/ Stars that died in 2023

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Steve Cardiff, Canadian politician, died from a automobile accident he was , 53.

Steve Cardiff was a Canadian politician. He represented the electoral district of Mount Lorne in the Yukon Legislative Assembly died from a automobile accident he was , 53..

Political career

He was first elected to the Yukon legislature in the 2002 general election and re-elected in 2006.[1] He won convincingly both times.
He was the NDP caucus critic for the Department of Community Services, the Department of Education, the Department of Highways and Public Works, the Department of Justice, the Yukon Workers' Compensation Health and Safety Board, the Yukon Housing Corporation and the Yukon Liquor Corporation. Cardiff shared critic responsibilities for the Department of Economic Development with party leader Todd Hardy, and was the Third Party House Leader.
Prior to becoming Mount Lorne’s MLA Cardiff worked as a certified sheet metal journeyman on industrial, commercial and residential projects in every Yukon community.
For 16 of his 20 years in the sheet metal trade, he volunteered as the local president of the United Association of Plumbers and Pipefitters. He volunteered on the executive of the Yukon Federation of Labour for two years at the same time. He also served on Yukon College’s board of governors, which he did for nine years, acting as chair for his final three. He is an active volunteer with the Mount Lorne Community Association.
In February 2009, Cardiff declared his candidacy for the leadership of the New Democrats, following Hardy's resignation as party leader.[2] However, he withdrew from the race later in the year for unspecified personal reasons.[3]
Cardiff was killed in a two-vehicle road accident, one kilometre north of Lewes Lake on the South Klondike Highway, involving a tractor trailer and a small vehicle.[4]

 

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Mani Kaul, Indian filmmaker, died after a long illness he was , 66.

 Mani Kaul was an Indian film director of Hindi films  died after a long illness he was , 66.. He graduated from the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) where he was a student of Ritwik Ghatak and later became a teacher. Started his career with Uski Roti (1969), which won him the Filmfare Critics Award for Best Movie, he went on to win four of them in all. He won the National Film Award for Best Direction in 1974 for Duvidha and later the National Film Award for his documentary film, Siddheshwari in 1989.

(25 December 1944 – 6 July 2011) 

Early life and education

Born as Rabindranath Kaul in Jodhpur, Rajasthan into a Kashmiri Pandit Kaul family, he first joined Film and Television Institute of India (FTII), Pune as an acting student and later shifted to the direction course, graduating in 1966.[2]
He was the nephew of actor-director Mahesh Kaul. Initially studying acting at the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII), Pune, he changed over to directing. He is a 1966 graduate of the FTII.[2]

Professional life

His first film Uski Roti (1969) has been described as "one of the key films of the New Indian Cinema or the Indian New Wave".[2] It marked a drastic departure from earlier Indian cinema techique, form and narrative. It was one of the early formal experimental films in Indian cinema.
Asad ka Ek Din (1971), his next film, was based on a play by Mohan Rakesh.
Duvidha (1973), his third, was his first in colour. It grew out of a short story by Vijayan Detha and tells the story of a merchant's son, who returns with his new bride to have to depart on family business. A ghost falls in love with the bride... It was widely shown across Europe.
Mani Kaul was one of the co-founders of the Yukt Film Co-operative (Union of Kinematograph Technicians) in 1976, leading to avantgarde films. Critics[2] suggest that in "Mani Kaul's cinematic conception, fiction and documentary films have no clear demarcated dividing line." He also taught music in the Netherlands, and was Creative Director of the film house at Osian's Connoisseurs of Art, Mumbai.

Career

In 1971, he was a member of the jury at the 21st Berlin International Film Festival.[3]
He was a visiting lecturer at Harvard University for the 2000–2001 school year.[4] Currently he was the Creative Director of the Film House at Osian's Connoisseurs of Art, Mumbai.

