Departed During 2023

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Re: Departed During 2023 - AOPA's Richard McSpadden

#161 Post by OneHungLow » Mon Oct 02, 2023 8:20 am

Really sad to read this. Often quoted here.

https://www.ops-normal.org/viewtopic.ph ... 43#p376643
Richard McSpadden, the senior vice president of the AOPA Air Safety Institute died, along with one other person, in the crash of a Cessna 177RG near Lake Placid Airport in upstate New York Sunday. McSpadden was in the right seat. Russ Francis, a former NFL tight end and the new owner of Lake Placid Airways was in the left seat according to the Lake Placid News. AOPA spokesman Eric Blinderman told AVweb early reports indicate the Cardinal had “an emergency on takeoff” from Lake Placid shortly before 5 p.m. “They tried to get back but didn’t make the runway,” said Blinderman. The nature of the emergency wasn’t immediately known. He said more information will be available on Monday.

McSpadden was a former commander of the USAF Thunderbirds air demonstration team and joined the Air Safety Institute in 2017. He was well known in the GA community for his analyses of accidents and the safety related content he and his staff created for free distribution. He was also highly regarded by his many friends and colleagues. “We are beyond heartbroken,” said Blinderman. “This is the worst kind of news to process as a friend, colleague and fellow aviator.” He is survived by his wife Judy, son Grant and daughter Annabel.
https://www.avweb.com/aviation-news/air ... -in-crash/
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Re: Departed During 2023 - AOPA's Richard McSpadden

#162 Post by PHXPhlyer » Mon Oct 02, 2023 2:49 pm

OneHungLow wrote:
Mon Oct 02, 2023 8:20 am
Really sad to read this. Often quoted here.

https://www.ops-normal.org/viewtopic.ph ... 43#p376643
Richard McSpadden, the senior vice president of the AOPA Air Safety Institute died, along with one other person, in the crash of a Cessna 177RG near Lake Placid Airport in upstate New York Sunday. McSpadden was in the right seat. Russ Francis, a former NFL tight end and the new owner of Lake Placid Airways was in the left seat according to the Lake Placid News. AOPA spokesman Eric Blinderman told AVweb early reports indicate the Cardinal had “an emergency on takeoff” from Lake Placid shortly before 5 p.m. “They tried to get back but didn’t make the runway,” said Blinderman. The nature of the emergency wasn’t immediately known. He said more information will be available on Monday.

McSpadden was a former commander of the USAF Thunderbirds air demonstration team and joined the Air Safety Institute in 2017. He was well known in the GA community for his analyses of accidents and the safety related content he and his staff created for free distribution. He was also highly regarded by his many friends and colleagues. “We are beyond heartbroken,” said Blinderman. “This is the worst kind of news to process as a friend, colleague and fellow aviator.” He is survived by his wife Judy, son Grant and daughter Annabel.
https://www.avweb.com/aviation-news/air ... -in-crash/
https://lakeplacidairways.us/

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Re: Departed During 2023

#163 Post by PHXPhlyer » Mon Oct 02, 2023 4:38 pm

Russ Francis Dies in Plane Crash at Age 70; Won Super Bowl with 49ers in 1985

https://bleacherreport.com/articles/100 ... =editorial

Former NFL tight end Russ Francis was one of two people who died in an airplane crash at Lake Placid Airport on Sunday.

He was 70.

The New England Patriots released a statement after news of Francis' death became public:


Aaron Marbone of the Adirondack Daily Enterprise reported Francis, an avid flyer, had recently purchased the Lake Placid Airways scenic tour business. The other person who died has been identified as Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association's senior vice president Richard McSpadden.

"Russ Francis and I became close friends right away," North Elba town supervisor Derek Doty told the Enterprise. "His energy was infectious and was so excited to be an integral part of our community. A terrible tragedy. I will delay any further comments until after consoling his family."

Francis played 13 NFL seasons for the Patriots and the San Francisco 49ers. He made three Pro Bowls and two All-Pro teams in the late 1970s with the Patriots before winning Super Bowl XIX with the 49ers in 1985.

The Patriots named Francis to their All-1970s team, and he was part of their 35th Anniversary Team in 1994. Francis finished his career with 393 receptions for 5,262 yards and 40 touchdowns.

After his NFL career ended, Francis briefly went into the professional wrestling business, competing in a battle royale at WrestleMania II and winning the NWA Hawaii Tag Team Championships. He also hosted a radio show in New Hampshire.


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Re: Departed During 2023

#164 Post by PHXPhlyer » Sat Oct 14, 2023 10:51 pm

Piper Laurie, three-time Oscar nominee, dies at 91
Laurie’s manager Marion Rosenberg confirmed her death to NBC News.

https://www.nbcnews.com/pop-culture/pop ... rcna120459

Piper Laurie, who blossomed as an actress only after extricating herself from the studio system and went on to rack up three Oscar nominations, has died. She was 91.

Laurie’s manager Marion Rosenberg confirmed her death to NBC News, writing, “Piper was one of the finest actors of her generation and a beautiful human being.”

Laurie scored her first Oscar nomination for her work opposite Paul Newman in 1961’s classic poolhall drama “The Hustler,” in which she played an alcoholic who memorably tells Newman’s character, “Look, I’ve got troubles and I think maybe you’ve got troubles. Maybe it’d be better if we just leave each other alone.”

