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David Montgomery - Carole Singleton Wearing a Dress by Jean & Martin Pallant (Vogue UK 1975)
#david montgomery#carole singleton#vogue#photography#fashion photography#vintage fashion#vintage style#vintage#retro#aesthetic#beauty#seventies#70s#70s fashion#70s style#70s model#1970s#1970s fashion#editorial#vogue uk
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Vogue Italia July/August 1974
Saint Laurent rive gauche Fall/Winter 1974
Model : Carole Singleton
Photo Gianpaolo Barbieri vogue archive
#vogue italia#july/august 1974#fashion 70s#saint laurent rive gauche#ysl#ready to wear#prêt à porter#carole singleton#gianpaolo barbieri#vintage vogue#vintage fashion#abraham fabric
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THE FACE IS FAMILIAR… BUT I CAN’T PLACE THE NAME!
Same Actor / Different Character ~ Part 3: “Here's Lucy"
It used to be quite common for actors to be cast in multiple roles on the same series. Not in principal parts, certainly, but in supporting and minor characters. Lucycoms were no exception. Although the world created by these shows was representative of reality, the characters who populated them often gave viewers Deja vu. By the time "Here's Lucy" premiered in 1968, Lucille Ball had developed a repertory company of actors that she used time and time again.
For the purposes of this discussion, we won't include background performers (aka extras) as they were nearly always drawn from the same pool of actors. Also, those who played multiple characters need to have at least one of them identified by name.
MARY WICKES
Lucille Ball's good friend tops the list of actors who played multiple roles, with seven characters in nine appearances. When the series premiered, she played a secretary friend of Lucy Carter's named Isabel in two episodes. Perhaps there was no room for Isabel, so she disappeared, but Wickes did not! Due to the fact that she played a nurse in her breakout role in The Man Who Came to Dinner (both stage and screen), she also played several nurses. She even showed up as Lucy's sister-in-law, a nun, another type that she was often cast as in films. In addition, she was a maid to an eccentric dowager, a Montana matriarch, and a nosy neighbor.
JACK COLLINS
Collins' six appearances span from season one in 1968 to the series finale in 1974. He played secret agent Johnson, expectant father Mr. Phillips, Vincent Price's producer Curt, Harry's eye optometrist Dr. Proctor, Harry's accountant Arthur Collins, and Harvey Stevens, proprietor of Harvey's Welcome Inn. Perhaps Collins is best compared to versatile actor Charles Lane on "I Love Lucy"?
CAROLE COOK
Lucy's protege is back with more interesting characters - five of them, to be exact. She started the series as a wacky woman in Carol Burnett's audience, played crusading neighbor Sheila Casten, bridge club member Lillian Rylander, gangster Ma Parker, and Cynthia Duncan, a Lucille Ball look-alike. Ma Parker was by far Cook's largest and most adventurous role on the series.
IRWIN CHARONE
Charone made five appearances on “The Lucy Show” and an equal number of “Here’s Lucy” episodes. Mr. Garfield of the Nippy Whippy Whipped Cream Company , dog owner Mr. Farnsworth, neighbor Chester P. Franklin, a permit office clerk, and college dean Phillips.
ROY ROBERTS
Roberts made an impact as Mr. Cheever on "The Lucy Show." His first appearance on "Here's Lucy" was as the Superintendent of the Air Force Academy in a two-part season opener filmed on location. He returned as a NASA's Dr. Jensen in "Lucy and the Astronauts" (1971), Warden Maginetti when "Lucy Goes To Prison" (1973), and Dr. Honeycutt when "Lucy is N.G. as an R.N." (1974).
RHODES REASON
