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The 2012 Off Topic Celebrity Dead Pool

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  • Michael Clarke Duncan’s fiancée says the Oscar nominee for The Green Mile has died while being hospitalized after a July heart attack.

    Publicist Joy Fehily released a statement from Mr. Clarke’s fiancée, the Rev. Omarosa Manigault, saying the 54-year-old actor died Monday morning in a Los Angeles hospital after nearly two months of treatment following the July 13 heart attack.

    The 6-foot-5, 300 pound actor appeared in dozens of films, including such box office hits as Armageddon, Planet of the Apes and Kung Fu Panda.

    Mr. Duncan had a handful of minor roles before The Green Mile brought him an Academy Award nomination for best supporting actor. The 1999 film, based on the Stephen King novel of the same name, starred Tom Hanks as a corrections officer at a penitentiary in the 1930s. Mr. Duncan played John Coffey, a convicted murderer.
    "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
    "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

    Comment


    • Wow. Only 54. Very sad. RIP.
      Apolyton's Grim Reaper 2008, 2010 & 2011
      RIP lest we forget... SG (2) and LaFayette -- Civ2 Succession Games Brothers-in-Arms

      Comment


      • If ever a role was made for someone, Michael Clarke Duncan was John Coffey.

        Rest In Peace, Michael.
        Last edited by Tuberski; September 3, 2012, 22:21.
        Don't try to confuse the issue with half-truths and gorilla dust!

        Comment


        • Very true.

          R.I.P.
          Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.
          "Hating America is something best left to Mobius. He is an expert Yank hater.
          He also hates Texans and Australians, he does diversify." ~ Braindead

          Comment


          • My Hot Ass Neighbor 5?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!

            ACK!
            Don't try to confuse the issue with half-truths and gorilla dust!

            Comment


            • MIAMI—Griselda Blanco, the drug kingpin known for her blood-soaked style of street vengeance during Miami’s “cocaine cowboys” era of the ‘70s and ‘80s, was shot to death in Medellin by motorcycle-riding assassins Monday, according to Colombian press reports.

              Blanco, 69, spent nearly two decades behind bars in the United States for drug trafficking and three murders, including the fatal shooting of a 2-year-old boy in Miami in 1982.

              Known as “The Godmother of Cocaine,” she was deported to Colombia in 2004.

              According to Radio Caracol and two newspapers, El Espectador and El Tiempo, two gunmen on motorcycles unleashed a fatal hail of gunfire as she walked out of a butcher shop in Medellin, her hometown.

              “It’s surprising to all of us that she had not been killed sooner because she made a lot of enemies,” former Miami homicide detective Nelson Andreu, who investigated her, said late Monday. “When you kill so many and hurt so many people like she did, it’s only a matter of time before they find you and try to even the score.”

              Blanco was arrested in 1985 in a cocaine trafficking case in New York, and she was released in 1998 to Florida authorities. She pleaded no contest in October 1998 to three counts of second-degree murder.

              Police estimated she was involved in at least 40 homicides between Miami and New York. She is credited with importing to Miami the concept of the “motorcycle assassin” — killers on bikes who sprayed their victims with machine-gun bullets.

              “This is classic live-by-the-sword, die-by-the-die-sword,” said Miami filmmaker Billy Corben, whose “Cocaine Cowboys” documentaries chronicled her notoriety. “Or in this case, live-by-the-motorcycle-assassin, die-by-the-motorcycle assassin.”
              "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
              "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Wezil View Post
                MIAMI—Griselda Blanco, the drug kingpin known for her blood-soaked style of street vengeance during Miami’s “cocaine cowboys” era of the ‘70s and ‘80s, was shot to death in Medellin by motorcycle-riding assassins Monday, according to Colombian press reports.

                Blanco, 69, spent nearly two decades behind bars in the United States for drug trafficking and three murders, including the fatal shooting of a 2-year-old boy in Miami in 1982.

                Known as “The Godmother of Cocaine,” she was deported to Colombia in 2004.

                According to Radio Caracol and two newspapers, El Espectador and El Tiempo, two gunmen on motorcycles unleashed a fatal hail of gunfire as she walked out of a butcher shop in Medellin, her hometown.

                “It’s surprising to all of us that she had not been killed sooner because she made a lot of enemies,” former Miami homicide detective Nelson Andreu, who investigated her, said late Monday. “When you kill so many and hurt so many people like she did, it’s only a matter of time before they find you and try to even the score.”

                Blanco was arrested in 1985 in a cocaine trafficking case in New York, and she was released in 1998 to Florida authorities. She pleaded no contest in October 1998 to three counts of second-degree murder.

                Police estimated she was involved in at least 40 homicides between Miami and New York. She is credited with importing to Miami the concept of the “motorcycle assassin” — killers on bikes who sprayed their victims with machine-gun bullets.

                “This is classic live-by-the-sword, die-by-the-die-sword,” said Miami filmmaker Billy Corben, whose “Cocaine Cowboys” documentaries chronicled her notoriety. “Or in this case, live-by-the-motorcycle-assassin, die-by-the-motorcycle assassin.”


