/ Stars that died in 2023

Monday, July 4, 2011

Martha Rommelaere, Canadian baseball player (All-American Girls Professional Baseball League) died he was , 88..


Martha Rommelaere [Manning] was a Canadian outfielder who played in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League during the 1950 season. Listed at 5' 4", 120 lb., she batted and threw right handed died he was , 88...


(August 30, 1922 – May 28, 2011)

Born in Deloraine, Manitoba, Martha Rommelaere was one of the 57 players born in Canada to join the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League in its twelve years history. But unfortunately, her career in the circuit was cut short due to a severe back injury.[3]
Rommelaere grew up on a farm near LaFleche, and moved to Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan at seventeen. She began to play sandlot ball with the boys of her neighborhood when she was a little girl, and became a track and field star in high school who could outrun any girl in Saskatchewan. I could run like a deer, she explained in an interview.[4]
At age 22, Rommelaere joined the Moose Jaw Royals softball team. She was missed by scouts of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League during her first years in softball. Then she gained the Most Valuable Player award while playing for the Edmonton team, where she won a trip to South Bend, Indiana to try out for the league.[5]
Rommelaere entered the league in 1950, playing for the Chicago Colleens and Springfield Sallies traveling teams before being promoted to the Kenosha Comets halfway through the season. Basically an infielder in Canada, she was converted to the outfield because of her flashy speed.[4]
She hurt her back while playing and had problem with it during her AAGPBL career. It was the sitting on the bus that killed me, she said. At the end of the season, she married John Manning and decided to quit baseball because of her back ailment, which required five surgeries to correct the problem. The couple raised three children, and she worked as a dressmaker until her retirement in 1983.[4]
In 1998, Martha gained honorary induction into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame. In addition, she received a Certificate of Merit from the Government of Canada for her contribution to sports and fitness. She is also part of the AAGPBL permanent display at the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum at Cooperstown, New York, opened in 1988, which is dedicated to the entire league rather than any individual personality.[5]
Martha was a longtime resident of Regina, Saskatchewan, where she died at the age of 88.[5]
Batting statistics
30
80
7
15
0
0
0
7
8
10
12
.188
.278

 

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Janet Brown, British actress and impersonator, died after a short illness he was , 87.

 Janet Brown was a Scottish actress, comedienne, and impressionist who gained considerable fame in the 1970s and 1980s for her impersonations of Margaret Thatcher died after a short illness he was , 87.

(14 December 1923 – 27 May 2011)

Early life

Janet McLuckie Brown was born in Rutherglen, Lanarkshire, and educated at Rutherglen Academy.

Career

Early in her performing career, she presented Picture Book on BBC Television in the 1950s. Beginning with Margaret Thatcher's election as the leader of the Conservative Party in 1975, Brown gained increasing prominence because of her realistic impression of the Tory politician. She performed as Thatcher on BBC TV's Mike Yarwood Show, on BBC Radio's The News Huddlines, and on film in the 1981 James Bond film For Your Eyes Only. In 1979, Brown starred as Thatcher on the comedy album Iron Lady: The Coming Of The Leader (see [1] and [2]), written by Private Eye satirist John Wells and produced by Secret Policeman's Ball series co-creator/producer Martin Lewis and Not the Nine O'Clock News series co-creator/producer John Lloyd.[2]

During the 1970s and 1980s, she was occasionally confused by some with fellow actress and comedienne Faith Brown because they had the same surname and were both best remembered for their Margaret Thatcher impersonations. In 1990, she recorded a spoken word sequence in her Margaret Thatcher voice for Mike Oldfield's album Amarok.
Still acting in her 80s, Janet Brown's last role was Old Lady Squeamish on the London West End stage in a production of William Wycherley's The Country Wife at the Theatre Royal Haymarket from September 2007.
She entitled her 1986 autobiography "Prime mimicker". [3]

Personal life

Brown was married to Carry On actor Peter Butterworth from 1947[1] until his death in 1979.[4] They had two children, a son, actor Tyler Butterworth,[4] and a daughter Emma, who died in 1996 aged 34. Janet Brown never remarried and lived the rest of her life in Hove, East Sussex[5] until her death from a short illness while in a nursing home in May 2011.[4] She is buried alongside her husband Peter Butterworth in Danehill Cemetery, in East Sussex.[6]

Partial filmography

 

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Jeff Conaway, American actor (Grease, Taxi, Babylon 5) died from drug usage he was 60.

