RIP...for all that have passed
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Sigh... Dabney Coleman was great. I had no idea he was 92! And seeing that "9 to 5" clip also reminded me how kick-ass Dolly Parton was in that movie. I'm surprised she didn't have a bigger movie career.
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Sixties pop phenomenon Frank Ifield dies aged 86
The country singer, who was known for incorporating yodelling into his songs, also gave The Beatles an early break by booking them as a support act in 1962.
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Richard and his brother Robert wrote these songs:
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RIP Richard M. Sherman. He and his brother were flippin' geniuses -- the songs for "Mary Poppins" (my absolute favorite childhood movie) are about as close to perfect as movie songs can be.
If you need proof, just watch "Mary Poppins" and then watch the remake-masquerading-as-a-sequel, "Mary Poppins Returns." The latter movie has multiple problems (like stealing half its ideas from the first film), but the worst is that the songs are just boring. It's really, really hard to create songs that are not only memorable, but also illuminate the characters and advance the story. The Sherman brothers did that better than nearly anyone short of Cole Porter and Stephen Sondheim (and even Sondheim sometimes gave the memorable part short shrift).
Hail and farewell.
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LAPD Seeks Public’s Help In Johnny Wactor Killing; Suspects Remain At Large
Johnny was a hero!
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Elizabeth MacRae Dies: ‘General Hospital’ & ‘Gomer Pyle: USMC’ Actor Was 88
She was the voice of Lady Fish in “The Incredible Mr. Limpet” (1964)
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Just heard that Tony Bramwell died, age 78. He had severe dementia.
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This posted on FB says Tony was 81:
Farewell to Tony Bramwell who has sadly passed away at the age of 81.
I find it difficult to put into one sentence what he has done. It tends to be an unwieldy sentence – even when I’m trying to keep it as brief as possible.
So let me give you twenty facts about him.-
He was best friends with George Harrison as a child and they used to see Paul McCartney at weekends.
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He was there when Paul first met John Lennon and when they played together for the first time.
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He became the Beatles Road Manager by chance after meeting his old pal George Harrison on the Number 61 bus on the way to the Beatles first gig after they came back from Hamburg and offering to carry his guitar in to get in for free. After doing this a few times John Lennon said to him “If you’re carrying George’s you can carry mine too”. “Mine as well” Paul McCartney said. When Brian Epstein became their manager he offered Tony the job as Road Manager full time. Tony almost turned it down as he had a good job at Ford’s as a clerk. Said Tony “I would have retired last year from Ford’s if I had said ‘no’ and got my gold watch – and missed the wild ride I had with The Beatles”.
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He got an award from MTV for his pioneer work in the very early days of pop videos. As The Beatles got lots of requests to appear and it was difficult for them to go out anyway, it made sense to make little films with teh songs for distribution. THis was how the pop video began. The first pop videos like Day Tripper and We can Work It Out cost £200 to make and they were told they had overspent. Later on when they spent £700 making the video for Strawberry Fields Forever, they were told they had gone right over the top. What would they be worth now?
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Tony was Beatles manager, Brian Epstein’s, talent scout. He discovered James Taylor and tried to sell a young Paul Simon, years before he became famous with Simon and Garfunkel, to Brian Epstein but was told “He’s too small and too Jewish looking (Epstein was Jewish himself). I can’t sell him”. Another one that got rejected after his recommendation, years before they became famous, was Queen.
In later years he discovered Eva Cassidy who sold 7m albums after her death. A film is to be made of her life with Nicole Kidman as Eva Cassidy and Bill Nighe as Tony. Robert Redford will be the Producer and his daughter will be Director.
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Tony was the PR guy for The Beatles and every act in Brian Epstein’s stable – so the BeatlesFest on the Lough couldn’t get anyone better.
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Brian Epstein bought the Saville Theatre in Piccadilly in London and put Tony in charge of it and getting the musical acts for it. Tony put on Jimi Hendrix’s fist ever UK gig on – before he was famous in either the US or UK. The gig was a huge success and made Hendrix a huge name. His manager Chas Chandler (ex of The Animals) was a good friend of Tony’s. While he was there, Tony, John and Paul took Jimi to the Cromwellian where Cream were playing. When Eric Clapton took a break, Jimi asked for a shot of his guitar. Even though as a left hander he was playing backwards and upside down, Hendrix blew them off the stage.
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When the Saville Theatre (which was also used for recording) was being knocked down Tony was passing by and saw a whole load of tapes on a skip. He went inside and asked the workers about them. The workers said they sent the ones they knew to the artists they knew and then threw the rest out. Included there were tapes of The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix etc. Tony took them home with him and, as he knew the guys, gave the tapes to them. Many of the tracks have now been used in subsequent CDs and even films. Tony gave the Hendrix tapes to Chas Chandler Hendrix’s manager, who died soon after, so Tony doesn’t know what happened to them. However, he said that there were many tracks that he didn’t recognise – so out there are tapes with mainly unreleased material from Hendrix.
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Tony, without realising it, as he only knew her as Christine, went out with the girl at the centre of the Profumo Affair, which brought down the Minister for War, John Profumo, and nearly the Conservative Government at the time. When he discovered who she was he packed her in and went out with the American Miss World of the time.
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Tony became joint head of Apple Records, the Beatles record company.
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Tony also became head of Apple Films.
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When the radio stations went crazy and said that Paul McCartney was dead and said that the album cover of Abbey Road proved it, Tony decided to take matters into his own hands to put an end to the pandemonium at the Apple offices as Paul was in Scotland and wasn’t interested. He sounds very like Paul McCartney over the phone (I can vouch for that) as he comes from the same part of Liverpool. Tony called up a radio station in America and pretended to be Paul saying he was fine and was just having a cup of tea. However, the radio station had the voice analysed against the real voice of Paul McCartney and the word went out that Paul McCartney really was dead and that this proved it, and a double had been covering for him for months.
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After The Beatles split up he went on to become head of Polydor Records which had Slade, The Jam and Roxy Music (with Brian Ferry and Brian Eno) in his stable of artists.
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Just three days before John Lennon’s death he put a call through to Tony Bramwell. Tony had been in touch with him by post and he thinks the contact may have been for him to get involved with his new album that he was working on. The guy on the desk where Tony lived called Tony and said “there’s a Mr Lennon on the phone for you. Shall I put him through?”. The guy then lost the call and Lennon was never put through. Three days later Tony was woken up at 4am by a DJ in America and asked “What do you think of John Lennon’s death?”
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