Dynasty star Kate O’Mara dies

Dynasty star Kate O’Mara dies

Dynasty star Kate O’Mara dies Aged 74

خليجيةSky News – 12 minutes ago


Former Dynasty star Kate O’Mara has died at a Sussex nursing home at the age of 74 after a short illness.
She was best known for playing Alexis Colby’s scheming sister Cassandra "Caress" Morrell in the soap in the mid-80s, but also had roles in Doctor Who, Howards’ Way and Triangle.
Her agent Phil Belfield said: "She was extraordinary, she had so much energy and vitality with a love for theatre and acting."
"A shining star has gone out and Kate will be dearly missed by all who knew and have worked with her."
Doctor Who actor Colin Baker tweeted: "Oh my goodness. Kate O’Mara is no longer with us. Sad sad news. A delightful, committed and talented lady and actress. We are the poorer."
During the 70s she played a number of television roles in series including The Return of the Saint, and The Brothers. She also had a recurring role in the prison drama series Bad Girls.
O’Mara was also loved for her role in the 90s comedy series Absolutely Fabulous where she played the sister of Patsy, the character played by Joanna Lumley.
She had been married and divorced three times – once to fellow Doctor Who actor Jeremy Young – and she was a strong advocate of animal welfare issues.
During her acting career she also wrote two autobiographies; Vamp Until Ready and Game Plan: A Woman’s Survival Kit.
She also wrote two fictional novels When She Was Bad and Good Time Girl.

https://uk.news.yahoo.com/dynasty-st…5#RWB53BZ

I saw her in a department store once. She was loud and theatrical but tiny.

Don Featherstone, creator of pink plastic lawn flamingo dies age 79

Don Featherstone, creator of pink plastic lawn flamingo dies age 79

Creator of pink plastic lawn flamingo, the ultimate piece of American suburban kitsch, dies age 79

  • Don Featherstone was a classically trained painter, a talented sculptor and artist who became famous for creating the pink plastic lawn flamingo
  • He died at an elder care facility in Fitchburg, Massachusetts, after a long battle with Lewy **** dementia, his wife of 40 years Nancy said
  • Featherstone studied art at the Worcester Art Museum and created the ornamental flamingo in 1957 for plastics company Union Products Inc.
  • He modeled it after photos of the birds he saw in National Geographic
  • Featherstone is survived by two children, four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren

Don Featherstone was a classically trained painter, a talented sculptor and artist who became famous for creating the pink plastic lawn flamingo — the ultimate piece of American suburban kitsch.
And it didn’t bother him a bit.
Featherstone, who died Monday at 79, embraced the fame the invention brought him.
He died at an elder care facility in Fitchburg, Massachusetts, after a long battle with Lewy **** dementia, his wife of 40 years, Nancy, told The Associated Press on Tuesday.
خليجية
Creator: In this Thursday, June 25, 1998 photo, Don Featherstone, creator of the original plastic pink flamingo, sits surrounded by many of the plastic creatures at Union Products, Inc. in Leominster, Massachusetts

خليجية
Couple: Featherstone (seen with his wife Nancy in September 2024) died at an elder care facility in Fitchburg, Massachusetts, after a long battle with Lewy **** dementia, Nancy has said

‘He was the nicest guy in the world,’ Nancy Featherstone said. ‘He didn’t have a selfish bone in his ****. He was funny and had a wonderful sense of humor and he made me so happy for 40 years.’
Featherstone, who studied art at the Worcester Art Museum, created the ornamental flamingo in 1957 for plastics company Union Products Inc., of Leominster, modeling it after photos of the birds he saw in National Geographic.
Featherstone worked at Union for 43 years, inventing hundreds of products in that time and rising to the position of president before his retirement in 1999.
‘People say they’re tacky, but all great art began as tacky,’ Featherstone said in a 1997 interview.
He was forever humble about the flamingo, and in fact, his wife often brought it up in conversations with people they would meet, bringing a sheepish smile from her husband, she said.
The flamingo even made an appearance on the silver screen. A pink flamingo, dubbed Featherstone of course, was a major character in the 2024 animated movie ‘Gnomeo & Juliet.’
خليجية
Decoration: Featherstone created the ornamental flamingo in 1957 for plastics company Union Products Inc., of Leominster, modeling it after photos of the birds he saw in National Geographic (October 2024 photo)

خليجية
Surrounded: Featherstone (seen in June 2001) was a classically trained painter, a talented sculptor and artist who became famous for creating the pink plastic lawn flamingo

‘The thing that thrilled him the most was that movie,’ Nancy Featherstone said.
‘Humble’ is how Marc Abrahams, editor the Annals of Improbable Research magazine, remembers Featherstone.
The magazine hands out an annual spoof on the Nobel Prizes known as the Ig Nobels. Abrahams became good friends with Featherstone after he won the Ig Nobel for art in 1996.
Featherstone kept his real artistic talent under wraps to everyone except those closest to him, Abrahams said.
‘He decided it would destroy the illusion and pleasure for people who knew him for the flamingo, so he only let those very close to him see his work,’ he said.