Reason was a handsome leading man type who easily played a variety of roles from 1968 to 1973: Bradley Henshaw, Jim Simpson, Sam Toliver, Lieutenant Egan, and Keith Davidson.
ROBERT CARSON
Carson was a busy Canadian-born actor. While he never played supporting roles, he wasn't just an extra either. On "Here's Lucy" he played Martin Philips, Buzzy Brock, Sergeant Lou Holmes, and Officer Hurlow.
ROBERT ALDA
Alda (father of Alan) was best known for originating the role of Sky Masterson on Broadway in Guys and Dolls (1950). He did four episodes of "Here's Lucy," the first as himself, hosting the Secretary Beautiful Contest. The role was originally written for Don Ameche, then re-cast with Ross Martin, before Alda was finally given the part. He got to use his musical theatre skills singing the pageant’s theme. He put his musical skills to use again as Dean Butler in "Lucy, the Co-Ed" (1970). He also sang as Captain MacClay in a two-parter set on a cruise ship to Hawaii.
WALLY COX
Cox had come to the nation's attention as Mr. Peepers. On "Here's Lucy" he played ex-con safecracker Rock Barnett, wimpy Wally Manley, diamond cutter Gustav Vandermeer, and toy tycoon Tommy Tucker.
DORIS SINGLETON
Singleton created the role of Caroline Appleby on “I Love Lucy.” She was slated to appear as Doris, a secretary colleague of Lucy's, on "Here's Lucy," but the role was eliminated after the first episode. She returned, however, for three more appearances, all as secretaries to the stars: Petula Clark's secretary Miss Perkins, Eddie Albert's secretary Patty, and Lucille Ball's secretary Doris, a role modeled after Ball's own secretary Wanda.
WILLIAM LANTEAU
William Lanteau was a theatre actor who was most famous for playing Charlie the Mailman in On Golden Pond. His theatrical background surely helped him disguise himself in his four roles on "Here's Lucy". Unlike past guest actors, he looks significantly different in each one: Mr. Sherwood, a supermarket manager; Mr. Minkle, building superintendent; Spike, Ginger Rogers' secretary; and Edgar St. Vincent Kinkaid, antiques store manager.
DICK PATTERSON
Patterson was seen by Lucille Ball performing on stage and cast on "The Lucy Show." He continued his relationship with the redhead on "Here's Lucy" where he played computer matchmaker Mr. Morton (Ball's real surname), TV host Dick Dunkirk, Joe Namath's football coach Hennessy, and director of Lucy's pickle commercial Steve Thompson.
RETA SHAW
Shaw was a star of stage and screen (big and small) and Lucille Ball enjoyed working with her. This time, in the series' third episode, she played Mabel Ryker, using the same first name she had in The Pajama Game on stage and screen. She played Rita Forrester in "Lucy and The Group Encounter" (1972), and Mrs. Witherspoon, Lucy's prospective new boarder in "Lucy's Tenant" (1973).
LOLA FISHER
Fisher understudied and replaced Julie Andrews on Broadway in the musical My Fair Lady. She was seen as in "Lucy's Working Daughter" (1968), as Mrs. Pomeroy in "Lucy in the Jungle" (1971), and Bunny in "Lucy and the Franchise Fiasco" (1973).
CLIFF NORTON
Norton played Sam the Plumber who's overalls turn up on Richard Burton. He was an undercover detective looking for scalpers in an episode starring O.J. Simpson. Lastly, he got title billing in "Mary Jane's Boyfriend", playing accident prone Walter Butley.
BEN WRIGLEY
Wrigley was a British actor who appeared in My Fair Lady (1964) and Bednobs and Broomsticks (1971). so he was a natural to play butlers to Liberace and Jack Benny. He also played Homer Pomeroy in "Lucy in the Jungle" (1971).
BRUCE GORDON
Gordon was best known for playing gangster Frank Nitti in the Desilu television series "The Untouchables" (1959-63), a role he satirized on "The Lucy Show". He trades on that reputation again as Doc Porter in "Lucy and the Ex-Con" and Rocky in "Dirty Gertie", another organized crime scenario. For a change of pace, he played Grandfather Konstantine Kasos in "Lucy's Wedding Party."