Jeffrey Charles William Michael Conaway known as Jeff Conaway, was an American actor, best known for his roles in the movie Grease and the U.S. television series Taxi and Babylon 5. He directed the 1992 film Bikini Summer II. Conaway was on the hit TV show Celebrity Rehab, but since then relapsed, and died from drug usage he was 60.

(October 5, 1950 – May 27, 2011)

Biography

Early life and career


Jeff Conaway was born in Manhattan, New York City, and raised in the Astoria, Flushing, and Forest Hills neighborhoods of the borough Queens.[4] His father, Charles,[4] was an actor, producer and publisher.[5] His mother, Helen, an actress who went by the stage name Mary Ann Brooks,[4] taught music at New York City's Brook Conservatory.[5] They divorced when he was 3,[5] and Conaway and his two older sisters lived with his mother.[6] He also spent time living with his grandparents in South Carolina, which gave him enough of a Southern accent[6] that when he accompanied his mother to a casting call for director Arthur Penn's Broadway play All the Way Home, the 10-year-old Conaway landed a featured role as one of four boys.[5] The 1961 Pulitzer Prize-winning play was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Play and ran 333 performances and one preview from November 29, 1960 to September 16, 1961.[7] Conaway remained for the entire run, then toured with the national company of the play Critic's Choice.[5]
Conaway worked as a child model, and attended high school at the Quintano School for Young Professionals.[5] After playing with the rock band 3 1/2 for a time, beginning at age 15,[5] he attended the North Carolina School of the Arts[5][8] and later transferred to New York University.[5] While at NYU, he appeared in television commercials and had the lead in a school production of The Threepenny Opera.[5] He made his movie debut in the 1971 romantic drama Jennifer on my Mind.[5]

