Bloody hell was not expecting Chyna to be on here. RIP
And Guy Hamilton too, this is sad day. RIP Guy.
Bloody hell was not expecting Chyna to be on here. RIP
And Guy Hamilton too, this is sad day. RIP Guy.
Prince found dead now too. He was 57.
RIP
Seems to be alot of stars dying !
Victoria Wood yesterday too of course, although Iâm unsure how well-known she mightâve been outside the UK. Big star here though, obviously.
The Grim Reaper has gone celeb-hunting in earnest this year.
2016 is not a good year to be an Iconic Actor/Director/Comedian/Musician/Wrestler
Italian supporting actor Ugo Adinolfi died in his sleep in Rome on April 26th. He was 73. His son Mario reported his fatherâs passing on Facebook. Ugo was born in Milan, Lombardy, Italy on April 1, 1943. He moved to Rome where he graduated from the Experimental Centre of Cinematography and became an actor in over 60 films of which eighteen were westerns. In the early 1970s he left the business to devote time to his family. Most of the films he appeared in he had small parts and he was cast mainly for tax purposes. Among his films were âKiller Kidâ, âThe Moment to Killâ, âThe Wild and the Dirtyâ (all 1967), âGatling Gunâ, âKill Them All and Come Back Aliveâ, âThe Mercenaryâ, âSartanaâ (all 1968), âA Man Called Apocalypse Joeâ (1970) and âDrummer of Vengeanceâ (1971). His son is journalist and politician Mario Adinolfi.
Cinematographer Franco di Giacomo is reported to having passed away April 30th. RIP
R.I.P. BURT KWOUK
Born: July 18, 1930 in Warrington, Cheshire, England, UK
Died: May 24, 2016 (age 85)
Burt Kwouk, who was probably best known for playing Inspector Clouseauâs manservant, Cato, in the Pink Panther films, has died aged 85.
He also appeared as âMr. Lingâ in the Bond film, 'Goldfinger; had a brief rold in another Bond, âYou Only live Twiceâ; and - among many other notable TV and film screen appearances - had roles in âLast of the Summer Wineâ; âThe Brides of Fu Manchuâ; âThe Avengersâ; âDanger Manâ; âThe Saintâ; âCallanâ; 'Rollerball (1975); and âIt Ainât Half Hot, Mumâ.
Perhaps, one of his most distinguished roles, was that of âMajor Yamauchiâ, in the BBC adaption of âTenkoâ.
R.I.P. Burt Kwouk.
R.I.P. Interesting he was from Warrington, not to far from me.
I was very sad to hear this. Kwouk was the go to guy in every British TV show and film of the 50s 60s and 70s when they needed any Chinese, Japanese or random Asian face. He must have been in every other episode of the Saint I think, In those days there were a few actors like that who got cast in everything where a particular nationality or âtypeâ was required. Andre Marane (also in the Pink Panther films like Kwouk) played every Frenchman over the same period and Marne Maitland was every swarthy complexioned general Johnny foreigner. All sadly gone now.
RIP Sieghardt Rupp
It has only now become known that the film, TV and theater star Sieghardt Rupp died in July 2015 aged 84 years. Sieghardt Rupp was born on June 14, 1931 in Bregenz. He studies at the University of World Trade in Vienna (today a business university), the son of a school principal he soon and moved to the Max Reinhardt Seminar. At first he was a stage actor before becoming a film actor appearing as Tommy Rupp. His first western role was as Fernando in âThe Last Ride to Santa Cruz (1963) and then became internationally known for his role as Esteban Rojo in âA Fistful of Dollarsâ. He would go on to appear in a total of seven westerns including âFrontier Hellcatâ (1964), âThe Man Called Gringoâ âWho Killed Johnny R.? (both 1965) and âBlood at Sundownâ 1966. In the mid-1990s he withdrew from acting and lived a secluded life in Vienna, Austria where he died on July 20, 2015.
Although I live in Vienna, I had to read the sad, well, news here. Reportedly, it was Ruppâs express wish that the media should not learn of his death. The Filmarchiv Austria will show fourteen movies in memoriam Sieghardt Rupp next month.
R.I.P. Sieghardt Rupp
A very sad lossâŠhe was at his sneering best in the part of Esteban Rojo, in âFistful of Dollarsâ; and also played memorable roles in the Pierre Brice/Stewart Granger film, âAmongst Vulturesâ; and the excellent âBlood at Sundownâ.
R.I.P. SieghardtâŠ
I just read that as well
Apparently he made his social worker promise to tell no-one about his passing. RIP Siggi
RIP Marina Malfatti
Italian stage, screen and TV actress Marina Malfatti died at the Hospital SantâAndrea in Rome June 8th. She was 83. Born in Florence on April 25, 1933, at 17 she enrolled in Paris at Cours dâArt Dramatique, school of acting founded by RenĂ© Simon. Two years later, on her return to Italy, she obtained a scholarship for the experimental center of cinematography and debuted in the cinema at first in small roles. She was then discovered by director Arnold Foa for the stage which hence began a rewarding career in dramatic roles. Marina was the widow of ambassador Umberto La Rocca. Marina appeared in two Euro-westerns: Savage Guns (both 1971), The Return of Clint the Stranger (1972).
I havenât checked yet Son of Zorro (in which her name does not appear in the credits) because of terrible image quality, for the rest sheâs only in The Return of Clint the Stranger.
R.I.P. Marina
RIP Dick Palmer (Mimmo Palmara)
Dick Palmer aka Mimmo Palmara (Domenico Palmara) has died. He was 87. Born in Cagliari, Sardinia, Italy on July 25, 1928, he was one of the great faces of the Italian Peplums and Spaghetti Westerns. Plamara usually played villains and was an excellent horseman. He doubled Steve Reeves in several sword and sandal films after Steve injured his shoulder. Because of his size he was easily cast as a protagonist opposite the large American actors. As Dick Palmer he was seen in 17 Euro-westerns among which were âBullets Donât Argueâ (1964), âJohnny Westâ (1965), âThe Handsome, the Ugly, the Stupidâ, "Shotgun (both 1967), âBlack Jackâ (1968), âA Long Ride from Hellâ (1968), âThe Deserterâ âPanhandle Calibre .38â (both 1971).
A very, very sad day. I always like Mimmo Palmara. He will be missed RIP .
Thanks Mimmo, you were one of the best. R.I.P!
Liked the actor, R.I.P