/ Stars that died in 2023

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Arie van Deursen, Dutch historian, died he was 80.

Arie Theodorus van Deursen was a Dutch historian whose focus was the early modern period died he was 80 . He was Professor Emeritus of History at the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam. He was a specialist in Dutch history of the 16th and 17th century.

(23 June 1931 – 21 November 2011)

Career

Arie van Deursen was born at Groningen. He was a prolific author[1] with a refined style. He has written several books about daily life in the Dutch Golden Age, religious controversies in the 16th and 17th century (Jacobus Arminius versus Franciscus Gomarus) and the political situation of that period; he wrote biographies of William the Silent and Maurice of Nassau, Prince of Orange, a history of the Vrije Universiteit, a history of the Netherlands (1555–1702), a biography of Michiel de Ruyter and several volumes of collected essays.
As an orthodox Christian Van Deursen was heavily involved in polemics about the history of secularization and its consequences.[2] In his Huizinga Lecture Huizinga en de geest der eeuw (Huizinga and the spirit of the age) Van Deursen compared the critical evaluation of the secularization by Isaäc da Costa and Johan Huizinga. Van Deursen died in Oegstgeest on 21 November 2011, aged 80.

Books (Dutch)

  • Professions et métiers interdits: Un aspect de l'histoire de la révocation de l'Édit de Nantes, Groningen: Wolters 1960 (doctoral thesis)
  • Honni soit qui mal y pense? De Republiek tussen de mogendheden (1610–1612), Amsterdam: Noord-Hollandsche Uitgevers Maatschappij 1965
  • Bavianen en slijkgeuzen: Kerk en kerkvolk ten tijde van Maurits en Oldenbarnevelt, Assen: Van Gorcum 1974 (ISBN 9051941854)[3]
  • Mensen van klein vermogen: Het kopergeld van de Gouden Eeuw, Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 1991 (ISBN 9035110110). Translated in English: Plain lives in the Golden Age. Popular culture, religion and society in seventeenth-century Holland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1991.
    • Volume 1, Het dagelijks brood
    • Volume 2, Volkscultuur
    • Volume 3, Volk en overheid
    • Volume 4, Hel en hemel
  • Een dorp in de polder: Graft in de zeventiende eeuw, Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 1994
  • Willem van Oranje: een biografisch portret, Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 1995
  • De Bataafse revolutie (1795–1995), Apeldoorn: Willem de Zwijgerstichting 1995
  • Geleefd geloven: geschiedenis van de protestantse vroomheid in Nederland (coauthor: G.J. Schutte), Assen: Van Gorcum 1996
  • Maurits van Nassau, 1567-1625: de winnaar die faalde, Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 2000
  • Rust niet voordat gy ze van buiten kunt: de Tien Geboden in de 17e eeuw, Kampen: De Groot Goudriaan 2004
  • De last van veel geluk: De geschiedenis van Nederland 1555-1702, Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 2004 (ISBN 9035126270)
  • Een hoeksteen in het verzuilde bestel: De Vrije Universiteit 1880-2005, Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 2005 (ISBN 9035128672)
  • De admiraal: De wereld van Michiel Adriaenszoon de Ruyter, Franeker: Van Wijnen 2007 (ISBN 9789051942828)



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Manuel Carbonell, Cuban-born American sculptor, died he was 93.

Manuel Carbonell was regarded as the last of the Cuban Master Sculptors died he was 93 .. He was part of the generation of Cuban artists, which includes Wifredo Lam and Agustin Cardenas, that studied at the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes "San Alejandro", Havana Cuba. Carbonell's inexhaustible vision and his ever changing-style are the product of a brilliant talent and academic background. Ceaselessly searching for the essence of form and the absence of details, he struggled to provide a sense of strength, monumentality and simplicity to his work. At 92 years of age, he had continued to work in his studio.

(October 25, 1918 – November 10, 2011 [1]

Childhood

Carbonell was born on October 25, 1918, in Sancti Spiritus ("Holy Spirit"), Cuba.[1][2] He had two sisters the older, Josephine and the younger Angela. His father alone came from a family of eighteen brothers and sisters. The family history has its roots in early sugar farming, from the early 1800s.
At an early age the family moved to Cienfuegos and Carbonell went to study at Cienfuegos primary school, this proved to be the beginnings of many long lasting friendships, even then he was known and recognized as the person so in admiration of art, and consumed with drawing and carving. Continuing on to his more formative academic years, in Havana he attended Belen,[3] a Jesuit Preparatory Catholic High School where, he excelled in the classes that involved art or history.

