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.
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Ron Gans American voice actor (Transformers, Welcome to Pooh Corner), has died from complications from pneumonia. he was , 79
Gans acted and did voice work on "Lost in Space" in 1966-67 and appeared on such series as "It
Movie roles included "Tarzan and the Jungle Boy" in 1968 and "Runaway, Runaway" in 1971.
Ronald Kenneth Gans was born Aug. 9, 1931, in Chicago and his family moved to California when he was 14. He graduated from Beverly Hills High School and attended USC before serving in the Navy, his wife said. He started acting after leaving the service.
Gans' voice also could be heard on commercials and promos for television shows and movies, his wife said.
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Queen Jane, Kenyan musician, has died of meningitis she was 45
Queen Jane was from Murang'a District. She started her musical career in 1984 as back up vocalist for Mbiri Young Stars under the band leader Musaimo (Simon Kihara). She formed her own band Queenja Les Les and released her debut album Ndorogonye in 1991, produced by Lemanco Productions [1]
Her career reached prominence a year later upon the release of her hit song Mwendwa KK [2][3]. Her other hits include Ndutige Kwiyaba, Muici Wa Itura, Muthuri Teenager and Arume Ni Nyamu [4]. Many of her songs handled social issues [5].
Her last album Gikuyu Giitu (Our Gikuyu (Language/tribe)) was released in early 2010 [1]. Maina David Mithu of Leemax Studio has been one of her producers [6].
She won awards from the Music Copyright Society of Kenya (MCSK) and Music Composers Association [2]. Her song Nduraga Ngwetereire (I've been Waiting for You) was released on The Rough Guide to the Music of Kenya compilation CD [2].
Queen Jane died of meningitis[1] June 29, 2010 at St Mary's Hospital in Nairobi after a spell of illness [4]. Her funeral was postponed as her relatives disputed over the place of her burial [7].
She is survived by husband Kariuki Mburu [8]. Her siblings Ejidiah Wanja (aka Lady Wanja) and Agnes Wangui (Princess Aggie) are also musicians [3]. Kenyan politician John Michuki is her uncle [1].
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Pietro Taricone, Italian actor and reality show contestant (Grande Fratello), has died in a parachute accident he was 35
(February 4, 1975 – June 29, 2010)
Taricone was born in Frosinone. He was a contestant on the first season of Grande Fratello, the Italian version of Big Brother, in 2000.[2] On the show, Taricone had an affair with fellow contestant Cristina Plevani after just three days in the house.[2] Taricone came in third place on the show, while Plevani won the season.[2] However, the show launched Taricone and he later appeared in Italian television and film roles.[1]
Taricone had one daughter with Kasia Smutniak, a Polish model and actress.[2]
Taricone and Smutniak took part in a skydive over Terni, Umbria, in June 2010.[1] During the jump, Taricone waited to open his parachute until he was just 100 metres from the ground.[1] However, the parachute malfunctioned and failed to open, slamming Tarcione to the ground.[1] He suffered severe back, leg and head injuries in the accident.[2]
He died on June 29, 2010, after more than nine hours of surgery at the age of 35.[2][1] He was survived by his six-year old daughter with Smutniak, Sofia.[2]
To see more of who died in 2010 click hereBill Aucoin,, American band manager (Kiss), has died from complications from prostate cancer.he was 66,
(29 December 1943 – 28 June 2010, )
Born in 1943, Aucoin attended Northeastern University and graduated with a degree in film.[3] He worked at WGBH in Boston during his college years and after. Aucoin later worked at Teletape Productions as a cinematographer.[4]
Credited with discovering KISS, Aucoin managed the group for nearly a decade. He quit in 1982 citing creative and directional differences [5], but later worked with the band on various DVD projects.
Aucoin originally produced a television show called "Supermarket Sweep" in the early (pre-1973) 1970s.[6]
Aucoin had re-entered the management business with his company, Aucoin Globe Entertainment, at the time of his death of surgical complications from prostate cancer. He is survived by partner Roman Fernandez, and two sisters, Betty Britton and Janet Bankowski.