Though she informally retired to raise a family for more than a decade, she returned to film and television in the mid-’70s and racked up an impressive roster of characterizations, including Oscar-nominated turns in “Carrie” and in “Children of a Lesser God,” in which she played Marlee Matlin’s icy mother. Laurie was truly chilling in “Carrie,” as the mother of the shy telekinetic girl of the title who has, in the words of Roger Ebert, “translated her own psychotic fear of sexuality into a twisted personal religion.”

Her performance as the plotting, power-hungry Catherine Martell in David Lynch’s landmark TV series “Twin Peaks” brought her two of her nine Emmy nominations. The actress won her only Emmy for her role in the powerful 1986 “Hallmark Hall of Fame” entry “Promises,” in which James Wood starred as a schizophrenic and James Garner as his brother, with Laurie’s character offering help to the pair.

She scored her last Emmy nomination in 1999 for a guest role on sitcom “Frasier” in which she played the mother of a radio psychologist played by Christine Baranski and clearly modeled after Dr. Laura Schlessinger.

The actress negotiated herself out of her contract with Universal in the mid-’50s after a series of ingenue roles in mediocre films and turned in an impressive supporting performance in Robert Wise’s “Until They Sail” (1957), with Jean Simmons, Paul Newman and Joan Fontaine.

She then headed east; in New York she appeared in television productions of “Twelfth Night” and “Caesar and Cleopatra.” She picked up Emmy nominations for original drama “The Deaf Heart” on “Studio One in Hollywood” and “Days of Wine and Roses” with Cliff Robertson on “Playhouse 90.” Director Robert Rossen spotted her working at the Actors Studio and offered her the role of the crippled alcoholic Sarah Packard in the drama “The Hustler,” which brought her an Oscar nomination as best actress in 1961.

Soon thereafter she married writer Joseph Morgenstern, later a film critic, and left show business to start a family, living in Woodstock, New York.

By the mid-’70s she was ready to work again and appeared in a Broadway revival of “The Glass Menagerie” and in an episode of PBS’ “Nova” science series as pioneer family planning champion Margaret Sanger.

Laurie took Brian De Palma’s “Carrie” almost as a lark. But her tongue-in-cheek but terrifying performance in the horror film brought her a second Oscar nomination in the supporting category. She followed that up with an Australian drama “Tim,” starring a young Mel Gibson, as well as films including “Ruby,” “The Boss’s Son” and “Return to Oz.”

She also began regular work on television in such TV movies as “In the Matter of Karen Ann Quinlan”; the Judy Garland biography “Rainbow”; 1981’s “The Bunker,” in which she played Magda Goebbels to Anthony Hopkins’ Hitler, drawing an Emmy nomination; “The Thorn Birds,” which brought her another Emmy nom; and 1986’s “Promise,” for which she won an Emmy for supporting actress. She was also guesting on TV series, picking an Emmy nom in 1984 for her work on “St. Elsewhere.”

Bigscreen work during the late ’80s and ’90s included “Appointment With Death,” “Other People’s Money,” “Wrestling Ernest Hemingway,” “Storyville,” “Rich in Love,” and “The Crossing Guard.” In the well-regarded period dramedy “The Grass Harp,” she reunited with her “Carrie” co-star Sissy Spacek but this time played her sister (they also both appeared in the 2001 telepic “Midwives”).

In the 1990s and 2000s she guested on the likes of “ER,” “Diagnosis Murder,” “Touched by an Angel,” “Will and Grace” and “Law and Order: SVU.” She appeared steadily in a series of telepics.

Her last film appearances included “Eulogy” (2004), in which she stood out as the matriarch of a dysfunctional family; “The Dead Girl,” in which she played another cruel mother, this one bed-ridden; “Hounddog,” as the stern grandmother of rape victim Dakota Fanning; and “Hesher,” in which she memorably shared a bong with the stranger, played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who insinuates himself into her household.

Born Rosetta Jacobs in Detroit, she was plucked out of Los Angeles High School at age 17 and signed to a Universal contract for $250 a week, which would run up to $1,750 a week after seven years.

She made her debut as Ronald Reagan’s daughter in the 1950 film “Louisa” and then went on to star in a series of undistinguished comedies and musicals, including a foray into the Francis the talking mule series called “Francis Goes to the Races.” As an ingenue she was the love interest of such up-and-comers as Tony Curtis and Rock Hudson and established stars including Tyrone Power and Victor Mature.

Among the early forgettable films were “Johnny Dark,” “Dangerous Mission,” “Ain’t Misbehavin’” and “No Room for the Groom.”

“I hated what I was doing,” she later told a journalist. But she also admitted that the regular work helped her develop and move on to more gratifying projects.

Laurie and Morgenstern divorced in 1981. She is survived by a daughter, Anne Grace.

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Phyllis Latour: The secret life of a WW2 heroine revealed

#165 Post by OneHungLow » Sun Oct 15, 2023 3:38 am

Just noticed that Karearea posted this... viewtopic.php?p=378261#p378261

Phyllis Latour, the last of the 39 female secret agents who served in Sir Winston Churchill's "secret army" in France, has died aged 102. Now, previously classified official files paint a vivid portrait of her life as a World War Two spy behind enemy lines.

In the summer of 1944, in a village in German-occupied western France, a slim young woman with dark hair and grey-green eyes sat in a building with a wireless set, tapping out messages in Morse code.

She was an agent in the Special Operations Executive (SOE), known as Churchill's Secret Army. Her codename was Genevieve and she was sending urgent messages back to London.

The French resistance in the area was sabotaging key transport links, disrupting German forces as they fought the Allied advance. For this they needed supplies - dropped by air from Britain - and aerial support.

