In 2024, we've experienced the loss of several luminaries in the world of entertainment. These beloved figures—actors, comedians, musicians, singers, and coaches—have touched our lives with their talent, passion, and dedication. They've left an indelible mark on our hearts and shaped the world of entertainment in ways that will continue to inspire and influence generations to come.
Among the incredible actors who bid farewell this year, we mourn the loss of a true chameleon who effortlessly.
LEXINGTON, Va. (AP) - Mike Seeger, who helped revive traditional American folk music, has died at age 75.
Seeger's wife, Alexia Smith, said Monday that Seeger died of cancer Friday night at their home in Lexington, Va.
Seeger was born in New York City and raised near Washington, D.C., in a musical family. Two of his siblings became key figures in the folk music revival of the 1950s and 1960s: his half brother, Pete, and sister Peggy.
Mike Seeger associated with traditional musicians such as Maybelle Carter and Dock Boggs.
He sang and played a number of instruments, including banjo, fiddle and guitar, and helped form the traditional music group The New Lost City Ramblers in 1958. He recorded more than 40 albums solo and with others, and received six Grammy Award nominations.
ROME (AP) — Riccardo Cassin, a mountaineering pioneer credited with 100 first ascents from the Himalayas to Alaska, is dead at the age of 100.
Cassin died Aug. 6 at his home in Piani Resinelli, a hamlet north of Milan at the foot of the Alps, his climbing equipment company said. The cause of death was not announced.
"He has left us a wealth of values, dreams and climbs that will continue to guide us," said a statement from the company, Cassin Srl. "His rope is still tied to us and continues to drive us."
Italian media remembered Cassin as a man who helped to transform mountaineering from a romantic 19th century challenge into a highly technical sport.
He was born into poverty on Jan. 2, 1909, in the northeast village of San Vito al Tagliamento. His father died in a Canadian mining accident when Riccardo was still a toddler.
As a young man, Cassin began work as a blacksmith in the town of Lecco on Lake Como. Sunday outings with friends in the nearby mountains sparked his love for climbing over a six-decade career. He and his companions were known as the Ragni di Lecco, "the Spiders of Lecco." They went on to pioneer daring routes that are still used today to climb some of the world's most treacherous peaks.
The most memorable of Cassin's first ascents included the 1961 climb up the previously "unclimbable" southern ridge of Alaska's Mt. McKinley, the highest peak of North America at 20,320 feet (6,194 meters).
Cassin and his five companions received a congratulatory telegram from U.S. President John F. Kennedy after they conquered McKinley at the cost of severe frostbite. The most daunting McKinley ridge is named after Cassin today.
Cassin continued to climb until the late 1980s, totaling around 2,500 ascents.
Lester William Polfuss, known as Les Paul died he was 94. Paul was an American jazz guitarist and inventor. He was a pioneer in the development of the solid-body electric guitar which "made the sound of rock and roll possible."[2] His many recording innovations included overdubbing, delay effects such as "sound on sound" and tape delay, phasing effects, and multitrack recording. He is often credited as being the 'father of modern music'.
He was born in Waukesha, Wisconsin to George and Evelyn Polsfuss.[3] The family name was first simplified by his mother to Polfuss before he took his stage name of Les Paul. He also used the nickname"Red Hot Red".
Paul first became interested in music at the age of eight, when he began playing the harmonica. After an attempt at learning to play the banjo, he began to play the guitar. By 13, Paul was performing semi-professionally as a country-music guitarist. At the age of 17, Paul played with Rube Tronson's Texas Cowboys, and soon after he dropped out of high school to join Wolverton's Radio Band in St. Louis, Missouri on KMOX.
In the 1930s, Paul worked in Chicago in radio, where he performed jazz music. Paul's first two records were released in 1936. One was credited to Rhubarb Red, Paul's hillbilly alter ego, and the other was as an accompanist for blues artist Georgia White.
In January 1948, Paul was injured in a near-fatal automobile accident in Oklahoma, which shattered his right arm and elbow. Doctors told Paul that there was no way for them to rebuild his elbow in a way that would let him regain movement, and that his arm would remain in whatever position they placed it in permanently. Paul then instructed the surgeons to set his arm at an angle that would allow him to cradle and pick the guitar. It took him a year and a half to recover.
