Friday, February 28, 2020

Billie Barrett Greenbey obit

Billie Barrett Greenbey of the Barrett Sisters, famed gospel music trio, dead at 91

Performing together for nearly 70 years, they linked the early days of traditional gospel to contemporary singers who sprang from the church.

 

She was not on the list.


Billie Barrett Greenbey provided the piercing alto in the legendary gospel music trio the Barrett Sisters’ silvery, spine-tingling harmonies.

Mrs. Greenbery, the middle sister of the three, died Friday in Chicago at 91, according to her daughter Albertina Spratley.

She had performed as recently as December, when she and her younger sister Rodessa Barrett Porter sang together at Trinity United Church of Christ.

“They wrecked the place,” said their niece Mary Campbell.

“We’re not ministers, and we’re not preachers,” Mrs. Greenbey told the Wisconsin State Journal in 1990, “but we’re singing about the good news and the good times happening with the Lord.”

With the death of Mrs. Greenbey — a longtime resident of the West Chesterfield neighborhood — Rodessa Barrett Porter is the last remaining member of the group.

The joyful voices of Billie, Rodessa and their eldest sister, the late Delois Barrett Campbell, would swoop from octave to octave, blending with the near-telepathy in singing families known as “blood harmony.”

Performing together for nearly 70 years, they linked the early days of traditional gospel to contemporary singers who sprang from the church. Jennifer Hudson grew up listening to the Barrett Sisters.

Their stardom grew with the release of the 1982 documentary “Say Amen, Somebody.” Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert called it “the most joyful movie I’ve seen in a very long time” and “one of those peak movie experiences that stay with you for a lifetime.”

When it was shown at the New York Film Festival, Ebert wrote, it was interrupted 12 times by applause. A personal appearance by the sisters prompted the audience to jump to their feet to sing along.

They performed on “The Tonight Show” and toured the world. In Europe, they were welcomed like royalty, treated to five-star hotels, fine shopping and gourmet food. It was a welcome change after years of meager income from record companies.

They also were featured in “Sweet Sisters of Zion,” a documentary filmed while they were in their 80s. That was the nickname bestowed on them “for their Baptist soulfulness and concert decorum,” Bob Marovich said in his 2015 book “A City Called Heaven, Chicago and the Birth of Gospel Music.”

There’s not a lot of money in gospel,” Mrs. Greenbey told the Sun-Times in 1983. “I think what gospel singers like most is the response they get — knowing they’re lifting burdened hearts and easing troubled minds.”

They grew up in Chicago in a family of 10 children, four who would die young of tuberculosis, Rodessa Barrett Porter told Marovich on the show “Conversations with the Gospel Legends.”

Young Billie Mae Barrett went to Englewood High School and studied at the Sherwood Conservatory of Music, her daughter said.

Starting out, the sisters loved both the sheen of Marian Anderson’s contralto and the bell-like harmonies of the Andrews Sisters. But their father was a deacon at Morningstar Baptist Church. “As my mother [Delois] used to say,” Mary Campbell said, “‘he was a strict old man.

“They had the potential to sing rock and roll,” she said, “but because of their relationship with their father and because of their personal beliefs, they were committed to singing only gospel.”

Two of the earliest hymns they learned were “I’ll Fly Away” and “Jesus Loves Me,” Mrs. Greenbey told Marovich.

For a time, Mary Campbell said, the Barrett Sisters lived on Indiana Avenue within blocks of two other gospel icons, their friends Mahalia Jackson and Thomas Dorsey, often called the father of gospel music, who’s credited with combining elements of jazz, blues and spirituals to write archetypal gospel songs including a favorite of ther Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.: “Take My Hand, Precious Lord.”

A Barrett aunt was a music director of the Morningstar choir, and she sometimes brought the sisters new songs straight from Dorsey, according to Marovich, who first reported Mrs. Barrett’s death on the website www.journalofgospelmusic.com.

Delois Barrett Campbell performed with the Roberta Martin Singers from Ebenezer Baptist Church, “the first true gospel ensemble,” Marovich said. Campbell had a powerful stage presence and sang at the funerals of Jackson, Dorsey and Sam Cooke, he said.

Later, the Barrett Sisters performed with Curtis Mayfield to support Harold Washington as he stumped to become Chicago’s first African American mayor.

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Gene Dynarski obit

R.I.P. Gene Dynarski, who went from Star Trek and Batman henchman to Seinfeld

The actor also appeared in two Spielberg films. He was 86.

 

He was not on the list.


Few actors can claim to have memorable moments in both Star Trek: The Original Series and Seinfeld. Gene Dynarski's 40-year acting career made him both a foil of Captain Kirk and Jerry — not to mention Batman.