خليجية
Film star: The flamingo even made an appearance on the silver screen. A pink flamingo, dubbed Featherstone of course, was a major character in the 2024 animated movie ‘Gnomeo & Juliet’

The flamingo almost met its demise in 2024, when Union went out of business. But the company was eventually bought by Cado Products Inc., which to this day proudly manufactures the ornaments in Fitchburg, retailing for about $14.99 a pair.
‘We still sell thousands of them a year,’ said Bruce Zarozny, president of Cado, noting that the company’s packaging refers to them as ‘The original Featherstone pink flamingo.’
He’s not sure how many have been sold over the years, but it’s in the millions.
‘They say there are more plastic Featherstone flamingos in the world than real flamingos,’ he said.
In addition to his wife, Featherstone is survived by two children, four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
A wake is scheduled for Friday with a funeral Mass scheduled for Saturday at St. Joseph Church in Fitchburg.

Creator of kitsch pink plastic lawn flamingo Don Featherstone dies age 79 | Daily Mail Online

Actor Matthew Cowles Dies

Actor Matthew Cowles Dies

Matthew Cowles passed away at home Thursday. He was 69.
Cowles played All My Children villain Billy Clyde Tuggle when the show aired on ABC, and he reprised the role for its online reboot. The two-time Daytime Emmy nominee is survived by his wife of 30 years, Christine Baranski, and their daughters, Isabel and Lily. Former All My Children writer Jean Passanante tweeted her condolences Sunday, calling Cowles "a sweet man and a uniquely talented actor."
The late actor’s manager, Tsu Tsu Stanton, confirmed his death via Twitter Friday. "He was a very gifted and kind man who loved life and everyone," she said of Cowles, a born-and-raised New Yorker.
Cady McClain, Cowles’ former All My Children co-star, called his passing "so sad" on Twitter. The soap opera actress told her followers, "What a lovely man… I adored working with him last year. So kind."
PHOTOS: TV’s greatest villains
Cowles was born on Sept. 28, 1944, and his career spanned both the stage and screen. His Broadway roles include Malcolm (1966), The Time of Your Life (1969) and Sweet Bird of Youth (1975). His movie credits include Slap Shot (1977), Stars and Bars (1988), The Juror (1996), American Loser (2007), Shutter Island (2010), and many more. His most recent short film, Family on Board (2014), is currently in post-production. His televisions credits include The Bold and Beautiful, Oz, Life on Mars and more.
He also wrote three plays: Mexican Standoff at Fat Squaw Springs, Our Daily Bread and Noblesse Oblige.

RIP Billy Clyde Tuggle! I had no idea he was married to Christine Baranski.

Hollywood star Shirley Temple dies

Hollywood star Shirley Temple dies

11 February 2024 Last updated at 05:31 ET Obituary: Shirley Temple

خليجية Shirley Temple later rued aspects of her childhood.
Shirley Temple, who has died aged 85, was that rare example of a Hollywood child star who, when the cameras stopped rolling, carved out a new career.
With her ringlets, dimples and precocious talent, America’s "Little Princess", charmed audiences during the 1930’s Depression
For four years, she was Hollywood’s biggest box-office star representing the kind of sweet, innocent girl everyone wanted as their daughter.
And after a period of domesticity she re-emerged as a successful businesswoman and politician.
Shirley Temple was born in Santa Monica, California on 23 April 1928.
Encouraged by her mother she learned to dance while she was still a toddler and was enrolled in a Los Angeles dance school when she was just three.
Merchandising This led to her being signed up by a talent spotter for Educational Pictures which promptly featured her in a series of one-reelers entitled Baby Burlesques.
Temple later described them as "a cynical exploitation of our childish innocence that occasionally were racist or sexist".
When Educational went bust in 1933 she signed up with Fox Film Corporation, first appearing in a number of bit parts
خليجية Wee Willie Winkie was her favourite film
In 1934 Stand Up and Cheer, became her first feature film and she stole the show with her rendition of Baby Take a Bow.
Her box office potential was obvious and at the age of six she was earning $1,250 a week; more than $21,000 at today’s values.
Her income from her films was doubled by sales of merchandise including Shirley Temple dolls and a host of girls clothes and accessories.
Continue reading the main story “Start Quote