Celebrity Rehab: Jeff Conaway by TheDlisted

Grease and Taxi

The following year, Conaway appeared in the original cast of the Broadway musical Grease, as an understudy to several roles including that of the lead male character, Danny Zuko, and eventually succeeded role-originator Barry Bostwick.[4][9] He played the role for 2 1/2 years while his friend John Travolta, with whom he shared a manager, later joined the show, playing Doody in the chorus.[4][10] The two would reunite in the 1978 motion picture musical Grease, in which Travolta played Zuko and Conaway his buddy Kenickie.[4]
After breaking into series television in 1975 with Happy Days, followed by other sitcom and drama appearances and three more movies including Grease, Conaway was cast as vain, struggling, but goodhearted actor Bobby Wheeler in the workplace comedy Taxi, which premiered in fall 1978. He had appeared in an episode of The Mary Tyler Moore Show for the same producers, and, he said in 1987, was originally considered for the role of John Burns, which eventually went to Randall Carver:
But then one day I got the whole script and became real interested in the actor character, then called Bobby Taylor. And [the producers] said they had been thinking along the same lines, so I read again. Later I got a call from [original casting director] Joel Thurm, who says, 'Well, it's not good news, but it's not bad news either.' He says I'm the only choice for a white actor, but that they'd had a meeting and thought that maybe Bobby should be black and that now they're looking at black actors. ... So I went back to read, and it was me, Cleavon Little, and somebody else.... I ended up reading with [star] Judd [Hirsch] and it went really well."[11]
Conaway left Taxi after the third season. Part of the reason was his drug abuse after season one.[4]Taxi writer Sam Simon recalled in 2008 that during production of Simon's first script for that show, a missing Conaway was found in his dressing room too high on drugs to perform, and that his dialogue for that episode was divided between his co-stars Danny DeVito and Christopher Lloyd who delivered the jokes well enough so that Conaway's absence had little negative impact on the actual episode. This caused the show's producers to realize that he was expendable and contributed to Conaway's eventual firing.[12] But Conaway also felt creatively stymied:
I wanted to do things with Bobby, but as the show went on, I could see I wasn't going to get that chance. ... Lemme tell you – I loved Bobby, I identified with Bobby. So, yeah, I kind of took everything personally. I had a lot of meetings with [the producers] because I was unhappy. ... Sure, partially it was ego, but let me do what I do best. It was frustrating. I remember leaving the studio feeling guilty and unhappy. I just couldn't appreciate it and use it as just a job, as a learning experience. Instead I saw it as, 'Hey, anybody could do this character.' Like nobody else could do Louie or Jim, they were such defined characters. But Bobby – anybody could walk in and say, 'Hi, Alex.'"[13]
Conaway went on to star in the short-lived 1983 fantasy-spoof series, Wizards and Warriors. He made guest appearances on such shows as Barnaby Jones, George and Leo and in four episodes of Murder, She Wrote. He appeared in films such as Jawbreaker, Elvira, Mistress of the Dark and Do You Wanna Know a Secret?. From 1994–1999, he played Sergeant Zack Allan, on Babylon 5. From 1989–90, he was cast on The Bold and the Beautiful, in the role of "Mick Savage". In 1993, he appeared onstage in Real Life Photographs.[citation needed]

Music career

In addition to acting, Conaway also dabbled in music. In the mid-1960s, he was the lead singer and guitarist for a rock band, The 3 1/2. They recorded four singles for Cameo Records in 1966 and 1967:
  • "Don't Cry To Me Babe" / "R & B In C" (Cameo 425, 1966)
  • "Problem Child" / "Hey Mom Hey Dad" (Cameo 442, 1966)
  • "Hey Gyp" / "Hey Kitty Cool Kitty" (Cameo 451, 1967) (This single was produced by Peter Noone of Herman's Hermits, who also wrote the B-side. The A-side is a song by Donovan.)
  • "Angel Baby (Don't You Ever Leave Me)" / "You Turned Your Back On Love" (Cameo 485, 1967)
In 1979, Conaway recorded a self titled debut album for Columbia Records. "City Boy" was released as a single. Bruce Springsteen's manager, Mike Appel, produced the album.
The CD Saints & Sinners, by Vikki and Kenickie, was released independently via the internet in 2008, featuring Conaway singing and rapping with Vikki Lizzi (Spinoza). They promoted the CD on The Howard Stern Show on April 2, 2008 and performed live shows in the Los Angeles area.

Personal life

Conaway was married three times. His first short-lived marriage, at 21, to a dancer he had been seeing for two years, was annulled.[5] His second marriage, from 1980 until their divorce in 1985, was to Rona Newton-John, elder[14] sister of his Grease co-star Olivia Newton-John. His third marriage was to Keri Young from 1990 until their divorce.[15]