In one of his earliest roles, the Brooklyn-born actor played Benedict, an egg-centric henchman of Egghead (Vincent Price) in "An Egg Grows in Gotham" and "The Yegg Foes in Gotham."

That same month, minus his trademark mustache, Dynarski popped up in another iconic series of '66, Star Trek. He was the miner Ben Childress in "Mudd's Children."

He would return to the Enterprise two seasons later as Krodak, one of the councilmembers of the planet Gideon who abduct Kirk in "The Mark of Gideon."

Dynarski could be spotted all over television in the Sixties, as Zeppo on The Monkees in "Son of a Gypsy," as well as episodes of Adam-12 and Mission: Impossible.

In the following decade, Dynarski found work under the nascent genius of Steven Spielberg. In Duel, the fantastic made-for-TV chase flick with Dennis Weaver, he can be found as a café patron. Spielberg gave him a meatier role in Close Encounters of the Third Kind, playing the supervisor of Richard Dreyfuss.

At the close of the 1970s, Dynarski opened The Gene Dynarski Theatre in Los Angeles, which welcomed rising actors like Ed Harris and Tom Hanks on its stage for productions.

Dynarski himself was not done with the screen. He returned to the world of Star Trek as Cmdr. Orfil Quinteros in an episode of The Next Generation. And, as we mentioned above, Seinfeld-fanatics will know him as Izzy Mandelbaum Jr., the elder son of Lloyd Bridges' character in two later episodes, "The English Patient" and "The Blood."

 

Filmography 

Year , Title , Role , Notes  

1965, Morituri, Merchant Marine, Uncredited  

1966, Star Trek: The Original Series, Ben Childress, Episode: "Mudd's Women"  

1968, In Enemy Country, Capek,  

1969, Star Trek: The Original Series, Krodak, Episode: "The Mark of Gideon"  

1974, Airport 1975, 1st. Friend,  

1974, Earthquake, Dam Caretaker,  

1976, All the President's Men, Court Clerk,  

1977, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Ike,  

1984, Best Defense, Gil,  

1985, Movers & Shakers, Board Member #2,  

1988, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Quinteros, Episode: "11001001"  

1989, Breaking In, Brock, Ernie's Mob Connection,  

1996, Command & Conquer: Red Alert, Joseph Stalin

 



Eugene Dynarski obit

Gene Dynarski, Actor on ‘Seinfeld’ and ‘Close Encounters of the Third Kind,’ Dies at 86

Gene Dynarski, a character actor who appeared in Steven Spielberg's 'Duel' and 'Close Encounters of the Third Kind' and played Izzy Mandelbaum Jr., the son of Lloyd Bridges' character, on 'Seinfeld,' has died. He was 86. 

He was not on the list.


Gene Dynarski, a character actor who appeared in Steven Spielberg’s Duel and Close Encounters of the Third Kind and played Izzy Mandelbaum Jr., the son of Lloyd Bridges’ character, on Seinfeld, has died. He was 86.

Dynarski died Feb. 27 in a rehabilitation center in Studio City, playwright Ernest Kearney announced.

The Brooklyn native also worked twice on the original Star Trek, as the miner Ben Childress on the 1966 episode “Mudd’s Women” and as Krodak, who represents a city up for Federation membership, on the 1969 installment “The Mark of Gideon.”

Dynarski was seen as Benedict, one of Egghead’s (Vincent Price) henchmen, on Batman in 1966, and on a 2000 episode of The X-Files, his character fell victim to a monstrous bat creature.

His rĂ©sumĂ© also included Earthquake (1974), Airport 1975 and All the President’s Men (1976) and Hill Street Blues, The A-Team, Little House on the Prairie, Starsky and Hutch, Kung Fu, Kojak, Bonanza and The Monkees, among other TV series.

In 1979, Dynarski opened The Gene Dynarski Theatre near Sunset Boulevard and Western Avenue in Los Angeles, with Ed Harris starring in Tennessee Williams’ Sweet Bird of Youth as its first production. Elisabeth Shue and Tom Hanks were among others who performed there before it shuttered in the mid-1990s.

Born on Sept. 13, 1933, Dynarski worked as a “pin monkey” at a bowling alley, served in the U.S. Navy and, after coming to L.A., began getting acting jobs through noted casting director Lynn Stalmaster. In 1965, he made his onscreen debut on an episode of the ABC medical drama Ben Casey.

In the 1971 telefilm Duel, Dynarski was a trucker confronted in a roadside cafĂ© by Dennis Weaver, who thinks he’s the murderous big-rig driver on his tail, and in Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), he played the supervisor who sends out Richard Dreyfuss to investigate those mysterious blackouts.

On the 1997 Seinfeld episode “The English Patient,” Dynarski’s character and his equally competitive dad and grandfather (Earl Schuman) all throw out their backs, then blame Jerry for it. (He and Bridges returned for another episode the following season.)