I class myself with Rin Tin Tin”
Shirley Temple
Across the world, audiences flocked to see her in films such as Little Miss Marker, The Little Colonel and The Littlest Rebel.
Career peak Everyone sang along to her songs, especially On the Good Ship Lollipop, which appeared in the film Bright Eyes.
In 1935 she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar and her foot and hand prints were added to those of stars such as Jean Harlow and Mary Pickford outside Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood.
By the age of 10, Temple was the country’s top box office draw. President Roosevelt even credited her with helping to raise American morale during the trials of the Great Depression.
Her own assessment of this period is somewhat different. "I class myself with Rin Tin Tin," she once said, referring to the canine star. "They fell in love with a dog and a little girl."
Goodness always triumphed over evil in her plots which were often ****d on traditional fairy stories.
As she got older her character was altered slightly as the fresh faced little six year old turned into a pre-adolescent.
خليجية The Little Princess marked the peak of her career
The studio, aware that time was not on their side, began to invest more money in her films which, certainly in the early days, had been made on a tight budget.
Directors of the stature of John Ford were hired and his collaboration with her, Wee Willie Winkie, remained Temple’s favourite.
The peak of her film career came in 1939 when The Little Princess, her first outing in Technicolor, became a critical and box office success.
Continue reading the main story “Start Quote

I stopped believing in Santa Claus when I was six”
Shirley Temple
Marriage Not everyone was enamoured. The author Graham Greene said she was just too nubile for a nine year old.
In a magazine article he accused "middle aged men and clergymen" of finding it acceptable to respond to her "desirable little ****" because "the safety curtain of story and dialogue drops between their intelligence and desire."
The studio and Temple successfully sued for libel.
خليجية By the 1950s she’d retired to a domestic life
Fox turned down a huge offer from MGM for her to play Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz, the role went to Judy Garland, and instead cast her in Susannah of the Mounties.
The film did not go down well with audiences and neither did her two follow ups in 1940.
At the age of 12 Temple’s star had finally burnt out: her parents bought out the remainder of her contract and sent her to an exclusive girl’s school.
An attempted comeback with MGM in 1941 came to nothing. She made two films for David O Selznick during World War Two but he was not interested in seeing her develop.
She had become typecast as the sweet six-year-old and Selznick suggested she move abroad, change her **** and develop her acting skills.
In 1945 she married John Agar an army physical training instructor and had a daughter but the union lasted only four years.
Although Temple appeared from time to time on television, she retired from films in 1950.
Continue reading the main story “Start Quote

Some people are stuck on this image of the little girl. She is not me”
Shirley Temple
Charles Black, a wealthy San Francisco businessman, became her second husband, and she disappeared from the limelight for nearly 20 years.
When she returned to the public eye in 1967, it was as Shirley Temple Black, Republican candidate for Congress.
Ambassador Following her defeat in this election, Temple Black continued to work for the party, even travelling to Europe the following year to rally support for Richard Nixon.
In 1972 she was diagnosed with breast cancer and became one of the first high profile women to talk openly about the disease.
خليجية She emerged on the political stage as a supporter of Richard Nixon
When he became president, Nixon rewarded her with an appointment to the American delegation to the United Nations. Then, in 1974, President Ford appointed her the United States Ambassador to Ghana.
She fell out of favour with Ronald Reagan, with whom she had once appeared in a film called, That Hagen Girl, but his successor, George Bush Snr, appointed her Ambassador to Czechoslovakia.
An outspoken opponent of racial discrimination, she quickly gained popularity and a reputation for hard work, charm and an unorthodox way of working.
In July 1976, she became the first woman Chief of Protocol at the White House with the rank of Ambassador, but left office six months later, when Jimmy Carter became president.
The veteran of some 43 films later rued some lost aspects of her childhood.
"I stopped believing in Santa Claus at the age of six when my mother took me to see him in a store and he asked for my autograph."
And she drew a line between her childhood stardom and her later political career.
"Some people are stuck on this image of the little girl," she once said. "She is not me. We shouldn’t live in the past; my life is now."
Nevertheless, for many across the world, the **** Shirley Temple always called to mind a superstar cherub, banging out a tune, bouncing her curls, toe-tapping her tiny feet and representing all that was happiest about childhood.