The messages being sent by Genevieve were vital intelligence from inside enemy territory, as they included precise locations for the RAF to bomb, as well as where to drop equipment.

As she typed out her transmission, two German soldiers opened the door, looking for food.

Calmly, she closed up the wireless set, pretending it was a case she was packing. Genevieve told them she had scarlet fever - which had been sweeping the area - and said she had to get out of the village. The soldiers left quickly.

This was one of several close shaves for Genevieve. Working behind German lines, as the fighting grew closer, was incredibly dangerous, but she never lost her nerve. She had "tons of guts" according to her citation for the MBE at the end of the war.

Genevieve's real name was Phyllis Latour. After she married, she became known as Pippa Doyle, moved to New Zealand, and rarely spoke about her wartime career.

Now she has died at the age of 102, and for the first time her full wartime story can be told.

Latour.JPG

Latour's wartime SOE file has been released by the National Archives and shows exactly what she did, painting a vivid portrait of one of the little-known heroines of the war.

Born in South Africa in 1921 to a French father and British mother, Phyllis was orphaned at the age of four and went to live with an uncle in Jadotville in the Belgian Congo.

She spent all her spare time on "saffaris [sic]" with her guardian, according to her SOE form, travelling around the country as her uncle tried to stop the smuggling of ivory. It was an exciting time - when she was training for SOE one report noted that she was "always talking about the Belgian Congo".

Phyllis spoke English, French, some Arabic, Swahili and Kikuyu. At 16 she was sent to boarding school in Kenya, then in May 1939 she left with her guardians for Europe. In November 1941 she joined the Women's Auxiliary Air Force, or WAAF, as a balloon operator.

But it is clear from her files that she yearned for more adventure, and by autumn 1943 she was training for SOE.

She was a "simple-minded, naïve, ingenuous girl", according to her first report. She was "bright, eager and plucky", with a dislike of "sedentary" duties - office-based work, in other words. She was "childlike" and had "no grasp of the realities of life".

Male trainers at SOE often underestimated the female agents, according to Clare Mulley, who has written several books about women agents in World War Two.

"Latour's training reports appear dismissive, warning that she is 'unsuitable' for work in the field, but in France she gave exceptional service," says Ms Mulley.

According to the historian, this was not uncommon. Ms Mulley recalls another trainee's report, which read: "Would make an excellent wife for an unimaginative man."

A former agent turned trainer, Odette Wilen, dismissed Phyllis Latour on New Year's Day, 1944, as a "cheerfull [sic] little scatterbrain" who was "uncontrolled and stubborn". She was "too unreliable emotionally for this type of work".

But Phyllis's reports improved. She was good with a pistol, although a 9mm was too heavy for her. She was sent to SOE's Special Training School in January 1944 and took to parachute jumping with great enthusiasm - though on her first attempt she landed on top of another student.

She was allocated to the network of agents - or circuit - codenamed "Scientist". Her keyword for communicating with HQ was SMOKEGETSINYOUREYES . The circuit was run by Claude de Baissac, who the head of F (France) section described as "the most difficult of my officers". It ran operations across a large swathe of Normandy.

Behind enemy lines
Phyllis arrived in France on 1 May, 1944. At first she travelled around the area of Caen and Vire with another agent, who would be covering the area. The Gestapo heard of their presence - and they even encountered a German vehicle full of Allied parachutes which they had found.

Phyllis and her colleague got away, but then had to pack up their base in a village called Champgeneteux in the middle of the night, destroying documents and decamping to St Mars, a resistance base near Nantes.

One citation in the file notes how she had to move constantly, without a change of shoes or clothes. "This did not worry her," the file said, "so great was her eagerness to serve". In one of the rare interviews she gave in later life, Phyllis described how she hid her codes, on fine silk, by wrapping them round a knitting needle, then feeding that into a shoelace, which she used to secure her hair.

She didn't carry the bulky wireless sets around - she had 17 of them, in different places. She carried out 135 transmissions in the few weeks she was in France.

As the Americans began to advance rapidly, life became even more difficult behind the German lines. The SOE agents used to stay on farms, but once the RAF bombing increased, the Germans occupied these.

Phyllis started sending her transmissions from the open fields instead. At the beginning of August, as the US forces had taken over, Phyllis contacted them, but was initially taken prisoner, until they confirmed her identity.

Return to England
Back in Britain, Phyllis looked for other work as an agent in the field, trying to avoid being sent back to WAAF and a "disciplined" existence, which "horrified" her.

On 7 December 1944 one senior officer wrote he had seen her, saying: "Latour seemed to think that SOE was displaying gross ingratitude towards her and others like her. She told me that no attempt had been made to find her other employment."

She asked to go to the Far East, but was told there was no employment there for women as agents. Then, she was recommended to MI5, but they had no "suitable employment" either.

So she volunteered to go to Germany for SOE and another round of intensive training followed, this time with glowing reports, especially from parachute training.

"She is extremely keen on her job and will put her whole heart and soul into the work," the instructor wrote.

Phyllis was, he said, the first woman who enjoyed the experience and asked to have an extra turn. The instructors turned her down as they "didn't want to set a precedent".

But the Allied armies' rapid advance meant Phyllis was never sent on this second mission. She stayed in England, a change in fortune which appeared not to suit her.

In June 1945 one note says: "Since the collapse of Germany, Miss Latour has suffered from severe nervous strain."

