

Actors (1995)

Actors

7.6

Noam

1995

 

Love Hurts (1992)

Love Hurts

7.2

TV Series

Surveyor

1994

1 episode

 

August Snow (1993)

August Snow

6.3

1993

 

Schindler's List (1993)

Schindler's List

9.0

Josef Bau (as Rami Hauberger)

1993

 

The Beast of War (1988)

The Beast of War

7.3

Helicopter Co-Pilot (as Ramy Heuberger)

1988

 

Self

Back of the Nation (2015)

Back of the Nation

7.7

TV Series

Self - Panelist

2016–2019

12 episodes

 

Machar Shabat (2017)

Machar Shabat

4.4

TV Series

Self - Guest

2017

1 episode

 

HaEish Shenisa Limnoa Milchama (2017)

HaEish Shenisa Limnoa Milchama

Moshe Dayan

2017

 

Matzav Ha'Uma (2010)

Matzav Ha'Uma

7.6

TV Series

Self - Panelist

2010–2011

2 episodes

 

Mo'adon Layla (2006)

Mo'adon Layla

7.7

TV Series

Self - Panelist

2006

6 episodes

 

BeMdinat Ha-Yehudim (2004)

BeMdinat Ha-Yehudim

7.0

TV Series

Various

2004

1 episode

 

Archive Footage

Yossi Alfi, Gila Almagor, Lior Ashkenazi, Michal Bat-Adam, Nir Bergman, Assi Dayan, Shira Geffen, Meirav Gruber, Rami Heuberger, Dror Keren, Hagai Levi, Assi Levy, Maya Maron, Moni Moshonov, Yisrael Poliakov, Ayelet Zurer, Alma Zack, Tali Sharon, Tali Rubin, Lillian Barto, Eliko Zuzot, Shimrit Lustig, Guy Kresner, Idan Raz, and Niv Zilberberg in In Therapy (2005)

In Therapy

8.2

TV Series

Micha'el Neuman (archive footage)

2005

1 episode