BBC News – Obituary: Shirley Temple

Nicole Kidman’s father dies after fall

Nicole Kidman’s father dies after fall

خليجية

Nicole Kidman’s father, a well-known clinical psychologist at the University of Technology in Sydney, died Friday.

Dr. Antony Kidman was visiting Nicole’s sister, Antonia and his grandchildren, in Singapore where he reportedly fell after breakfast in his hotel room, reports The Daily Mail.

Police said they are investigating the “unnatural” death,” which is often referred to falls and accidents in the Asian nation. No other details about his sudden passing are available.

“It is with great sadness that we learn of Dr. Tony Kidman’s sudden passing,” said Vice Chancellor Professor Attila Brungs. “During his 43 years at the University of Technology, Sydney, Tony has contributed greatly—as a colleague, as a researcher, and as a health practitioner. Tony will be missed by all at UTS. Our thoughts are with his family at this time.”

Nicole’s publicist and family friend, Wendy Day, told the site, “The family is in shock and is grieving … I think that some time and privacy is needed to deal with this shock and tragedy.”

Nicole Kidman’s father dies after fall | Page Six

Actor Ben Powers (Keith from "Good Times") Dies at 64

Actor Ben Powers (Keith from "Good Times") Dies at 64

Ben Powers, ‘Good Times’ actor, Dies at 64

BY Zayda Rivera

خليجيةCourtesy Everett CollectionBen Powers, picuted here with "Good Times" co-star BerNadette Stanis. Powers died earlier in April.

خليجيةCBS Photo Archive/Getty ImagesThe cast of the television show "Good Times" in 1978, from left: Ralph Carter, Janet Jackson, Esther Rolle, BernNadette Stanis, Ben Powers, Ja’net DuBois and Jimmie Walker.

https://www.nydailynews.com/entertain…icle-1.2190760

Courtesy Everett CollectionBen Powers, picuted here with "Good Times" co-star BerNadette Stanis. Powers died earlier in April.

Alton (Ben) Powers’ good times will never be forgotten.
The Actor best known for his role as Keith Anderson on the ’70s sitcom "Good Times" died on April 6 in New Bedford, Mass., according to a local funeral home. He was 64.
Powers’ character on the hit comedy was the football player husband of Thelma Evans, played by BerNadette Stanis. The TV couple were married during the sixth and final season of the show.
"My condolences goes out to the family of Ben Powers who past a few days ago," Stanis wrote Thursday on Facebook. "He was a great Actor and great friend who is gone too soon. He will be missed by many. Until next lifetime my friend."

Ellen Albertini Dow ‘Wedding Singer’ Rapping Granny Dies at 101

Ellen Albertini Dow ‘Wedding Singer’ Rapping Granny Dies at 101

Ellen Albertini Dow Dies — ‘Wedding Singer’ Rapping Granny Dead at 101 | TMZ.com

Ellen Albertini Dow

‘Wedding Singer’ Rapping Granny

Dies at 101


خليجية
Ellen Albertini Dow — who famously performed "Rapper’s Delight" in the Adam Sandler movie "The Wedding Singer" passed away Monday. She was 101.

Dow’s longtime agent confirmed her passing to Deadline.

She most recently appeared on "Family Guy" … and "New Girl" in 2024 — when she was 99! Ellen’s other famous TV roles were on "Seinfeld," "My Name Is Earl," "Scrubs," "Six Feet Under" and "The Golden Girls."

She also played Grandma Cleary in "Wedding Crashers" and was Tom Green’s grandmother in "Road Trip."

Her version of "Rapper’s Delight" was on the "The Wedding Singer" soundtrack, and even made Billboard’s top 5.

Renowned Spanish flamenco guitarist Paco de Lucia dies at 66

Renowned Spanish flamenco guitarist Paco de Lucia dies at 66

He was a simply amazing musician.

Renowned Spanish flamenco guitarist Paco de Lucia dies at 66 | Reuters

Renowned Spanish flamenco guitarist Paco de Lucia dies at 66

خليجية

(Reuters) – Paco de Lucia, the influential Spanish guitarist who vastly expanded the international audience for flamenco and merged it with other musical styles, died suddenly on Wednesday of a heart attack in Mexico.

The 66-year-old virtuoso, as happy playing seemingly impossible syncopated flamenco rhythms as he was improvising jazz or classical guitar, helped to legitimize flamenco in Spain itself at a time when it was shunned by the mainstream.