ELLIOTT REID
Reid's work with Lucy goes back to "I Love Lucy". Here he plays three roles: Detective Harvey Gaines, Sammy Davis Jr.'s Director, and the host of Milton Berle's telethon.
PHIL VANDERVOORT
Vandervoort was (briefly) Lucille Ball's son-in-law and Lucy believed in keeping it in the family, casting her children, her husband, and her cousin-in-laws on the series. Vandervoort, a handsome young man, makes only three appearances but each one is made to look dramatically different, perhaps to obscure his leading man good looks. He plays Kim and Craig's musician friend Steve (the most 'normal' of his appearances), computer geek Joe Hackley, and beaded handman Tommy.
BARBARA MORRISON
Morrison returns to play two more imposing and imperious women: Harry's date Lady Agatha Warren, and finicky shopper Mrs. Murdock. With many other members of Lucy's acting company, she turns up as a diner in the series' penultimate episode.
HARRY HICKOX
Hickox was best known for playing anvil salesman Charlie Cowell in the 1962 film The Music Man. He played a drill sergeant on "The Lucy Show". He played three different policemen on “Here’s Lucy.”
BILLY SANDS
Sands played Mr. Larson, Lucy's milkman, in two episodes, but he also played Billy the bookie in a third appearance.
DON CRICHTON
Crichton was a dancer on "The Carol Burnett Show" and also did small roles, just as he did on "Here's Lucy". He danced in the series premiere, and then acted, playing Don in "Lucy, The Conclusion Jumper" (1968), and Steve in "Lucy, The American Mother" (1970).
LEW PARKER
Parker, best known as Marlo Thomas' father on "That Girl", was seen on the very first episode of "Here's Lucy" in 1968 as Mr. Caldwell. He returned in 1971 as Mr. Adams, the manager of an All-Nun Band.
LYLE TALBOT
Talbot, a veteran film actor, played Harry's Lawyer and his best pal from Bullwinkle U, Freddy Fox.
JACK MANNING
Manning played Mr. Walters, the manager of the showroom presenting teen idol Donny Osmond as well as Mr. Hubbell, a ceramics store owner who runs art classes, both during season 5.
RICHARD DEACON
Deacon was one of Desilu's favorites, appearing on "The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour," "The Mothers-In-Law" and "The Dick Van Dyke Show." For "Here's Lucy" he played unemployment office worker (with show biz aspirations) Harvey Hoople, and Loan Officer Elmer Zellerbach.
ALAN OPPENHEIMER
Oppenheimer played the part of the previously unknown Uncle Herb Hinkley, Lucy's brother. He then turned up as Lucy's doctor, Dr. Matt Parker.
OTHERS WHO 'HIT A DOUBLE'
Robert L. Stevens (River Guide / Alan Stevens)
James Brodhead (Tilford / Mr. Miller)
Mike Howden (Ski Instructor / Flight Attendant)
Ivor Barry (Producer / French Chef)
Hal Dunlop (Major Dunlop / Mr. Greenway)
R.G. Brown (Office Manager / Walter, Eva Gabor's Assistant)
Ernest Sarracino (Mr. Nicoletti / Tony)
Cecil Gold (Fred / Cecil)
Jimmy Bates (Clarence / Billy Joe Jackson)
Robert Hogan (Captain Perry / Jack Lucas)
Johnny Silver (Mountie / Benny)
Jody Gilbert (King Kong Woman / Prison Matron)
Ed Hall (Officer Egan / Numbers Smith)
Marc Lawrence (Joe Grapefruit / Ruby)
Florence Lake (Little Old Lady / Trixie)
Eddie Quillan (Cabbie / Mr. Jackson)
Al Checco (Detective Bobby / Dr. Crawford)
Dick Winslow (Harvey / Nightclub Emcee)
Susan Tolsky (Sue Ann Ditbenner / Miss Quigley)
CELEBRITIES WHO DID 'DOUBLE DUTY'
CAROL BURNETT (Carol Krausmeyer / Herself)
MILTON BERLE (Cheerful Charlie / Himself)
ROBERT CUMMINGS (Bob Collins / Bob Henning)
EVA GABOR (Eva Von Graunitz / Herself)
PAUL WINCHELL (Carlo the Tailer / Little Old Jeweler & The Great Pierre Barmarche)