She had seen the resident psychiatrist at the Air Ministry, who recommended she be released "immediately" from her home military department, the WAAF. They wanted Phyllis to return "home" to South Africa as soon as possible.

n September 1945, Phyllis was awarded an MBE. The recommendation says she was "a bit scatters" - a scatterbrain, in other words. "Always wanted to be doing something dangerous but had no idea it was dangerous. Thought it was all rather fun. Tons of guts. Wants to go on with the work, provided it's dangerous enough."

Vera Atkins, who was in charge of female SOE agents in France, wrote to Phyllis that she was "delighted" by the MBE. She asked whether Phyllis had "settled down again to shooting elephants and ostriches and other peace-time occupations".

"After the thrill of clandestine resistance in enemy-occupied territory, many former SOE agents found it hard to adjust to what one called 'the horrors of peace'," says historian Clare Mulley, adding that returning SOE agents were given no support or counselling to help them adjust.

There was little opportunity to make use of their exceptional field skills.

After World War Two, Phyllis married and lived in Kenya, Fiji and Australia, before settling in New Zealand.

France had already awarded Phyllis the Croix de Guerre, but in 2014 she was made a Chevalier of the Legion d'Honneur, the country's highest decoration, in a special ceremony in New Zealand.

Of the 39 women agents who served with Special Operations Executive in the field in France, Phyllis Latour - Pippa Doyle - was the last survivor.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-67100792
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Re: Departed During 2023

#166 Post by PHXPhlyer » Sun Oct 15, 2023 8:12 pm

Suzanne Somers, star of 'Three's Company,' dies at 76
The iconic 70's TV star passed in her home on the eve of her 77th birthday while surrounded by her family early Sunday morning.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/su ... rcna120514

Suzanne Somers is dead at 76, according to her longtime publicist R. Couri Hay.

The “Three’s Company” actress died in her home while surrounded by her family in the early hours of Sunday, which was the eve of her 77th birthday.

“Her family was gathered to celebrate her 77th birthday on October 16th. Instead, they will celebrate her extraordinary life, and want to thank her millions of fans and followers who loved her dearly,” Hay said in a statement on behalf of Somers’ family.
It wasn't immediately clear how Somers passed, but Hay said the actress "survived an aggressive form of breast cancer for over 23 years."

Somers will be buried in a private ceremony sometime this week and a memorial will follow next month, according to Hay.

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Re: Departed During 2023 - Sir Tim Wallis

#167 Post by Karearea » Tue Oct 17, 2023 4:55 pm

Sir Tim Wallis, adventurer and Warbirds Over Wānaka founder, died on Tuesday surrounded by family.

His death was acknowledged in a blog post on the Warbirds Over Wānaka website. He was 85 and died peacefully, it said.

Wallis was the founder of the aviation event and “the driving force” behind it for 20 years, starting with the first airshow “Warbirds on Parade” in 1988.

He was in part motivated by his desire to share his collection of WWII fighters with the public and attract visitors to Wānaka. It became the largest warbird show in the southern hemisphere, with the first show attracting 14,000 visitors.

He was knighted in 1994 for services to deer farming, export and the community.

Warbirds Over Wānaka Community Trust chairperson John Gilks said Wallis left an amazing legacy, with the event attracting more than 50,000 people over its three days and pumping $42 million into the regional economy.

Wallis stepped back from running the event in 2006, but continued to support it and other projects in the region.

Warbirds Over Wānaka general manager Ed Taylor said he had very fond memories of catching up with Wallis over the past 12 years.

“Sir Tim was a regular out at his airport office and I loved nothing more than having chats with him, which almost always were about the airshow. He loved nothing more than talking about aircraft and the airshow.”

Wallis was held in the highest regard in warbird airshow world, Taylor said.

“I might be talking to a relatively young Warbird display pilot in the US or Europe and they would ask after Sir Tim – they all knew him by name.”

In 2014, Wallis became a patron of the Wānaka Watersports Facility Trust and helped it build a community facility for non-motorised watersports, including rowing, kayaking and swimming.

Wallis lost two sons in helicopter crashes - just three months apart.

In October 2018, pilot Nick Wallis, 38, died with his passengers – two Department of Conservation staff.

Matt Wallis, 39, died when his Robinson 44 helicopter crashed into Lake Wānaka, near Stevensons Island, on July 21, 2018.

According to a 2005 Listener article, Sir Tim Wallis had survived 15 air crashes, including hitting overhead power lines in a helicopter in 1968, breaking his back and permanently paralysing his left leg. He has been unable to fly since 1996, when he crashed his Spitfire Mk XIV at 320kmh at Wānaka Airport.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/300991 ... es-aged-85

https://www.warbirdsoverwanaka.com/2024 ... is-passes/
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Re: Departed During 2023 - Sir Tim Wallis

#168 Post by OneHungLow » Tue Oct 17, 2023 5:34 pm

Karearea wrote:
Tue Oct 17, 2023 4:55 pm
Sir Tim Wallis, adventurer and Warbirds Over Wānaka founder, died on Tuesday surrounded by family.

His death was acknowledged in a blog post on the Warbirds Over Wānaka website. He was 85 and died peacefully, it said.

Wallis was the founder of the aviation event and “the driving force” behind it for 20 years, starting with the first airshow “Warbirds on Parade” in 1988.

He was in part motivated by his desire to share his collection of WWII fighters with the public and attract visitors to Wānaka. It became the largest warbird show in the southern hemisphere, with the first show attracting 14,000 visitors.

He was knighted in 1994 for services to deer farming, export and the community.

Warbirds Over Wānaka Community Trust chairperson John Gilks said Wallis left an amazing legacy, with the event attracting more than 50,000 people over its three days and pumping $42 million into the regional economy.