List of acts managed
KISS, 1973–1982
Piper 1975–1978
Spider, 1970's
Manowar, 1981
Billy Idol, 1982–1984
Rising Star, 1989–1990
Flipp, 1998–2003
Starz, 1977–1979
Crossbreed, 2003–2010
Lordi, 2006–2010
Nothing Rhymes with Orange, 2007–2010
Evan Saffer, 2007–2010
The Early Strike, 2010
Tantric, 2010
Dreaming in Stereo, 2010 [7]
Corey Allen,, American actor (Rebel Without a Cause), film and television director, has did from complications of Parkinson's disease.he was 75
(June 29, 1934 – June 27, 2010)
Allen was born Alan Cohen in Cleveland, Ohio on June 29, 1934. After his family moved to California, he attended the University of California, Los Angeles, where he received his start in acting and was awarded a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1954.[2]
Allen was best known for his role as gang leader Buzz Gunderson in Nicholas Ray's 1955 film Rebel Without A Cause. Starring in the film was James Dean, who played Jim Stark, a disaffected teenager who has moved to Los Angeles to start a new life, only to find more problems in his new home. After a show at the Griffith Observatory, Buzz challenges Jim to a knife fight, which Stark wins by subduing Buzz with his switchblade. During the filming of the knife fight, both Allen and Dean, aficionados of method acting, used real knives and Dean was injured when Allen lunged at him with his knife.[2] The gang challenges Jim to a chickie run, in which two stolen cars will be raced towards a cliff and the winner will be the last one to jump out.[2] Before the two are about to embark on their death race, Buzz and Jim stand at the edge of the cliff, looking down at the fall they might face if they remained in their cars to the end. As Jim questions why they are going ahead with this race, Buzz responds "You got to do something, don't you".[3] Allen would later recall that his classic line was "the underlying question of each generation. Here we are: What do we do?".[4] As the cars are heading to the cliff, Buzz attempts to jump out but is unable to escape when his leather jacket gets caught in the car door and is killed in the crash at the beach below.[2]
He had appeared in some minor film roles before Rebel and afterward would be seen in The Chapman Report, Darby's Rangers, Juvenile Jungle, Party Girl, Sweet Bird of Youth, in addition to guest appearances on Bonanza, Dr. Kildare and Perry Mason.[3]
He was actively involved in theatrical productions in the Los Angeles area, creating the touring company Freeway Circuit Inc. in 1959 and the Actors Theater in 1965. He was also involved in teaching theater at The Actors Workshop.[3]
Allen turned to directing starting in the 1960s, where he worked on such television programs as Hawaii Five-O, Hill Street Blues, Ironside, Mannix, Murder, She Wrote, Police Woman, The Rockford Files, Star Trek: The Next Generation and The Streets of San Francisco.[2] He won an Emmy Award, in 1984, for directing an episode of Hill Street Blues.[5]
He died due to complications of Parkinson's disease on June 27, 2010, in Hollywood, California, just two days before his 76th birthday. He was survived by a daughter, four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.[2]
Filmography
As Director
- The Cosby Mysteries
- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
- episode The Maquis: Part 2
- episode Paradise
- episode The Circle
- episode Captive Pursuit
- Star Trek: The Next Generation
- episode "Journey's End"
- episode "The Game"
- episode "Final Mission"
- episode "Encounter at Farpoint"
- The Search (1994)
- Men Who Hate Women & the Women Who Love Them (1994)
- Moment of Truth: Stalking Back (1993)
- FBI: The Untold Stories
- Unsub
- The New Lassie
- Supercarrier
- The Ann Jillian Story (1988)
- J.J. Starbuck
- CBS Summer Playhouse
- episode Infiltrator
- Infiltrator (1987)
- Destination America (1987)
- The Last Fling (1987)
- I-Man (1986)
- Beverly Hills Cowgirl Blues (1985)
- Brass (1985)
- Code Name: Foxfire
- Code Name: Foxfire (1985)
- Otherworld
- Murder, She Wrote
- episode Deadly Lady
- pilot episode The Murder of Sherlock Holmes (1984)
- Jessie
- Hunter
- The Paper Chase
- episode Billy Pierce
- Hill Street Blues
- episode Hair Apparent
- episode Goodbye, Mr. Scripps
- episode Jungle Madness
- Legmen
- Scarecrow and Mrs. King
- episode Always Look a Gift Horse in the Mouth
- Whiz Kids
- episode Programmed for Murder
- episode Fatal Error
- episode Deadly Access
- Gavilan
- Tucker's Witch
- Matt Houston
- The Powers of Matthew Star
- Capitol
- Simon & Simon
- McClain's Law
- Magnum, P.I.
- The Return of Frank Cannon (1980)
- Stone
- The Man in the Santa Claus Suit
- The Rockford Files
- episode No-Fault Affair
- episode The Man Who Saw the Alligators
- episode The Empty Frame
- Trapper John, M.D.
- episode The Shattered Image
- Stone (1979)
- Avalanche (1978)
- Police Woman
- episode The Young and the Fair
- episode Do You Still Beat Your Wife?