Paul was dissatisfied with the acoustic guitars that were sold in the mid 1930s and began experimenting with a few designs for an electric model on his own. Famously, he created "The Log," which was nothing more than a length of common 4" x 4" lumber with bridge, guitar neck, and pickup attached. For the sake of appearance, he attached the body of an Epiphone hollow-body guitar, sawn lengthwise with The Log in the middle. This solved his two main problems: feedback, as the acoustic body no longer resonated with the amplified sound, and sustain, as the energy of the strings was not dissipated in generating sound through the guitar body.
In 1938, Paul moved to New York as part of a trio that included Jim Atkins (older half-brother of guitarist Chet Atkins) and bassist/percussionist Ernie Newton. They landed a featured spot with Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians radio show. Paul moved to Hollywood in 1943, where he formed a new trio. As a last-minute replacement for Oscar Moore, Paul played with Nat King Cole and other artists in the inaugural Jazz at the Philharmonic concert in Los Angeles on July 2, 1944. Also that year, Paul's trio appeared on Bing Crosby's radio show. Crosby went on to sponsor Paul's recording experiments. The two also recorded together several times, including a 1945 number one hit, "It's Been A Long, Long Time." In addition to backing Crosby and artists like The Andrews Sisters, Paul's trio also recorded a few albums of their own on the Decca label in the late 1940s.
Paul's innovative guitar, "The Log", built in 1939, was one of the first solid-body electric guitars.[4] (Leo Fender also independently created his own solid-body electric guitar around the same time and Adolph Rickenbacher had marketed a solid-body guitar in the 30s). Gibson Guitar Corporation designed a guitar incorporating Paul's suggestions in the early fifties, and presented it to him to try. He was impressed enough to sign a contract for what became the "Les Paul" model (originally only in a "gold top" version), and agreed never to be seen playing in public, or be photographed, with anything other than a Gibson guitar.
The arrangement persisted until 1961, when declining sales prompted Gibson to change the design without Paul's knowledge, creating a much thinner, lighter, and more aggressive-looking instrument with two cutaway "horns" instead of one. Paul said he first saw the "new" Gibson Les Paul in a music store window, and disliked it. Though his contract required him to pose with the guitar, he said it was not "his" instrument, and asked Gibson to remove his name from the headstock. (Others claimed that Paul ended his endorsement contract with Gibson during his divorce, to avoid having his wife to get his endorsement money.) Gibson renamed the guitar "Gibson SG" (which stands for "Solid Guitar"), and it also became one of the company's best sellers.
The original Gibson Les Paul guitar design regained popularity when Eric Clapton began playing the instrument a few years later (although he also played an SG and an ES-335). Paul resumed his relationship with Gibson, and has endorsed the original Les Paul guitar design ever since (though his personal Gibson Les Pauls are much modified by him — Paul always used his own self-wound pickups and customized switching on his guitars). To this day, various models of Gibson Les Paul guitar are used all over the world, by both novice and professional guitarists. A less expensive version of the Les Paul guitar is also manufactured for Gibson's lower-priced Epiphone brand.
In 1947, Capitol Records released a recording that had begun as an experiment in Paul's garage, entitled "Lover (When You're Near Me)", which featured Paul playing eight different parts on electric guitar, some of them recorded at half-speed, hence "double-fast" when played back at normal speed for the master. ("Brazil", similarly recorded, was the B-side.) This was the first time that multi-tracking had been used in a recording. These recordings were made not with magnetic tape, but with acetate disks. Paul would record a track onto a disk, then record himself playing another part with the first. He built the multi-track recording with overlaid tracks, rather than parallel ones as he did later. There is no record of how many "takes" were needed before he was satisfied with one layer and moved onto the next.
Paul even built his own disc-cutter assembly, based on auto parts. He favored the flywheel from a Cadillac for its weight and flatness. Even in these early days, he used the acetate disk setup to record parts at different speeds and with delay, resulting in his signature sound with echoes and birdsong-like guitar riffs. When he later began using magnetic tape, the major change was that he could take his recording rig on tour with him, even making episodes for his 15-minute radio show in his hotel room.
Les Paul and his wife Mary Ford at work recording during the late 1940s.