                Apparently there is a good documentary called Cocaine Cowboys in which she figures somewhat prominently (for obvious reasons).
                If at first you don't succeed, take the bloody hint and give up.

                Comment


                • From the world of sports...

                  Former Baltimore Ravens owner Art Modell died of natural causes early Thursday.

                  Modell was 87. One of the most controversial and influential owners in league history, Modell will be remembered for taking the Cleveland Browns to Baltimore and rebranding them the Ravens in 1996. But he was also a driving force behind Monday Night Football, served as league president for three years and helped establish the league's first collective bargaining agreement.
                  Source: Associated Press
                  Sep 6 - 8:05 AM
                  Apolyton's Grim Reaper 2008, 2010 & 2011
                  RIP lest we forget... SG (2) and LaFayette -- Civ2 Succession Games Brothers-in-Arms

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by embalmer42 View Post
                    Apparently there is a good documentary called Cocaine Cowboys in which she figures somewhat prominently (for obvious reasons).
                    You mean this?


                    “This is classic live-by-the-sword, die-by-the-die-sword,” said Miami filmmaker Billy Corben, whose “Cocaine Cowboys” documentaries chronicled her notoriety.
                    "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
                    "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Uncle Sparky View Post
                      True. Cyril died quite a while ago. I remember him as The Captain in Fahrenheit 451.
                      Vivian is alive and lives in London.

                      Mmm- I like the film in spite of its shortcomings. I have Cyril Cusack on an old l.p. reading James Joyce. Sorry to have implied Viv Pickles had snuffed it- I 'mis-wrote' as American politicians might put it.
                      Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.

                      ...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915

                      Comment


                      • Yeah right.

                        It was a bald faced lie.
                        "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
                        "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Wezil View Post
                          Yeah right.

                          It was a bald faced lie.
                          My face ain't bald, Canucklehead!!!!!

                          Some days I'm positively wendigoan in appearance. The top of my head, however, is a different matter... The one thing that most irritates me about getting older is how hair seems to spring up with no trouble in the ears and nostrils, on the back of the neck and the small of the back, the scrotum and on the toes- but on the summit of the noggin ?


                          I've seen hairier billiard balls.
                          Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.

                          ...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915

                          Comment


                          • I blame advancing age for my forgetting this:

                            Victor Spinetti, who has died of cancer aged 82, was an outrageously talented Welsh actor and raconteur who made his name with Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop and found fame and fortune as a friend and colleague of the Beatles, appearing in three of their five films, and with Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor in Franco Zeffirelli's The Taming of the Shrew (1967).

                            It was while he was giving his brilliantly articulated and hilarious "turn" as the gobbledegook-shouting drill sergeant in Oh, What a Lovely War! in the West End in 1963 – he won a Tony for the performance when the show went to Broadway – that the Beatles visited him backstage and invited him to appear in A Hard Day's Night (1964).

                            George Harrison later said that his mother would refuse to go and see the group's films unless Spinetti was in them. These, and other tales of the stars, would be recounted by Spinetti himself in his one-man shows, and in the wonderful autobiography he wrote, Up Front (2006), with the help of another Littlewood associate, Peter Rankin.

                            "The people I miss most are all in the show," Spinetti told me over lunch four years ago, "so I don't miss them at all, really. It's like a seance, and there they all are, Noël and Marlene, Frank, Joan and Tennessee. Tenn came to see me in a play that was a disaster. 'Victor,' he said, 'I'll see you in anything. But don't be in this again.'"

                            Spinetti was the eldest of six children, born in the mining village of Cwm in the Ebbw Vale. His father, Giuseppe, who ran a fish and chip shop, was interned on the Isle of Man when the second world war broke out. Spinetti was educated at Monmouth school, then became embroiled in amateur dramatics and was discharged from his national service, and a TB ward, in 1948 with a pleural effusion. He then attended the Cardiff School of Music and Drama where he met his partner, the actor Graham Curnow (who died in 1997). They shared a house, and an openly non-monogamous life, thereafter.

                            Spinetti's grounding in show business was both louche and demanding: a Welsh concert party, revues, variety theatres, US air force bases and hotel functions. He made his London debut in Expresso Bongo (1958) by Wolf Mankowitz and Julian More at the Saville theatre. Paul Scofield was the star in this satire on the entertainment industry, but a multitasking Spinetti made a comic mark as a Fleet Street editor, a parson, a psychiatrist and a head waiter.

                            He was more than ready for the swinging 60s, living a champagne lifestyle and dressing colourfully, even when he could not pay all the bills. And if that happened, he told me, he "spanked old gentlemen for money" so he could buy Christmas presents. "My dear old mother told me that, if she'd known at the time, she would have come along and given me a hand!"

                            Littlewood snapped him up at Stratford East, where his association, in a great company including Barbara Windsor, Harry H Corbett, Avis Bunnage, George A Cooper and Murray Melvin, stretched from 1959 to 1965. This was a golden age in British theatre, running in parallel with first stirrings at the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National theatre.

