The Rest In Peace & Remembrance Thread #2

Developer and philanthropist John Q. Hammons passes away at age 94
by KY3 News and the Associated Press jscherder@ky3.com
8:49 a.m. CDT, May 27, 2013

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — John Q. Hammons, a prominent hotel developer and southwest Missouri philanthropist who rose from a poor Depression-era childhood to build a national real estate empire, has died. He was 94.

Hammons, who actively led his company well into his 80s, died peacefully Sunday at a nursing home in Springfield, said Sheri Davidson Smith, a spokeswoman for John Q. Hammons Hotels & Resorts.

Hammons' first business — a company that sold mortar-less bricks — went bust in the late 1940s, saddling him with debt. He paid off that debt after two years and recovered to build housing subdivisions in southwest Missouri over the next decade before purchasing 10 Holiday Inn franchises with a partner in 1958 from the company's founder.

He went on to build 200 hotels nationwide, including Embassy Suites, Marriotts, Radissons and Holiday Inns. Hammons also developed an expansive real estate portfolio associated with those hotels of golf courses, restaurants, convention centers, a casino and riverboat gambling. He avoided big-city locations in favor of properties in college towns and state capitals.

Full story at KY3 News.
 
'All in the Family' star Jean Stapleton dies at 90

Jean Stapleton, who played Archie Bunker’s long-suffering wife Edith in the long-running 1970s television series “All in the Family,” died Friday at her New York City home. She was 90.


Stapleton died of natural causes, her family announced Saturday.

She had been a veteran of stage, film and television when she was cast in the CBS sitcom opposite Carroll O’Connor’s loud-mouthed, bigoted Archie Bunker, who often addressed her as "dingbat." She won three Emmys for the role.

“The benign, compassionate presence she developed made my egregious churl bearable,” O'Connor wrote of Stapleton in his 1998 autobiography. He died in 2001.

Born in New York City on Jan. 19, 1923, Stapleton was the daughter of a billboard advertising salesman and an opera singer.

In 1949, she got a break when she was cast in the national touring company of “Harvey.” Many characters later in summer stock, regional and off-Broadway plays, Stapleton starred as a wisecracking waitress in 1953 Broadway production of “In the Summer House.”

Stapleton went on to a feature role as Sister in “Damn Yankees,” singing the hit tune “You've Gotta Have Heart,” and reprised the role in the 1958 film. She also appeared in both the stage and film versions of “The Bells Are Ringing” as Sue, the proprietor of Susanswerphone Service. And she originated the role of Mrs. Strakosh in “Funny Girl,” which made a Broadway star of Barbra Streisand.

Stapleton is survived by her children, television producer Pamela Putch and film and television director John Putch.




Susan
 
James Gandolfini, The Sopranos Star Dead At 51

Terrible news for TV fans: James Gandolfini, who played mobster Tony Soprano on HBO's seminal drama "The Sopranos," died suddenly today at the age of 51.

Gandolfini was traveling in Italy on vacation when he fell ill; conflicting reports have him suffering either a heart attack or a stroke. He is survived by his wife, Deborah Lin, and an eight-month-old daughter, Liliana, as well as a son, Michael, from a previous marriage.

HBO confirmed his death in a statement: "We're all in shock and feeling immeasurable sadness at the loss of a beloved member of our family. He was a special man, a great talent, but more importantly a gentle and loving person who treated everyone no matter their title or position with equal respect. He touched so many of us over the years with his humor, his warmth, and his humility. Our hearts go out to his wife and children during this terrible time. He will be deeply missed by all of us."

Gandolfini won three Emmys and one Golden Globe for his performance as Tony Soprano on the acclaimed HBO drama — a complex, sometimes villainous role that launched the current wave of TV antiheroes. "The Sopranos" remains HBO's highest-rated series ever, with 13.4 million viewers tuning in for the Season 4 premiere in 2002.

In addition to "The Sopranos," Gandolfini appeared in dozens of movies, including memorable supporting turns in "True Romance," "Get Shorty," and last year's "Zero Dark Thirty."



Susan
 
'Family Ties' creator Gary David Goldberg dies
Jun 24, 4:17 PM (ET)
By FRAZIER MOORE


NEW YORK (AP) - Gary David Goldberg, who created the 1980s sitcom hit "Family Ties" and expanded into feature films, has died.

