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Thread: Book of Condolence Thread

  1. #441
    spontaneously luminescent Oh my god, it's Robby!'s Avatar
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    Red face Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by bysshe View Post
    That man had amazing cleavage.
    he may have worked out a lot, but he could not stop

    Valar Dohaeris

  2. #442
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    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    TV presenter Tony Hart dies at 83

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7836112.stm

    Jools Holland: "Knock Knock!"
    Morrissey: "I'm not in!"
    Jools: "Oh, come on."
    Morrissey: "I refuse to open the door."

  3. #443

    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by cornelius blaze View Post
    Oh dear, poor old tony. Childhood hero, loved that show when i was a nipper.
    He always looked so debonair..

  4. #444

    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Kathleen Byron: Actress who played Sister Ruth in 'Black Narcissus'

    Tuesday, 20 January 2009

    Few actresses are so identified with one role as Kathleen Byron, who will always be remembered foremost as the passionate, wildly neurotic nun Ruth in the Powell-Pressburger masterpiece, Black Narcissus (1947). Driven mad with repression and her hopeless love for the District Commissioner (David Farrar) in a remote Himalayan convent, she piles on the lipstick and puts on a clinging red dress before trying to push Deborah Kerr to her death from the convent's bell-tower. Such displays of eroticism were rare in British films, and the effectiveness of the scene, and Byron's performance, gave her a reputation as one of the screen's great bad ladies.

    Later she memorably menaced Margaret Lockwood (herself no slouch at being wicked) in Madness of the Heart (1949), but her versatility was recognised by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, who cast her as a young schoolteacher in occupied Holland undermining the enemy by telling her pupils of the 1628 resistance hero Piet Hein, in The Silver Fleet (1943), as an angel in A Matter of Life and Death (1946), and notably in The Small Back Room (1948), in which, as the understanding sweetheart of an alcoholic bomb-disposal expert (Farrar again), she displayed qualities of devotion and intelligence that were every bit as convincing as her malevolent nun.

    She was at her best, though, when formidably resilient and strong-willed, such as in her role as the manipulative Italian promoter of a boy prodigy conductor (Jeremy Spencer) in Prelude to Fame (1950). She displayed such traits frequently in British "B" films of the Fifties, such as My Death Is a Mockery (1952), in which she was a smuggler's wife, and her prolific career also embraced television and stage (including a spell in the long-running Agatha Christie mystery The Mousetrap). Admiration for her work prompted Steven Spielberg, a Powell-Pressburger enthusiast, to cast her as the mother of the missing soldier Ryan in his ambitious war movie, Saving Private Ryan (1998).

    Born in London in 1922, to parents her daughter described as "staunch working-class socialists" who later became Mayors of East Ham, she turned down her place to read languages at London University when she won an acting scholarship to the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School. She made her screen debut with an uncredited bit part as a model in Climbing High (1938), starring Jessie Matthews, but had her first speaking role (two lines, as a maid) in Carol Reed's The Young Mr Pitt (1942). She told the historian Brian McFarlane, "While still at drama school, I came up to London to find an agent, and I met John Gliddon, who was Deborah Kerr's agent, and he sent me to the people who were doing The Young Mr Pitt. They gave me a part and after that I used to go around saying, 'I had two lines opposite Robert Donat.' I did very little after that because of the war and I was working for Censorship."

    Byron appeared in several wartime shorts for the Crown Film Unit, and in 1943 she played her first substantial film role in The Silver Fleet, the first of her four consecutive films for Powell and Pressburger. She played the angel in A Matter of Life and Death (Powell later described her role as "enchantingly grave"), the neurotic nun in Black Narcissus, and then the heroine of The Small Back Room.

    "When I was offered Black Narcissus, Michael Powell sent me a telegram saying, 'We're offering you the part of Sister Ruth; the trouble is, you'll never get such a good part again!' He was more or less right." Though Byron was rumoured to have had an affair with Powell, she found him a tough director. "He used to put people down and upset them. Looking back at the way he directed, I realise that he was determined to get something from you and didn't mind how he did it. At the time, I always used to fight with him. He wanted me to overstate the madness of Sister Ruth, and I used to argue with him that the character didn't know she was mad... Deborah Kerr used to whisper to me, 'Don't argue with him, just say, 'Oh, what a marvellous idea' and then do exactly what you want to do.'"

    Byron enjoyed the contrasting role given her in The Small Back Room.

    "I enjoyed playing that un-neurotic character because she had a nice lot of strength. I nearly lost the part because of censorship – you couldn't have two people living together, and that was the whole thrust of the story, that he wouldn't marry her because he was not happy with himself."

    Byron enhanced her shrewish reputation on screen with Madness of the Heart, in which she was pathologically jealous of Margaret Lockwood, a blind girl who has won the heart of the rich Frenchman (Paul Dupuis) at whom Byron had set her cap. When Lockwood carefully checks the position of her wine glass on the piano beside which she makes a toast to her ball guests, Byron slyly moves it so that Lockwood will knock it over and lose her confidence. In a splendid climactic sequence she leads Lockwood to a non-existent door of a chateau (actually an opening through which there is a sheer drop to the cliffs below) unaware that Lockwood has had an operation to restore her sight. "So you can see," she hisses.