- episode The Lifeline Agency
- episode Broken Angels
- Lou Grant
- Thunder and Lightning (1977)
- Yesterday's Child (1977)
- Quincy, M.E. (1976)
- Executive Suite
- Bronk
- Kate McShane
- The Family Holvak
- Cry Rape (1973)
- Police Story (1973)
- Barnaby Jones (1973)
- The Streets of San Francisco
- Ironside
- episode But When She Was Bad
- episode Too Many Victims
- See the Man Run (1971)
- Cannon
- The Erotic Adventures of Pinocchio (1971)
- The High Chaparral
- episode A Good Sound Profit
- Mannix
- episode Time Out of Mind
- episode The Sound of Darkness
- The New People
- Then Came Bronson
- Lancer
- episode Child of Rock and Sunlight
- Hawaii Five-O
Actor
- Quarantined (2009)
- A Time Out of War (1954)
- The Night of the Hunter (1955)
- Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Season 2, episode "Jonathan" (1956)
- Rebel Without a Cause (1955)
- Darby's Rangers (1958)
- Party Girl
- The Chapman Report (1962)
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Aldo GiuffrĆØ, Italian actor,has died of peritonitis.he was , 86
(10 April 1924 – 27 June 2010)
He is known for his roles in The Four Days of Naples, and as the alcoholic Union Army captain in the Sergio Leone film The Good, the Bad and the Ugly in 1966.
GiuffrĆØ died yesterday evening, June 26th during an operation for peritonitis in San Filippo Neri Hospital in Rome. GiuffrĆØ turned 86 years old on April 10. A native of Naples, Italy he was a radio announcer before he was 20 years-old and announced the end of the war in 1945.
He started acting on stage in 1942 with the Eduardo De Filippo company. He worked on stage with Luchino Visconti and Giorgio Strehler. In 1972-1973 he played alongside his brother Carlo in the comedy “Un coperto di piĆ¹”. His film debut was in 1947 in the drama “Assunta Spina” directed by Mario Mattoli. He also appeared in “I eri, oggi, domani” directed by Vittorio De Sica but is best remembered for his role as Captain Clinton in Sergio Leone's “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” (1966). His last film appearance was in 2001's “La republica di San Gennaro” directed by Massimo Costa. In the 1960s he devoted most of his acting skills to television. GiuffrĆØ also appeared in the Euro-western “Two Mafiamen in the Far West” (1964) as a defense attorney with Franco and Ciccio.
GiuffrĆØ died in Rome.
Filmography
- Assunta Spina (1948)
- L'Imperatore di Capri (1949)
- TotĆ² Tarzan (1950)
- Napoli milionaria (1950)
- I cadetti di Guascogna (1950)
- Vita da cani (1950, uncredited)
- TotĆ² sceicco (1950)
- TotĆ² terzo uomo (1951)
- Il padrone del vapore (1951)
- Filumena Marturano (1951)
- Guardie e ladri (1951)
- La figlia del diavolo (1952)
- Cinque poveri in automobile (1952)
- Villa Borghese (1953)
- Un turco napoletano (1953)
- Ti ho sempre amato! (1953)
- Capitan Fantasma (1953)
- TotĆ² all'inferno (1954)
- Il medico dei pazzi (1954)
- Carosello napoletano (1954)
- Le Signorine dello 04 (1955)
- Racconti romani (1955)
- Peccato di castitĆ (1956)
- Malafemmena (1957)
- Rascel marine (1958)
- I magliari (1959)
- Tenente Sheridan: Delitto a tempo di Rock (1959, TV)
- Tenente Sheridan: Rapina al grattacielo (1960, TV)
- I piaceri del sabato notte (1960)
- Juke box urli d'amore (1960)
- Il re di Poggioreale (1961)
- Lui, lei e il nonno (1961)
- Il carabiniere a cavallo (1961)
- La trincea (1961, TV)
- The Best of Enemies (1962)
- Accroche-toi, y'a du vent! (1962)
- Operazione Vega (1962, TV)
- I due della legione straniera (1962)
- Le Quattro giornate di Napoli (1962)
- Ercole sfida Sansone (1963)
- I Cuori infranti (1963, segment "La manina di Fatma")
- Ieri, oggi, domani (1963, segment "Adelina")
- TotĆ² contro il pirata nero (1964)
- Scherzoso ma non troppo (1964, TV)
- I Marziani hanno dodici mani (1964)
- L'idea fissa (1964, segment "L'ultima carta, L'")
- Spiaggia libera (1965)
- La maschera e il volto (1965, TV)
- Letti sbagliati (1965, segment "Il complicato")
- Gli amanti latini (1965, segment "Il telefono consolatore")
- La potenza delle tenebre (1965, TV)
- Due mafiosi nel Far West (1965)
- Made in Italy (1965, segment 1 "Usi e costumi", episode 2)
- Les Combinards (1966)
- Il buono, il brutto, il cattivo (1966)
- Questi fantasmi (1968)