ED MCMAHON (Ed McAllister / Himself)
LUCILLE BALL (Lucy Carter / Herself)
#Carole Cook#Jack Collins#Here's Lucy#Lucille Ball#TV#CBS#sitcom#Actors#Mary Wickes#Rhodes Reason#Roy Roberts#Irwin Charone#Doris Singleton#Wally Cox#Robert Carson#Robert Alda#William Lanteau#Dick Patterson#Lola Fisher#Reta Shaw#Carol Burnett#Cliff Norton#Ben Wrigley#Bruce Gordon#Phil Vandervoort#Elliott Reid#Lucie Arnaz#Barbara Morrison#Harry Hickox#Ed McMahon
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Captured by David Montgomery, Carole Singleton dons a Jean & Martin Pallant dress (Vogue UK, 1975). #FashionFlashback #VintageStyle
#FashionFlashback#VintageStyle#Vintage Photo#old photo#sealed in time#historical photo#history photo#photos#history#photography#black and white photography#vintage photography#black and white#black and white photo#history lovers#history in pictures#antique photo#timeless photo#photo of the day#vintage#retro#nostalgic#rare photos#vintage pictures#old vintage photos#historical
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Reading List (in progress)
Feel free to contact me with suggestions to add, or reblog with your own:
Books:
Alexander Michelle: The New Jim Crow
Carol Anderson: One Person, No Vote
Carol Anderson: White Rage
Azeem Rafiq: It's not Banter; It's Racism
Erica Armstrong Dunbar: Never Caught
Slavoj Žižek: Against Progress
James Baldwin: The Fire Next Time
Robin DiAngelo: White Fragility
Ibram X. Kendi: How to Be an Antiracist
George Lakey: How We Win
Kiese Laymon: Heavy
Michie, Feinstein, Rogers & Corbyn: Monstrous Anger of the Guns
Crystal Fleming: How to be Less Stupid About Race
Walter Johnson: The Broken Heart of America
Heather McGhee: The Sum of Us
Khalil Gibran Muhammad: The Condemnation of Blackness
Tanuro, Wilder, Achcar, Hannah and Fortune: Resisting Trumpism
Clara Zetkin: Fighting Fascism: How to Struggle and How to Win
Leon Trotsky: Fascism - What it is and How to Fight it
Leon Trotsky: The Struggle Against Fascism in Germany
John Foot: Blood and Power - The Rise and Fall of Italian Fascism
Hope & Mullen: The Black Anti-Fascist Tradition - Fighting back from lynching to abolition
Richard Rothstein: The Color of Law
Glenn Singleton: Courageous Conversations About Race
Cornel West: Race Matters
Isabel Wilkerson: Caste
Williams & Blaine: Charleston Syllabus
Derald Wing Sue: Race Talk and the Conspiracy of Silence
Articles: -Hannah-Jones, Nikole. (2019). The 1619 Project. The New York Times Magazine. -Coates, Ta-Nehisi. (2014). The Case for Reparations. The Atlantic. -DiAngelo, Robin. (2017). Why It’s So Hard to Talk to White People About Racism. Huffington Post. -McIntosh, Peggy. (1989). White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible -Knapsack. Peace and Freedom. -Serwer, Adam. (2020). The Coronavirus Was an Emergency Until Trump Found Out Who Was Dying. The Atlantic. -Abdul-Jabbar, Kareem. (2020). Don’t Understand the Protests? What You're Seeing is People Pushed to the Edge. Los Angeles Times. -Hinton, Elizabeth. (2020). The Minneapolis Uprising in Context. Boston Review.
Podcasts: -Hannah-Jones, Nikole. 1619. The New York Times. -Muhammad, Khalil Gibran and Ben Austen. Some of My Best Friends Are. Pushkin. -Carroll, Rebecca. Come Through with Rebecca Carroll. WNYC Studios. -Biewen, John. Seeing White. Scene On Radio. -Raghuveera, Nikhil and Erica Licht. Untying Knots. SoundCloud. -Moyo, Thoko. A historic crossroads for systemic racism and policing in America. PolicyCast. Featuring Khalil Gibran Muhammad and Erica Chenoweth.
If you need help getting your hands on any materials, please don't hesitate to reach out to me or another trusted person with inter-library access.
#climate change#free palestine#fundraising#government#capitalism#black history#black lives matter#activism#reading#banned books#information