Health problems

After experiencing a crisis in the mid-1980s, Conaway came to grips with the fact that he had a substance abuse problem. He underwent treatment in the late 1980s and often spoke candidly about his addictions.[citation needed]
By the mid-2000s however, he had relapsed. Conaway appeared in VH1's Celebrity Fit Club, but was forced to leave and entered rehab. In early 2008, Conaway appeared with other celebrities in the VH1 reality series Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew. The show revealed that Conaway was addicted to cocaine, alcohol, and painkillers, and that he was in a codependent relationship with his girlfriend Vikki Lizzi,[16] also a user of prescription opiates. Conaway had suffered a back injury earlier in his career on the set of Grease while filming the "Greased Lightning" scene, which had been exacerbated more recently as a result of lifting boxes in his home.
Conaway's appearance on the show's first and second seasons drew much attention due to his severely crippled state, his constant threats of leaving the facility and his frequent inability to speak clearly. Upon arrival at the Pasadena Recovery Center (which was filmed as part of Celebrity Rehab's first episode) Conaway, using a wheelchair, arrived drunk, mumbling to Dr. Drew that the night previous he had binged on cocaine and Jack Daniel's whiskey.
During the second episode of Celebrity Rehab's first season, Conaway, fed up with his dorsalgia, withdrawal symptoms and the humiliation of having to be assisted while using the toilet, told Dr. Pinsky that he was thinking of killing himself. After Pinsky asked him to elaborate upon how he would carry out a suicidal act, Conaway glared at the mirror in his room and said "I see myself breaking that mirror and slicing my fucking throat with it." During group sessions, Conaway revealed "torture" from his childhood, as older boys in his neighborhood would put him into dangerous situations, tying him up and threatening him. When he was seven years old, he was a victim of pedophiles and child pornographers.[17] Conaway stated that he had been an addict since he was a teenager.[18]
With John Travolta's support, Conaway took courses and auditing from the Church of Scientology to cope with his drug problem and depression,[19] although he did not intend to become a Scientologist.[20][21][22]
In June 2009, Conaway and Vikki joined Celebrity Rehab cast mate Mary Carey at the premier of her spoof flick Celebrity Pornhab with Dr. Screw.[23]
In August 2009, Conaway was interviewed by Entertainment Tonight. In the interview, the actor claimed he was much better after a fifth back operation, and that he had yet to use painkillers again. He also discussed unscrupulous doctors and enablers.[24]
In March 2010, shortly after the death of actor Corey Haim, Conaway told E! News that he had warned Haim about dying due to prescription drug abuse.[25]

Death

On May 11, 2011, Conaway was found unconscious from what was initially described as an overdose of substances, believed to be pain medication, and was taken to Encino Tarzana Medical Center in Encino, California, where he was listed as being in critical condition and in a coma.[26] After the initial reports, Dr. Drew Pinsky, who had treated Conaway for substance abuse, said the actor was suffering not from a drug overdose but rather from "pneumonia with sepsis", for which he was placed into an induced coma.[27][28] Though his pneumonia was not directly caused by drugs, his use of them hampered his ability to recognize how ill he was, and prevented him from seeking treatment for pneumonia until it was too late.[29]
On May 26, 2011, Conaway's family took him off life support after doctors decided there was nothing they could do to revive him. Conaway died the following morning at the age of 60.[1][29] Pinsky attributed his death to his addiction, stating, "What happens is, like with most opiate addicts, eventually they take a little too much ... and they aspirate, so what's in their mouth gets into their lungs ... That's what happened with Jeff" - describing Aspiration pneumonia.[30]
Conaway is survived by his sisters, Michelle and Carla.[31]

Awards

Golden Globe Award
  • 1978 nomination, Best Supporting Actor, Comedy or Musical Series (for Taxi)[32]
  • 1979 nomination, Best Supporting Actor, Comedy or Musical Series (for Taxi)[32]

Filmography

Television work

 

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Margo Dydek Polish basketball player (Utah Starzz, Los Angeles Sparks) and coach, died from a heart attack she was , 37,.

 MaÅ‚gorzata Dydek  known as Margo Dydek in the United States, was a Polish international professional basketball player. Standing 7 ft 2 in (2.18 m) tall, she was famous for being the tallest active professional female basketball player in the world died from a heart attack she was , 37. She played center position for the Los Angeles Sparks in the WNBA and was a coach for the Northside Wizards in the Queensland Basketball League.


