Showing posts with label 85. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 85. Show all posts

Monday, May 13, 2013

Dr. Joyce Brothers dead at 85


Dr. Joyce Brothers dead at 85


Talya C. Arbisser
Dr. Joyce Brothers.
Popular television psychologist and columnist Joyce Brothers passed away at her home in Fort Lee, New Jersey on Monday, her family confirmed to NBC News. She was 85.
Brothers died peacefully, surrounded by family, according to an obituary written by her family and provided to NBC News.
Dr. Joyce Brothers, known as the first psychologist of the television era, appeared for decades as a talk show regular. NBC's Brian Williams reports.
She was born on October 20, 1927 in New York City and married physician Milton Brothers in 1949.
Her career spanned nearly six decades after her start in 1955 as the only woman to ever win the television quiz show “The $64,000 Question.”

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Andy Williams Moon River Dead at 84





 
 
 
 

Andy Williams in 1969
Background information
Birth nameHoward Andrew Williams
Born(1927-12-03)December 3, 1927
Wall Lake, Iowa, U.S.
DiedSeptember 25, 2012(2012-09-25) (aged 84)
Branson, Missouri, U.S.
GenresTraditional pop, jazz, country, pop, easy listening
OccupationsSinger, songwriter, actor, record producer
Years active1938–2012
LabelsSony BMG/Columbia, Cadence
WebsiteAndyWilliams.com

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andy_Williams



 
 


Howard Andrew "Andy" Williams (December 3, 1927 – September 25, 2012) was an American singer who recorded eighteen Gold-[1] and three Platinum-certified[2] albums. He hosted The Andy Williams Show, a TV variety show, from 1962 to 1971, as well as numerous television specials, and owned the Moon River Theatre[3] in Branson, Missouri, named after the song "Moon River", with which he is closely identified.

Williams was close friends with Robert F. Kennedy and Ethel Kennedy, campaigning in 1968 for Kennedy's presidential campaign. Williams was among the celebrities who were present in Los Angeles at the Ambassador Hotel on the night Sirhan Sirhan shot and mortally wounded RFK in June 1968. Williams solemnly sang "Battle Hymn of the Republic" at RFK's funeral, by request of widow Ethel. By August 1969, over a year after Bobby Kennedy's death, Andy and Claudine named their newborn son 'Bobby' Williams. The Williams' friendship with Ethel Kennedy endured, with Williams even serving as escort to Ethel, during events in the 1970s. He also raised funds for George McGovern's 1972 presidential campaign, performing at benefit concerts.[23]

Bladder Cancer.

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Actor Tony Curtis, 85, dies in Las Vegas home









http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/actor_tony_curtis_dead_in_las_vegas_oMRiuESv9tmvMmmdklHkyM#ixzz111wYPqpa
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Curtis
Tony Curtis (June 3, 1925 — September 29, 2010) was an American film actor. He played a variety of roles, from light comedy, such as the musician on the run from gangsters in Some Like It Hot, to serious dramatic roles, such as an escaped convict in The Defiant Ones, which earned him a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor.

Bernard Schwartz
June 3, 1925(1925-06-03)
Bronx, New York, United States
His parents were Hungarian Jewish immigrants from Mátészalka, Hungary
Curtis died at his Henderson, Nevada (near Las Vegas) home on September 29, 2010, of cardiac arrest.

Born Bernard Schwartz in The Bronx, NY on June 3, 1925, Curtis was born to a Hungarian immigrant family and endured a miserable childhood that would affect future relationships with both his wives and his own children. His mother was schizophrenic and frequently beat him and his brothers Julius and Robert (who was later diagnosed with the same disease). Sadly, at the age of eight, Curtis was placed in an orphanage because of his parents’ extreme poverty, and later, after his brother Julius was killed in a traffic accident in 1938, Curtis was sent to identify the body. He finally got a whiff of a better life when he landed his first acting role (as a girl) in a neighborhood play about King Arthur’s adventures. After serving in the Navy during World War II – where he witnessed the surrender of Japan in Tokyo Bay in 1945 – Curtis returned to civilian life and studied acting at New York’s Dramatic Workshop, while practicing his craft in the “Borscht Belt” circuit in the Catskills. He was discovered by casting director and talent agent Joyce Selznick (the niece of famed “Gone with the Wind” producer David O. Selznick), and headed for Hollywood in 1948. Billed initially as James Curtis and later as Anthony Curtis, he was signed to a contract with Universal and began appearing in bit and supporting roles in a string of largely forgettable dramas and genre pictures – save for the Western classic “Winchester ’73” (1950) – which capitalized on his darkly handsome features.
In 1951, he married Janet Leigh, an attractive starlet on the rise, and their overpoweringly photogenic qualities made them popular news items in the Hollywood gossip magazines. With Leigh, Curtis scored his first success as a leading man in “Houdini” (1953), a fictionalized biopic of the famed magician; he also became a father to two daughters, Kelly Curtis (born 1956) and Jamie Lee Curtis (born 1958), both of whom would go on to enjoy acting careers of their own. Though Curtis and Leigh appeared the idyllic picture of an attractive married couple, the gossip columns frequently whispered about or hinted at the true nature of his sexuality – actually a moment when a star truly knows they’ve arrived.