Personal life and death

He was a nephew of the noted Hindi film director Mahesh Kaul, who made films like Raj Kapoor starrer Sapnon Ka Saudagar (1968). Mani Kaul died on 6 July 2011 at his home in Gurgaon, near Delhi. He had been ailing for sometime.[5][6]
According to a tribute[6] from Prabha Mahajan on the Indian documentary film discussion network Docuwallahs2[1], Mani Kaul's significant body of work included both feature films and documentaries. In an interview Mani stated: "The dividing line from my films and documentaries is thin. Some of my films like "Siddheshwari" are like poetic documentaries." Mani Kaul's fellow alumni from FTII intend to put together a collective tribute to Mani Kaul and his work, and interested persons were invited to send in their thoughts on Mani as a film maker, teacher/ mentor, colleague, and as a person.
Indian film critic Khalid Mohamed commented,[7] " As a film director, he discussed the status of women (Uski Roti, Duvidha), crafted visually seductive documentaries (Arrival, Before My Eyes, A Desert of a Thousand Lines) and went through a spell of interpreting Fyodor Dostoevsky’s masterworks. The Russian writer’s short story A Gentle Creature inspired Nazar, shot in low, chiaroscuro lighting."

Awards

National Film Awards

Filmfare Awards

Mani Kaul won Filmfare Critics Award for Best Movie four times.
  • 1971: Uski Roti (1970)
  • 1972: Ashad Ka Ek Din (1971)
  • 1974: Duvidha (1973)
  • 1993: Idiot (1992)

Filmography

 

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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

George Edward Kimball, American boxing columnist (Boston Herald), died from esophageal cancer he was , 67


George E. Kimball III  was an American author and journalist who spent 25 years as a sports columnist for the Boston Herald before retiring in 2005 died from esophageal cancer he was , 67. Considered one of the foremost boxing writers of his era, he is the author of Four Kings: Leonard, Hagler, Hearns, Duran, and the Last Great Era of Boxing (2008) and "Manly Art: They can run -- but they can't hide" (2011). In collaboration with John Schulian, he edited two anthologies, "At The Fights: American Writers on Boxing" (2011) and "The Fighter Still Remains: A Celebration of Boxing in Poetry and Song from Ali to Zevon" (2010). Since 1997 he had written the weekly ‘America at Large’ column for The Irish Times in Dublin, Ireland, and had contributed to a number of boxing websites.

(December 20, 1943 – July 6, 2011)

Youth and Education

Descendant of Richard Kimball (ca 1595-1675) and the son of a career Army officer, Kimball was born in Grass Valley, California, but lived all over the world as a boy, including stops in Taiwan and Germany. After graduating from high school in San Antonio, Texas, he attended the University of Kansas, and later the Iowa Writer's Workshop. He became increasingly involved in the counterculture of the late 1960s, and although he had originally attended college on a Naval ROTC scholarship, later in the decade his participation in the antiwar movement led to several arrests.

Early career

In the late 1960s Kimball (with John Fowler and Charles Plymell) was an editor for the influential Midwestern magazine Grist before moving to New York, where he was heavily involved in the literary scene revolving around the Poetry Project at St. Mark’s-in-the-Bouwerie and the Lion’s Head saloon in Greenwich Village. After working at the Scott Meredith Literary Agency in New York, Kimball returned to Kansas in 1970, where he waged a colorful campaign for the office Douglas County sheriff. As a freelance writer he contributed to diverse publications such as The Paris Review, Rolling Stone, The Realist, and Scanlan’s Monthly, and his novel, Only Skin Deep, was published in 1968. In the early 1970s he was also an editor for the Cambridge (Mass.) literary journal Ploughshares.

Journalistic career

In early 1972 Kimball became the sports editor of the Boston Phoenix, and for nearly a decade there worked on a Phoenix staff that at various times included Joe Klein, Jon Landau, Janet Maslin, Curt Raymond, Sidney Blumenthal and David Denby, while nurturing the early careers of fellow sportswriters Mike Lupica, Michael Gee, and Charles P. Pierce. In 1980 he began a columnist for the Herald, and for the next quarter-century covered major sporting events around the world, including Super Bowls and World Series, NBA Finals and the Olympic Games, golf’s four majors and Ryder Cups, Wimbledon and the America’s Cup yacht races. He covered nearly 400 world title fights, and was the 1985 recipient of the Nat Fleischer Award for Excellence in Boxing Journalism. Kimball also received ‘Best Column’ awards from the Boxing Writers Association of America, the Golf Writers Association of America, Boston Magazine, and United Press International.