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"I had never met a Latin before. In fact, up to this time, I hadn't had much fun. I'd gone out with lots of guys and it had been in the papers, that I was engaged to this one and that one, but now I think back on it, they all seem pretty ordinary. But this I can say for myself and this is the truth. I never wanted to marry anybody until I met Desi."
The day that Lucille Ball first met Desi Arnaz, she had a black eye and a torn dress from filming a fight scene for "Dance, Girl, Dance" (1940) and he didn't find her at all attractive until they met again later in the day when she had changed into her own clothes and makeup. His oft-quoted first impression of her extraordinary beauty was "That's a hunk o' woman." When they were first married in 1940, Arnaz had to give her a ring from a drugstore because all jewelry stores were closed. She wore it for the rest of their marriage.
"After the short ceremony, we ate our wedding breakfast in front of a bright fire in the club's lounge. Outside a fresh mantel of snow hung on the pine trees. After all the indecision we'd been through, Desi and I were dazed with happiness. We kissed each other and the marriage certificate again and again. It still has my lipstick marks on it. I'm going to keep this forever and ever. I told Desi. Clutching it to my black wool covered bosom. This marriage had to work. I would do anything, sacrifice anything to make Desi happy."
Ball decided to go ahead with the series "I Love Lucy" after having a dream in which Carole Lombard, the screwball comedy actress that died in a plane crash and who was a close friend of Lucy, recommended she take a shot at the risky idea of entering television, and to get off of radio.
This show attracted numerous huge Hollywood names as guest stars who did the show not for the money (which was actually very little), but because they liked the show or were personal friends of the stars. The impressive list includes Tennessee Ernie Ford, William Holden, John Wayne, Bob Hope, Will Wright, Elsa Lanchester, Van Johnson, Orson Welles, Rock Hudson, Eve Arden, Charles Boyer, Harpo Marx, Barbara Pepper, Pepito Pérez, Peggy Rea, Herb Vigran, Barbara Eden, Arthur Q. Bryan, Janet Waldo, Richard Crenna, Cornel Wilde, Richard Widmark, Gale Gordon, Natalie Schafer, Hedda Hopper, Bob Jellison Louis Nicoletti, Richard Reeves, Doris Singleton, Hy Averback, Kathryn Card, Jay Novello, George Reeves, Mary Jane Croft, Jerry Hausner, Elizabeth Patterson, Aaron Spelling, Ross Elliot, Hans Conried, The Pied Pipers, and Johnny Jacobs, among others.
According to Turner Classic Movies' host, Robert Osborne, MGM was not sure whether "The Long, Long Trailer" (1954, below) would be a success because it was thought people would not pay money to see Ball and Arnaz in a movie when they could watch the couple on television for free. Arnaz made a $25,000 bet with the studio that the movie would make more money than the current highest-grossing comedy at that time ("Father of the Bride," starring Spencer Tracy and Elizabeth Taylor and directed by Vincente Minnelli, who also directed "Trailer"). Arnaz won the bet.
"People always expect me to be funny. I was never funny; the writers were funny. Do you know who was really funny? Judy Garland. Judy Garland was naturally funny...the funniest lady in Hollywood. She made me look like a mortician." (IMDb)
Happy Birthday, Lucille Ball!