Creativity

Carbonell first realized he wanted to be a sculptor when he was eight or nine years old. He was always making little figures with clay. And whenever He found a piece of paper, He would doodle little figures on it. His harshest punishment as a child was when his mother forbade him to draw. Having the understanding that a piece of paper could be torn apart but not a sculpture, held the idea of lasting permanence to the thought of creating. To this day he becomes depressed when he is not involved in the process of creation, he becomes impossible. "Something curious happens to me when I sit down to begin the process of translating the images in my imagination into this third dimension. I see the whole piece finished, actually totally finished, in my minds eye, even before I begin. But, as we all know, imagination can be very treacherous."[2] To describe Carbonell's sculptures they have the force of Rodin, the monumentality of Moore and the simplicity of Mallot, but with a personal style and interpretation.[4]

Education

In 1937, He wanted to learn about art and found out about "San Alejandro",[3] the renowned Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes (National Academy of Fine Arts) in Havana.[1] When he arrived, they asked him what previous training he had. Explaining, he told them he had none. The school wanted him to go through a preliminary process for two years prior to attending, however he managed to prove himself with a clay carving that he had made that following weekend and they accepted him as a student on the spot. Carbonell was eighteen years old and barely beginning at San Alejandro when he fell down some stairs. The injury was very severe; one of his kidneys had literally exploded as a result of the impact. He spent nearly one year paralyzed, unable to move. He couldn't attend classes of course, the despair he felt, lying there, all that time was immeasurable. But little by little he learned to walk again, he just stubbornly refused to give up, finally able to return to San Alejandro. At the Academy Carbonell studied under the guidance of Juan José Sicre, a former student of Antoine Bourdelle, Rodin's favorite disciple.[5] In 1945 Carbonell graduated with the title of Professor of Drawing and Sculpture. Carbonell met and worked alongside some great artist, Fidelio Ponce, Victor Manuel, Amelia Pelaez, Estopinan and many more. Artistic excellence, meant one must measure up to maximum standards or smash it into pieces and start again, that was the norm.

Beginnings as a sculptor

His classical and religious period developed between 1945 and 1959 some of his many important commissions included the stone carvings bas-reliefs of the Twelve Stations of the Cross, along with The Last Rites located at Las Lomas Del Jacan in San Miguel de los Banos. Last Rites,[6] was exhibited at the National Capitol in Havana. He also sculpted a statue of the Virgin Mary for the Association of Catholic University students in Havana.[7] A life size wood carving, crucifixion for the chapel at the Covadonga Sugar mill in Las Villas, Cuba.
Carbonell's work received immediate recognition. Dr. Roberto Lopez-Goldaras, the art critic of Havana's Diario De La Marina, in Havana, said in 1952 about his work, "We foresee for the young and distinguished sculptor Manuel Carbonell a great future; (he) who had been able to conceive a sculpture like eternity, will without a doubt, earn himself a glorious name, which is already an euphoric name, accredited among the literary and artistic names of Cuba."[2]

Carbonell carving out of Capellania stone, typical of Cuba, this resembles granite because of its density.
Carbonell participated in numerous national competitions and was the recipient of many awards. The life-size stone carving Fin de una raza (End of a race)[2] earned him his first international award in 1954, for the III Bienal Hispanoamericana de Arte, in Barcelona, Spain. The piece became part of the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts in Havana; it appeared on the cover of Reader's Digest magazine in May 1956.[8]

Professional Journey

Havana, in the 1950s was glittery with pomp and wealth, deemed "The sexiest city in the world". The Latin Caribbean Playground for the International jet setters. An establishment such as the Tropicana, where the rhythm and gaiety exuded the nightlife was in vogue and a place that Carbonell was well familiar and able to utilize many of the dancers as his models. Enjoying life in the Miramar Coastal neighborhood of Havana.

Manuel Carbonell (right) with Wifredo Lam.
For the first Commercial television broadcast, Union Radio Television, Carbonell was the host and interviewer for a weekly television program where he interviewed artist as his topic of discussion, to include Wifredo Lam, amongst others. He worked in various aspects of television and production whereby he won an award in set design for the ‘Union De La Cronica Tele-Radial Diaria"[2] in the second festival. By 1954 Carbonell left for Europe traveling and visiting museums and more museums in such countries as Spain, Italy, France. A nomad through the museums of Europe proved to inspire Carbonell as he studied the art of the Impressionist and Abstract artists, which inspired a change in direction to give form a sense of movement.[9]
Included in his various business ventures, he owned an operated his own Interior Design business "Carbonell Studio".[10] Where he designed from French to Modern furniture incorporating his other beloved interest of creating an environment. Ultimately this would provide the perfect opportunity for defecting and leaving his homeland, with the understanding he was granted a visa for a purchasing trip to Miami having an ulterior motive.