Goldberg died of brain cancer in Montecito, Calif., on Saturday, days before his 69th birthday, The New York Times reported.

Goldberg's TV successes also included the ABC comedy "Spin City," which in 1996 reunited him with "Family Ties" breakout star Michael J. Fox as the deputy mayor of New York City.
 
‘Waltons’ Actor Joe Conley Dies at 85

He played general store owner Ike Godsey through all nine seasons of the CBS family drama.

Joe Conley, who played general store proprietor Ike Godsey on the beloved CBS family drama The Waltons, has died, his co-star Mary Beth McDonough reported Monday on her Facebook page. He was 85.

Conley had dementia and died July 7 at a care facility in the Thousand Oaks community of Newbury Park, his wife, Louise, told the Los Angeles Times.

Conley appeared in 172 of the 212 episodes of Earl Hamner Jr.’s The Waltons -- which debuted with a December 1971 pilot and then ran for nine seasons through June 1981 -- as well as in all six of the Lorimar series’ reunion telefilms. (Woodrow Parfrey played Ike in the series’ two-hour pilot titled “The Homecoming: A Christmas Story.”)

As the owner of General Merchandise in the years following the Great Depression, Conley rode a 1927 motorcycle, did a bit of singing and suffered a heart attack in a memorable season-seven episode. His character got married to the bossy Corabeth Walton (Ronnie Claire Edwards) in the third season.

A native of Buffalo, N.Y., whose grandfather was a traveling medicine man and mother a vaudevillian, Conley broke into show business as a child radio star.

He moved west in 1945 to attend Loyola University and appeared in college plays, then served in the Korean War and was wounded. Later, while at Arizona State, he was cast in a production of The Sound of Fury and landed a small role in the Lloyd Bridges film that was released in 1950, jumpstarting his career.

Conley went on to appear on dozens of TV shows, including six episodes of Mister Ed and stints on The People’s Choice, Lassie, Make Room for Daddy, Dragnet, Wanted: Dead or Alive, Dennis the Menace, Gunsmoke and Green Acres.

His résumé also includes the films Crime of Passion (1957), Blueprint for Robbery (1961) and Cast Away (2000) and scores of TV commercials.

A successful businessman, Conley at one time owned a string of real estate offices and a restaurant in the San Fernando Valley.

In addition to Louise, his wife of 44 years, survivors include his children Kevin, Julie, Erin and Jana.



Susan
 
Cory Monteith Dead: Glee Star Dies at 31

Cory Monteith's life was cut tragically short on Saturday, July 13. The Glee star, who celebrated his 31st birthday on May 11, was found dead in a hotel room at the Fairmont Pacific Rim Hotel in Vancouver, Canada, police announced in a press conference.

According to Vancouver PD, emergency personnel arrived at the hotel shortly after noon, at which point Monteith was pronounced dead on the scene by paramedics. The coroner is investigating cause of death. Foul play is not suspected.

"We are so saddened to confirm that the reports on the death of Cory Monteith are accurate," the actor's rep said in a statement to Us Weekly shortly after news broke of the tragedy. "We are in shock and mourning this tragic loss."

Monteith had recently completed treatment for substance addiction. On March 31 of this year, he announced via his rep that he had voluntarily checked himself into rehab, buoyed by the support of his girlfriend, Lea Michele, and others. "Cory is a beloved member of the Glee family, and we fully support his decision to seek treatment," 20th Century Fox TV said in a statement at the time. "Everyone at the show wishes him well and looks forward to his return."

In recent weeks, the actor had seemed happier and healthier. After leaving rehab on Apr. 26, he tweeted his appreciation to fans. "Sending out big love to everyone," he wrote. "Thank you for the continued support! It means the world to me!"

The actor had previously opened up about his struggles with drugs and alcohol, telling Parade in 2011 that he did "anything and everything, as much as possible," after he dropped out of high school at age 16. "I had a serious problem," he admitted.

Afraid he "could die," the British Columbian star's family and friends staged an intervention when he was 19. "That's when I first when to rehab," he told Parade. "I did the stint but then went back to doing exactly what I left off doing."