"I learned the guitar like a child learns to speak," the guitarist said in a 2024 ********ary.


Born Francisco Sanchez Gomez, he became famous in the 1970s after recording bestselling album "Entre Dos Aguas", becoming the first flamenco musician to perform at Madrid’s opera house Teatro Real in 1975.


Paco’s albums such as "El Duende flamenco de Paco de Lucia" and "Almoraima" reinvented traditional flamenco.


He toured extensively with well known international artists and played with the likes of Carlos Santana and Al Di Meola, happy to expand flamenco rhythms into jazz, although that upset flamenco purists.


"It has been said, and rightly so, that Paco de Lucia has never been surpassed by anyone and guitar playing today would not be understood without his revolutionary figure," Spain’s arts association SGAE said in a statement.


De Lucia went on to record flamenco jazz fusion with Di Meola and John McLaughlin in a series of now legendary concerts, and also recorded with Chick Corea.


He was highly acclaimed after playing Joaquin de Rodrigo’s "Concierto de Aranjuez" at London’s Festival Hall in 1991, attended by the composer himself, and considered one of the best interpretations of the piece.


De Lucia memorised the piece by ear as he did not read music, and gave it a distinctive flamenco flavor.


"With the guitar I’ve suffered a great deal, but when I’ve had a good time, the suffering seemed worthwhile," he said in the ********ary.


He also formed a partnership in the 1970s with singer Camaron de la Isla which played a large part in creating the New flamenco movement.


A spokesman for the city hall in Algeciras, where de Lucia was born, confirmed his death and said the city had decreed two days of official mourning.

Hot Chocolate singer Errol Brown dies at age 71

Hot Chocolate singer Errol Brown dies at age 71

Hot Chocolate singer Errol Brown dies at age 71 | EW.com

خليجية

Singer and Hot Chocolate frontman Errol Brown has died at age 71,according to the BBC. The Jamaica-born Brown was a cofounder of the U.K.-based soul-pop act, which formed in 1969 and enjoyed an extraordinary run of success in Britain during the ’70s and ’80s. The band’s hits included “It Started with a Kiss” and “You Sexy Thing,” which featured heavily in the 1997 comedy The Full Monty.

According to a statement released Wednesday by Brown’s manager, the singer passed away this morning in the Bahamas as a result of liver cancer. Chic guitarist and producer Nile Rodgers has paid tribute to the vocalist on Twitter, writing, “We had some good times back in the day. #ErrolBrown RIP.”

Mantecore, the White Tiger That Mauled Roy in 2024, Dies at 17

Mantecore, the White Tiger That Mauled Roy in 2003, Dies at 17

Roy Mourns ‘Majestic’ Tiger That Nearly Mauled Him to Death

Done

View photo
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خليجيةSiegfried & Roy with Mantecore (Everett Digital)

Las Vegas is mourning the loss of one of its most famous stars: Mantecore, the White Tiger That performed alongside magic heavyweights Siegfried & Roy, has died. The 17-year-old animal passed away on March 19 after a brief illness.Mantecore appeared in literally thousands of shows during the magicians’ run at The Mirage, but will also undoubtedly be remembered for mauling Roy Horn on stage just over a decade ago. The attack had occurred on the entertainer’s 59th birthday and landed him in critical care in the hospital.
Roy ultimately survived, though he was left partially paralyzed, and the Tiger was quarantined for 10 days while professionals tried (unsuccessfully) to determine what caused his violent behavior. Not surprisingly, the flamboyant duo was forced to close their record-breaking show following the frightening incident, effectively ending their famed careers.
After the show ended and Mantecore was medically cleared, he was returned to The Mirage’s Secret Garden of Siegfried & Roy attraction, where he remained.
Still, the 79-year-old Las Vegas vet has never blamed the 380-pound animal for what happened. And while no one ever figured out what set Mantecore off, Roy thinks he knows.
"The world has lost one of its most majestic creatures and I have lost a brother," he said in a statement following Mantecore’s passing. "I will forever believe it was his concern for my safety and well-being That caused him to act as he did on That night long ago. We spent many hours together and he never failed to bring me great joy and wonderment. It was my great honor to be beside him at the end. He is now playing with his siblings in White Tiger heaven."
"His contribution to the avalanche of awareness for conservation and preservation has made him unforgettable," Roy mused. "His spirit will live forever with Siegfried & Roy and his multitude of fans."

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