Exile to New York City

In 1959, Carbonell fled Cuba where he could no longer live under a totalitarian regime. Leaving behind his wealth, his position and his sculptures, and most importantly his family, he arrived in New York City with only his tremendous talent and $200. He initially took up residency at the YMCA.[10]
Although deeply depressed at first, he proceeded to experiment with newly acquired freedom of expression.[11] His early work in his new country shows a constant search for beauty and perfection. His intrinsic fascination with the human body and the basic shapes of nature, led him to a very personal and distinctive style. He moved away from his classical and religious period,[12] in Cuba in the 1940s and 1950s through the commencement and development of his modern expression of the 1960s, culminating in Madison Avenue, then pinnacle of the art world.
It started almost haphazardly and by chance. As payment to his then public relations manager Ted Materna and Associates he provided one of his sculptures. A very prominent doctor, Paul Henkind,[13] then Chief of the Department of Ophthalmology at Monte Fiore Hospital, NYC noticed the incredible sculpture and stated to the gentleman "I didn't know you owned a Rodin"? He insisted in meeting Carbonell to see his work and showed up unannounced at his studio, that same evening with his wife they purchased three Carbonells of their own and became his first patron.
Shortly after in 1961, Manuel Carbonell introduced himself to Dr Fred Schoneman, the influential and renowned Gallery owner, who was impressed with what he saw of Carbonells work, and invited him to become the gallery's first and only modern sculptor. The gallery exhibited Carbonell's sculptures alongside paintings of Impressionist masters, such as Braque, Chagall, Monet, Dufy, Pissarro, Picasso, Gaugin, Renior and others. He lived and worked in a loft studio, located at what is referred to today as Soho. By 1963, he celebrated the first of his seven bi-annual "One Man Show's" at the renowned Schoneman Gallery, Madison Avenue, in New York City, a collaboration exceeding twelve years.[5]
For his first exhibition at Schonemans, Carbonell departed from clay and plaster forms and worked in hammered metals. During this time, one sensed the influence of Pablo Gargallo. In 1967 he extended his frontier to include another one-man show in San Francisco at the Maxwell Galleries. By 1971 the Sculptor held two exhibits, one again at Schoneman and the other at Bacardi Gallery in Miami. At this time, Carbonell moved from acclaimed hammered metals and patina bronzes to high-polished bronzes.[12] This new work took on a completely different turn, becoming more abstract. Rounded volumes replaced the elongated anatomical shapes, present in Lovers, Madonna of the Moon and Figurative Form. During an exhibition at Galerie Moos, in 1972, in Montreal Canada the artist unveiled new subject matters through high-polish bronze as exemplified by Sea Lion, Sea Horses, Snail and Mermaid. These works are abstract interpretations of Carbonells vivid imaginations, conveying universal beauty characteristic of such images.
Randall Galleries took control and ownership of Schoneman Galleries in 1973 while Carbonell was preparing an exhibit as a tribute to Dance. The Dancer series are of flowing and delicate movements in this period, climaxed with his show in New York "Homage and Ballet" to benefit the City Center in 1974.[14] In this show, his highly polished sculptures, soared and flowed, rose and bent, in an unbroken pattern, of graceful movements and merging rhythms of harmony, as exemplified in "Modern Dancer," "Firebird," "Isadora" and "Rehearsal".

Reuniting with family

Carbonell took in his two nephews, in 1960, Ricardo 15 and Luis 13 to live with him in New Jersey to save them from being inducted into Castro's military army.[15] Soon enough, nine months later his father Manuel and his sisters Angela and Josefina with her 2 year-old daughter, Clara were able to leave Cuba and come to Miami. Anxious to rejoin his family, he moved his studio to Miami in 1974 and went into seclusion and concentrated on important private commissions. The following years in 1977 Carbonell created the "Virgin of Fatima", for the Blue Army Shrine, his first commissioned bronze monument in the United States:[16] a 26-foot high statue weighing 12 tons is permanently placed on top of 150 foot shrine in Washington, New Jersey. This statue is one of the largest works cast in bronze in America during the twentieth century.[17] Another impressive monumental sculpture during this period, a composition 15 feet in height of a horse and rider, balanced in only two points, which was commissioned by Burt Reynolds for the entrance of the Burt Reynolds Jupiter Theater, in Jupiter, Florida.[18]
The Awards formally presented by The South Florida Entertainment Writers Associations (SFEWA), an organization of major media theater critics from Dade, Broward and Palm Beach Counties, decided to name them in the name sake of Carbonell, as he signified and represented one who devotes his life to art.[19] He additionally designed and cast the first awards which were oval in theme. In November 15, 1976 they became and still are called, The Carbonell Awards.[20]
In 1976, Carbonell held a monographic exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum[21] and Art Center, in Miami, Florida, on view at the opening of their newest gallery, where he introduced more than 20 of his newest works.[22] (Now incorporated into, The Frost Museum). Between the late seventies and mid-eighties, the artist worked on private commissions and ventured creatively in designing jewelry and furniture. At this time he had several one-man shows that were also presented at different galleries during this decade, including Steiner Gallery in Bal Harbor, West Avenue gallery in Palm Beach, Camino Real in Boca Raton, all in Florida and Ann Jacob Gallery, in Marietta, Georgia.