Electronics engineer Jack Mullin had been assigned to a US Army Signals unit stationed in France in WWII. On a mission in Germany near the end of the war, he acquired and later shipped home a German Magnetophon (tape recorder) and 50 reels of I.G. Farben plastic recording tape. Mullin rebuilt and developed the machine back in the US with the intention of selling it to the movie industry, and held a series of demonstrations which quickly became the talk of the US audio industry. Mullin's second demonstration was witnessed by Murdo MacKenzie, technical director for the Bing Crosby radio show.
Within a short time Crosby had hired Mullin to record and produce his radio shows and master his studio recordings on tape, and he invested US$50,000 in local electronics firm Ampex. With Crosby's backing Mullin and Ampex created the Ampex Model 200, the world's first commercially-produced reel-to-reel audio tape recorder. Crosby gave Les Paul the second Model 200 to be produced and Les immediately saw its potential both for special effects, like echo, and eventually its suitability for multitrack recording, of which he is considered the father. Using this machine, Paul placed an additional playback head, located before the conventional Erase-Record-Playback heads. This allowed Paul to play along with a previously recorded track, both of which were mixed together on to a new track. Keep in mind that this was a mono tape recorder - just ONE track across the entire width of quarter-inch tape - and so the recording was 'destructive' in the sense that the original recording was erased and replaced with the new recording.
One need only listen to any of the early Capitol recordings from the early 1950s to realize how great a challenge this process was. These revolutionary recordings were made with his wife, Mary Ford, who sang. The couple's hits included "How High the Moon", "Bye Bye Blues", "The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise", and "Vaya Con Dios". These songs featured Mary harmonizing with herself, giving the vocals a very novel sound.
Les Paul's need for multiple non-destructive tracks was obvious and his re-invention of the Ampex 200 inspired Ampex to develop two-track and three-track recorders. These machines were the backbone of professional recording, radio and television studios in the 1950s and early 1960s. In 1954, Paul continued to develop this technology by commissioning Ampex to build the first eight tracktape recorder, at his expense. The machine took three years to get working properly, and Paul says that by the time it was functional his music was out of favor and so he never had a hit record using it. His design became known as "Sel-Sync," (Selective Synchronization) in which a specially modified electronics could either record or playback from the Record Head, which was not optimized for playback but was acceptable for the purposes of recording an "overdub" (OD) in sync with the original recording. This is the core technology behind multi-track recording.
Like Crosby, Paul and Ford also used the now-ubiquitous recording technique known as close miking, where the microphone is less than six inches from the singer's mouth. This produces a more intimate, less reverberant sound than is heard when a singer is a foot or more from the microphone. When implemented using a cardioid-patterned microphone, it emphasizes low-frequency sounds in the voice due to a cardioid microphone's proximity effect and can give a more relaxed feel because the performer isn't working so hard. The result is a singing style which diverged strongly from un-amplified theater-style singing, as might be heard in musical comedies of the 1930s and 40s.
Paul had hosted a 15-minute radio program, The Les Paul Show, on NBC in 1950, featuring his trio (himself, Ford, and rhythm player Eddie Stapleton) and his electronics, recorded from their home and with gentle humour between Paul and Ford bridging musical selections, some of which had already been successful on records, some of which anticipated the couple's recordings, and many of which presented dazzling re-interpretations of such jazz and pop selections as "In the Mood," "Little Rock Getaway," "Brazil," and "Tiger Rag." Several recordings of these shows survive among old-time radio collectors today.
The show also appeared on television a few years later with the same format, but excluding the trio and retitled The Les Paul & Mary Ford Show (aka Les Paul & Mary Ford At Home) with "Vaya Con Dios" as a theme song. Sponsored by Warner Lambert's Listerine, it was widely syndicated during 1954-'55, and was only five minutes (one or two songs) long on film, therefore used as a brief interlude or fill-in in programming schedules. Since Les created the entire show himself, including audio and video, he has maintained the original recordings and is in the process of restoring them to up-to-date quality.[5]
During his radio shows, Paul introduced the legendary "Les Paulverizer" device, which multiplies anything fed into it, like a guitar sound or a voice. Paul has stated that the idea was to explain to the audience how his single guitar could be "multipled" into an orchestra. The device even became the subject of comedy, with Ford multiplying herself and her vacuum cleaner with it so she could finish the housework faster. Later Paul claimed to have made the myth real for his stage show, using a small box attached to his guitar which is really just a stage prop. He typically pretended to lay down one track after another on stage, in-sync, and then play over the repeating forms he had recorded.