Wallis stepped back from running the event in 2006, but continued to support it and other projects in the region.

Extraordinary man who had the misfortune, like that other Kiwi, Ray Hanna, to lose son(s) in pursuit of aviation, and the preservation, and display of classic warbirds.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Wallis
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Carla Bley

#169 Post by OneHungLow » Wed Oct 18, 2023 12:05 am

Carla Bley, the American jazz composer-pianist celebrated for boldly avant-garde work as well as her uplifting and beautiful takes on the genre’s mainstream, has died aged 87.

Her death was announced by longtime partner and musical collaborator Steve Swallow, who said the cause was complications from brain cancer.

Bley’s impish, blithe yet pointed approach to her craft meant she recorded right across the jazz spectrum, from straightforwardly lovely piano pieces (the likes of Lawns became standards and hits on streaming services) to stridently political big band works and an acclaimed 1973 triple-LP jazz-rock opera, Escalator Over the Hill, with a supporting cast including country-pop singer Linda Ronstadt, Cream bassist Jack Bruce and Manfred Mann’s Paul Jones.

Carla Bley Trio: Life Goes On review – warm, spirited and even funny

Born Lovella May Borg in Oakland, California in 1936, she learned piano from the age of three but dropped out of school at 14 and picked up work as a pianist in Bay Area jazz clubs. Bley then moved to New York aged 17 and worked as a cigarette girl at jazz club Birdland, later saying: “I was the one who took a picture of you and your girlfriend at the table to commemorate your being there with someone who wasn’t your wife usually. I hardly sold anything because I was listening to the music,” which included Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Count Basie and more.

She met pianist Paul Bley, marrying him in 1957 and moving back to California together, with Bley composing music for him and an LA group to improvise off of, its members including Ornette Coleman and Don Cherry.

The Bleys returned to New York, and Carla became deeply involved in the city’s free jazz scene: “I wanted to object to as many things as possible that were wrong in the world of jazz and change the whole system that existed in the music world,” she later explained.

She was a key component of the Jazz Composer’s Orchestra and its associated Guild, a union who campaigned on behalf of musicians’ working conditions. Equally politically minded was the Liberation Music Orchestra, helmed by bassist Charlie Haden who was inspired by Spanish civil war songs, Che Guevara and more – Bley was the group’s arranger and conductor, with Rolling Stone magazine’s Lester Bangs hailing her “miracles of dynamics” in a review of their self-titled 1970 album.

Having had her head turned by the Beatles, Bley also explored a fusion with pop and rock. As well as recording Escalator Over the Hill across five years with around 50 personnel, she wrote the music for the debut album by Pink Floyd’s Nick Mason and collaborated with Robert Wyatt. Having amicably divorced Bley (and kept his name), she also made a number of 1970s collaborations with second husband, trumpeter Michael Mantler; the couple also had a daughter, Karen.

She continued to reconnect with Haden’s Liberation Music Orchestra (and helmed it after his death in 2014) and worked with her own self-titled big band. She released a steady stream of solo releases with German label ECM from the late 1970s onwards, culminating in a trio of albums with Swallow and saxophonist Andy Sheppard, most recently Life Goes On in 2020.

She was diagnosed with brain cancer in 2018, explaining: “Sometimes I don’t know the answer to a question, so I think they must have taken something out by mistake, because ever since the operation I no longer have perfect pitch.”

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Re: Departed During 2023: Sir Bobby Charlton

#170 Post by Karearea » Sat Oct 21, 2023 6:49 pm

England’s most successful footballer, a player who won all the major honours and was admired for his gentlemanly behaviour.
Sir Bobby Charlton, who has died aged 86, was one of the greatest footballers England has ever produced. He was certainly the most successful, the only English player to win all of football’s major honours – the FA Cup, Football League and European Cup with Manchester United, and the World Cup with England, accumulating a record number of international caps and goals

As captain of United in 1968, when they were the first English team to win the European Cup, and a key player in the 1966 World Cup-winning team, he was the embodiment of a golden age of English football. But he was also involved in one of the game’s darkest moments, the 1958 Munich air disaster, in which eight of his team-mates, three United staff and a further 12 passengers were killed.

Charlton was renowned for his raking passes and explosive long-range shots, with either foot, and was blessed with speed, athleticism and perfect balance.

Some commentators say he was a scorer of great goals rather than a great goalscorer, but the statistics undermine that claim. For England, he scored 49 in 106 appearances, and he was United’s highest all-time scorer, with 249 in 758 games, until 2017, when his record was beaten by Wayne Rooney.

But it was his modesty and gentlemanly demeanour, as much as his outstanding ability, that won him admiration far beyond Manchester and England. At the height of his fame in the mid to late 60s, when London and the counterculture were in full swing, one of the world’s most famous Englishmen was an old-fashioned sporting hero. Across the world, the first or only two words of English many people could speak were “Bobby Charlton”.
....
Much more to read at link:
Guardian: Sir Bobby Charlton - Obituary

I remember him from my earliest days of watching football on tv. Was synonymous with football to me.

Rest in peace, sir.
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Re: Departed During 2023

#171 Post by tango15 » Tue Oct 24, 2023 4:50 pm

Bill Kenwright, sometime actor and later West End impresario, and chairman of Everton Football Club. I was at school with him, and we often got the bus home together. I never saw him again after we left school, but I wasn't surprised that he did so well - he was a bright lad at school. Put on a huge amount of weight, though. So now he joins George Harrison and Peter Sissons (newsreader) in the celestial version of our alma mater.

