Showing posts with label Another Celebrity died. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Another Celebrity died. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Director Gary Winick dies, aged 49

Filmmaker Gary Winick has died at the age of 49.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, the Bride Wars and Letters To Juliet director passed away after suffering from brain cancer.

"He was suffering from brain cancer for quite some time, and it ultimately metastasised throughout his body," explained his manager Rosalie Swedlin.

Swedlin, who said that a memorial service for Winick was being planned, added: "What's remarkable is that after his first surgery, he was able to direct Letters To Juliet. It was a battle that we thought he had won, and ultimately they just didn't get it all."

Winick produced 19 independent films after founding production company InDigEnt in 1999.
His other films as a director include 13 Going on 30, Tadpole and Sweet Nothing.

Friday, February 18, 2011

'Narnia' producer Moore dies, aged 39

Perry Moore has been found dead in his Manhattan apartment at the age of 39.

The Chronicles of Narnia producer was found unconscious by his partner Hunter Hill on Thursday from an apparent overdose of the prescription drug OxyContin and was later pronounced dead on the scene, reports the New York Daily News.

Moore's father Bill told the publication: "We're in shock. He was in a great, great mood [when we spoke the night before]. No-one was expecting this.

"He's been able to reach out and touch a lot of people. He was set to do some mighty good things. Parents are not meant to bury their children."

Authorities have not confirmed the cause of death.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Veteran TV, film actor Khayyam Sarhadi dies

LAHORE – Veteran actor Khayyam Sarhadi died of cardiac arrest during picturisation of a TV play here in the City on Thursday. He was 63. His funeral prayers offered at his residence here after Juma prayers. He started his career from theatre and later joined Pakistan Radio but he got fame from number of TV plays like Waris, Anokha Ladla and Man Chale Ka Soda. The actor also performed in three movies including Dakoo and Bobby but he left the film industry. The actor is survived by two widows and three daughters.

Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani expressed grief and sorrow over his sad demise.
In his condolence message, the premier conveyed his heartfelt condolences and sincere sympathies to the members of the bereaved family.

The PM lauded the invaluable contributions of late Khayyam Sarhadi in the field of performing art, saying that his services will be long remembered.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

John Barry dies, aged 77

OBITUARY: John Barry. Composer. Born York, England, November 3, 1933. Died New York, January 30, aged 77.

JOHN Barry did not get the chance to see any footage and had not read any of Ian Fleming's books when he was called in to work on the music for the first James Bond film, Dr No (1962), for which Monty Norman had originally been commissioned to write the score.

"I was just given a timing and told that it was about this Secret Service guy," said Barry, who'd had a few instrumental hits and was already a minor pop star.

The resulting piece of music became one of the most familiar themes in cinema and also one of the most argued over. The official composer credit went to Norman, though the music, as it is used in the film, has the distinctive mix of twangy guitar and brass that was so characteristic of Barry at that time.
During the next quarter century, Barry composed music for a series of James Bond films. He perfected the formula for the big, ballsy theme song on the third instalment, Goldfinger (1964), with the aid of the lyricists Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley and the singer Shirley Bassey. He combined sweeping strings and aggressive brass, fusing pop, jazz, cabaret and musical theatre in something akin to a mini-opera. His monumental theme tunes and powerful scores became vital elements in the classic Bond movies.

Although Barry is most widely celebrated for Bond, he composed for more than 100 films and television programs. He won five Oscars - best song and musical score for Born Free (1966), The Lion in Winter (1968), Out of Africa (1985) and Dances with Wolves (1990) - but never got a nomination for the Bond films.

Born John Barry Prendergast in York in 1933, he showed early musical talent. His father owned several cinemas and Barry became a keen filmgoer, making notes about the films he enjoyed and why. He played the piano as a boy and developed an interest in trumpet in his teens.

After leaving school he played in a dance band and did his national service as a bandsman in Egypt and Cyprus. He left the army and formed his own band, the John Barry Seven, who became regulars on the BBC pop show Drumbeat (1959), with Barry on trumpet. Barry also wrote and arranged songs for Adam Faith, and this association led to Barry first getting involved in films. Faith was cast in Beat Girl (1959) and Barry composed the music.

He had his first Top 20 hit in 1960 with Hit and Miss, the theme for the popular BBC show Juke Box Jury (1959-67). Other hits followed, a mix of original compositions and cover versions, and he also worked on another Faith film, Never Let Go (1960).

No one had any idea just how successful the James Bond films would become when production began on Dr No early in 1962. The producers wanted a piece of music that could serve as a signature theme across several movies. There was talk of bringing in someone of the calibre of William Walton to do further work, but the producers Harry Saltzman and Cubby Broccoli opted for Barry, who was young, cheap and fashionable. Another option was Cliff Richard's group the Shadows.

Crucially, however, Barry had experience of film soundtracks and of arranging pre-existing music. He was hired for a flat fee of pound stg. 250 plus possible involvement in future Bond films.