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY to Mike Allsup (3 Dog Night), C.P.E. Bach, Cheryl Baker (Bucks Fizz), The Beach Boys’s 1965 TODAY! Album, Benny Blanco, Anne Bonny, Bob Brozman, Tom Chaplin (Keane), Cyd Charisse, Reina del Cid, "Gaz" Coombes (Supergrass), Lew DeWitt (Statler Brothers), Johnny Dollar, Bob Dylan’s 1965 “Subterranean Homesick Blues” single, Ralph Ellis (Swinging Blue Jeans), Richard Farina, Alan Hale Jr., one of my favorite composers Alan Hovhaness, Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., Van Hunt, Mississippi John Hurt, Dick Hyman, Leon, Ruggero Leoncavallo, Edward MacDowell’s 2nd Piano Suite (1883), Camryn Manheim, Peggy March, Randy Meisner, Shawn Mullins, Gary Numan, Andrea Parker, Aidan Quinn, Lynn Redgrave, Johann von Rist, Andy Ross (OK Go), Carole Bayer Sager, Jean Sibelius’s 2nd Symphony (1902), Raynoma Singleton Gábor Szabó, Claire Trevor, Milana Vayntrub, and my friend and sometime boss, one of the greatest rock’n’roll frontmen and tenor voices of all time, Micky Dolenz—turning 80 and still hitting the notes. One critic called him “a cross between Freddy Mercury and Roy Orbison.” Most people know Micky as an actor, director, producer, radio DJ, writer, and singer on most of The Monkees’s hits, but he’s also an inventor and furniture maker. It’s been my honor and privilege (and learning experience) to work and hang out with Micky and to be part of the 2011 Monkees reunion tour of the UK and US + other Monkees spin-off projects. HB and God bless you Micky. Here we are doing my #1 favorite Monkees track:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NgV3KLUrhAw
#birthday #mickydolenz #themonkees #porpoisesong #headmovie #psychedelicrock #poprock #actor #director #producer #radioDJ #writer #vocalist #rocknroll #singer #johnnyjblair #bassist #monkeestour
#johnny j blair#music#pop rock#san francisco#monkees#birthday#Micky Dolenz#Porpoise Song#psychedelic rock
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ELLE No.1479 - 22 April 1974 - Carole Singleton
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'We Don’t Talk About Carol' review: A diary and a cold case
At age 13, Sydney Singleton discovered an old photograph tucked away in a drawer in her paternal grandmother’s guest room. It was a portrait of a Black girl just entering her teen years — a girl who looked a lot like Sydney. Next morning, Sydney asked her grandmother about it. The woman, her voice “firm as the oak tree on her front lawn,” would say only this: “We don’t talk about Carol.” Two…
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Carol Muphy endorses Andy Kim for U.S. Senate - New Jersey Globe
Murphy and Singleton have close ties to the South Jersey Democratic organization headed by George E. Norcross III. Whether Menendez runs or not …
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Paris Vogue August 1974 - Sonia Rykiel - Carole Singleton Photographed by Gian Paolo Barbieri
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Chris von Wangenheim - Carole Singleton Wearing Dior (Vogue Paris 1973)
#chris von wangenheim#carole singleton#vogue#photography#fashion photography#vintage fashion#vintage style#vintage#retro#aesthetic#beauty#70s#70s fashion#70s style#70s model#1970s#1970s fashion#editorial#vogue paris#christian dior
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Carole Singleton by Helmut Newton for Vogue Paris September 1974
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Secrets; "Don't look at me like that. Like you're scared. Like you don't trust me. I can take it from everyone else, but not from you." -Rick Grimes
Carylering on<333333333333
#secrets#twd#the walking dead season two#s2 ep6#rick grimes#lori grimes#tdog twd#carol peletier#she is there#by the tree#andrew lincoln#sarah wayne callies#ironE singleton#melissa mcbride#caryl positivity#background gifs#twd gifs#my gifs
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In Memoriam 2019
As 2019 draws to a close, we remember those in entertainment that left us during the year.
Pegi Young - singer (1952 - 1/1/2019)