(28 April 1974 – 27 May 2011)

Personal life

Margo Dydek was born April 28, 1974 in Warsaw, Poland to a 6'7" father and a 6'3 mother.[3] She had two sisters, her elder sister, Kashka (6'7") used to play for the Colorado Xplosion of the now defunct ABL, and in Poland. Her younger sister (standing 6'6") graduated from the University of Texas-El Paso where she played basketball and played in Spain professionally in the 2000s.
She was awarded the Polish Gold Cross of Merit (1999).[4]

WNBA career

Dydek made her first trip to the United States in May 1998 for WNBA pre-draft camp. Dydek was drafted 1st overall in the 1998 WNBA Draft by the Utah Starzz (the franchise was subsequently transferred to San Antonio).
On April 16, 2005, during the 2005 WNBA Draft, the San Antonio Silver Stars traded Dydek to the Connecticut Sun in exchange for the Sun's first-round draft pick, Katie Feenstra from Liberty University.
Dydek held the record for most blocks in a WNBA career, with 877 blocks in 323 games.
Dydek led the WNBA in blocks 9 times (1998–2003, 2005–07)
Dydek led the WNBA in blocks/game 8 times (1998–2003, 2006–07)
Dydek led the WNBA in Defensive Rebounds (214) in 2001
On August 27, 2008 Dydek signed with the Los Angeles Sparks following time away from basketball due to her pregnancy (she gave birth to a son in April 2008).

European career

Dydek played for Olimpia Poznań from 1992 to 1994, before playing for Valenciennes Orchies in France from 1994 to 1996. She then moved to Spain and played for Pool Getafe from 1996 to 1998, and moved back to Poland to play for Fota Porta Gdynia starting with the 1998-99 season. She continued to play with the club through several sponsorship changes; since then, the club has taken the names Polpharma and Lotos.
In 1999-2001, she averaged 18.5 points and 10.7 rebounds for Gdynia in FIBA Euroleague play. She was named Most Valuable Player of the Polish League Finals of the 1999-2000 season. In 1999 she was also named the best female basketball player in Europe by the Italian sports magazine La Gazzetta dello Sport. Dydek was chosen as Poland's Sports Woman of the Year and has long been a member of the Polish National Team. She helped lead Gdynia to runner-up finishes in the FIBA Euro-league in 2002 and 2004.

Death

On May 19, 2011, Dydek, at the time pregnant with her third child, suffered a severe heart attack and was placed in a medically induced coma at a Brisbane hospital. She had been working as a coach for the Northside Wizards in the Queensland Basketball League. Dydek collapsed at her home in Brisbane and was taken by ambulance to a hospital. She never regained consciousness and died eight days later on May 27, 2011.[5] As Dydek was early in her pregnancy, the fetus also died.[6] Prior to her death, she was the last surviving prominent Polish women's basketball player.[7]

Vital statistics

  • Position: Center
  • Height: 7 ft-2 in (2.18 m)
  • Shoe size: men's 18 (US) / 54 (EU) (34 centimetres / 13.5 inches long)[8]
  • College: Akademia Wychowania Fizycznego (University School of Physical Education), in WrocÅ‚aw.
  • Team: Los Angeles Sparks
  • National Team(s): (12), Olimpia PoznaÅ„ (Poland), Valenciennes Ochies (France), Pool Getafe (Spain), Fota Porta / Polpharma VBW Clima / Lotos VBW Clima / Lotos Gdynia (Poland)

 

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Regalado Maambong, Filipino jurist, member of 1986 Constitutional Commission died he was , 72.

Regalado E. "Dodong" Maambong was a Filipino jurist, politician and member of the 1987 Constitutional Commission, which drafted the Constitution of the Philippines  died he was , 72.