Books

  • Only Skin Deep (Olympia/Ophelia, 1968)
  • Sunday’s Fools: stomped, tromped, kicked, and chewed in the NFL. Houghton Mifflin. 1974. ISBN 9780395199527. (with Tom Beer)
  • Chairman of the Boards -- Red Rock Press, Dublin (2008) (with Eamonn Coghlan)
  • American at Large -- Red Rock Press, Dublin (2008)
  • Four Kings: Leonard, Hagler, Hearns, Duran and the Last Great Era of Boxing. McBooks Press. September 1, 2009. ISBN 9781590132388.; Mainstream Publishing, Edinburgh = date July 1, 2008
  • The Fighter Still Remains: A Celebration of Boxing in Poetry and Song from Ali to Zevon -- publisher = Fore Angels Press/DiBella Entertainment/ date June 1, 2010 (with John Schulian)
  • At The Fights: American Writers on Boxing -- Publisher - The Library of America -- date March 3, 2011 (with John Schulian)
  • Manly Art: They can run -- but they can't hide. Publisher = McBooks Press = date= April 1, 2011

Anthologies

  • The New Olympia Reader
  • The World Anthology
  • Baseball Diamonds
  • Baseball’s Finest
  • Come Out Writing
  • Impossible Dreams
  • A Commonwealth of Golfers
  • Rolling Stone Record Review
  • Patriots Day

Forewords

  • Football’s Blackest Hole by Craig Parker
  • The Regulation of Boxing by Robert Rodriguez

Broadcast career

Beginning in the mid-1980s, Kimball served as a regular co-host for several sports talk radio programs in the Boston area, as a television analyst for boxing broadcasts on the Fox SportsNet and Comcast networks, and as a panelist for several PBS programs produced by WGBH-TV. He appeared (as a boxing writer covering a fight between Woody Harrelson and Antonio Banderas) in Ron Shelton’s 1999 film “Play it to the Bone.”

Family

In a ceremony officiated by former heavyweight champion George Foreman, Kimball married New York psychiatrist Marge Marash in 2004. The couple lived in New York City. He had two children, Darcy Maeve Kimball of Denver, Colorado and George E. Kimball IV of Brooklyn, New York, stepsons Kim, Chris, and Jeremy Seeger, and four grandchildren.
Kimball was diagnosed with cancer in 2005, and died from the disease in 2011 at age 67.[1][2]

Editorial Reviews

Product Description
Roberto Duran, Marvelous Marvin Hagler, Sugar Ray Leonard, and Thomas "Hit Man" Hearns all formed the pantheon of boxing greats during the late 1970s and early 1980s—before the pay-per-view model, when prize fights were telecast on network television and still captured the nation's attention. Championship bouts during this era were replete with revenge and fury, often pitting one of these storied fighters against another. From training camps to locker rooms, author George Kimball was there to cover every body shot, uppercut, and TKO. Inside stories full of drama, sacrifice, fear, and pain make up this treasury of boxing tales brought to life by one of the sport's greatest writers.
About the Author
George Kimball spent 25 years as a sports columnist for the Boston Herald and in 1986 received the Nat Fleischer Award for Excellence in Boxing Journalism. He has covered more than 350 title bouts, and is the author of Only Skin Deep and Sunday's Fools. He lives in New York City.
RE: NAT FLEISCHER AWARD:
http://boxing.about.com/library/bl_bwaa_fleischer.htm
RE: PLOUGHSHARES
http://www.pshares.org/authors/author-detail.cfm?authorID=1899
RE: GRIST:
http://www.etext.org/Poetry/Grist/gol_1.asc
Any reference to the original GRIST would be incomplete if there were no indication of the contribution made by co-editors George Kimball and Charlie Plymell. For many issues they were, in fact, the editors, while I acted as publisher (from the thin bankroll of the Abington Book Shop which was too soon exhausted). They sought out authors, gathered material, traveled, wrote letters, made phone calls, cajoled subscribers, designed, laid out, typed, printed, collated, stapled, stamped and delivered. (John Fowler)

 

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John Mackey, American Hall of Fame football player (Baltimore Colts, San Diego Chargers) died he was , 69.


John Mackey  was an American Football tight end who grew up in Roosevelt, Long Island and played for the Baltimore Colts (1963-1971) and the San Diego Chargers (1972) died he was , 69.. He played college football at Syracuse University. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1992.