In the late 1960s, Paul went into semi-retirement, although he did return to the studio occasionally. He and Mary Ford (born Iris Colleen Summers) had divorced in December 1964, as she could no longer countenance the itinerant lifestyle their act required of them. Paul's most recognisable recordings from then through the mid-1970s were an album for London Records, Les Paul Now (1967), on which he updated some of his earlier hits; and, backed by some of Nashville's celebrated studio musicians, a meld of jazz and country improvisation with fellow guitar virtuoso Chet Atkins, Chester and Lester (1976), for RCA Victor.
By the late 1980s, Paul had returned to active live performance. In 2006, at the age of 90, he won two Grammys at the 48th Annual Grammy Awards for his album Les Paul & Friends: American Made World Played. He also performed every Monday night, accompanied by a trio which included guitarist Lou Pallo and pianist John Colianni, at the Iridium Jazz Club on Broadway in New York City.[6][7]
On August 13th, 2009, Les Paul died of complications from pneumonia at White Plains Hospital in White Plains, NY. His family and friends were by his side. [8]
Schulberg attended Deerfield Academy and then went on to Dartmouth College, where he was actively involved in the Dartmouth Jack-O-Lantern humor magazine. In 1939 he collaborated on the screenplay for Winter Carnival, a light comedy set at Dartmouth. One of his collaborators was F. Scott Fitzgerald, who was fired because of his alcoholic binge during a visit with Schulberg to Dartmouth.[1]Dartmouth College awarded Schulberg an honorary degree in 1960.
While serving in the Navy during World War II, Schulberg was assigned to the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), working with John Ford's documentary unit. Following VE Day, he was among the first American servicemen to liberate the Nazi-run concentration camps.[2] He was involved in gathering evidence against war criminals for the Nuremberg Trials, an assignment that included arresting documentary film maker Leni Riefenstahl at her chalet in Kitzbühel, Austria, ostensibly to have her identify the faces of Nazi war criminals in German film footage captured by the Allied troops.[3]
In 1950, Schulberg published The Disenchanted, about a young screenwriter who collaborates on a screenplay about a college winter festival with a famous novelist at the nadir of his career. The novelist (who at the time was assumed by reviewers to be a thinly disguised portrait of Fitzgerald, who had died ten years earlier) is portrayed as a tragic and flawed figure, with whom the young screenwriter becomes disillusioned. The novel was the 10th bestselling novel in the United States in 1950.[citation needed] and was adapted as a Broadway play in 1958, starring Jason Robards, Jr. (who won a Tony Award for his performance) and George Grizzard as the character loosely based on Schulberg. In 1958, Schulberg wrote and co-produced (with his younger brother, Stuart) the film Wind Across the Everglades, directed by Nicholas Ray.
Schulberg encountered political controversy in 1951 when screenwriter Richard Collins, testifying to the House Un-American Activities Committee, named Schulberg as a former member of the Communist Party.[4] Schulberg testified as a friendly witness that Party members had sought to influence the content of What Makes Sammy Run and "named names" of other Hollywood communists.[5]
In the novel named “Remember Max Baer” (Aurelia Rivera Books, Buenos Aires[, 2008), author Federico G. Polak created a character who tries to extort Schulberg by threatening him with telling the world his acts of denunciation, forcing him to be an accomplice of a crime he’s about to commit, but Schulberg, after breaking into tears, refuses and keeps his dignity.
Schulberg was also a sports writer and former chief boxing correspondent for Sports Illustrated. He was inducted into the Boxing Hall of Fame in 2002 in recogniton of his contributions to the sport.[citation needed]
In 1965, after a devastating riot had ripped apart the fabric of the Watts section of Los Angeles, Schulberg formed the Watts Writers Workshop in an attempt to ease frustrations and bring artistic training to the economically impoverished district.[citation needed]
Schulberg's third marriage, to actress Geraldine Brooks, ended with her death; they had no children. He is survived by his fourth wife, the former Betsy Ann Langman, and his five children: Victoria (by first wife), Stephen and David (by second wife), Benn and Jessica (by fourth wife). His niece Sandra Schulberg was an executive producer of the Academy Award nominated film Quills, among other movies.