Although Barry did not get to see any footage, he did meet Norman, who had suggested several pieces of music as the main theme. The basic melody of the eventual theme appears to bear similarity to a piece of music written by Norman for an unproduced stage musical, though the mix of twanging guitar and brass was characteristic of Barry.

Norman retained the composer credit for the tune while Barry and his band recorded it. In 2001, Norman won a libel case against The Sunday Times for an article that falsely suggested Barry had written it. Norman was awarded damages after successfully arguing that the article had damaged his reputation by suggesting that he had wrongly taken credit (and royalties) for the Bond theme.

Goldfinger was the first in a series of theme songs for which Barry wrote the music. Bricusse said later he and Newley tried to match the tongue-in-cheek humour of the action. "I thought it was the silliest lyric I ever wrote," he said. Barry believed the entire score was important, and the Goldfinger soundtrack topped the charts in Britain and the US.

Barry left his first wife for a Swedish woman but that relationship faltered, too, and he enjoyed the single life in London, often in the company of Michael Caine and Terence Stamp.

He wrote his first stage musical, Passion Flower Hotel (1965), with lyricist Trevor Peacock and writer Wolf Mankowitz. The cast included Pauline Collins, Francesca Annis and the 18-year-old Jane Birkin, who had a tiny part in The Knack and would shortly become Barry's second wife, despite the marked gap in their ages. The marriage lasted only a few years.

Barry would go through a third marriage and third divorce by the early 1970s. His fourth marriage, in the late 70s, proved more lasting. He and his wife Laurie, who survives him, lived on Long Island, New York, with their son. Barry had three other children from other relationships.

Some of his best music was for non-Bond projects: the wistful, rolling theme on harmonica from Midnight Cowboy (1969), the haunting score for the BBC mafia drama Vendetta (1966-68), and his optimistic piece The Girl with the Sun in Her Hair (1968), used for a shampoo commercial.

He had another go at musical theatre, teaming up with Alan Jay Lerner in 1971 for a short-lived musical version of Lolita. He fared much better with Billy (1974-76), a West End adaptation of Keith Waterhouse's Billy Liar.

Barry collaborated with several lyricists on the Bond theme songs, including, on Live and Let Die (1973), Paul McCartney. He remained one of cinema's top composers through the 70s and 80s. His last two Bond theme songs, for A View to a Kill (1985) and The Living Daylights (1987), were top 10 hits for Duran Duran and A-ha. His melancholy, nostalgic scores contributed significantly to the Oscar triumphs of Out of Africa and Dances with Wolves.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Bengali Actress Gita Dey And Singer Pintu Bhattacharya Died

Bengali entertainment industry has lost two important artists on Monday. Actress Gita Dey took her last breath at a private hospital in Kolkata at the age of 79 years. As per the hospital sources, she passed away at 12:10 am after staying here for last one-and-a-half month. She was brought to the hospital after a cardiac arrest.

She was a renowned actress of her time with noted films like Ritwik Ghatak's Meghe Dhaka Tara, Satyajit Ray's Teen Kanya, and Komal Gandhar in her kitty. She has also acted in the films like Pareenita, Abhaya o Srikanta, Chirodiner, Prothom Pratisruti, Manjari OperaDey, Phuleswari, Kabi and Byapika Biday. She has around 200 Bengali films and dramas to her credit, which reflects her versatility in acting.

The veteran actress started her acting career only at the age of six in the film Ahuti, which was directed by notable filmmaker Dhiren Ganguly. At the age of 13, she joined the renowned Star Theater and made her association with a well known artist called Sisir Bhaduri.

She received lots of critical acclaims for her performance in Meghe Dhaka Tara. Apart from being cast in the negative roles, Dey has also shown her acting talent in various roles.

On the same day morning at 5:15 am, another Bengali singer Pintu Bhattacharya also died at the Thakurpukur Cancer Hospital in Kolkata. He was 71 years old and had a very melodious and intense voice. He was a very popular Bengali modern singer during the seventies and eighties. He has worked with music directors like Salil Chowdhury and his contribution to the Bengali music is immense. 'Ek Tajmahal Goro Hridoy Tomar', 'Aami Cholte Cholte Theme Gechi', 'Jani Prithibi Jabe Amay Bhule', 'Mayur Pankhi Chore' are some of his hit music which increased his fan following.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Sherbet guitarist dies from lung cancer

Harvey James has died from lung cancer.
The 58-year-old musician, who was best known as the guitarist of Australian band Sherbet, passed away in a Melbourne hospital on Saturday surrounded by his wife Faye, sons Gabriel and Joshua and daughter Alexandra.

Alexandra wrote on Facebook: "Rest in peace my gorgeous, funny, amazing father.

 We will miss you every day forever." She also thanked family, friends and fans for their support since Harvey began cancer treatment six months ago.

Joshua also wrote: "RIP dad, I love you, you'll always be my hero."

Harvey, who recently said that he was "humbled" by his life, was organising a reunion for the band at the Gimme That Guitar concert before his death.