He finally realized he needed to turn his life around when he was caught stealing "a significant amount of money from a family member," he said. "I was so desperate I didn't care. It was a cry for help."

Monteith was best known for playing Finn Hudson on Glee, but he also had roles in Final Destination 3 and Monte Carlo. He and Michele, 26, had been dating for more than a year.



Susan
 
'Law & Order' Star Dennis Farina Dead at 69

by Kelly Woo
Yahoo TV

Actor Dennis Farina, who pursued criminals for years as a Chicago cop and then on television's "Law & Order," died Monday at the age of 69.

Farina's representative said Farina died of a blood clot in Scottsdale, Arizona, with his longtime girlfriend, Marianne Cahill, beside him.

Farina was best known as Det. Joe Fontana on "Law & Order," and playing a police officer came naturally to him after 18 years in Chicago's force.

He started acting after serving as a police consultant to director Michael Mann, who hired him for a small part in his 1981 movie "Thief." After that, Mann brought him over to his TV show, "Miami Vice," then gave him the lead role in "Crime Story."

From there, Farina built a career out of playing characters on both sides of the law; he was often cast as a cop or mobster in movies like "Midnight Run," "Manhunter," "Get Shorty," "The Mod Squad," "Snatch," and "Out of Sight." He also played an army officer in Steven Spielberg's "Saving Private Ryan," a baseball manager in "Little Big League," and Cameron Diaz's boss in "What Happens in Vegas."

Though he was primarily seen as a dramatic actor, Farina was also heralded for his comedic work and won an American Comedy Award for "Get Shorty."

In 2004, Farina joined the cast of "Law & Order" to replace the late Jerry Orbach's Lenny Briscoe. After two years, he left the show to pursue other projects, including hosting "Unsolved Mysteries." His most recent roles were on HBO's short-lived horse-racing drama "Luck" and as Jake Johnson's father on "New Girl."

Farina is survived by his girlfriend, three children from a previous marriage, and six grandchildren.
 
From Chicago cop to celebrity, Dennis Farina never forgot what he learned in grammar school

http://www.trbimg.com/img-51ed7413/turbine/chi--dennis-farina-2005-profile-20130722-001/580/580x401
Actor Dennis Farina arrives at the Hollywood premiere of the HBO series "Luck" in Los Angeles, California on January 25, 2012. Farina, a former Chicago policeman turned tough-guy actor, died in Scottsdale, Arizona, on Monday, the actor's publicist said. (Gus Ruelas/Reuters)

By Rick Kogan
August 7, 2005

This article by Chicago Tribune's Rick Kogan was originally published on August 7, 2005.


Some people are impossible to imagine as a kid and Dennis Farina is one of them, even as he sits across a table saying, "And the teacher, the nun, would say to us, 'OK, boys, now move these boxes' or 'Put these chairs over there,' and then she would say, 'Here's your reward' and give us some candy."

He is saying this--remembering what it was like growing up and going to school here and learning lessons that he continues to carry through life-while sitting in a restaurant named Phil Stefani's 437 but which was once called Riccardo's and was the setting for the opening scene of the 1986-88 NBC television series "Crime Story."

This is important because with that opening scene, Farina's life was changed forever.

Before then he was an 18-year veteran of the Chicago Police Department, a detective moonlighting on Chicago theater stages and in small movie roles. With the series, he became a full-time actor much in demand for feature films ("Midnight Run," "Saving Private Ryan," "Get Shorty," "Snatch"), TV movies ("The Case of the Hillside Strangler," "Empire Falls") and TV series ("The In-Laws," "Buddy Faro").

He is currently one of the stars of "Law & Order," playing tough, nattily dressed Detective Joe Fontana.

"I had met ('Law & Order' creator and executive producer) Dick Wolf a long time ago when I worked on some episodes of 'Miami Vice' when he was a producer of that show," says Farina. "I wasn't so sure about signing up for 'Law & Order.' I liked the show, but another TV series? I'll tell you, though, it's been great and I had no idea how popular the show was."

In other words, walking down Chicago streets now, he is instantly recognizable and people stare, point, do double takes, shout "Hey, Dennis!" and otherwise disrupt the relative anonymity this legendarily private man used to enjoy when he returned to his hometown.