Daryl Dragon - singer (The Captain And Tennille) (1942 - 1/2/2019)

Bob Einstein - actor, comedian (1942 - 1/2/2019)

Mean Gene Okerlund - wrestling announcer (1942 - 1/2/2019)

Verna Bloom - actress (1938 - 1/9/2019)

Carol Channing - actress, singer (1921 - 1/15/2019)

Kaye Ballard - actress (1925 - 1/21/2019)

Jonas Mekas - documentary director (1922 - 1/23/2019)

Dusan Makavekev - director (1932 - 1/25/2019)

Michel Legrand - film composer (1932 - 1/26/2019)

James Ingram - singer (1952 - 1/29/2019)

Dick Miller - actor (1928 - 1/30/2019)

Julie Adams - actress (1926 - 2/3/2019)

Albert Finney - actor (1936 - 2/7/2019)

Jan-Michael Vincent - actor (1945 - 2/10/2019)

Bruno Ganz - actor (1941 - 2/16/2019)

Karl Lagerfeld - fashion designer (1933 - 2/19/2019)

Stanley Donen - director (1924 - 2/21/2019)

Peter Tork - musician (The Monkees) (1942 - 2/21/2019)

Brody Stevens - actor, comedian (1970 - 2/22/2019)

Katherine Helmond - actress (1929 - 2/23/2019)

Andre Previn - film composer, pianist, conductor (1929 - 2/28/2019)

Luke Perry - actor (1966 - 3/4/2019)

Hal Blaine - drummer (1929 - 3/11/2019)

Dick Dale - guitarist (1937 - 3/16/2019)

Scott Walker - singer (The Walker Brothers) (1943 - 3/22/2019)

Agnes Varda - director (1928 - 3/29/2019)

Nipsey Hussle - rapper (1985 - 3/31/2019)

Seymour Cassel - actor (1935 - 4/7/2019)

Georgia Engel - actress (1948 - 4/12/2019)

John McEnery - actor (1943 - 4/12/2019)

Bibi Andersson - actress (1935 - 4/14/2019)

Fay McKenzie - actress, singer (1918 - 4/16/2019)

Ken Kercheval - actor (1935 - 4/21/2019)

Jean-Pierre Marielle - actor (1932 - 4/24/2019)

John Singleton - director, screenwriter, producer (1968 - 4/28/2019)

Peter Mayhew - actor (1944 - 4/30/2019)

Norma Miller - dancer, actress (1919 - 5/5/2019)

Alvin Sargent - screenwriter (1927 - 5/9/2019)

Peggy Lipton - actress (1946 - 5/11/2019)

Machiko Kyo - actress (1924 - 5/12/2019)
Doris Day - actress, singer (1922 - 5/13/2019)

Tim Conway - actor, comedian (1933 - 5/14/2019)

Grumpy Cat - internet celebrity (2012 - 5/14/2019)

Herman Wouk - author (1915 - 5/17/2019)

Leon Redbone - singer (1944 - 5/30/2019)

Dr. John - singer (1941 - 6/6/2019)

Sylvia Miles - actress (1924 - 6/12/2019)

Franco Zefferelli - director (1923 - 6/15/2019)

Dave Bartholomew - singer, songwriter, record producer (1918 - 6/23/2019)

Edith Scob - actress (1937 - 6/26/2019)

Max Wright - actor (1943 - 6/26/2019)

Arte Johnson - actor, comedian (1929 - 7/3/2019)

Pierre Lhomme - cinematographer (1930 - 7/4/2019)

Joao Gilberto - singer (1931 - 7/6/2019)

Artur Brauner - producer (1918 - 7/7/2019)

Rip Torn - actor (1931 - 7/9/2019)
Freddie Jones - actor (1927 - 7/9/2019)

Valentina Cortese - actress (1923 - 7/10/2019)

Johnny Clegg - singer (1953 - 7/16/2019)

David Hedison - actor (1927 - 7/18/2019)

Rutger Hauer - actor (1944 - 7/19/2019)