    A less than cordial off-set relationship with Lockwood possibly added to the effectiveness of such scenes, but her convincing villainy had its drawbacks – she later claimed that two trips to Hollywood resulted in only one role (in Young Bess) because she was perceived as an actress specialising in neurotic monsters. But she was a delightfully feisty Duchess of Devonshire in I'll Never Forget You (1951, made in the UK, where it was titled The House on the Square), a time-travel romance in which Tyrone Power's atomic physicist is transported to the 18th century and falls in love with Ann Blyth. She was also effective as a university professor's daughter whose latent passions are aroused by a sadistic killer (Laurence Harvey) in The Scarlet Thread (1951), one of several "B" movies in which she starred.

    When such product began to be phased out in the Sixties, Byron became a familiar figure on television, her many appearances including roles in Emergency Ward 10, Danger Man, The Avengers, Callan, Secret Army (two episodes, as Madame Celeste Lekeu), Emmerdale Farm and Midsomer Murders. When she played a murder suspect in the show Crown Court, in which a panel had to bring in a "live" verdict, her reputation was such that the jury decided before hearing any evidence that she did it.

    Her final screen role was that of old Mrs Ryan in Saving Private Ryan, and her last television role was in Stephen Poliakoff's Perfect Strangers (2001), after which ill-health forced her to turn down the role of Lauren Bacall's sister in Lars Von Trier's Dogville.

    Tom Vallance

    Kathleen Byron, actress: born London 11 January 1921; married 1943 Daniel Bowen (marriage dissolved), 1953 Alaric Jacob (died 1995; one son, one daughter, one stepdaughter); died Northwood, Middlesex 18 January 2009


  5. #445

    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Hisayuki Toriumi (1941-2009)

    He directed Battle of the Planet and many other TV animations.

  6. #446

    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Dave2006 View Post
    TV presenter Tony Hart dies at 83

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7836112.stm

    His funeral has been pencilled in for Wednesday

    Jukebox Jury

    The World's Only Morrissey Tribute Band

  7. #447
    Boychild mustn't tremble! cornelius blaze's Avatar
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    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Jukebox Jury View Post
    His funeral has been pencilled in for Wednesday

    Jukebox Jury
    that is good to know....I bet his daughter and two grandchildren found that hilarious


    Archangel risin' on the moon
    Just to save me from this tomb
    I'll cry the tears of time all day
    'Til she wipes them all away

  8. #448
    Senior Member Uncleskinny's Avatar
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    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Reg Gutteridge has passed away. Boxing commentator, as heard on Morrissey's 'Boxers'.

    Peter

  9. #449

    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Uncleskinny View Post
    Reg Gutteridge has passed away. Boxing commentator, as heard on Morrissey's 'Boxers'.

    Peter
    No way!
    Regardless of his sampling on ''Boxers'', Reg - as with David Vine who died the other week - were the voices of sporting commentaries in the 70's and 80's for me when growing up.

    Peter, you posting this on main page?

    Jukebox Jury

    The World's Only Morrissey Tribute Band

  10. #450
    Senior Member Uncleskinny's Avatar
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    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Jukebox Jury View Post
    No way!
    Regardless of his sampling on ''Boxers'', Reg - as with David Vine who died the other week - were the voices of sporting commentaries in the 70's and 80's for me when growing up.

    Peter, you posting this on main page?

    Jukebox Jury
    Fire away if you like Phill, I haven't submitted it. Sad days. I do recall one sordid detail of his past. It could be entirely wrong here, but I think he was one of many celebrities who got caught banging one out in a porno cinema. It happens to us all. Err....

    Peter

  11. #451

    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Uncleskinny View Post
    Fire away if you like Phill, I haven't submitted it. Sad days. I do recall one sordid detail of his past. It could be entirely wrong here, but I think he was one of many celebrities who got caught banging one out in a porno cinema. It happens to us all. Err....

    Peter
    No, that wasn't Reg, it was the Granada Sport commentator Gerald Sinstadt who was caught (ahem) masterbating in a gay cinema

    Jukebox Jury

    The World's Only Morrissey Tribute Band

  12. #452
    Senior Member Uncleskinny's Avatar
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    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Jukebox Jury View Post
    No, that wasn't Reg, it was the Granada Sport commentator Gerald Sinstadt who was caught (ahem) masterbating in a gay cinema

    Jukebox Jury
    That's the one. I'm happy to clear that up, for all the lawyers watching.

    Peter

  13. #453

    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Uncleskinny View Post
    That's the one. I'm happy to clear that up, for all the lawyers watching.

    Peter
    That's one question you wont get on Eggheads
    I've forwarded the details to DavidT if he wishes to use it on the main page.

    Jukebox Jury

    The World's Only Morrissey Tribute Band

  14. #454
    Sprd <3 Its da Brklyn Way Buzzetta's Avatar
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    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by cornelius blaze View Post
    oh dear poor old Khan





  15. #455
    misses her daddy. bysshe's Avatar
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    "A day without laughter is a day wasted." ~ Charlie Chaplin

  16. #456

    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Aww, I read Marry Me by him as a teenager. I shall re-read it, it was a long time ago.
    And I heard so many things I failed to understand at all

  17. #457

    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    John Martyn (1948 - 2009)

    http://www.nme.com/news/john-martyn/42400
    RIP.


  18. #458
    Senior Member Uncleskinny's Avatar
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    Default Lux Interior (The Cramps) has died.

    Wasn't Morrissey involved with their fan club way back? Anyway, Lux Interior of The Cramps has passed away. Looks like he shared Morrissey's publicists too.

    Peter

  19. #459
    misses her daddy. bysshe's Avatar
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    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    "A day without laughter is a day wasted." ~ Charlie Chaplin

  20. #460

    Default Re: Book of Condolence Thread

    Ivan Cameron, David Cameron's 6 year old son.
    However much I despise the man, this is desperately sad.

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