RIP Bill

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Re: Departed During 2023

#172 Post by PHXPhlyer » Wed Oct 25, 2023 1:57 am

Shaft

Reports: Richard Roundtree, actor famous for playing ‘Shaft,’ has died


https://www.cnn.com/2023/10/24/entertai ... index.html

Richard Roundtree, the stage and screen actor best known for his performance as a tough-talking private eye in 1971’s “Shaft,” has died, according to multiple reports.

He was 81.

The news was confirmed by Roundtree’s manager Patrick McMinn in a statement to Variety.

“Richard’s work and career served as a turning point for African American leading men in film,” McMinn said. “The impact he had on the industry cannot be overstated.”

CNN has reached out to representatives for the actor for comment.

Roundtree has the distinction of being among a handful of actors who enjoyed top billing with his first-ever screen credit. Until then a theater actor, his starring role in the 1971 Blaxploitation epic “Shaft” propelled him into the cultural limelight, launching a franchise that would see sequels, a TV series and a 2019 reboot starring Samuel L. Jackson.

The actor would go on to enjoy a career spanning 50 years with over 150 screen credits. Notable television credits include “Roots,” “L.A. Law,” and “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.” Roundtree also costarred in films such as “Se7en,” “Speed Racer” and “Brick.”

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Re: Departed During 2023

#173 Post by PHXPhlyer » Fri Nov 03, 2023 3:55 am

Ken Mattingly, astronaut pulled hours before Apollo 13, dies at 87
Mattingly circled the moon on Apollo 16, but is just as remembered for the flight he didn't take: He was scrubbed from Apollo 13 days before launch.

https://www.12news.com/article/news/nat ... 01982ca5d3

ARLINGTON, Va. — Astronaut Thomas "Ken" Mattingly, who orbited the moon on NASA's Apollo 16 mission and narrowly missed the ill-fated Apollo 13 mission, died Tuesday at age 87, NASA said.

“We lost one of our country’s heroes on Oct. 31. NASA astronaut TK Mattingly was key to the success of our Apollo Program, and his shining personality will ensure he is remembered throughout history," NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said in a statement.

Mattingly began his career as a jet pilot in the Navy and joined NASA in 1966, serving on the support crews for Apollo 8 and Apollo 11.



Thomas "Ken" Mattingly was one of the 19 astronauts selected by NASA in April 1966. He died Oct. 31, 2023.
His first space flight was set to be on Apollo 13, during which he would orbit the moon in the command module while the other two astronauts, James Lovell and Fred Haise, explored the lunar surface. He was scratched from flight status 72 hours before launch because of exposure to Rubella, avoiding the massive explosion that crippled the spacecraft as it neared the moon.



Members of the Apollo 13 crew leave the launch site after finishing a demonstration in the spaceship, March 26, 1970 at Cape Kennedy in Florida.
During the emergency response from the ground, Mattingly offered critical advice to the three astronauts as they worked to get back to Earth safely.

"He stayed behind and provided key real-time decisions to successfully bring home the wounded spacecraft and the crew of Apollo 13," Nelson said.

Mattingly was portrayed by Gary Sinise in the 1995 film about the event.


He later would orbit the moon in 1972 on NASA's Apollo 16 mission and fly two space shuttle missions.

“TK’s contributions have allowed for advancements in our learning beyond that of space. He described his experience in orbit by saying, ‘I had this very palpable fear that if I saw too much, I couldn’t remember. It was just so impressive.’ He viewed the universe’s vastness as an unending forum of possibilities," Nelson said.

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Re: Departed During 2023

#174 Post by Wodrick » Fri Nov 03, 2023 8:24 am

Thanks PP an oft forgotten man.

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Re: Departed During 2023

#175 Post by PHXPhlyer » Fri Nov 10, 2023 12:48 am

Apollo 8 astronaut Frank Borman dies at 95

https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/apoll ... es-95-nasa#

Frank Borman, who commanded two early NASA missions, including the first to orbit the moon, has died. He was 95 years old.

NASA administrator Bill Nelson confirmed the news of his passing, stating that Borman passed away on Nov. 7 in Billings, Montana.

"Today we remember one of NASA’s best," Nelson wrote on NASA's website. "Astronaut Frank Borman was a true American hero. Among his many accomplishments, he served as the commander of the Apollo 8 mission, humanity’s first mission around the Moon in 1968."

In 1967, Borman served as a member of the Apollo 204 Fire Investigation Board, investigating the causes of the fire that killed three astronauts aboard an Apollo spacecraft, reminiscent of the Challenger tragedy.

Later, he became the Apollo Program Resident Manager, heading the team that reengineered the Apollo spacecraft. He also served as Field Director of NASA's Space Station Task Force, according to the space agency.

He and his crew, James Lovell and William Anders, were the first Apollo mission to fly to the moon — and to see Earth as a distant sphere in space.

Launched from Florida’s Cape Canaveral on Dec. 21, 1968, the Apollo 8 trio spent three days traveling to the moon, and maneuvered into lunar orbit on Christmas Eve. After they circled 10 times on Dec. 24-25, they headed home on Dec. 27.

On Christmas Eve, the astronauts read from the Book of Genesis in a live telecast from the orbiter: "In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth. And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep."

Borman ended the broadcast with, "And from the crew of Apollo 8, we close with good night, good luck, a Merry Christmas, and God bless all of you — all of you on the good Earth."