The White House


Internationally known Cuban Sculptor Manuel Carbonell, presenting his bronze eagle, as a symbol of freedom.
In 1976 Carbonell presented, at a formal ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House his "Bicentennial Eagle" as a gift to the United States of America. Durning the bicentennial celebrations the sculpture was on display in the Great Hall of Commerce in Washington D.C. The sculpture is now part of The Gerald R. Ford, Presidential Museum, Gran Rapids, Michigan, which is technically a branch office of The National Archives and Records Administration Collection, that the Federal government oversees.[23]

Beaux Arts Gallery

A new representation begun in 1987 as Beaux Arts Gallery, Miami Florida, became the exclusive world wide representative of Carbonell's work, under the Director, Ricardo Gonzalez III. The years 1987-88 marked a very creative and productive period for Carbonell. Lovers, mothers and children, dancers and the female figure intensified as subject matters in his artistic vision.[24] He redefined forms and contours, while maintaining the anatomical essence of the human figure, bringing female sensuality to a point of abstraction, while displaying a sense of aesthetic basic principles in a simplified form. A continuance of one-man shows and exhibits along with Art fairs nationally and internationally have since to date been part of this relationship.[25]
Having won a competition in 1989 to create a statue of the Cuban Apostle Jose Marti for the San Carlos Institute in Key West, Florida. A subject very close to his heart: the artist struggled with the challenge of translating the human Marti into the idealized and heroic universal figure that Marti philosophically and spiritually represented. Conquering this challenge, in 1990 Carbonell moved to Pietrasanta, (Holy Stone) Italy to carve a 6-foot marble sculpture that portrays Marti with his left arm extended, as if to greet visitors, while the right hand rest on a bundle of wheat surrounded by the Cuban flag. The symbolism conveyed by the statue is that a cause, like one stalk of wheat, may become weak, but becomes strong when its supporters band together.[11]

The Miami River Bridge


This bridge on Brickell Avenue was the first time that the Florida Dept. of Transportation incorporated architecture, art and engineering in a bridge design.
Carbonell again won a competition in 1992[26] and was selected to create one of his most impressive commissioned works of art, the 53-foot bronze monument "The Pillar of History" located at the Brickell Avenue Bridge, Miami Florida.[27] Created in 1992 the monument reflects the history of the settlers of Miami, from the indigenous to its pioneers. The monument consists of a 36-foot high bronze bas-relief column that graphically narrates the lives of the Tequesta Indians, Miami's first inhabitants and features 158 figures. At the top stands a 17-foot bronze sculpture, "Tequesta Family" portraying a Tequesta Indian warrior aiming an arrow to the sky with his wife and child at his side. In the niches at the supporting piers are four 4-foot by 8-foot bronze bas reliefs honoring the quintessential Miami pioneers Henry Flagler, Dana A. Dorsey, William and Mary Brickell, Marjory Stoneman Douglas and Julia Tuttle, depicting them in their historical perpetual settings. Twelve bronze bas-reliefs of Florida fauna are located at the base of the flagpole on the sides of the bridge.[28]

This Historical Landmark serves as a lesson on the history of Miami.
"Little Miracles",[2] Certainly an invaluable opportunity, " I was in love with the project, first because the Tequesta's are a fascinating people, second, because it was such an important monument, with such tremendous dimensions. I am convinced that, previously, long ago, there were many civilizations more advanced than ours, who knew how to enjoy the beauty of the soul. While I was in Pietrasanta, Italy to commence this two-year project, in the middle of it, I suffered a stroke.[29] My left side was paralyzed, and being left-handed I was desperate. I kept asking the medical staff, "listen, when can I once again begin to move my arms, I am a sculptor", the reply "be patient" which I am not. On the one hand, I would tell myself, "look Carbonell, you are no longer a sculptor, you have been a sculptor for more than seventy years, but you are no longer a sculptor now. Your left hand is paralyzed. Nobody can change that. It's absurd but on the other hand, since I couldn't accept that, I would say, "yes, I can, I can change that". The doctors released me from the hospital so I could emotionally feel better and come back in a couple of months to start my physical therapy. Ten days later, I told my assistants to get me my tools and bring them to the house because I wanted to start carving again. Shortly there after, my therapy nurse that came to my house spread the news I was insane. All my friends from the hospital arrived, they couldn't believe that I was already working, ok, maybe not with my left hand, but I was surely working with my right hand. "My life is my work. And my work is my life."