- La piĆ¹ bella coppia del mondo (1968)
- I Diamanti che nessuno voleva rubare (1968)
- "Il mestiere di vincere" (1968, mini TV series)
- Scacco alla regina (1969)
- Nero Wolfe: Per la fama di Cesare (1969, TV)
- "Quel negozio di Piazza Navona" (1969, mini TV series)
- Certo, certissimo, anzi... probabile (1969)
- Con quale amore, con quanto amore (1970)
- Cerca di capirmi (1970)
- Quando le donne avevano la coda (1970)
- Quando gli uomini armarono la clava e... con le donne fecero din-don (1971)
- No desearƔs la mujer del vecino (1971)
- La violenza: Quinto potere (1972)
- Pasqualino Cammarata... capitano di fregata (1973)
- Furto di sera bel colpo si spera (1973)
- Il brigadiere Pasquale Zagaria ama la mamma e la polizia (1973)
- Il tuo piacere ĆØ il mio (1973)
- Gli eroi (1973)
- Il testimone deve tacere (1974)
- Prostituzione (1974)
- Sesso in testa (1974)
- Ettore lo fusto (1974)
- Gente di rispetto (1975)
- Colpo in canna (1975)
- La prima notte di nozze (1976)
- L'adolescente (1976)
- Chi dice donna, dice donna (1976, segment "La signorina X")
- Oh Serafina (1976)
- Zappatore (1980)
- Tre sotto il lenzuolo (1980)
- Ciao marziano (1980)
- Carcerato (1981)
- Per favore, occupati di Amelia (1982)
- Mi manda Picone (1984)
- L'ultima scena (1989)
- Scugnizzi (1989)
- Il morso del serpente (1999, TV)
- Repubblica di San Gennaro (2001)
- Faulkner (2007)
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Friday, July 9, 2010
Rammellzee, American hip hop musician and graffiti artist, has died after a long illness he was 49
( late 1960 – June 27, 2010)
Rammellzee's graffiti and art work are based on his theory of Gothic Futurism, which describes the battle between letters and their symbolic warfare against any standardizations enforced by the rules of the alphabet. His treatise, Iconic Panzerisms, details an anarchic plan by which to revise the role and deployment of language in society.[3]
He has stated that his name is derived from RAM plus M for Magnitude, Sigma (Ī£) the first summation operator, first L - longitude, second L - latitude, Z - z-bar, Ī£, Ī£ - summation.
Rammellzee performed in self-designed masks and costumes of different characters which represented the "mathematical equation" that is Rammellzee. On the basis of his Gothic Futurism approach, he described his artistic work as the logical extension into a new phase which he calls Ikonoklast Panzerism. This artistic work has been shown in art galleries throughout the US and Europe. His Letter Racers, and other Noise includes artistic works by individuals mostly identified with their musical contributions.[4]
Rammellzee was also instrumental as one of the original hip hop artists from the New York area who introduced specific vocal styles which date back to the early 1980s.[5] His influence can still be heard in contemporary artists such as The Beastie Boys and Cypress Hill. His song Beat Bop was featured in the film Style Wars. Rammellzee makes a cameo appearance near the end of Jim Jarmusch's 1984 film Stranger Than Paradise.
Discovered by a larger audience through the 1982 cult movie Wild Style by Charlie Ahearn, his fame in graffiti circles was established when he painted New York subway trains with Dondi, OU3, and Ink 76, and doctor Revolt.[6] Rammellzee was also a member of the Death Comet Crew, with Stewart Albright, Michael Diekmann and Shinichi Shimokawa.
In 1988, he and his band Gettovetts recorded the album Missionaries Moving. In 2003, Rammellzee performed at the Knitting Factory in New York with the newly reformed Death Comet Crew. Subsequently Troubleman Unlimited re-released recordings made by DCC between 1982 and 1984. Their single for Exterior St was featured on the compilation Anti-NY with Ike Yard, Sexual Harassment, and Vivian Goldmann, among others. In 2004, Rammellzee released his debut album Bi-Conicals of the Rammellzee, produced by Gomma Records. Rammellzee also performed at Knitting Factory with guitarist Buckethead several times.
Born in Far Rockaway, Queens, New York in 1960, and died there on June 27, 2010 at age 49.[7]
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Dickey Betts died he was 80
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