Budd Schulberg died in his home in Westhampton, New York, aged 95. According to his wife Betsy, Schulberg died after being rushed to hospital from his Long Island home.
John Caldwell died of cancer on July 11, 2009, he was 71 A brilliant, quick and clever boxer, known as the Cold-eyed Killer, John Caldwell was an Olympic medal-winner and held the world bantamweight title for eight months in 1961-62. Had he not then come up against the great Brazilian Eder Jofre, who was to dominate the bantamweight and featherweight divisions for the next ten years, his reign at the top of his sport might well have been longer.
The third of seven children from the Lower Falls area of Belfast, Caldwell began boxing at the age of 10, when he joined the Immaculata Club, winning a host of titles including both Ulster junior and senior titles in 1955 and 1956. At the Melbourne Olympics, in 1956, he won a bronze medal for Ireland at flyweight, losing on points in the semi-final to Mircea Dobrescu, of Romania. On his return there was a huge street party in his native Cyprus Street. “The whole street was out to cheer me,” he said. The scene would be repeated five years later when he won his world title.
Throughout his career Caldwell attended Mass every morning after running. He continued to do this when he moved to Glasgow to start his professional career under Sammy Docherty, a bookmaker and part-time promoter. There his exercise regime and strict dieting inspired Jimmy McGrory, the Celtic football club manager, to approach him for advice.
Caldwell won his first 21 professional bouts, beating Frankie Jones in three rounds to win the British flyweight title, before stepping up to bantamweight in 1961 to win the world bantamweight title at the Empire Pool, Wembley.
That night he boxed brilliantly for a runaway points victory over Alphonse Halimi, the French-Algerian champion who had beaten Freddie Gilroy, Caldwell’s room-mate in Melbourne, for the title seven months previously.
Caldwell won a rematch five months later, but then had to travel to São Paulo to face Jofre, the NBA champion, in front of a hostile 18,000 crowd. He lost in the tenth round.
A match was then set up with Gilroy, from North Belfast, for which 12,000 crammed into the King’s Hall, with some even said to have climbed on to the glass roof to see the action. Gilroy won on a ninth-round stoppage due to cuts and retired rather than give Caldwell a rematch.
Cuts would trouble Caldwell for the rest of his career, and he won just three of his remaining seven bouts. He took the British and Commonwealth bantamweight title against George Bowes, but lost against Alan Rudkin before retiring with a professional record of 29 wins, 5 losses and a draw.
Life in retirement was not particularly kind for Caldwell. The money he made in his career soon went. A trained plumber, he worked for some time as a pipefitter and as a taxi driver, living in the heart of the Troubles in West Belfast. In 1975 he emigrated to Canada to try to start a new life, but that did not work out either: “For six weeks, I wandered the streets looking for a job,” he said. “Then I got the offer of one — clearing up sewage. For the first time in my life I felt unwanted, like a leper in a strange land. I just packed up and flew home.”
He is survived by his wife and five children.
John Caldwell, world bantamweight boxing champion, 1961-62, was born on July 7, 1938.
Hughes was born in Lansing, Michigan, to a mother who volunteered in charity work and John Hughes, Sr., who worked in sales.[1] A 1968 graduate of Glenbrook North High School in Northbrook, Illinois, Hughes used Northbrook and the adjacent North Shore area for shooting locations and settings in many of his films, though he usually left the name of the town unsaid, or referred to it as "Shermer, Illinois", Shermerville being the original name of Northbrook. In high school, he met Nancy Ludwig, to whom he was married from 1970 until his death. They had two sons, John Hughes III, born in 1976, and James Hughes, born in 1979.
Hughes began his career as an advertisingcopywriter in Chicago in 1970 after dropping out of the University of Arizona.[2] During this time, he created what became the famous Edge "Credit Card Shaving Test" ad campaign.
His first attempt at comedy writing was selling jokes to well-established performers such as Rodney Dangerfield and Joan Rivers. This led him to pen a story, inspired by his family trips as a child, that was to become his calling card and entry onto the staff of the National Lampoon Magazine. That story, "Vacation '58", became the basis for the film Vacation. Subsequent stories such as the April Fool's Day classics "My Vagina" and "My Penis" gave an early indication of Hughes' ear for the particular rhythm of teen speak, as well as the various indignities of teen life in general.