Other monuments to follow

Between 1996 to 1999, Carbonell remained in Pietrasanta working on two commissions for monumental sculptures: "El Centinela Del Rio",[30] a 21-foot bronze sculpture depicting a Tequesta Indian blowing a conch shell carved out of alabaster, located at Tequesta Point in Brickell Key. Serving as a welcoming site to all, at the entrance of the mouth of the river and the city of Miami and very near to the "Miami Circle". The other "The Manatee Fountain",[31] consisting of three Indian children playing with two manatees, located at the walkway between, Two and Three Tequesta Point condominiums on Brickell Key. In addition, sculptures are presented in all three buildings. Swire Properties and Manuel Carbonell have a unique patronage, not only is there "The Swire Art Trust", there is the "Swire Carbonell Scholarship Fund" for the Florida International University Foundation.[32]
His modern monumental works, created in his unique and distinctive personal style, are part of important art collections and public spaces, "Couple in Love" adorns the lobby of the Mandarin Oriental, Miami, "Lovers" is founded at the entrance of the Carbonell Condominium,[33] named in the artist honor, "Torso" formally at Selby's Five Point Park, downtown Sarasota is now at the von Liebig Art Center in Naples, Florida, and "New Generation" in Xujianhui Park, Shanghai, China. The sculpture of " Amantes" now graces the grounds of the Hotel Bristol, Republic of Panama.

Later life

Manuel Carbonell died at Kindred Hospital Coral Gables in Coral Gables, Florida, on November 10, 2011, at the age of 93.[1] He was survived by his two sisters, Josefina Gonzalez and Angela Carbonell; niece, Clara Falcon; and nephews, Ricardo and Luis Gonzalez.[1] His funeral mass was held at the chapel of Belen Jesuit Preparatory School in Miami.[1]


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Benny McCoy, American baseball player (Detroit Tigers, Philadelphia Athletics), died he was 96.

Benjamin Jenison McCoy  was a second baseman in Major League Baseball who played for the Detroit Tigers (1938–1939) and Philadelphia Athletics (1940–1941) died he was 96.. Listed at 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m). 170 lb., he batted left-handed and threw right-handed. He was born in Jenison, Michigan.

(November 9, 1915 – November 9, 2011)

McCoy was 22 years old when he entered the majors in September 1938 with the Detroit Tigers, appearing in seven games while hitting a .200 batting average (3-for-15). In 1939, though he played just two months for Detroit after Charlie Gehringer was injured, McCoy hit .302 with 33 runs batted in and 38 runs scored in 55 games played. At the end of the season, he was dealt by the Tigers to the Philadelphia Athletics in exchange for Wally Moses.
But McCoy was among 91 Detroit minor league players declared free agents by baseball commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis. The Tigers had been blocking players in their minor league system for years, players with major league skills, which was a fairly common practice in those days as there were only 16 big league clubs and precious few jobs. For a middle infielder, McCoy was a very good offensive player, but Detroit had Gehringer and he was blocked in the minors.
With the deal canceled, McCoy had bids from ten major-league clubs. The Washington Senators offered him a bonus of $20,000, the New York Giants raised it to $25,000, the Brooklyn Dodgers to $35,000, and the Pittsburgh Pirates and Cincinnati Reds to $40,000. McCoy, who got $15 for his first major league season and thought his $5,000 in 1939 was big money, accepted the Philadelphia Athletics'offer: a $45,000 bonus, a two-year contract at $10,000 a year, and a regular job at second base under the tutorial guidance of manager Connie Mack. His was not only the biggest bonus in major league history, $20,000 more than the previous top, given Rick Ferrell by the St. Louis Browns in 1929, but it made McCoy the highest-paid bigleaguer of the year. His 1940 income of $55,000 will be more than the salary of Joe Di Maggio, Jimmy Foxx or Hank Greenberg.
McCoy played in 1940 and 1941 with the Athletics. His most productive season came in 1941, when he hit .271 with 61 RBI and posted career-highs in games (141), hits (140), walks (95), runs (86), home runs (8), and triples (7). He spent the next four years in the US Navy during World War II. When he returned from service, his skills had eroded and he never played another game.
In a four-season career, McCoy was a .269 hitter (327-for-1214) with 16 home runs and 156 RBI in 337 games, including 182 runs, 327 hits, 52 doubles, 18 triples, and eight stolen bases. A selective and patient hitter, he posted a solid .384 on-base percentage and a respectable 1.56 strikeout-to-walk ratio (190-to-122).
Before his death, he was recognized as one of the oldest living major league ballplayers.
McCoy died on his 96th birthday on November 9, 2011.