"It doesn't really bother me," he says. "Chicago's always a friendly place to me."

Farina was born on Feb. 29, 1944, a leap-year baby and the fourth son and youngest of the seven children of Joseph and Yolanda Farina. The father was a doctor, the mother a homemaker, and they raised their kids in a home at 549 W. North Ave. in an area that was then a working-class neighborhood with a broad ethnic mix predominated by Italians and Germans.

He went to school right around the corner from his home, at St. Michael's Elementary and St. Michael's Central High School. They no longer exist; the high school closed first, in 1978, the grammar school three years later. Declining enrollment and financial difficulties were cited as the reasons, and you will now find townhouses where the schools and the Farina home once stood.

"Change never bothers me, not really," Farina says. "I don't need to see the old school to remember it and the teachers there. They changed the way that I've always looked at life and learning."

His favorite was Sister Mary Arnoldine. "I had her in the 5th grade and the 7th grade," he says. "She was the first person to start giving me lessons that I still use, lessons that didn't so much come from books. She helped me out in life, taught me a lot about responsibility and reward. That was what the moving the chairs and boxes was about, I think. And we did a lot of things for charity, and learned that charity is its own reward.

Many of the priests teaching were World War II vets, and the nuns had lived through a Depression and the war. There was nothing we could say or do that could surprise them."

Was he a good student?

"I passed everything," he says, a smile breaking out beneath his mustache. "I got diplomas to prove it.”

"I wasn't a great student," he adds, "but I wasn't a bad kid or anything like that. I made some mistakes, but the mistakes I made, I made myself. I knew right from wrong and when I did wrong it was nobody's fault but my own. One of the brothers at the school was a former Golden Gloves champ, so you didn't want to mess around too much. The priests and nuns were firm but fair. But I caught it a few times from them."

He says he has no regrets about the way he grew up. "No traumas; I had a great childhood. I always got to come home for lunch, we lived so close. It was no cafeteria food for me-I was having chicken Vesuvio. And I remember that the boys and girls in high school were separated by the library. We'd always go check out books when we knew the girls were going to be in there. I played basketball, softball. It was great."

After graduating from high school, Farina decided to "get the Army out of the way" and served three years before returning to Chicago. He worked for a while at the South Water produce market until, on the advice of his older brother, a lawyer, he joined the police force and studied criminal justice at Truman Junior College.

He does not like to talk about his years on the force, primarily because during his first interviews as an actor, writers continually asked him questions such as, "Did you ever kill anybody?" (He did not.)

"I left that life a long time ago," he says. "I was a good cop, a good detective, and I've still got some good friends on the force. No, I don't offer any inside information to the 'Law & Order' writers. I'm an actor now."

He left Truman College a few hours short of his criminal justice degree. "I'm still thinking that I might go back and finish," he says. "I can only imagine how that would please my brother Joe. He was a lawyer. He's in Heaven now.”

His brother was a big influence on him, he says, as were other members of his family and his teachers.

"Not like today," he observes. "There weren't sports stars or singers or actors as role models. The models were at home and at school."

Farina is 61, and his former teachers are all "in Heaven now." But he saw some of his classmates at the recent wedding of one of his sons; he has three from a previous marriage, Michael, Joseph and Dennis Jr. "We stay in touch," he says of these old classmates. "A lot of the guys I grew up with, we get together when I'm home."

When not working, which has been most of this summer, Farina is here, splitting his time between a 25th-floor apartment on the North Side and a house in New Buffalo, Mich., in an area where he has dozens of relatives. He likes to play golf, to read and to see his family.

"Sometimes I think we're all stuck in about 1948," he says. "When I get together with my brothers and sisters, playing cards or whatever, it's always like: 'Do you remember this guy or that place?' 'Do you remember when we saw such and such a movie at the Plaza?' It's fun to come back home."

His enthusiasm for the city animates one of his latest projects, "My Kind of Town," an audio CD written by comic-actor Aaron Freeman. The CD features Farina's distinctive voice (and accent) telling such historical tales as that of Cap Streeter; exploring such timeless topics as the river, the lake and Wrigley Field.