(? - May 27, 2011)

Regalado Maambong was born in Santa Fe, Cebu to his father, Judge Joaquin Tagalog Maambong.[2] Maambong studied pre-law at the University of San Carlos in Cebu, before completing his law degree at Ateneo de Manila University, a Jesuit university in Manila.[2] He passed the Philippines bar exam within the top 20 for the country.[2] A criminologist, Maambong later served as the dean of the College of Criminology of the University of the Visayas.[2]
Maambong served in both the Filipino legislative and executive branches of government.[1] He was elected to the Batasang Pambansa in 1984 as a member of the Kilusang Bagong Lipunan (KBL).[2]
After the fall of Ferdinand Marcos, President Corazon Aquino appointed Maambong as a trial judge in Cebu and then as a member of the 1986 Constitutional Commission.[2] As a member of the Commission, Maambong helped to write and draft the Constitution of the Philippines drafted in 1987.[2] Aquino then appointed Maambong as a Commissioner of the Commission on Elections, or Comelec.[2]
Maambong retired from Comelec and ran as a candidate for Governor of Cebu in 2001.[2] However, he was defeated Pablo Garcia (Filipino politician).[2] In 2002, President Gloria Macapagal as an associate justice of the Court of Appeals of the Philippines.[2] He served as the chairman of the 15th Division of the Court of Appeals until 2009.[2] Maambong made an unsuccessful bid for the Philippines Senate in 2010.[2]
He was considered an expert in election law.[1] Maambong spearheaded and advocated the automation of the Philippines election system, which was fully implemented for the May 2010 Philippine general election.[1]
Regalado Maambong died from multiple organ failure at his condominium in Quezon City on May 27, 2011, at the age of 72.[2] He was survived by his wife, Cristina, two sons Victor and Renren, and five grandchildren.[1][2] Maambong was laid in state at St. Peter's Memorial Chapel, cremated at Quezon City Columbarium, and his remains returned to Cebu, his home province.[1] His ashes were spread at a cemetery in Asturias, Cebu.[3]
Filipino Chief Justice Renato Corona called Maambong "a great man. A constitutionalist, an election expert and a great jurist. Justice Maambong was a big loss to the legal circle and to the academe. His contributions in the field of law will never be forgotten."[1

 

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Prince Ali Mirza Qajar, Iranian royal, Head of the Qajar Imperial Family (since 1988), died after a long illness he was , 81.

.Prince Soltan Ali Mirza Kadjar (Qajar) was an Iranian Prince of Qajar Dynasty and the son of Soltan Majid Mirza Qajar (1907-1975) and Homadokht Kian (Shayesteh Khanoum) (1912-1992) and the grandson of Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar died after a long illness he was , 81.. He was the Head of the Qajar Imperial Family. Despite Soltan Ali Mirza Qajar being Head of the Qajar Imperial Family, the Qajar claimant to the Peacock Throne was the Heir Presumptive Mohammad Hassan Mirza II, son of Soltan

(November 16, 1929 - May 27, 2011)

Hamid Mirza and grandson of Soltan Ahmad Shah's brother and successor in exile, Mohammad Hassan Mirza Qajar.
Kaanoun-e Khanevadegi-e Ghajar (after 1999 Kadjar Family Association also named Qajar Family Association: KFA/QFA) was founded in Tehran under the presidency of Nosrat-os-Saltaneh son of Mozaffar al-Din Shah and Yamin-ed-Dowleh son of Naser al-Din Shah. It was dissolved two years after its founding. In 1999 under the presidency of Prince Soltan Ali Mirza this reconstituted association was brought to life by Prof. M.M. Eskandari-Qajar (Santa Barbara City College) and L.A.F. Barjesteh van Waalwijk van Doorn (private), who, together with Prof. M. Tehranian (then University of Hawaii), also founded the International Qajar Studies Association, of which Soltan Ali Mirza Qajar was the honorary president.[2][3]
Soltan Ali Mirza was a Barrister at Law from France and resided in Paris, France. He is the author of Les Rois oublies.[4]
Soltan Ali Mirza Qajar died on 27 May 2011 in Paris. Shortly before his death he donated his collection of Qajar manuscripts and photographs to the Qajar Studies and Documentation Centre, housed at the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

 

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Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...