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Arnold Green, Estonian politician, President of the Estonian Olympic Committee (1989–1997), died he was 91.

Arnold Green was an Estonian politician and president of the Estonian Olympic Committee from 1989 to 1997, leader of the Estonian Olympic team for the Games in Albertville, Barcelona, Lillehammer and Atlanta and former President of the Estonian Wrestling League and the Estonian Skiing League died he was 91..

(August 20, 1920 – November 4, 2011[1]

Biography

Born to an Estonian family in Riga, Latvia, in 1920, Green served in the Soviet Army in World War II, emerging as a Soviet politician of the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic in the post-war years. From 1962 to 1990 he was the minister of foreign affairs of the Estonian SSR. Green participated in the organization of the 1980 Olympic Games sailing regatta in Tallinn.
In 2001 he was awarded the Olympic Order by the IOC.[2]

Honours and awards



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Ted Dicks, English composer, died he was 83.

Ted Dicks  was an English composer died he was 83.. He is best known for composing the music for the novelty songs "Right Said Fred" and "The Hole in the Ground". They were both Top 10 hits in the UK Singles Chart in 1962,[1] recorded by Bernard Cribbins with lyrics by Myles Rudge, and produced by George Martin for Parlophone. Another song by Dicks and Rudge, "A Windmill in Old Amsterdam", was a hit in 1965 for Ronnie Hilton. Dicks also wrote the theme tune for 1970s children's television series Catweazle.

(5 May 1928 – 27 January 2012)

Life and career

Dicks was born in Muswell Hill, North London, England. His father was a postman. Dicks was educated at Tollington Grammar School and Hornsey School of Art and then undertook two years national service in the RAF. He won a scholarship to the Royal College of Art, where he became friends with Len Deighton. Dicks later concentrated on composing music, but continued to paint in later life.
While working as a teacher in the 1950s, Dicks composed a stage show Let's Go Mad, which had a short run at the Fortune Theatre in London's West End in 1960 under the title Look Who's Here!, featuring Nyree Dawn Porter, Donald Hewlett and Anna Quayle. Dicks collaborated with Barry Cryer, and then with Myles Rudge. Dicks and Rudge wrote the revue And Another Thing which had a long run at the Fortune Theatre in 1960, featuring Bernard Cribbins, Anna Quayle, Lionel Blair, and Joyce Blair.
Music producer George Martin liked the show, and released a single of Cribbins singing one of the show's songs, "Folk Song". Martin commissioned Dicks and Rudge to write other comic songs for Cribbins, and the next two tunes, "Hole in the Ground" and "Right Said Fred", were both top 10 hits in 1962.[1] Martin praised the "clever lyrics" written by Myles Rudge and the "quirky melodies" written by Dicks. Noël Coward chose "Hole in the Ground" as one of his records on Desert Island Discs, saying he would pass the time on his desert island by translating it into French. Richard and Fred Fairbrass adopted "Right Said Fred" as the name of their pop group.
Dicks and Rudge also wrote "A Windmill in Old Amsterdam" which was a hit for Ronnie Hilton in 1965 and won an Ivor Novello award. Other examples of their collaborative output were Petula Clark's "The Happiest Christmas", Val Doonican's "Annabelle", and their ballad "Other People" was on the B-side of Matt Monro's "Born Free". They also wrote the theme song for the 1966 film Carry On Screaming, and an album that was recorded by Kenneth Williams under the title On Pleasure Bent in 1967. Other songs by Dicks and Rudge were recorded by Jim Dale, Joan Sims and Topol.
Dicks also wrote scripts for the television soap operas, Compact and Crossroads.
He was survived by his wife and their son.


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Robert Turner, Canadian composer, died he was 91.

Robert Comrie Turner  was a Canadian composer, radio producer, and music educator died he was 91.. He graduated with a bachelors degree in music from McGill University in 1943. While there he studied with Douglas Clarke and Claude Champagne. He continued his studies briefly at Colorado College in 1947, where he met his wife, percussionist Sara Scott. They married in 1949. In 1947, Turner transferred to Peabody College in Nashville, Tennessee, where he studied with Roy Harris. He graduated in 1950 with a Masters degree. During this time, Turner spent two summers studying with Herbert Howells and Gordon Jacob at the Royal College of Music and one summer at the Berkshire Music Center at Tanglewood studying with Olivier Messiaen. He returned to McGill University in 1951, graduating with a doctorate two years later.[1]
Turner worked as a CBC Vancouver music producer 1952-68, where his responsibilities included the broadcasts of the CBC Vancouver Chamber Orchestra. He taught at the University of British Columbia 1955-7, at Acadia University 1968-9, and at the University of Manitoba 1969-85. He was appointed professor emeritus at the University of Manitoba upon his retirement in 1985. Several of his students have gone on to have successful careers including Peter Allen, Pat Carrabré, Jim Hiscott, Diana McIntosh and Glenn Buhr.