Jeremy Kemp - actor (1935 - 7/19/2019)

Russi Taylor - voice actress (1944 - 7/26/2019)

Harold Prince - theater producer and director (1928 - 7/31/2019)

D.A. Pennebaker - documentary director (1925 - 8/1/2019)

Toni Morrison - author (1931 - 8/5/2019)

Jean-Pierre Mocky - director, screenwriter, producer (1929 - 8/8/2019)

Peter Fonda - actor (1940 - 8/16/2019)

Richard Williams - animator, director (1933 - 8/16/2019)

Larry Taylor - bassist (Canned Heat, Tom Waits) (1942 - 8/19/2019)

Michel Aumont - actor (1936 - 8/28/2019)

Valerie Harper - actress (1939 - 8/30/2019)

Carol Lynley - actress (1942 - 9/3/2019)

Robert Frank - director, photographer (1924 - 9/9/2019)

Eddie Money - singer (1949 - 9/13/2019)

Ric Ocasek - singer (The Cars), record producer (1944 - 9/15/2019)

Sid Haig - actor (1939 - 9/21/2019)

Robert Hunter - lyricist (The Grateful Dead) (1941 - 9/23/2019)

Jessye Norman - opera singer (1945 - 9/30/2019)

Julie Gibson - actress (1913 - 10/2/2019)

Diahann Carroll - actress, singer (1935 - 10/4/2019)

Ginger Baker - drummer (Cream, Blind Faith) (1939 - 10/6/2019)

Rip Taylor - actor, comedian (1934 - 10/6/2019)
Marie-Jose Nat - actress (1940 - 10/10/2019)

Robert Forster - actor (1941 - 10/11/2019)

Robert Evans - producer (1930 - 10/26/2019)

John Witherspoon - actor, comedian (1942 - 10/29/2019)

Marie Laforêt - singer, actress (1939 - 11/2/2019)

Branko Lustig - producer (1932 - 11/14/2019)

Terry O’Neill - photographer (1938 - 11/16/2019)

Michael J. Pollard - actor (1939 - 11/21/2019)
Jonathan Miller - actor, director, author, comedian (1934 - 11/27/2019)

Shelley Morrison - actress (1936 - 12/1/2019)
Richard Easton - actor (1933 - 12/2/2019)

Robert Walker Jr. - actor (1940 - 12/5/2019)
Ron Leibman - actor (1937 - 12/6/2019)

Zaza Urushadze - director (1965 - 12/7/2019)

Caroll Spinney - puppeteer (1933 - 12/8/2019)

Marie Fredriksson - singer (Roxette) (1958 - 12/9/2019)

Gershon Kingsley - composer (1922 - 12/10/2019)

Danny Aiello - actor (1933 - 12/12/2019)

Anna Karina - actress (1940 - 12/14/2019)

Nicky Henson - actor (1945 - 12/15/2019)

Claudine Auger - actress (1940 - 12/18/2019)

Tony Britton - actor (1924 - 12/22/2019)

Jerry Herman - theater composer (1931 - 12/26/2019)

Sue Lyon - actress (1946 - 12/26/2019)

Neil Innes - actor, comedian, musician (The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, The Rutles) (1944 - 12/28/2019)

Syd Mead - art director (1933 - 12/30/2019)

#danny reviews#2019#in memoriam#carol channing#albert finney#peter tork#bruno ganz#luke perry#Agnes Varda#john singleton#peter mayhew#peggy lipton#doris day#tim conway#grumpy cat#dr. john#Franco Zeffirelli#rip torn#rutger hauer#russi taylor#peter fonda#D.A. Pennebaker#valerie harper#eddie money#ric ocasek#caroll spinney#danny aiello#ginger baker#neil innes#happy new year
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Photo
I know I just posted the video but seriously... I can't stop watching this and it so deserved a gif.
#gif#carol peletier#tdog#melissa mcbride#irone singleton#twd cast#twd family#twd season three#twd#teamcarylmundial#melissatcm#twdtcm
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