(September 24, 1941 — July 6, 2011)

Career statistics

Mackey joined the Colts in 1963 and had revolutionized the position of tight end by 1966. During the 1966 season, of the nine touchdowns he compiled, six were scores of more than 50 yards, and he served as one of Johnny Unitas' primary receivers in Unitas' later years of his career. Twice Mackey compiled season averages of more than 20 yards a catch, and his 10-year career average of 15.8 is considered remarkable for a tight end.
Mackey also displayed impressive speed for a tight end. During one season, the Colts decided to use him as a kick returner. He returned 9 kickoffs for 271 yards, an impressive 30.1 yards per return.
Although injuries forced him into early retirement, Mackey proved to be an extremely durable player, missing only one game in his 10-season career.

Super Bowl V

In Super Bowl V played January 17, 1971, Mackey was a principal in one the most famous plays in NFL championship history, catching a pass from quarterback Johnny Unitas after the ball first bounced off the hands of receiver Eddie Hinton and then grazed the fingertips of Cowboys All-Pro defensive back Mel Renfro. The ball caromed further downfield into the waiting arms of Mackey, who ran untouched for a (then) Super Bowl-record 75-yard touchdown reception. Baltimore won the game, 16-13, on Jim O'Brien's 32-yard field goal with five seconds left.

Post-playing career

After retirement, Mackey became the first president of the NFL Players Association. He helped organize a strike that earned players $11 million in pensions and much-needed benefits.
"He was the right man at the right time," said former teammate Ordell Braase. "We were a fractured group until John began putting permanence in [the union's] day-to-day operations. He hired administrators and a general counsel."[2]

Honors

In 1992, Mackey became the second pure tight end to be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Mike Ditka of the Bears had been the first one four years earlier. It has been speculated that Mackey's actions as a high-ranking member of the players' union may have led to the delay in his election. In 1999, he was ranked number 48 on The Sporting News' list of the 100 Greatest Football Players, the highest-ranking tight end. He was also named number 42 on NFL Network's list of the Top 100 Football Players in 2010.[3]
In 2000, the Nassau County Sports Commission created the John Mackey Award which annually honors the top Division 1-FBS collegiate Tight End. He was inducted into the Nassau County Sports Hall of Fame that same year.
On September 15, 2007, Syracuse University retired #88 in Mackey's honor.
On an October 2008 airing of the NFL Network's 'Top 10 Tight Ends' Mackey was named the #1 tight end by virtually every football figure commenting on the show.

Post-football career health problems

Mackey suffered from frontotemporal dementia, which made him particularly protective of personal possessions and suspicious of anyone who tries to control his actions. During the 2006 NFL season, Mackey was reported by family members to be confused and angered when seeing Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Marvin Harrison wearing the same #88 jersey that Mackey used to wear.[4]
At age 65 Mackey's dementia forced him to live in a full-time assisted living facility. NFL Players Association initially refused to pay a disability income due to there not being a proven link between brain injury and playing football. The league and the NFL Players' Association have responded with the "88 plan" – named after Mackey's number. It provides $88,000 per year for nursing home care and up to $50,000 annually for adult day care. Mackey passed away July 6th, 2011 at the age of 69 of frontotemporal dementia.[5][6][7][8]

 

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Josef Suk, Czech violinist, died from prostate cancer he was , 81.

 Josef Suk  was a Czech violinist, violist, chamber musician and conductor, the grandson of Josef Suk, the composer and violinist, and great-grandson of Antonín Dvořák Josef Suk, Czech violinist, died from prostate cancer he was , 81.. In his home country he carried the title of National Artist.

(8 August 1929 – 6 July 2011)

Early life

Suk's talent was spotted at an early age by Jaroslav Kocián, who tutored him until his death in 1950. Suk first appeared on concert platforms at the age of eleven. His Prague debut in 1954 rapidly led to an international career. Before long he was recognized as the heir to the best tradition of the Czech violin school and his 1959 tour with the Czech Philharmonic covered three continents and was one of the greatest expressions of Czech music the world had until then ever heard.[citation needed] He also studied at the Prague Conservatory with Kocián and the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague.