(6 June 1920 – 26 January 2012)

Among his numerous works are two operas: The Brideship (1967) and Vile Shadows (1983).[2]
Turner died on January 26, 2012, in Winnipeg.[3]
Robert Turner's family and friends published a memorial and archive website which includes tributes from students and colleagues, audio samples, a list of compositions, and an extensive bibliography. The website can be found at robert-turner.com

Selected works

Stage
  • The Brideship, Opera in 1 act, 3 scenes (1966–1967); libretto by George Woodcock
  • Vile Shadows, Opera in 2 acts for soloists and wind quintet (1982–1983, revised 1998); libretto after the play of the same name by Norman Newton
Orchestral
  • Opening Night, Theatre Overture (1955)
  • Lyric Interlude (1956)
  • Nocturne (1956, 1965); original version for piano solo
  • A Children's Overture (1958); suitable for youth and community orchestras
  • The Pemberton Valley, Suite (1958)
  • Symphony for Strings for string orchestra (1960)
  • 3 Episodes (1963)
  • Moerae (1963)
  • Eidolons, 12 Images for chamber orchestra (1972)
  • Variations on "The Prairie Settlers's Song" (1974)
  • Symphony in One Movement "Gift from the Sea", Symphony No. 2 (1983)
  • Playhouse Music (1986)
  • Shades of Autumn (1987)
  • Manitoba Memoir for string orchestra (1989)
  • Symphony No. 3 (1990)
  • House of Shadows, A Symphonic Synthesis after the Opera Vile Shadows (1994)
  • Diverti-memento for chamber orchestra (1997)
  • Festival Dance (1997)
Band
  • Robbins' Round, Concertino for jazz band (1959)
Concertante
  • Concerto for 2 pianos and orchestra (1971)
  • Chamber Concerto for bassoon and 17 instruments (1973)
  • Capriccio Concertante for cello, piano and orchestra (1975)
  • From a Different Country: Homage to Gabrieli for solo brass quintet and orchestra (1976)
  • Encounters for soloists and orchestra (1985)
  1. Flutenanny, Encounter I for flute, string orchestra and harp
  2. Spring Greeting, Encounter II for clarinet, string orchestra and piano
  3. Shadows, Like Lost Souls, Encounter III for violin and orchestra
  4. A Great Quiet and a Still Home, Encounter IV for cello and orchestra
  5. Ebb Tide, Encounter V for voice (high or low) and orchestra; words by Marjorie Pickthall
  6. The Wind's and the Wave's Riot, Encounter VI for piano and orchestra
  7. Shepherd on the Make, Encounter VII for oboe, string orchestra and percussion
  8. The Old Sea's Pride, Encounter VIII for horn and orchestra
  9. The Strong Thunder of the Full Straits, Encounter IX for trombone and orchestra
  • Concerto for viola and orchestra (1986–1987)
  • A Group of Seven: Poems of Love and Nature by Canadian Poets for viola, narrator and orchestra (1991)
Chamber music
  • String Quartet No. 1 (1949)
  • Lament for flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon and piano (1951)
  • String Quartet No. 2 (1954)
  • Sonata for violin and piano (1956)
  • Little Suite for harp (1957)
  • Vignette for clarinet, 2 violins, viola and cello (1958, revised 1988)
  • Variations and Toccata for flute (piccolo), oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn, 2 violins, viola, cello and double bass (1959)
  • Serenade for flute, oboe, clarinet, horn and bassoon (1960)
  • 4 Fragments for 2 trumpets, horn and 2 trombones (1961)
  • Fantasia for organ, brass quintet and timpani (1962)
  • Diversities for violin, bassoon and piano (1967)
  • Transition, Trio for violin, cello and piano (1969)
  • Fantasy and Festivity for harp (1970)
  • Nostalgia for soprano saxophone and piano (1972)
  • String Quartet No. 3 (1975)
  • Lament for Linos, An Elegiac Triptych for flute (piccolo), clarinet (E-flat clarinet), piano (celesta), prepared tape and slides (1978); words by Rainer Maria Rilke
  • Shadow Pieces for flute, bassoon, violin, cello and piano (1981)
  • Bitonal Wedding, 3 Fanfares for 2 trumpets (1997)
Keyboard
  • Sonata Lyrica for piano (1955, revised 1963)
  • Nocturne for piano (1956); orchestrated in 1965
  • Dance of the Disenchanted for piano (1959, 1988)
  • 6 Voluntaries for organ (1959)
  • A Merry-Mournful (Major-Minor) Mood for piano (1971)
  • Wedding March for organ or piano (1977)
  • Vestiges, 3 Pieces for piano (1987)
Vocal
  • Eclogue: The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd for voice, oboe (or flute, or clarinet, or violin), and harpsichord (or piano) (1958); words by Sir Walter Raleigh
  • 4 Songs for tenor and orchestra (1959)
  • The Phoenix and the Turtle for mezzo-soprano, flute, bass clarinet, clarinet, string trio, celesta and harp (1964); words by William Shakespeare
  • Suite in Homage to Melville for soprano, alto, viola and piano (1966); words by Herman Melville
  • Four Songs for voice and orchestra (1969); words from Friday's Child by Wilfred Watson
  • Johann's Gift to Christmas for narrator and orchestra (1972)
  • Ebb Tide, Encounter V for voice (high or low) and orchestra (1985); words by Marjorie Pickthall
  • Time for Three, 3 Songs for mezzo-soprano, viola and piano (1985); words by John Milton, Marjorie Pickthall and anonymous
  • Four "Last Songs" for voice, violin and piano (1995); words by Francis Ledwidge
Choral
  • 2 Choral Pieces for mixed chorus (1952); words by Wallace Stevens and E. E. Cummings
  • Mobile for mixed chorus and percussion (1960); words by Elder Olson
  • Prophetic Song for female chorus a cappella (1961); words by Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • The Third Day, Cantata for 2 sopranos, contralto, tenor, baritone, mixed chorus and orchestra (1962)
  • The House of Christmas, 4 Carols for mixed chorus (1963); words by G. K. Chesterton
  • 5 Canadian Folk Songs from the Maritimes and Newfoundland for soprano and mixed chorus (1973)
  • 10 Canadian Folk Songs for voice and piano (1973) or voice and orchestra (1980)
  • Amoroso Canto for mixed chorus a cappella (1978); words by Wallace Stevens, Paul Verlaine, Louis Dudek, Guillaume Apollinaire and Thomas Hardy
  • River of Time for mixed chorus and orchestra (1994); words by Matthew Arnold
Television scores
  • Object Matrimony, Television play (1958)
  • The Pemberton Valley, Documentary (1958)
  • Yosef Drenters, Documentary (1961)