"It was a fun thing to do," he says. "It's probably geared mostly for tourists, but anybody would like these stories. They remind us what an amazing town this is. Sometimes we forget."

He is also excited about being part of "We Celebrate: A Salute to Chicago's Finest," a benefit for the Chicago Police Memorial Foundation on Aug. 27 at McCormick Place. Hosted by comedian Tom Dreesen, it will feature Farina, some of the 1985 Bears and other Chicago stage actors who made good, including Gary Sinise, Dennis Franz, William Petersen and Joe Mantegna.

"It'll be nice to see some of those guys," Farina says. "Acting has always been a work in progress for me. I learned so much in the early days from people like Billy [Petersen] and [John] Mahoney, Dennis, Gary, Joe, so many people. I knew nothing and they took their time with me. That's the way it's been ever since. In movies I got to learn from actors like Gene Hackman."

"I'm still learning. I don't think that schooling ever ends with a degree," he says. "Maybe this is something I learned from Sister Arnoldine a long time ago, but I'll tell you, I still really believe that life is school."
----------
rkogan@tribune.com

Copyright © 2013 Chicago Tribune Company, LLC
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi--dennis-farina-2005-profile-20130722,0,4305836,full.story


Dennis Farina dead at 69

Tribune staff and wire reports
1:44 p.m. CDT, July 22, 2013


Dennis Farina, a Chicago native and police officer who turned to acting, has died at 69 in Arizona, his publicist said today.

Farina, best known as detective Joe Fontana on the long-running TV series "Law & Order," suffered a blood clot in his lung, publicist Lori De Waal said.

Farina was an 18-year veteran of the Chicago Police Department, a detective who moonlighted on Chicago theater stages and in small movie roles. In the 1980s he was on the NBC television series "Crime Story."

He became a full-time actor much in demand for feature films ("Midnight Run," "Saving Private Ryan," "Get Shorty," "Snatch"), TV movies ("The Case of the Hillside Strangler," "Empire Falls") and TV series ("The In-Laws," "Buddy Faro").

He then became one of the stars of "Law & Order," playing tough, nattily dressed Detective Joe Fontana.

Farina was born on Feb. 29, 1944, the fourth son and youngest of the seven children of Joseph and Yolanda Farina. The father was a doctor, the mother a homemaker, and they raised their kids in a home at 549 W. North Ave. in an area that was then a working-class neighborhood with a broad ethnic mix predominated by Italians and Germans.

He went to school right around the corner from his home, at St. Michael's Elementary and St. Michael's Central High School.

After graduating from high school, Farina decided to "get the Army out of the way" and served three years before returning to Chicago. He worked for a while at the South Water produce market until, on the advice of his older brother, a lawyer, he joined the police force and studied criminal justice at Truman Junior College.

The actor is survived by his three sons, six grandchildren and the love of his life of 35 years, Marianne Cahill.

Funeral services are pending.

Tribune staff reporter Rick Kogan, Reuters and the Los Angeles Times contributed to this report.
Copyright © 2013 Chicago Tribune Company, LLC


http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-dennis-farina-dead-20130722,0,4544905.story

Dennis Farina Guest Book
 
'Private Benjamin' actress Eileen Brennan dies aged 80

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - American actress Eileen Brennan, best known for her Oscar-nominated role in 1980 film "Private Benjamin," has died from bladder cancer. She was 80.

Los Angeles-born Brennan died on Sunday at her home in Burbank, a Los Angeles suburb, surrounded by her family, said Kim Vasilakis, a media representative for the actress. Brennan was suffering from bladder cancer, she said.

"Our family is so grateful for the outpouring of love and respect for Eileen," Brennan's family said in a statement. "She was funny and caring and truly one of a kind. Her strength and love will never be forgotten. She will be greatly missed by all of us."

Brennan earned a best supporting actress Oscar nomination in 1981 for her role as U.S. Army Captain Doreen Lewis in the comedy "Private Benjamin," starring alongside Goldie Hawn.

She reprised the role of Doreen in the TV adaptation of the film from 1981 to 1983, for which she won an Emmy award and a Golden Globe.

The actress also appeared in TV series such as "Murder, She Wrote," "7th Heaven" and "Will & Grace," and last appeared in 2011 comedy film "Naked Run."