Later career

Suk had a distinguished solo career. His career as a concert violinist started in 1954, and gave concerts all over the world at prestigious music festivals. He reached his greatest success in the United States and Canada. He also formed the Suk Chamber Orchestra in 1974.
Suk showed an extraordinary affinity for chamber music. This yielded extraordinary fruits, especially through his partnerships with pianist Jan Panenka and the harpsichordist Zuzana Růžičková - and from 1973 he was a frequent additional player with the Smetana Quartet, playing second viola. Suk was also for some years the first violin of the Prague Quartet. He founded the Suk Trio (named after his grandfather) in 1951 with Jan Panenka and cellist Josef Chuchro
He became a distinguished violist, having recorded Mozart's Sinfonia Concertante for Violin, Viola and Orchestra as violist with Iona Brown and the Academy of St Martin in the Fields.
Josef Suk had a long and distinguished career in the recording studio, winning the Grand Prix du Disque six times: including in 1960 for recordings of Leoš Janáček and Claude Debussy violin sonatas, and in 1968 for the Alban Berg violin concerto. He also won the Wiener Floetenuhr Prize and the Edison Prize.
He was a sponsor, with Vladimir Ashkenazy of Toccata Classics for whom he recorded "Songs my great-grandfather taught me".
He was esteemed for his refined tone, deep sense of lyricism (expressed unforgettably for example in his Martinů interpretations) and commitment to the music he played.

Selected discography (violin)

  • J.S. Bach: Violin Concertos - Supraphon Records
  • Bach: Sonatas for Harpsichord and Violin - Lotos
  • Beethoven: Concerto for violin in D; Dvorak: Concerto for violin in A minor - BBC Radio Classic
  • Bartók: Violin Concertos Nos. 1 and 2 - Praga Records
  • Berg: Concerto for violin; Bartok: Concerto for violin No. 1 - Supraphon
  • Brahms: Concerto, Op. 77; Concerto, Op. 102 - Praga
  • Brahms: Concerto, Op. 77; Concerto, Op. 102 - Praga
  • Brahms: Piano Trios Nos. 1 & 2 [Germany] - Decca Records
  • Brahms: Symphony No. 2 in D, Op. 73; Concerto in A minor, Op. 102 - Supraphon
  • Brahms: Symphony No. 2/Double Concerto - Supraphon
  • Chausson: Concerto for violin, piano & String Quartet; Fauré: Sonata No. 2 for Violin & Piano - Supraphon
  • Dvořák: Concerto for violin in A minor - Supraphon
  • Dvořák: Piano Quartets Nos. 1 & 2 - Supraphon
  • Dvořák: Quartet Op. 51 / Sextet Op. 48 - Lotos Records
  • Dvořák: Quintet in E-flat; Quintet No. 1 - Denon Records
  • Dvořák: Trio No1; Trio No2 - Denon Records
  • Dvořák: Violin Concerto; Romance; Josef Suk: Fantasy - Supraphon
  • Dvořák: Works for Violin & Piano - Supraphon
  • Janáček: Complete works for Violin, Cello & Piano - Carlton Classics
  • Janáček: Sinfonietta, Op. 60; Taras Bulba, rhapsody - Supraphon
  • Kodály: Musique de chambre - Praga
  • Martinů: Sonata for violin No. 3; Madrigal Stanzas H.297 - Supraphon
  • Mendelssohn: Concerto for violin in E minor; Bruch: Concerto for violin in G minor - Supraphon
  • Mozart: Quintets - Denon Records
  • Mozart: Sinfonia concertante in E-flat; Sinfonia concertante in E-flat - Panton Records
  • Ravel: Sonatas for Violin and Piano; Sonata for Violin and Cello; Tzigane - Praga
  • Schubert: String Quartet No. 1, D.87/String Quintet in C, Op. 163, D.956 Praga
  • Suk: Piano Quintets, Opp. 1 & 8 - Lotos
  • Suk: Piano Trio; Piano Quartet; Piano Quintet - Supraphon

Notable instruments

Suk played on rare instruments built by Antonio Stradivari (1729), Giuseppe Guarneri "del Gesu" (1744) and Giovanni Battista Guadagnini (1758).

Death

Josef Suk died on 6 July 2011, aged 81, after a long illness. He had been suffering from prostate cancer as well.[2]

 

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Friday, August 26, 2011

Andreas Waldherr, Austrian rally driver, died from a workshop accident he was , 43

Andreas Waldherr was an Austrian rally driver died from a workshop accident he was , 43.

(29 April 1968 – 6 July 2011)

Career

In 2000 Andreas Waldherr achieved second place for diesel vehicles in the Rally Cup of the Supreme National Sports Commission for Motorsports (OSK) of the Austrian Automobile, Motorcycle and Touring Club (ÖAMTC). He won the OSK Rally Cup for diesel vehicles three times, from 2001 to 2003. Since 2004, Waldherr drove successfully in the Austrian Rally National Championship.
He experienced his greatest success in 2006 when he took third place in the overall standings. He achieved his first success in the Austrian Rally National Championship at the 2–3 May 2008 Bosch Super Plus Rally in a Volkswagen Polo S2000. During his career, Waldherr drove in 72 rallies, three of which won. In the 2010 season, engaged by VW Racing Austria Club, Waldherr was able to finish in second place behind national champion Raimund Baumschlager. However, 2011 was less successful, where he ranked only eighth after experiencing several problems. Waldherr also proved his skills in closed-course racing: In 2006 he took third place in the 24 Hours of Dubai and in 2011 he achieved the highest score for diesel-powered vehicles in a Golf TDI.[1]
Andreas Waldherr lived in Thomasberg, Austria, was married and the father of a son.
Waldherr suffered a fatal accident in his workshop in Anspang, Austria on the morning of 6 July 2011 when he was crushed under his rally car while servicing it. He was alone in the workshop at the time he was found by rescue personnel, around 11:30 a.m. Resuscitation efforts were unsuccessful.[2]

 

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Keith Wilson, British production designer (Space: 1999) died he was , 69.


Keith George Wilson  was an award-winning production designer who began work at AP Films, working as art assistant on Fireball XL5 (1963) and many other Gerry Anderson productions to follow died he was , 69.. As a production designer he created all the futuristic sets for Space: 1999 (1975–77) and Star Maidens (1976). He died on 6 July 2011.

(19 September 1941 – 6 July 2011)

Awards

Wilson won an Emmy for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Art Direction for a Miniseries or a Special for the TV film Stalin (1992) and was nominated for Outstanding Art Direction for a Miniseries or a Special for Great Expectations (1989). He also received a CableACE Award for Art Direction in a Dramatic Special or Series/Movie or Miniseries for The Old Curiosity Shop (1995).

Filmography

  1. The Hills Have Eyes II (2007)
  2. The Ten Commandments (2007)
  3. A Christmas Carol (TV film, 2004)
  4. The Blackwater Lightship (TV film, 2004)
  5. Dinotopia (TV mini-series, 2002)
  6. Victoria & Albert (TV mini-series, 2001)
  7. In the Beginning (TV mini-series, 2000)
  8. Mary, Mother of Jesus (TV film, 1999)
  9. The Seventh Scroll (TV mini-series, 1999)
  10. Miracle at Midnight (TV film, 1998)
  11. Oliver Twist (TV film, 1997)
  12. The Apocalypse Watch (TV film, 1997)
  13. Supply & Demand (TV series, 1997)
  14. The Little Riders (TV film, 1996)
  15. The Governor (TV series, 1995)
  16. The Old Curiosity Shop (TV series, 1995)
  17. Remember (TV series, 1993)
  18. Stalin (TV film, 1992)
  19. Fergie & Andrew: Behind the Palace Doors (TV series, 1992)
  20. L'Amérique en otage (TV series, 1991)
  21. Great Expectations (TV mini-series, 1989)
  22. The Lady and the Highwayman (TV film, 1989)
  23. Steal the Sky (TV series, 1988)
  24. A Hazard of Hearts (TV film, 1987)
  25. The Lion of Africa (TV series, 1987)
  26. Gulag (TV film, 1985)
  27. Out of the Darkness (TV film, 1985)
  28. Exploits at West Poley (TV series, 1985)
  29. Haunters of the Deep (1984)
  30. Slayground (1983)
  31. Memoirs of a Survivor (1981)
  32. Riding High (1981)
  33. Yesterday's Hero (1979)
  34. A Man Called Intrepid (TV mini-series, 1979)
  35. International Velvet (1978)
  36. Space: 1999 (TV series, 48 episodes, 1975–78)
  37. The New Avengers (TV series, six episodes, 1977)
  38. Star Maidens (TV series, 13 episodes, 1976)
  39. The Secret Service (TV series, 1969)
  40. Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons (TV series, six episodes, 1967)
  41. Thunderbirds Are Go (1966)

 

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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...