"His lifelong love for aviation and exploration was only surpassed by his love for his wife Susan," Nelson continued, adding, "His service to NASA and our nation will undoubtedly fuel the Artemis Generation to reach new cosmic shores."

Frank Borman was born in Gary, Indiana, and was raised in Tucson, Arizona. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree from the U.S. Military Academy, West Point, in 1950 and a Master of Science degree in Aeronautical Engineering from the California Institute of Technology in 1957. He completed the Harvard Business School's Advanced Management Program in 1970.

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Re: Departed During 2023

#176 Post by Karearea » Fri Nov 10, 2023 12:55 am

PHXPhlyer wrote:
Fri Nov 10, 2023 12:48 am
Apollo 8 astronaut Frank Borman dies at 95

On Christmas Eve, the astronauts read from the Book of Genesis in a live telecast from the orbiter: "In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth. And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep."
...
PP
On the Soundtrack thread, my post #6396 just three hours ago, of Mike Oldfield's "In the beginning & Let There Be Light", includes those recorded words...
Around the world thoughts shall fly In the twinkling of an eye

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Re: Departed During 2023

#177 Post by OneHungLow » Fri Nov 10, 2023 9:16 pm

A good female friend! A Finnish born half Hawaiian lady who served honorably as a member of the US Marine Corps...

Tuna.JPG
Tuna.JPG (27.83 KiB) Viewed 3153 times
The observer of fools in military south and north...

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Re: Departed During 2023

#178 Post by tango15 » Sun Nov 12, 2023 4:44 pm

Karearea wrote:
Fri Nov 10, 2023 12:55 am
PHXPhlyer wrote:
Fri Nov 10, 2023 12:48 am
Apollo 8 astronaut Frank Borman dies at 95

On Christmas Eve, the astronauts read from the Book of Genesis in a live telecast from the orbiter: "In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth. And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep."
...
PP
On the Soundtrack thread, my post #6396 just three hours ago, of Mike Oldfield's "In the beginning & Let There Be Light", includes those recorded words...
None of the obituaries I read mentioned his tenure at Eastern Airlines, perhaps for good reason, although he was very unpopular, he did turn the airline around, but eventually had to sell it to Texas Air Corporation.

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Re: Departed During 2023

#179 Post by llondel » Sun Nov 19, 2023 3:32 am

Don Walsh, oceanographer, died on 12th Nov. He was in the bathyscaphe Trieste with Jacques Piccard when it did the first deep dive to the bottom of Challenger Deep.

https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-67445718
Ocean explorer Captain Don Walsh has died at the age of 92. More than 60 years ago he made the first ever descent to the deepest place in the ocean, the Mariana Trench which lies almost 11km (seven miles) down. I was lucky enough to count him as a good friend. This is the story of an extraordinary dive by a remarkable man.

In 1960, space-mania was gripping the world and would-be astronauts were dreaming of their first forays skywards.

But 28-year-old Captain Don Walsh had his sights set very much downwards. He was about to descend deeper than any human had ever ventured before.

The US Navy had acquired a submersible called the bathyscaphe Trieste and Don, a submarine lieutenant, volunteered to join the project.

But when he signed up for the mission, the deepest he'd been in a sub was just 100m down. He was in for a bit of a shock - the US Navy wanted him to dive more than a hundred times deeper.

The plan was to head to the deepest place on the planet, the very bottom of the Mariana Trench, a narrow, underwater canyon, which lies in the Pacific Ocean, off the coast of Guam.

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Re: Departed During 2023

#180 Post by PHXPhlyer » Sun Nov 19, 2023 9:20 pm

Rosalynn Carter, former first lady and tireless humanitarian who advocated for mental health issues, dies at 96
Carter devoted herself to several social causes in the course of her public life, including programs that supported health care resources, human rights, social justice and the needs of elderly people.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/obituaries ... -rcna62862

Rosalynn Carter, the Georgia-bred former first lady and humanitarian who championed mental health care, provided constant political counsel to her husband, former President Jimmy Carter, and modeled graceful longevity for the nation, died Sunday at her home in Plains, according to the Carter Center.

Carter was 96. She had entered hospice care in her Georgia home on Friday.

She was widely regarded for her political shrewdness, drawing particular praise for her keen electoral instincts, down-to-earth appeal, and work on behalf of the White House, including serving as an envoy to Latin America.

Carter devoted herself to several social causes in the course of her public life, including programs that supported health care resources, human rights, social justice and the needs of elderly people.

“Twenty-five years ago, we did not dream that people might someday be able actually to recover from mental illnesses,” Carter said at a mental health symposium in 2003. “Today it is a very real possibility.”

“For one who has worked on mental health issues as long as I have,” she added, “this is a miraculous development and an answer to my prayers.”

In late May, the Carter Center, the couple’s human rights group, announced that she had been diagnosed with dementia. “She continues to live happily at home with her husband, enjoying spring in Plains and visits with loved ones,” the organization said in a statement.

Bess Truman, the wife of President Harry Truman, is the only first lady to have lived longer, according to the National First Ladies Library. (Bess Truman died in 1982, at 97.) Jimmy and Rosalynn were the longest-married presidential couple in U.S. history.

The Carters earned admiration for their humanitarian projects after they left the White House. They were closely linked with Habitat for Humanity, considered by the charity to be “tireless advocates, active fundraisers and some of our best hands-on construction volunteers.”

Eleanor Rosalynn Smith was born in Plains, Georgia, on Aug. 18, 1927, the first of four children reared by Allethea Murray Smith and Wilburn Edgar Smith. Rosalynn’s father died when she was 13, and her mother became a dressmaker to provide for her family.