Dynarski also portrayed Josef Stalin in the 1996 videogame Command & Conquer: Red Alert and won a Los Angeles Drama Critics’ Award for his performance in Among the Vipers, produced by Kearney at the Odyssey Theatre Ensemble.

 

Filmography

 

Year    Title            Role            Notes

1965            Morituri            Merchant Marine            Uncredited

1966   Star Trek: The Original Series Ben Childress            Episode: "Mudd's Women"

1967            Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea            Centaur I            Episode: "Jouney with Fear"

1968   In Enemy Country            Capek 

1969   Star Trek: The Original Series            Krodak            Episode: "The Mark of Gideon"

1971   Duel            Truck Driver in Chuck's Cafe 

1974            Airport 1975 1st. Friend

1974            Earthquake    Dam Caretaker       

1976   All the President's Men    Court Clerk  

1977   Close Encounters of the Third Kind    Ike      

1984   Best Defense            Gil      

1985            Movers & Shakers            Board Member #2   

1988   Star Trek: The Next Generation            Quinteros            Episode: "11001001"

1989            Breaking In    Brock, Ernie's Mob Connection   

1996            Command & Conquer: Red Alert   Joseph Stalin


R. D. Call obit

R.D. Call Dies: ‘Into The Wild’, ‘Born On The Fourth Of July’ Actor Was 70

 

He was not on the list.


R.D. Call, an actor who appeared in seven Sean Penn films, a trio by director Walter Hill and such TV series as Walker, Texas Ranger and EZ Streets, died Feb. 27 of complications from back surgery in Layton, Utah. He was 70.

His death was announced by his family.

A student in the 1970s of Lee Strasberg’s acting school, Roy Dana Call made his TV debut in 1979 on CBS’ Barnaby Jones. Appearances on Little House on the Prairie, V, and Trapper John M.D. followed.

His long career as a character actor in films began in 1982 with Hill’s 48 Hrs. Call would work again with the director on 1985’s Brewster’s Millions and 1996’s Last Man Standing.

An even more prolific collaboration began with fellow actor Penn on 1986’s At Close Range, followed by Colors (1988), State of Grace (1990), The Weight of Water (2000), I Am Sam (2001) and Babel (2006). Call also appeared in 2007’s Into the Wild, directed by Penn.

Other credits include Born on the Fourth of July, Waterworld, Murder by Numbers, the 1991 TV-miniseries Golden Years, The X-Files and Burn Notice, among many others.

According to his family, Call was particularly proud of one accomplishment that didn’t involve acting: “R.D. fought an addiction with alcohol for many years. At one point he was at what he called ‘rock bottom’ and was heading either to possible suicide or recovery. Thanks to God he chose recovery and went into hospital rehab for many months. Coming out sober, R.D. joined Alcoholics Anonymous and celebrated his 26th year of sobriety this year. Last year he received his 27th year chip in Los Angeles.”

Call is survived by his brother Rick; sisters Quay and Cindy; his uncle Lane and aunt Evelyn.

 

Filmography

Year     Title            Role            Director           Notes

1979            Barnaby Jones Walsh            Winrich Kolbe            Episode: "False Witness"

1982    Little House on the Prairie            Dwayne          Michael Landon            Episode: "He Was Only Twelve: Part 1"

1982    48 Hrs.            Duty Sergeant            Walter Hill      

1985    V            Visitor Bringing Message            Cliff Bole            Episode: "The Champion"

1985            Trapper John, M.D.            Laundry Truck Driver            Leo Penn            Episode: "The Unholy Ghost"

1985            Brewster's Millions            Courtroom Guard            Walter Hill      

1986    At Close Range            Dickie            James Foley   

1986    The Children of Times Square            Walter - Rival Boss            Curtis Hanson TV movie

1987            Timestalkers     Bart            Michael Schultz TV movie

1987    No Man's Land            Frank Martin  Peter Werner

1988    Colors            Officer Rusty Baines            Dennis Hopper           

1988            Judgment in Berlin            Stephen N. Raboun            Leo Penn    

1988    War Party    Posse Member #1            Franc Roddam          

1988–1989            Knightwatch   Bates            Various            3 episodes