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Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Colin Tarrant, British actor (The Bill), died from suicide he was 59.

Colin Tarrant was an English actor best known for playing Inspector Andrew Monroe in ITV's The Bill between 1990 and 2002 died from suicide he was 59..

(14 June 1952 – 26 January 2012) 

Early life and career

Tarrant was born in 1952 in Shirebrook, Derbyshire, and studied for a degree in English and Drama at Exeter University,[1] then at the cutting edge of dramaturgy. He briefly worked as a teacher before taking up acting, first at the Northcott Theatre Exeter and then with Medium Fair Community Theatre Company, Exeter 1975-7 (a company developed from the university drama department). After leaving Medium Fair he was part of Peter Cheeseman's company at the Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent.[2] He worked with Foco Novo, Shared Experience, the RSC and the Leicester Phoenix Arts Centre. His first major television role was that of Will Brangwen in the BBC's adaptation of The Rainbow in 1988, playing opposite Imogen Stubbs. A twelve-year run in The Bill followed between 1990 and 2002, after which he made many appearances on other television programmes as well as returning to the theatre.
In June 2005, he played Brian Clough in the Nottingham Playhouse's production of Old Big 'Ead In The Spirit Of The Man.[3] The play returned several times to the Nottingham Playhouse and played in other venues across England.[4] He followed this with the role of the vagrant Davies in a Nottingham Playhouse production of Harold Pinter's The Caretaker, his performance described by The Stage as "brilliant - wild-eyed, twitchy, aggressive, over-defensive and ungrateful".[5] He starred as the 'Old Gent' in a new adaptation of The Railway Children at the National Railway Museum.[6] In 2009 he starred with Stephanie Turner in Honeymoon Suite at the New Vic in Basford.[2] Tarrant performed in a nationwide tour of Calendar Girls which began in Chichester in January 2010.
Television roles included appearances in Holby City, Heartbeat, Doctors, Midsomer Murders, and as Ted Williamson in an episode of Casualty which aired on BBC 1 on 11 December 2010.
Tarrant also taught at secondary schools between acting roles.

Personal life

Tarrant had two sons, Juma Kwasi Woodhouse (born 1987),[7] and Louis Morris-Tarrant (born 2011) by his girlfriend Sabrina Morris.[7][8]
Tarrant suffered from depression[9] and died on 26 January 2012 in the Bristol Royal Infirmary from stab wounds self-inflicted at his home in Bristol.[1][10] He is survived by his girlfriend and sons.[10] In April 2012, Tarrant's death was ruled a suicide by Flax Bourton Coroner's Court.[9]


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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...