The loss of her father at such a young age forced Rosalynn to assume additional responsibilities alongside her mother. But the family unit managed to stay afloat.

Rosalynn finished high school and enrolled at Georgia Southwestern College. In 1945, following her freshman year, she went on a date with Jimmy Carter, a childhood friend of the family who was home from the U.S. Naval Academy.

“She’s the girl I want to marry,” Jimmy Carter told his mother after their first outing, according to a biography compiled by the White House Historical Association.

They were married the following year, on July 7, 1946. They relocated to Norfolk, Virginia — Jimmy’s first duty station after graduation. But life as a Navy family meant they had to move frequently.

Their four children were each born in different states: John William in Virginia, James Earl III in Hawaii, Donnel Jeffrey in Connecticut, and Amy Lynn — their only daughter — in Georgia.

Jimmy’s father died in 1953, sending the couple back to Plains to run the family peanut business. Rosalynn soon started working for the enterprise full time, assisting with accounting and other front-office functions.

Jimmy decided to launch a political career in the early 1960s, winning a Georgia state Senate seat in 1962.

He unsuccessfully sought the governorship in 1966; during that campaign, Rosalynn learned more about the challenges facing people with mental illnesses, as she recounted to Time magazine in 2010.

“The more I thought about it and found out about it, the more I thought it was just a terrible situation with no attention,” she said.

Rosalynn helped lay the foundation for her husband’s winning bid for the Georgia governorship in 1970 and, six years later, advised her husband’s grassroots presidential campaign. Political reporters took notice of her vivacity on the trail.

“Rosalynn Carter, 49, the candidate’s wife, campaigns with the untiring race-horse type of energy which has typified Carter’s operation for the past 18 months,” U.S. News & World Report wrote in May 1976.

“Not only that: Top aides claim Mrs. Carter is her husband’s most influential political adviser,” the author of the article added.

Rosalynn attracted particular attention for the skillful way she connected with voters, nabbing their support for her husband with down-to-earth warmth. In an unusual move for the era, she traveled across the country on her own, making the case for her husband on her own terms.

“Mrs. Carter, soft-spoken and low-key, prefers face-to-face meetings with voters,” U.S. News & World Report wrote in June 1976. “In her campaigning in 30 states she has scheduled frequent sessions at plant gates and shopping centers.”

Jimmy, running as a political outsider and a symbolic break from the disillusioned post-Watergate era, defeated President Gerald Ford in 1976. The press quickly understood that Rosalynn would not be content to remain on the sidelines in Washington.

“Rosalynn Carter will not be simply an East Wing ornament, a First Lady content to redecorate the White House or preside over soirees,” Newsweek’s Jane Whitmore wrote in January 1977.

“There’s so much you can do,” Rosalynn told Whitmore, “and there are things I want to do. I want to work on mental health and the problems of the elderly — independently, on my own.”

“Jimmy’s always talked things over with me, like when he was choosing the Vice President or the Cabinet,” she added. “I’ve always been involved in the meetings. I always tell him what I think even if I disagree — and I’ll continue to do that.”

Rosalynn established herself as an active part of her husband’s administration.

She joined Cabinet meetings, attended key briefings, spoke on behalf of the White House at ceremonial gatherings, served as an honorary member on a mental health commission, and traveled to Latin American nations as the president’s personal envoy.

Jimmy Carter’s presidency itself was judged to be a mixed bag, and many Americans — including some Democrats — believed that he was an ineffective commander in chief, particularly as the Iran hostage crisis dominated headlines in late 1979.

Rosalynn worked tirelessly in the bid to re-elect her husband to a second term in 1980 — a campaign Jimmy lost to Ronald Reagan, a former Hollywood star and governor of California who represented the ascendant conservative movement.

She was said to have been gutted by her husband’s loss and the apparent repudiation of his presidency by so many voters. But she made it clear to political reporters that she was trying to look to the future.

“I think you accept it,” Rosalynn was quoted as saying in a November 1980 article by the longtime UPI reporter Helen Thomas. “When you’ve done all you possibly can do, that’s all you can do. It was out of our hands.”

She pledged to “speak out” on the issues close to her heart, adding: “You go from one phase of your life to the next phase of life. … I think it’s going to be exciting.”

The next phase of Rosalynn Carter’s life proved to be fruitful. She wrote several books, including the 1984 memoir “First Lady From Plains” as well as three books about mental health.

The Carters remained committed to bettering the lives of people around the world, winning several awards and honors along the way.

In 1982, they founded the Carter Center, a nonprofit human rights organization forged in partnership with Emory University in Atlanta. Seven years later, she established the Rosalynn Carter Institute for Caregiving at Georgia Southwestern State University.

First lady Rosalynn Carter in the Vermeil Room of the White House on Feb. 18, 1977.White House via AP file
She held annual symposia on mental health at the Carter Center for more than three decades, uniting experts and advocates for discussions about mental illness, family coping, financing care services, supporting research and reducing stigma.

The two were awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Bill Clinton in August 1999. Clinton, speaking at the Carter Center, praised the couple for their humanitarian accomplishments.

“Rarely do we honor two people who have devoted themselves so effectively to advancing freedom in all those ways,” Clinton said. “Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter have done more good things for more people in more places than any other couple on the face of the Earth.”

In recent years, the Carters appeared publicly less frequently. But during the 2020 presidential election, they recorded a video tribute to Joe Biden that aired during the televised portion of the Democratic National Convention.

PP

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