                            He appeared as Brain-Worm in Ben Jonson's Every Man in His Humour, as an IRA officer in Brendan Behan's The Hostage (which he also played in New York), and as Tosh in Frank Norman and Lionel Bart's Fings Ain't Wot They Used T'Be with Windsor before Lovely War took him back into the West End.

                            After his New York success and the first two Beatles films – Richard Lester's Help! followed A Hard Day's Night in 1965 – he played opposite Jack Klugman in Neil Simon's The Odd Couple at the Queen's in 1966 and then accepted an invitation from the critic Kenneth Tynan to co-write and direct John Lennon's zany, poetic In His Own Write at the National (then based at the Old Vic) in 1968.

                            His career after this phenomenal start was erratic. He clocked up more than 30 films, including the third Beatles collaboration, Magical Mystery Tour (1967) for television, and Andrew Sinclair's Under Milk Wood (1972) with the Burtons again, as well as Peter O'Toole, Siân Phillips and Vivien Merchant.

                            Spinetti was always in work but there was not much focus to it. He started directing musicals in the 1970s, taking charge of Hair in Amsterdam and Rome, and Jesus Christ Superstar in Paris. In 1980 he directed The Biograph Girl, a mediocre musical about the silent movie era at the Phoenix theatre, London, and shortly afterwards launched his one-man show of tart and funny reminiscences, A Very Private Diary, at the Edinburgh festival, but only on the fringe.

                            A season with the RSC at Stratford-upon-Avon in 1995 was not a happy experience ("we were called by page numbers and I didn't know the names of the people I was on stage with") but he delivered superb performances as Lord Foppington in John Vanbrugh's The Relapse and as a composite of cardinals opposite David Troughton's four-square Richard III.

                            Later film work included a nice cameo in Peter Medak's The Krays (1990). On television he played in an early sitcom opposite Sid James, Two in Clover, but became even better known as a Mexican snack thief in adverts for McVitie's Jaffa cakes. In the 1980s he was the voice of Texas Pete in the children's series SuperTed, and 10 years ago played the "man of a thousand faces" in the popular children's show Harry and the Wrinklies.

                            His last on-screen appearance was in a recent DVD of an independent film, Seth Swirsky's Beatles Stories, issued to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Beatles' first recording session at Abbey Road. And on stage he last garnered acclaim as Einstein in Albert's Boy at the Finborough theatre in Earl's Court in 2005. There he was, taking an audience by surprise right to the end.

                            • Vittorio (Victor) Giorgio Andrea Spinetti, actor, born 2 September 1929; died 18 June 2012
                            Actor who made his name at Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop and appeared in the Beatles films, making firm friends with the Fab Four



                            Mr. Spinetti is on the right...

                            Click image for larger version

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                            Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.

                            ...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Wezil View Post
                              You mean this?


                              “This is classic live-by-the-sword, die-by-the-die-sword,” said Miami filmmaker Billy Corben, whose “Cocaine Cowboys” documentaries chronicled her notoriety.

                              Smartass.


                              I'm getting old and can't see well anymore and you're making fun of me? You'd probably tell a blind man to cross a busy street on a red light so you could laugh.

                              You paralegals are all the same


                              If at first you don't succeed, take the bloody hint and give up.

                              Comment


                              • http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/wor...169127966.html

                                SYDNEY - Ron Taylor, a beloved Australian marine conservationist who helped film some of the terrifying underwater footage used in the classic shark thriller "Jaws," has died after a long battle with cancer, a close family friend said Monday. He was 78.

                                Taylor, who had suffered from leukemia for two years, died on Sunday at a hospital in Sydney, said Andrew Fox, who worked with Taylor on shark conservation efforts for decades.

                                Fox said Taylor had mixed feelings about his work on "Jaws," which terrified beachgoers but ultimately helped draw attention to the intimidating yet often threatened animals.

                                Taylor and his wife, Valerie, spent years filming great white sharks and trying to persuade a wary public that the much-feared creatures were beautiful animals worthy of respect. Their stunning up-close images of sharks drew the attention of "Jaws" director Steven Spielberg, who asked the couple to capture footage of a great white for his 1975 blockbuster.

                                The Taylors shot much of the now-classic sequence in which the shark tears apart a cage holding one of the main characters.

                                They filmed off South Australia, using a miniature shark-proof cage with a very short diver inside in an attempt to make the real sharks look as large as the 25-foot mechanical shark used in the movie. While filming, a great white became tangled in the shark cage's cables and began thrashing violently as it tried to escape.

                                Fox's father, Rodney Fox, who famously survived a near-fatal great white shark attack in 1963, assisted on the shoot. Andrew Fox said both men were affected by criticism that the movie reinforced the notion that great whites were death machines. ("It is as if God created the devil and gave him — JAWS," the narrator in the film's theatrical trailer warned in an ominous voice.)
                                There's nothing wrong with the dream, my friend, the problem lies with the dreamer.

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