His first credited screenplay, Class Reunion, was written while still on staff at the magazine. The resulting film became the second disastrous attempt by the flagship to duplicate the runaway success of Animal House. It was Hughes' next screenplay for the imprint, National Lampoon's Vacation (1983), however, that would prove to be a major hit, putting the Lampoon back on the map.
His first directorial effort, Sixteen Candles, won almost unanimous praise when it was released in 1984, due in no small part to its more realistic depiction of middle-class high school life, which stood in stark contrast to the Porky's-inspired comedies being made at the time. It was also the first in a string of efforts set in or around high school, including The Breakfast Club, Pretty in Pink, Weird Science and Ferris Bueller's Day Off (See also Brat Pack).
To avoid being pigeonholed as a maker of teen comedies, Hughes branched out in 1987, directing Planes, Trains & Automobiles starring Steve Martin and John Candy. His later output would not be so critically well received, though films like Uncle Buck (one of the first films to display the changeover in a suburban teen's choice of music from rock to rap) proved popular. Hughes's greatest commercial success came with Home Alone, a film he wrote and produced about a child accidentally left behind when his family goes away for Christmas, forcing him to protect himself and his house from a pair of inept burglars. Home Alone was the top grossing film of 1990, and remains the most successful live-action comedy of all time. His last film as a director was 1991's Curly Sue.
In 1994, Hughes retired from the public eye and moved to Wisconsin,[3] rarely granting or giving interviews or photographs to the media save a select few interviews in 1999 to promote the soundtrack album to Reach the Rock, an independent film he wrote.[4] The album was compiled by Hughes' son, John Hughes III, and released on his son's Chicago-based record label, Hefty Records.[5] He also recorded an audio commentary for the 1999 DVD release of Ferris Bueller's Day Off.[6] In the later years of his life, he was a farmer in Illinois.
Hughes died suddenly of a heart attack on August 6, 2009, while walking in Manhattan, where he was visiting his family.[7][8] In addition to his widow and two sons, Hughes is survived by four grandchildren.[9]
Eunice Shriver won widespread respect as a champion of the disabled
Eunice Kennedy Shriver, the sister of President John F Kennedy and founder of the Special Olympics, has died aged 88.
She died at Cape Cod hospital in Massachusetts on Tuesday morning, her family said in a statement.
Mrs Shriver organised the first Special Olympic Games in 1968, partly inspired by her mentally disabled sister, Rosemary Kennedy.
She is credited with helping to transform views of the mentally disabled through her campaigns.
President Barack Obama said he was saddened at the death of Mrs Shriver, calling her a "champion" for disabled people.
Mrs Shriver had been in critical condition at Cape Cod hospital since last week.
Her diagnosis was not given, but she had suffered a series of strokes in recent years.
Mrs Shriver is the mother of TV host Maria Shriver, who is married to California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Mrs Shriver's brother, Sen Edward Kennedy, is battling brain cancer that was diagnosed last year.
'Moral force'
Mrs Shriver was the fifth of nine children of Joseph P Kennedy and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy.
After earning a degree in sociology from Stanford University in 1943, she became a social worker at a women's prison before taking a job at the Chicago juvenile court.
She was the light of our lives Shriver family statement
In 1957 she took over the Joseph P Kennedy Jr Foundation for the mentally disabled.
The Special Olympics grew from a summer camp at Mrs Shriver's home in Maryland in 1962.
They were designed to give opportunities to people with mental disabilities to be considered athletes in their own right.
The first Games were held in 1968 in Chicago. Lasting two days, they attracted more than 1,000 participants from 26 US states and Canada.
Recent summer Games have drawn thousands of athletes from more than 160 countries.
Peter Collier, who wrote The Kennedys, an American Drama, described Eunice Shriver as the "moral force" of the Kennedy family.
Her family said: "She was the light of our lives... who taught us by example and with passion what it means to live a faith-driven life of love and service to others.
"We have always been honoured to share our mother with people of goodwill the world over who believe, as she did, that there is no limit to the human spirit."
Mrs Shriver is survived by her husband Sargent Shriver - who served as JFK's first director of the Peace Corps and was George McGovern's vice-presidential running mate in 1972 - and her five children.