Brennan is survived by two sons, Sam and Patrick, and two grandchildren.




Susan
 
'Star Trek' Stalwart Michael Ansara Dies at 91

Michael Ansara, the rugged character actor who played Klingon commander Kang on three different Star Trek TV series, has died. He was 91.

Ansara, who was married to actress Barbara Eden of I Dream of Jeannie fame, died July 31 at his home in Calabasas, Calif., after a prolonged illness, his former publicist, Michael B. Druxman, said.

Born in a small village in Syria to American parents, Ansara starred as Native Americans on two 1950s primetime series: the ABC Western Broken Arrow as Cochise and as Deputy U.S. Marshal Sam Buckhart, an Apache, on NBC's Law of the Plainsman.

Ansara is beloved by Star Trek fans as one of only seven actors to play the same character on three versions of the sci-fi series: on the original (in the 1968 episode "Day of the Dove"), on Deep Space Nine (1994's "Blood Oath") and on Voyager (1996's "Flashback"). Kang was a legendary warrior.

He also had major roles in such films as 1953's Julius Caesar and The Robe (as Judas); Jupiter’s Darling (1955); 1961's Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (he also appeared in the subsequent ABC series); The Comancheros (1961) with John Wayne; The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965); Guns of the Magnificent Seven (1969); The Bears and I (1974); The Message (1977); and It’s Alive (1974).

Ansara came to the U.S. with his American parents at the age of 2. As a teen, he and his family relocated to California, and he entered Los Angeles City College with the intention of becoming a doctor.

A stint at the Pasadena Playhouse (where fellow students included Charles Bronson, Carolyn Jones and Aaron Spelling) led to roles on stage and in films.

He was married to Eden from 1958-74. Their son, Matthew Michael Ansara, died in 2001.




Susan
 
Longtime USA Today music critic Steve Jones dies
Aug 2, 9:42 PM (ET)

HERNDON, Va. (AP) - USA Today reports that its longtime music critic, Steve Jones, who impressed people with his mental warehouse of music history and his unflappable cool, has died. He was 57.

Jones, whose career spanned nearly 28 years at the paper, died at his Herndon, Va., home Friday morning after a long illness.

The newspaper says he introduced readers to a variety of artists and trends, shedding light on the cultural and artistic significance.

Executive editor Susan Weiss says: "Steve had it all - talent, integrity, intelligence and a huge heart."

Jones joined the paper in 1985. He interviewed legends such as Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles and James Brown, as well as contemporary superstars like Jay Z, Kanye West and Alicia Keys.

Jones graduated from Howard University in Washington, D.C., in 1978 with a journalism degree.

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Michael Ansara passed away at the age of 91

StarTrek.com is saddened to report that veteran character actor and iconic Star Trek guest star Michael Ansara passed away on July 31 at the age of 91 following a long illness.

Ansara had a remarkably long and prolific career that spanned from 1944 to 2001 and included Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Broken Arrow (on which he starred as Cochise), The Fugitive, Gunsmoke, I Dream of Jeannie, It's Alive, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, Fantasy Island, Murder, She Wrote, Babylon 5 and such late-career animated projects as Batman, SubZero, Batman Beyond and his final credit, 2001's Batman: Vengeance; he voiced Dr. Victor Fries/Mr. Freeze in all of those Batman iterations.

Star Trek fans, of course, embraced Ansara for his performance as the Klingon commander, Kang, in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Day of the Dove." Later, when Star Trek exploded into a cultural phenomenon, Ansara became a favorite at conventions and on cruises. Decades passed and, in 1994, Ansara made a triumphant return to televised Trek, reprising his role as Kang in the Deep Space Nine hour "Blood Oath." Ansara played Kang yet again in the 1996 Voyager episode "Flashback" and portrayed an entirely different character, Lwaxana Troi's Tavnian spouse, Jeyal, in the 1996 Deep Space Nine episode "The Muse."

Ansara was predeceased in 2001 by Matthew, his son with second wife, I Dream of Jeannie actress Barbara Eden. He is survived by wife, Beverly Kushida. StarTrek.com sends our condolences to Ansara's family, friends, colleagues and many fans.
 
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