1989            Unconquered    Floyd Petrie, KKK Member            Dick Lowry  TV movie

1989    L.A. Takedown            Harry Dieter   Michael Mann   TV movie

1989    Born on the Fourth of July            Chaplain – Vietnam            Oliver Stone  

1990    Guns of Paradise            Fletcher           Michael Lange            Episode: "Devil's Escort"

1990    Young Guns II D.A. Rynerson            Geoff Murphy           

1990    State of Grace   Pat Nicholson, Frankie's Lieutenant            Phil Joanou

1991    Golden Years   Jude Andrews            Various            7 episodes

1991    Other People's Money Arthur            Norman Jewison        

1992    Cruel Doubt   District Attorney Mitchell Norton            Yves Simoneau            2 episodes

1993    Jack Reed: Badge of Honor  Lt. Lloyd Butler            Kevin Connor TV movie

1993–1998            Walker, Texas Ranger            Stan Gorman / Dave Kilmer  Michael Preece / Tony Mordente            2 episodes

1994            Murder, She Wrote            Joseph Kempinsky            Peter S. Fischer            Episode: "Deadly Assets"

1994    The X-Files     Sheriff Maurice Daniels Michael Lange            Episode: "Miracle Man"

1995            Waterworld            Enforcer           Kevin Reynolds         

1996    Last Man Standing            Jack McCool            Walter Hill      

1996–1997            EZ Streets  Michael "Fivers" Dugan            Various            9 episodes

1998    The Practice            Det. Morris  Michael Schultz            Episode: "The Pursuit of Dignity"

1998            Diagnosis: Murder            Eddie Wallace            Christopher Hibler            Episode: "Murder at the Finish Line"

1998    Logan's War: Bound by Honor  Albert Talgorno            Michael Preece  TV movie

1998            Malaika          Jack Grant    Marina Martins

2000    Family Law            Sergeant Rodriguez                 Episode: "Stealing Home"

2000    The Weight of Water   Coast Guard Officer            Kathryn Bigelow        

2001    I Am Sam     Cop at Park     Jessie Nelson

2002    Murder by Numbers            Captain Rod Cody            Barbet Schroeder       

2002    JAG            Master Chief Proctor            Michael Schultz            Episode: "The Killer"

2005            Supernatural    Sheriff Pierce   David Nutter            Episode: "Pilot"

2005    The Work and the Glory II: American Zion            Boggs            Sterling Van Wagenen  

2006    Dark Heart    Finn            Kevin Lewis  

2006    Babel            FBI Interrogation Officer            Alejandro González Iñárritu

2006    The Drop            Interviewer      Kevin Lewis  

2006    The Work and the Glory III: A House Divided            Boggs            Sterling Van Wagenen  

2007    Into the Wild     Bull            Sean Penn    

2008            Adventures in Appletown            Coach Joe       Robert Moresco         

2009    Follow the Prophet            General Davis    Drew Ann Rosenberg

2012    Burn Notice  Quinn            Alfredo Barrios Jr.            Episode: " Unchained"

2012    Silent Night in Muncie            Michael            Jon D. Wagner            Short

2012            Perception        Marcus            Stan Harrington       

2014    Castle            Quinn            Mickey Barbozza            Episode: "For Better or Worse" (as RD Call)

2015    Rogues of LA   Neal            Stuart Alexander            3 episodes

2015    Blue Telescope            John Fortuna            John D. Wagner           

2016    Code of Honor            Mayor Randolf            Michael Winnick           

2018    Not a Stranger            Sergeant Fitzgerald            James Russo   (final film role)

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Nick Apollo Forte obit

Nick Apollo Forte, Actor in 'Broadway Danny Rose,' Dies at 81



He was not on the list.


A longtime performer in cabarets and on cruise ships, he played has-been Lou Canova in the classic 1984 movie.



Born in Waterbury on June 14, 1938, Forte began his showbiz career as Nicky Redman at age 15. After opening for Della Reese at the Apollo Theater in 1957, he incorporated the Harlem venue into his stage name.

Forte, who also played the drums and keyboards and recorded several albums, spent a lifetime in cabarets and nightclubs and 15 years as a headliner on cruise ships that took him to Australia, New Zealand, China, Alaska and Hawaii.

He said he preferred gigs in small rooms. "Truthfully, I would rather play any day for 500-seater places than I would play outside concerts," he said. "It's not personalized. They're going to see me in a cabaret and they're going to say, 'My God, I could hear all the words. I could hear what he's talking about.' It's not a lot of noise out in the field or something like that."

His family took "comfort and pride in the fact that throughout his career, Nick only sang what he fondly referred to as 'happy songs.'"

Forte said he turned down work in The Sopranos — "Every other word was F-you, F-this. I may be a proud Italian American, but I don't use that kind of language" — but did appear as a guy named Gaslight Johnny Tomorrow on ABC's The Ellen Burstyn Show in 1987 and as himself on Showtime's Billions in 2016.

Survivors include his wife of 61 years, Rosalie; daughters Robin, Carmel, Lynn and Shelly; sons Nicholas, Mark and Jeffery; siblings Aurelia and Frank; 21 grandchildren; and two great- grandchildren.

Memorial contributions in his name may be made to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital or the Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation.