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I have all my taxi drivers turn on the Latin stations, so I can dance in the backseat. I have them turn the music up real loud and have a big time in the backseat dancing. He was a prolific and beloved character actor, whose most popular appearances included a shady real estate developer in "Poltergeist" who didn't bother removing the bodies when he displaced a cemetery's headstones , a TV news producer in "The China Syndrome," and a foreman who becomes a zombie in the horror-comedy "The Return of the Living Dead.
In February World War II saboteur Joachim Roenneberg August 30, October 21, headed a five-man team that daringly blew up a plant producing heavy water, depriving Nazi Germany of a key ingredient it could have used to make nuclear weapons. Roenneberg, then 23, was tapped by the Special Operations Executive, or SOE Britain's wartime intelligence gathering and sabotage unit to destroy key parts of the heavily-guarded plant in Telemark, in southern Norway. Parachuting onto snow-covered mountains, the group was joined by a handful of other commando soldiers before skiing to their destination.
They then penetrated the fortress-like heavy-water plant to blow up its production line. Roenneberg said he made a last-minute decision to cut the length of his fuse from several minutes to seconds, ensuring that the explosion would take place but making it more difficult to escape. The group skied hundreds of miles across the mountains to escape, and Roenneberg wearing a British uniform ended up in neighboring neutral Sweden.
For this and other operations as part of the resistance movement, Roenneberg received Norway's highest military decoration, and was honored by the U. In a Norwegian documentary about Operation Gunnerside, Roenneberg said the daring operation went "like a dream" — a reference to the fact that not a single shot was fired. Dorcas Reilly July 22, Oct. The popular dish, made with green beans and cream of mushroom soup and topped with crunchy fried onions, is the most popular recipe ever to come out of Campbell's corporate kitchen.
In a AP interview marking the recipe's 50th anniversary, Reilly said she didn't remember having a hand in it because the dish was among hundreds that were created during her decades at Campbell's. The recipe is still a fixture on soup-can labels and television commercials. And Reilly said she always kept the ingredients for the casserole on hand in her home, just in case someone asked her to whip one up. The recipe's website got 2. As teenagers in Seattle, Paul Allen January 21, October 15, and Bill Gates were passionate about the workings of computers and coding.
Their idea to take computers out of university and research labs and put them in people's hands was sparked in , in Boston Gates was then attending Harvard, Allen was a college dropout , when they came across a notice for a new small computer sold to hobbyists, the Altair. In eight weeks Allen and Gates wrote code that could run on the Altair and pitched it to the company. It was the birth of Microsoft, a giant in personal and business computing. By , Microsoft's operating systems and such programs as Word and Excel were used by 93 percent of the world's personal computers. Allen was Microsoft's executive vice president of research and new product development until , when he resigned after being diagnosed with cancer — and he pursued a wide range of interests with the passion of a cancer survivor.
Microsoft in Our Own Words. He also spent on such interests as music he played in his own rock 'n' roll band, and built Seattle's Museum of Pop Culture , sports he bought the Seattle Seahawks and the Portland Trail Blazers , science he funded an antenna farm listening for signals from outer space, and built the aerospace firm Stratolaunch , movies he invested in DreamWorks , and travel he built a yacht longer than a football field, equipped with its own submarine. Most companies fail.
But I had some whoppers! Taylor was the league's MVP in Taylor was often compared to his contemporary, Cleveland's Jim Brown, but Vince Lombardi had different views on two of the most punishing running backs in the league at the time: He also had a recurring role on the series "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.
But he was best known for playing veterinarian Hershel Greene on the AMC series "The Walking Dead," a character the network called "the emotional core of the show. An Atlanta native who hitchhiked to L. At different times, you are starting over. If you love it, you stay with it. That's what I'm doing. And he remained a familiar face. When Robert F. Kennedy decided to duck through the kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles after declaring victory in the Democratic presidential primary, an year-old busboy reveled at his good fortune — he might get to shake hands with the next President of the United States.
But after gunfire rang out and Kennedy fell, Juan Romero October 1, cradled the Senator's bleeding head. As they talked, Romero pressed a set of Rosary beads into Kennedy's hand as photographers frantically took pictures. Because of the beads, his white busboy smock and the beatific look on his face, Romero was misidentified in some early news reports as a priest. Josefina Guerra said her father felt guilty for years about the shooting, which she said broke his heart.
Visiting Kennedy's gravesite a few years ago, Romero spoke to the Senator, asking him for forgiveness for the fact that he didn't react quickly enough to possibly take the bullet for him, or push him out of the way of danger. Only recently, he said during rare interviews this year, did he finally come to terms with that struggle. He also said he still carried the example Kennedy had set as he campaigned for equality and civil rights. Animator Will Vinton November 17, October 4, invented Claymation, a style of stop-motion animation using putty or clay instead of models.
The technique was featured in his Oscar-winning short, "Closed Mondays. His animation studio would become best-known for a series of TV commercials for the California Raisin Advisory Board, starting in , that starred the California Raisins. In addition to other commercials including those starring Domino's "Pizza Zoid" , Vinton created animation effects for the Michael Jackson music video "Speed Demon," and the film "Return to Oz. Vinton once described the quality of bringing clay to life, one frame at a time, to CBS' " 48 Hours ": But even an animator's hands-on touch can't guarantee popularity like that of the Raisins: But his greatest success came through his monumental work with The Beatles on such landmark albums as "Revolver" and "Sgt.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. A London native fascinated by music and technology from an early age, Emerick was an invaluable part of the Beatles' legacy as they became increasingly ambitious and experimental in the studio including the embrace of effects like backward tape loops and double tracking.
He was on hand as an assistant during the Beatles' early EMI sessions in , and was promoted in the mids. Producer George Martin recalled in a s documentary that Emerick was unconventional: Pepper" included enhancing the sound of Ringo Starr's drums on "A Day in the Life" by loosening the skins and wrapping a microphone in a tea cloth and placing it in a glass container.
McCartney also recorded bass lines after the rest of a given track was done — an unusual practice at the time. He won three Grammys for engineering, and received a lifetime achievement award in Over eight decades, the French singer and actor Charles Aznavour May 22, October 1, endeared himself to fans around the world with his versatile tenor, lush lyrics and kinetic stage presence, selling more than million records. He would write upwards of 1, songs by his own estimate, including the classic "La Boheme.
Play excerpt of Charles Aznavour singing "La Boheme". He resisted description as a crooner, preferring instead " a songwriter who sometimes performs his own songs. My voice, my size, my gestures, my lack of culture and education, my honesty, or my lack of personality," the 5' 3" inch performer wrote in his autobiography. I cannot change it. The teachers I consulted all agreed I shouldn't sing, but nevertheless I continued to sing until my throat was sore. Of Armenian descent, Aznavour campaigned internationally to get the massacres of up to 1.
He also founded the nonprofit Aznavour and Armenia to aid victims of the earthquake. He also served in several ambassadorial roles, and in was awarded France's prestigious National Order of Merit. Folk musician Marty Balin January 30, September 27, , pictured far left, both founded the San Francisco rock band Jefferson Airplane and co-owned the Matrix, the Bay Area club where the group performed as house band and which served as a stage for such local artists as the Grateful Dead and Janis Joplin.
Their "San Francisco sound" was a psychedelic blend of blues, folk, rock and jazz. I told the guy, 'It's great that you're publicizing this beautiful-feeling scene out here,' and he looked me right in the eye and said, 'Fastest way to kill it. The Airplane would break up, in part owing to Balin's acknowledged jealousy of Grace Slick, who'd joined the group in the fall of , soon before their second album, "Surrealistic Pillow.
Amid rumblings that the 5-foot-7, pound McDonald was too small to play in the NFL, the Eagles drafted him in the third round in The small, speedy and sure-handed receiver teamed with quarterback Norm Van Brocklin to help the Philadelphia Eagles win the NFL championship three years later.
When he retired in , he ranked second in league history in touchdown catches, fourth in yards receiving, and sixth in receptions. His induction speech was equal parts hysterics and histrionics, as McDonald told jokes and tossed his pound bronze bust in the air. He even pulled out a radio and danced to disco music, all on the steps of the hallowed hall.
His early Hollywood resume as an assistant director, production manager and editor allowed him to cross paths with such cultish figures as Jack Nicholson, Dennis Hopper and Warren Oates, even if the films "Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet" were considerably less stellar. According to a family statement, Kurtz's religious studies would inspire a universal religion for Lucas' fantasy film, "Star Wars. In Kurtz explained the origin of the Force to the website Mashable: As soon as you say one of those words, you know what's behind that, even if you haven't studied any of those religions.
We wanted something as simple as that, an everyday expression that linked to the power of the Force that wasn't overbearing. In Arthur Mitchell March 27, —September 19, told "60 Minutes" correspondent Ed Bradley that, when he was a teenager, people did not encourage his pursuit of dance: There will never be a black man in the ballet until the year I'll show you! Born in Harlem, the son of a building superintendent, Mitchell rose to become a star performer with the New York City Ballet under George Balanchine, whose pairing of Mitchell with a white dancer in the late '50s was deemed audacious.
Mitchell also choreographed his own works, performed on Broadway, and worked with dance companies in other countries. In , committed to living up to the legacy of murdered civil rights pioneer Martin Luther King Jr. It would grow into the Dance Theatre of Harlem, the country's first major African-American dance company. Mitchell would also introduce inner-city children to the arts via Dancing Through Barriers, a program that taught tens of thousands of kids every year in cities from New York to Miami to London. Often referred to as the father of postmodernism, architect Robert Venturi June 25, —September 18, shunned the title, despite having broken with the Modernist school principle that "less is more" … insisting to the contrary that as he put it "less is a bore!
Venturi designed buildings bursting with ornamentation and flourishes, and encouraged architects and consumers to enjoy "messy vitality" in architecture, whether whimsical, sarcastic, humorous or honky-tonk. His first notable building was a house he designed for his mother in Philadelphia's Chestnut Hill neighborhood in It broke from the established architectural thinking of the time, that a modern house should contain no historical elements.
Architect Frederick Schwartz referred to the Vanna Venturi House pictured as "the first postmodern anything. That horrified people. We did houses that looked like houses, elemental concepts of houses. We did fire stations that looked like fire stations. In , Venturi was awarded the prestigious Pritzker Prize, for "expanding and redefining the limits of architecture in this century, as perhaps no other has.
Born Malcolm James McCormick in Pittsburgh, he got his start in the music industry with the local independent label Rostrum Records, where he frequently collaborated with rapper Wiz Khalifa. His debut solo album "Blue Slide Park" debuted at the No. In a Rolling Stone interview , Miller was asked to explain his neck tattoo of a lotus flower. He offered: I epitomize longevity. He later played the next-door neighbor of Bob Newhart on the comedian's s series, and psychiatrist Larry Dykstra on "Alf. In a interview for the Television Academy Foundation , Daily said reading scripts was always difficult no one knew he was dyslexic , and that he had trouble going up for commercial or movie auditions because he wouldn't be allowed to do improvs instead, and had to find other ways to impress others with humor.
Growing up, Randy Weston April 6, September 1, was exposed to all genres of music by his parents — everything from jazz, gospel and calypso to classical and opera. His first album, in , reinterpreted Cole Porter standards, and he would collaborate with poet Langston Hughes on "Uhuru Afrika. A tour for the State Department in the s landed him in Morocco, where he settled for five years, running the African Rhythms Club in Tangiers. In Weston told the Telegraph newspaper , "The great thing about African music is it's not music for the young, or the old, it's music for everybody.
An iconic figure in the world of dance, Paul Taylor July 29, August 29, conjured works that reflected the heights and depths of the human condition with scintillating athleticism and humor. A year after graduating Juilliard in , at age 24, Taylor founded his own company, collaborating with artist Robert Rauschenberg on his first production. A year later he became a soloist for Martha Graham, while continuing to shape his own company into one of the world's most successful contemporary troupes. The pairing of classical music particularly 18th-century Baroque with modern dance was one of Taylor's hallmarks.
His signature work was 's "Esplanade" center , a joyful scene of dancers hurtling themselves at each other, set to concertos by Bach.
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Taylor also created dances for such noted artists as Mikhail Baryshnikov right top and Rudolf Nureyev. Taylor kept working well into his 80s, venturing to his company's Manhattan studios from his Long Island home to choreograph two new pieces a year; he created in all during his year career. In the documentary "Paul Taylor: Creative Domain," the choreographer said, "Dance, I've always thought it's like poetry. Poems don't always spell everything out, you know.
They need room between the lines. Although he was known for memorable comedic moments, prolific playwright and screenwriter Neil Simon July 4, August 26, had a difficult childhood growing up in the Bronx, as his father frequently left the family. Humor helped get him through the difficult times. Being the toast of Broadway meant something quite personal for Simon. As he told "Sunday Morning," "Many times I would go to the theatre and stand in the back and people would come up and they say, 'How do you know my father?
He was an American hero and a maverick. The son and grandson of four-star Navy admirals, McCain was a rebellious student who, by his own volition, "didn't conform to the rules and regulations of either high school or the Naval Academy. Severely injured, McCain was captured and held at the so-called "Hanoi Hilton," enduring torture and frequent beatings.
He remained in captivity for five-and-a-half years, rejecting an early release when he refused to leave his fellow POWs behind. In , he took his fighting spirit to Washington, as a Congressman and later Senator, standing out for his "straight talk," especially on subjects like campaign finance and climate change.
He ran for president in , and again in , when he won the Republican nomination to run against Senator Barack Obama. One of the most forceful voices in the Senate, where he led the Armed Services Committee, he wasn't afraid to buck his own party, voting last year against the Republicans' attempt to kill Obamacare. Bon vivant journalist Robin Leach August 29, August 24, , the son of an English vacuum cleaner sales manager, would parlay a fascination with the lifestyles of the rich and famous into a TV hit. After helping get "Entertainment Tonight" on the air, he tussled with producers over celebrity coverage until leaving to package his own syndicated series, "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.
After helping get The Food Network off the ground, Leach worked in recent years as a celebrity journalist in Las Vegas, where he also invested in a TV production facility. Despite the breathless coverage he gave to the uber-rich, Leach admitted to the Hollywood Reporter in that he didn't quite live the rich-and-famous lifestyle himself: I am not like the people I interview. I do not have a fleet of bodyguards or minders around me. I have an accountant and lawyer; I don't have a manager.
I do all my business by myself, and I shop at the supermarket by myself because I enjoy it. Guitarist and bassist Ed King September 14, August 22, was an original member of the California psychedelic group Strawberry Alarm Clock, which had a hit with "Incense and Peppermints" in He joined the Southern rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd in and was part of the band's first three albums with their distinct three-guitar sound.
Hear an excerpt from "Sweet Home Alabama". He left the band two years before a plane crash killed singer Ronnie Van Zant and guitarist Steve Gaines in He rejoined the group 10 years later and played with them until he retired in Following a heart transplant, King developed a passion for posting his opinions on food online. In he quipped to the site Food Republic , "I don't know if my donor had something wrong with him, but I can't stand Italian food anymore, and I used to love it!
If you died, you really died, but it was a great way to learn.
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She made her screen debut in with "A Thousand Clowns," then got back-to-back Tony nominations in and for two hit Broadway musicals: In later years she decamped for Arizona where she taught acting, telling the Phoenix New Times in , "I used to try to get through one film a year, but I always chose movies that I thought would fail, so that I wouldn't have to deal with the fame thing. The son of an elite family from Ghana, Kofi Annan April 8, August 18, spent much of his career in the United Nations, where his aristocratic style, cool-tempered elegance and political savvy helped guide his ascent to become its seventh secretary-general, and the first hired from within.
He was also the first black African to lead the world body, from to From the outset of his tenure, Annan struggled to restore the U. When he departed, he left behind a global organization far more aggressively engaged in peacekeeping and fighting poverty, setting the framework for its 21st-century response to mass atrocities and its emphasis on human rights and development. Despite his well-honed diplomatic skills, Annan was never afraid to speak candidly. That didn't always win him fans, particularly in the case of President George W. Bush's administration, with whom Annan's camp spent much time bickering.
Much of his second term was spent at odds with the United States, the U. Even out of office, Annan never completely left the U. He returned in special roles, including as the U. He remained a powerful advocate for global causes through his eponymous foundation, which in helped broker peace in Kenya, where election violence had killed over 1, people. At the end of his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech, in , Annan reminded the world of the importance of the U. Born in Memphis but raised in Detroit by her single father, a Baptist preacher, Aretha Franklin March 25, August 16, began singing in the church choir at an early age, and by 14 the young prodigy was already recording professionally.
But she always defied categorization. At the Grammys, where she sang "Respect," she also substituted for an ailing Luciano Pavarotti by performing "Nessun Dorma," from Puccini's "Turandot. Ray Emory c. He spent the past few decades doggedly pushing to identify unknown remains and have them returned to their families.
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In , the military agreed to dig up a casket that Emory who'd meticulously studied records was convinced included the remains of multiple servicemen who'd died on the USS Oklahoma. Emory was right, and five sailors were identified. It helped lay the foundation for the Pentagon's decision more than a decade later to exhume and attempt to identify all sailors and Marines from the ship, who had been buried as "unknowns" in a national cemetery in Honolulu. Since those exhumations, sailors have been identified, though DNA testing and other methods. About 77 have been reburied, many in their hometowns, bringing closure to families across the country.
Emory, who recently moved to Boise, Idaho, to live with his son, visited Pearl Harbor one last time in June pictured , where more than sailors stood side-by-side on ships and piers to surprise him, greeting him with salutes and cheers. Novelist and essayist V. Naipaul August 17, August 11, , the first writer of Indian origin to win the Booker Prize, traveled as a self-described "barefoot colonial" from his rural childhood in Trinidad to an Oxford education in England, and would be hailed as one of the greatest writers of the 20th century.
Naipaul's books including "The Enigma of Arrival," "Finding the Centre" and "The Enigma of Arrival" explored colonialism and decolonization, exile and the struggles of the everyman in the developing world. He was critical of colonialism he would repeatedly reject his birthplace as little more than a plantation , but saw himself as a realist, cured of illusions.
His outlook was characterized by the famous opening words of "A Bend in the River": After working as a writer for the BBC, he earned plaudits for a string of novels, and traveled extensively to pen journalistic essays and books on culture, politics and religion. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in "for having united perceptive narrative and incorruptible scrutiny in works that compel us to see the presence of suppressed histories.
This was not out of wickedness. It was out of ignorance, out of indifference, out of the feelings that the history of this very small island was not important. These aspects one had to learn, and writing took me there. One didn't begin with knowledge. One wrote oneself into knowledge. After studying drama at Northwestern University, Rae moved to New York and quickly found work doing satirical sketches in Greenwich Village clubs. Her TV credits included "The U.
Rae originated the character of Mrs. Garrett in in the NBC comedy "Diff'rent Strokes," then took her to the spinoff show that premiered the following year. It would run for nine seasons, though Rae who earned an Emmy nomination for the role left the show after seven.
But we're getting the message now! Jonathan Gold July 28, July 21, was a classically-trained musician who played cello in punk bands. But his real talent was as a writer, and for four decades he covered the culinary landscape of Los Angeles, shifting the popular focus from Michelin-starred restaurants to the street food, diners, ethnic eateries and taco trucks that define the city's cuisine.
His L. Times column Counter Intelligence, begun in , helped introduce Angelenos to the lesser-known and tastier corners to be found in immigrant enclaves across the L. In , he became the first and to date only food critic to receive the Pulitzer Prize for criticism. The judges noted Gold's "zestful" writing that expressed "the delight of an erudite eater. In an interview earlier this year Gold said, "I love going out to eat in the way a theater critic loves theater.
I love going to farmers markets. I love sticking my hands in pots. And it turns out food is a pretty good prism through which to view humanity. Surpassing the average four-week life expectancy of RAF pilots during the war, he flew between 50 and 60 sorties during the Battle of Britain, shooting down or damaging several German planes. Wellum was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, and was later promoted to flight commander. Years later, as he faced divorce and the loss of his house, he told the Independent, "I just wanted to sit quietly and convince myself that at some point in my life I had been of use.
It was later turned into a BBC film, which Wellum himself judged to be the most authentic rendering of the Battle of Britain, surpassing even the epic "with all the big chaps in it," he told Forces TV. During his service as a U. The military wanted conservative programming. American youths fighting overseas, however, were not into "drab, sterile announcements" with middle-of-the-road music, Cronauer told The Associated Press in The battle over the airwaves was joined: Cronauer loved the movie but admitted much of it was Hollywood make-believe, explaining, "Yes, I did try to make it sound more like a stateside station.
Yes, I did have problems with news censorship. Yes, I was in a restaurant shortly before the Viet Cong hit it. And yes, I did start each program by yelling, 'Good Morning, Vietnam! The rest was invention on the part of Hollywood scriptwriters and Williams' improvisational genius.
After the military, he worked in radio, television and advertising. He also attended the University of Pennsylvania's law school and worked in communications law. He later handled prisoner-of-war issues for the Pentagon. A lifelong, card-carrying Republican, he said he was not anti-military or anti-establishment: And you certainly do run into a lot of stupidity in the military.
In the late s Reed, a Republican, worked with Florida's Republican governor, Claude Kirk, to block construction of what would have been the world's largest airport in the Big Cypress Swamp, destroying much of the Everglades. In that role, Reed helped preserve more than million acres of parks and wildlife refuges in Alaska, and worked with Congress to shape legislation that also included the Marine Mammal Protection Act, the Endangered Species Convention, and key amendments to the Clean Water Act.
His agent gave actor Art Gelien his stage name: Tab Hunter July 11, July 8, The shy boy - abandoned by his father and raised by a domineering mother - joined the Coast Guard at 15 by lying about his age. An equestrian and figure skater, he emerged a star in the potboiler "Island of Desire.
Rumors about the actor's homosexuality burned up the scandal sheets, but he continued working under the studio-projected image of him as a teen heartthrob. I mean, my sexuality was my sexuality. And it was not what people perceived. You know, people believe what they want to believe.
But this was very difficult for me. In his memoir, "Tab Hunter Confidential: The Making of a Movie Star," Hunter recounted the stresses of being a love object to millions of young women when he was, in reality, a gay man. The documentary, told through the unflinching testimonies of Jewish captives, German executioners, and Polish bystanders, was universally praised Roger Ebert called it "one of the noblest films ever made". For Lanzmann, who had been a member of the French Resistance, the topic of his long-in-production film whose name translates as "destruction" was death itself: Diaz was freelancing for AP in November when a boater found a Cuban boy floating in an inner tube in the waters off Fort Lauderdale.
Diaz spent the next few months chatting with Elian Gonzalez's relatives and neighbors, earning their trust by respecting an order from the boy's uncle to not speak to the child. Because of those relationships, he was the only photographer to capture the moment when U. Diaz's Pulitzer Prize-winning photo shows an armed U. After the picture hit the wires and network news, Diaz saw how both Cuban leader Fidel Castro and Cuban-American community leaders used it to argue that the other side was brutal and heartless.
I shot the moment. That's all," Diaz said last year. During his career Diaz, who was known to roar, "Hello, Miami! Dancer and choreographer Dame Gillian Lynne February 20, July 1, had stopped taking piano lessons when she was a girl because a mean piano teacher smacked her for playing poorly. But her school believed the fidgety girl had a learning disorder because she couldn't stay still. Her mother took her to a specialist, who observed Gillian react to his turning on a radio. I leaped on his desk, I leaped off his desk. I danced all around the room.
She's a born dancer. Take her to a dance school. June 29, The son of a Johnstown, Pa. While Lee embraced his status as a creative god among comics fans, Ditko was a recluse who nonetheless won the worship of the most hardcore comic-book geeks. At 5'5, science fiction writer Harlan Ellison May 27, June 28, was bullied as a youth, which may have fueled his loud-mouthed attitude, once punching an Ohio State University professor who said he lacked writing talent.
He brought that pugnacious style to his work, penning nightmarish, sometimes darkly humorous stories. He wrote some 50 books and more than 1, articles, essays, TV scripts and screenplays, and earned nearly a dozen Nebula and Hugo awards. Some of his most popular works were surrealistic fantasies set in grisly worlds run by totalitarians and conformists. His "Star Trek" episode, "The City on the Edge of Forever," is thought by many to be the best ever, in which a young woman played by Joan Collins is saved from a fatal accident by the starship Enterprise's time-traveling Dr.
Later, the ship's Capt. Kirk and Mr. Spock learn they must return to the year and let her die or history will be changed and Nazi Germany will win World War II. There was no one quite like him in American letters, and never will be," author Stephen King Tweeted. If there's an afterlife, Harlan is already kicking ass and taking down names. Conservative political columnist Charles Krauthammer March 13, June 21, faced many battles throughout his life. A diving accident while in medical school at Harvard left him paralyzed.
But he still managed to graduate on time and at the top of his class. He later gave up psychiatry and his studies of bipolar disorder, and followed his love of politics to Washington. His allegiance switched from Democrats to Republicans in the s, when he became a Pulitzer Prize-winning commentator for the Washington Post.
An unorthodox conservative, Krauthammer was a leading advocate for the Iraq War who approved of using torture to interrogate terrorism detainees, but he was also a passionate animal rights advocate. He also didn't shy away from challenging fellow conservatives. And he was not adverse to expressing his criticism of President Trump, whom he referred to as a "rodeo clown. When he needed a break from politics, Krauthammer would unwind at Nationals Park, a place of devotion. Veteran National League umpire Dutch Rennert June 12, June 17, was known for his animated, booming strike calls which verged on performance art.
His choreography for calling strikes would include stepping back from the catcher, turning toward one dugout in a crouch or on his knee, and extending his right arm, yelling loudly enough to be heard on TV or radio. Fans jovially mimicked his calls. Motion picture title designer Richard Alan Greenberg June 16, leapt from the advertising world and teaching graphic design to film when he received his first big Hollywood job: Create graphics to announce the "Superman" movie.
The streaking-titles teaser, later translated to the movie's monumental opening credits, launched his own high-flying film career. Greenberg blended typography and motion to create striking imagery that heralded stories of adventure, suspense and humor. Among his most noteworthy title designs: To view a retrospective of Greenberg's work visit the Art of the Title website. She was invited by The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. She later served as an administrator at Cornell University.
During a commemoration of King's death in , Cotton said that people need to take responsibility for carrying on the mission of racial equality. She just did it," Cotton said of the woman who inspired the Montgomery, Ala. It starts with ourselves, our families and our churches. But he knew better than other TV chefs that the sensual pleasures of food are often irremovable from the places in which they originated — hence the treks to lands that were exotic or at least filmed and edited in a smashingly exotic manner , which were gastronomic excuses to sit with families and friends for gossip, local history, politics , and lore about food.
His celebrity was born from his book, "Kitchen Confidential: As a storyteller, both of his own journey through life overcoming drug addiction and rising to become an executive chef in New York and about the cultures into which he dipped his toes, Bourdain was unparalleled — melding ego, curiosity and appetite into one boisterous, entertaining stew. But eating should be a submissive act. And chefs are at their happiest when they go to a restaurant and know someone in charge is cooking well. When that happens, I can completely switch over to the other side and experience it washing over me.
I know I'm in good hands. Eunice Gayson March 17, June 8, was the very first Bond Girl, Sylvia Trench, who loses to James Bond at the Baccarat tables in "Dr No," and later shows up in his hotel room wearing considerably less formal attire. Unlike many Bond Girls who would meet untimely ends during the franchise's year-plus history, Gayson's character actually returned the following year in "From Russia With Love.
In a interview with the Daily Record, Gayson explained that she helped Connery overcome nerves on the very first day of production when he kept bumbling his now-iconic opening line. Taking him to lunch and pretending to imbibe, she encouraged him to go off the wagon and loosen up with a drink. He downed two. But her place in film history as the very first Bond Girl is assured, though it wasn't without its indignities.
A striking presence, Gayson's voice was nonetheless dubbed over by another actress in both films. In January , Turgel and her mother were forced onto a death march from Auschwitz to Buchenwald, and later on to Bergen-Belsen in Germany. It was in a hospital at Bergen-Belsen where the year-old Turgel cared for year-old Anne Frank as she lay dying from typhus.
One month after Frank's death, the camp was liberated by the Allies. After the war, Turgel married one of the death camp's liberators a British Jew , earning the nickname "The Bride of Belsen. In she published a memoir, "I Light a Candle," and until the end of her life she retold the story of the Holocaust and the horrors of anti-Semitism she witnessed. Maybe that's why I was spared - so my testimony would serve as a memorial, like that candle that I light, for the men, women and children who have no voice.
Schoendienst led the National League with 26 stolen bases that year, then moved to third base and shortstop before settling at second. He wore the Cardinals uniform for 45 seasons as a player, coach and manager, and remained involved with the team in later years as a special assistant to general manager Walt Jocketty.
Into his 80s, Schoendienst hit fungos to fielders in pregame practice. He managed the St. Louis Cardinals to two pennants and a World Series championship in the s. Schoendienst ranks second in Cardinals history with 1, wins as a manager. Schoendienst also served as interim manager in and , the latter stint after Whitey Herzog resigned, and coached for the Oakland Athletics in and ' Along the way, she became a role model for a generation of women eager to make their mark in the fashion industry.
Fashion designer Liz Lange tweeted that Spade was "the nicest woman" who offered supportive words when Lange was just starting out. As the highly visible face of her brand, Spade became known for her s bouffant and thick-framed glasses. Yet the look belied a savvy businesswoman whose company, Kate Spade New York, now has more than retail shops and outlet stores across the U. Political prankster Dick Tuck January 25, May 28, made his career as a Democratic Party operative, but he was most renowned for wittily antagonizing Richard Nixon, whom he first pranked when Nixon visited the campus of UC Santa Barbara in during his Senate run against Helen Gahagan Douglas.
Assigned to oversee the candidate's visit, Tuck — a WWII vet studying under the GI Bill and who was actually working for Douglas — hired a large hall and invited a smattering of people, leaving more than 1, empty seats. He then quizzed Nixon on the International Monetary Fund. Though mild by some dirty tricksters' standards, Tuck's decades' long pranks of Nixon were humorous, such as hiring an old woman to console the candidate after his debate against John F. Kennedy with the reassuring, "That's all right, you'll do better next time," or having people in San Francisco's Chinatown hold up a sign in Chinese asking about a questionable loan billionaire Howard Hughes gave to Nixon's brother.
Informed of the translation, Nixon ripped up the sign.
Aretha Franklin and Stephen Hawking among the stars lost in 2018
He began his professional radio career as a freelancer for UPI covering the Patty Hearst case, and later worked for Mutual and NBC Radio, reporting on every presidential campaign from through Yet, he wrote he was "a busy and active kid" who "never let anything slow me down. He used a device called a "mono ski" to glide through the slopes of Colorado and elsewhere.
Navy test pilot and astronaut Alan Bean March 15, May 26, was the fourth human being to walk on the moon. But when I actually got there and looked back and saw it sitting out there and realized that everybody but the three of us was down there, it just seemed impossible. It just seemed too amazing to be true. The whole mission went that way. He also flew aboard America's first space station, Skylab, in , logging a then-record 59 days in orbit. Bean then left NASA and devoted himself to his new career as an accomplished artist. His first book, "Goodbye, Columbus" , about the guy who doesn't get the girl, grabbed the National Book Award.
And "Portnoy's Complaint," his blockbuster novel ten years later, grabbed national attention with its frankness about sex. Plays a huge part in their imaginations. Plays a huge part in their fantasies. And therefore, it's a subject for writing. Roth would be heralded as "America'a greatest living novelist," with his discourses on the Jewish experience and assimilation in 20th century America.
His 30 novels include "Operation Shylock" , set against the backdrop of the trial in Israel of a Nazi war criminal; "The Human Stain" , about the effects of accusations of racism; "The Plot Against America" , an alternate history in which President Charles Lindbergh leads the nation down the path of fascism; and "Nemesis" , about a polio epidemic in his hometown of Newark, N. An atheist, Roth was asked by Braver what he wished his legacy would be.
When does the legacy begin? Visiting Hollywood stars encouraged the 6-foot-6, ruggedly handsome Walker to give the movies a try. He almost missed his audition with filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille when he stopped on the way to help a woman fix a flat tire. When he tried to explain his lateness, DeMille said, "Yes, I know all about it; that was my secretary. Walker's fame came from starring roles in the TV westerns "Cheyenne" and "Laramie," and appearances on "Maverick" and "77 Sunset Strip.
Walker nearly died in when a ski pole pierced his heart in California's Sierra Nevada. Before audiences jumped out of their seats watching "The Exorcist," the movie poster by designer Bill Gold January 3, May 20, made sure they jumped into them. The illustrator created memorable posters for dozens of films during a career spanning seven decades. At age 21 the Pratt Institute graduate landed a job at Warner Brothers. First assignment: His designs featured innovative typography and minimalist graphics, traditional head shots and impressionistic illustrations — all tempting the ticket buyer with visions of fascinating stories and larger-than-life personalities.
Gold's idea of an effective poster? Pop artist Robert Indiana September 13, May 19, used bold colors and giant fonts to create prints, paintings and sculptures. His best-known work was his s "LOVE" series, examples of which have graced postage stamps and public spaces around the world. A friend described Indiana as "reclusive, cantankerous and sometimes difficult. But he was a very loyal, loving man. He was the architect of love. One after another, electric signs with neon martini glasses lit up on them, the San Francisco symbol of 'bar' — thousands of neon-magenta martini glasses bouncing and streaming down the hill, and beneath them hundreds, thousands of people wheeling around to look at this freaking crazed truck we're in, their white faces erupting from their lapels like marshmallows — streaming and bouncing down the hill — and God knows they've got plenty to look at.
In the mids, magazine writer Tom Wolfe March 2, May 14, became a leading and exuberant practitioner of "New Journalism" — non-fiction writing that was novelistic in emotional impact, analytical and fact-based, told with an over-the-top style that riveted the reader. His work broke countless rules, but was grounded in old-school, shoe-leather reporting. His magazine piece, "Radical Chic: Asked in by "Sunday Morning" if he saw himself as a voyeur or a reporter, Wolfe laughed: In the mids he turned to fiction with "The Bonfire of the Vanities," a sweeping, satirical story about New York City's social inequities, racism, and Wall Street's "Masters of the Universe.
In Wolfe suffered a massive heart attack and underwent a quintuple bypass, which both saved his life and changed it. And that's the part of you that really doesn't die. Their unforgettable on-screen pairing fostered a strong friendship that lasted for decades, until Reeve's early death in But prior to her star turn as the spunky reporter, Kidder battled manic mood swings — experiences which actually led to her pursuit of acting, and to being cast as troubled teenagers in Canadian TV shows.
But her professional career was hampered by financial problems and depression. Bipolar, she suffered a paranoia-fueled breakdown in when a computer virus destroyed three years' worth of writing on her laptop that could not be salvaged. She was found after disappearing for four days in the hills of Los Angeles, received help, and would eventually resume acting and writing. Stine's The Haunting Hour. She also became an outspoken activist; in she was arrested outside the White House protesting the Keystone pipeline. The cut from one image or scene to another is part of the defining vocabulary of film, and the most innovative and expressive of cuts can alter and expand the narrative, characters, and even the viewer.
How else to describe the sublime yet jaw-dropping "match cut" from "Lawrence of Arabia"? Editor Anne V.
In , as she accepted a lifetime achievement Oscar — only the second editor to be so recognized — Coates said, "Can you imagine a job where you're actually paid to look into the eyes of George Clooney, Peter O'Toole, Richard Burton Shot in the Piazza della Repubblica in Florence, Italy in August , Ruth Orkin's photograph "American Girl in Italy," of a solitary woman wading through a gaggle of loitering, catcalling men while clutching her shawl, was an iconic shot that encapsulated so much: She, a vacationing schoolteacher from New York City who was touring Europe on her own, met Orkin and agreed to appear in a photo essay about women traveling solo.
At six feet tall, Ninalee stood out from the crowd, making her solitary stride all the more noticeable. She later described the experience as fun, despite the appearance that she was burdened by the harassment of the men, one of whom is seen grabbing his crotch. I wasn't being harassed," she told The Globe and Mail in First published in Cosmopolitan magazine, the picture would become the most famous taken by Orkin who died in Ninalee, meanwhile, would become an advertising copywriter, and marry twice - first to a widowed Venetian count, Achille Passi, and later a Canadian steel executive, Robert Craig.
In what was a coincidence for the ages, the man pictured on the motor scooter ogling Ninalee turned out to be a cousin of her first husband, and a business partner of her second. In a interview with the website Green Living, artist Larry Harvey January 11, April 28, described his whimsical decision to erect a giant wooden figure and then burn it to the ground on San Francisco's Baker Beach one summer day in That first fire, in , led to the popular, long-running counterculture celebration known as Burning Man, held annually the week before Labor Day in Northern Nevada's Black Rock Desert.
The week-long festival attracts some 70, people who must carry in their own food, build their own makeshift community, and engage in whatever interests them. On the gathering's penultimate day, a giant effigy is set ablaze during a raucous, joyful celebration. Harvey who was the "chief philosophic officer" of the limited liability corporation created to oversee Burning Man had a falling out with John Law, who had co-founded Burning Man with him and who sued to have its trademark placed in the public domain.
They settled out of court, and Harvey retained control. It's our identity," said Harvey, who often spoke against the commodification of popular culture. While serving as a navigator under pilot Jimmy Stewart during World War II, he would sell his first photo, of two planes colliding in mid-air, to Look magazine. After flying 30 bomber missions and 22 aid missions, Shay joined the staff of Life magazine as a writer, before becoming a freelance photographer based out of Chicago.
During his six-decade photojournalism career, Shay's images of politicians, sports stars, celebrities, street children, Playboy bunnies and mobsters appeared in such publications as Time, Life and Sports Illustrated. The Art Institute of Chicago has some of Shay's pictures in its permanent collection. He was maced during the riot outside the Democratic Convention, and wrote children's books and plays. As he told Chicago magazine earlier this year, "Don't invest too much in your own immortality, if at all.
The Rev. Christian Mondor April 27, April 25, learned to surf in , when he was in his mids, after joining the Sts. The "Surfing Padre" wore a wetsuit under his clerical robe as he presided over an annual "Blessing of the Waves" ceremony, at which surfers would ask for his blessing before they paddled out. Mondor's interfaith prayer assembly on the sand, with a rabbi and other religious leaders, would draw thousands. Mondor might kick off the proceedings by thanking God or "The Big Kahuna," as he called Him for righteous waves. But he would also speak in more serious tones: Help us always care for this great ocean so that we and generations to come may enjoy its beauty and power and majesty.
The career of New Orleans-born saxophone player Charles Neville December 28, April 26, dated to the s when he performed with B. King and other musical greats. Yet he was best known for three decades of performances with his siblings Aaron, Art and Cyril as the Grammy-winning Neville Brothers. Formed in the s, the band gained fans with high-energy performances featuring a distinctive fusion of funk, jazz and New Orleans rhythm and blues. He also had access to books on music and, at times, exposure to other imprisoned musicians.
But Dorough's wider fame came from setting multiplication tables and grammar to music, as musical director for the educational cartoon series "Schoolhouse Rock" between and One of the shortest men in the world due to a genetic disorder, achondroplasia dwarfism, Verne Troyer January 1, April 21, was also one of the most recognizable, thanks to his role as "Mini-Me," the diminutive clone of the sinister Dr. Evil, in the "Austin Powers" comedies. In a National Geographic Channel documentary Troyer credited his parents with helping his overcome the obstacles of dwarfism: I have an average-sized brother and an average-sized sister and I had to do everything they had to.
Listen to an excerpt from "Le7els". Health problems due to chronic alcoholism he suffered acute pancreatitis, and his appendix and part of his gall bladder were removed in forced him to stop touring, but he continued making music: His family immigrated to Pittsburgh, where he was bullied because he spoke little English. Having suffered from rheumatic fever in childhood, Sammartino dedicated himself to bodybuilding. A wrestler in high school, he became a champion power lifter and workout fanatic he once bench-pressed pounds , and authored "The Bruno Course of Bodybuilding.
Sammartino's Italian heritage, brute strength and good-guy charisma helped make him an instant star. Sammartino became a broadcaster on World Wrestling Entertainment's weekend morning shows, before his frustration over the company's direction into campier storylines, and his outrage over the drug culture he said had permeated the industry, led to a bitter split with WWE. Yet, he accepted an induction into its Hall of Fame in Kasell's radio career spanned half a century, starting as a morning DJ and newscaster in Goldsboro, North Carolina, and later as morning anchor and news director in Arlington, Virginia.
He remained on that show for 30 years. Beginning in , he was also the official judge and scorekeeper of the popular news trivia game, "Wait, Wait If you would like to continue enjoying the Hulkshare platform, please disable your AdBlocker. Escuchar musica de Mac Miller online. Advisory the following lyrics contain explicit language: Days, days, days Days, days, days Days, days. So who's that lady with a picture painted on my everything? And what is she trying to say now? I could probably spend my time thinking all about some better things Now die hard fans can know exactly Mac Miller goes through on a day to day basis.
This show started airing February 26, and continues filming today. Fans can expect to see plenty more shenanigans as Mac Mac Miller breaks down this track in his commentary:. Track four, thats PA Nights. Thats the first track that I really open up about a lot of things.