1. #4576
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    John McCain dies at 81. Perhaps someone could post a suitable obit.

  2. #4577
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    R.I.P.
    nuff said I reckon,
    don't speak ill of the dead!

    Last edited by Mr Earl; 26-08-2018 at 08:32 AM.

  3. #4578
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    a musical tribute to McCain from two cherished dead idols.


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    fo earl

  5. #4580
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Earl View Post
    R.I.P.
    nuff said I reckon,
    don't speak ill of the dead!

    Why would you speak ill of him you piss gargling wanker?
    'American original': John McCain praised by political friends and foes
    Barack Obama and Sarah Palin salute senator’s service and friendships – while Donald Trump tweets condolences to family

    John McCain was remembered on Saturday as an “American original”, a “maverick” and a “hero of the Republic” who served his country for six decades in uniform and in Congress.

    The death of the Arizona senator, aged 81 and after more than a year-long battle with brain cancer, was met with an outpouring of condolences and tributes from dignitaries and politicians around the world as flags at the US Capitol and White House were lowered to half-staff in his honor.

    In a statement, Barack Obama honored to his 2008 rival for the White House. Despite their political differences, he said they shared a “fidelity to something higher – the ideals for which generations of Americans and immigrants alike have fought, marched, and sacrificed”.

    Obama continued: “We saw our political battles, even, as a privilege, something noble, an opportunity to serve as stewards of those high ideals at home, and to advance them around the world. We saw this country as a place where anything is possible – and citizenship as our patriotic obligation to ensure it forever remains that way.”

    McCain died surrounded by family at his ranch near Sedona, Arizona, a statement from his Senate office said. He was diagnosed with glioblastoma last July and his family announced on Friday that he would discontinue medical treatment.

    “My heart is broken,” his wife, Cindy McCain, wrote on Twitter. “I am so lucky to have lived the adventure of loving this incredible man for 38 years. He passed the way he lived, on his own terms, surrounded by the people he loved, in the the place he loved best.”
    Meghan McCain, a co-host of ABC’s The View and one of the senator’s seven children from two marriages, said: “He taught me how to live. All that I am is thanks to him. Now that he is gone, the task of my lifetime is to live up to his example, his explanations, and his love.”
    She added: “He was a great fire who burned bright, and we lived in his light and warmth for so very long.”

    In a tweet, Donald Trump offered his “deepest sympathies and respects” to McCain’s family.
    The relationship between the two Republican leaders was fraught. Despite the senator’s illness, Trump, who famously questioned McCain’s heroism in Vietnam, continued to criticize McCain for a 2017 vote against a plan to repeal key portions of the Affordable Care Act.
    Under Trump’s presidency, McCain watched his party veer from the values he championed. He disagreed sharply with Trump on foreign policy and America’s role in the world.

    Former President George W Bush, once a rival for the White House, called McCain a “man of deep conviction” and a “public servant in the finest traditions of our country”.
    Bush beat McCain in a fierce Republican primary in 2000. The former president supported McCain’s 2008 run but his unpopularity and the shadow of the Iraq war were widely believed to have hampered the senator’s chances.

    McCain’s choice of the Alaska governor Sarah Palin as his running mate had lasting effects. Debate continues over whether he thereby unleashed the populist, hard-right wing that now dominates the Republican party.
    On Saturday, Palin called McCain “an American original” and “a maverick and a fighter, never afraid to stand for his beliefs”.

    “John McCain was my friend,” she said. “I will remember the good times.
    Obama’s vice-president, Joe Biden, also called McCain a friend, saying his life was “proof that some truths are timeless”. He added: “America will miss John McCain. The world will miss John McCain. And I will miss him dearly.”
    Barack Obama speaks about immigration reform in 2009, flanked by Joe Biden and John McCain.

    Hillary Clinton, who lost the 2016 election to Palin’s heir, said McCain was “a tough politician, a trusted colleague, and there will simply never be another like him”.

    Former president Bill Clinton saluted McCain for his belief “that every citizen has a responsibility to make something of the freedoms given by our Constitution”.
    “He lived by his creed every day,” Clinton said, thanking McCain for his role in normalising relations with Vietnam.

    Former president Jimmy Carter praised McCain’s “steadfast integrity”.
    House Speaker Paul Ryan honored McCain as someone who put “principle before politics” and “country before self”. The House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi said the nation lost a “leader and public servant of deep patriotism, outstanding bravery and undaunted spirit”.
    Senator Lindsey Graham, a Republican of South Carolina, said he would need time to absorb the loss of one of his “dearest friends and mentor”.
    “America and Freedom have lost one of her greatest champions,” he wrote on Twitter.
    Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat of Connecticut, recalled on one occasion listening to McCain tell members of the Senate the story of his capture and imprisonment in Vietnam.
    He told them that the prisoners developed a system of “tapping out letters on the cell walls” to communicate with each other because they would be beaten if they spoke aloud. Senator Dianne Feinstein asked McCain if he could still remember the code.

    He began to tap on the podium. Then he leaned into the microphone and said softly: “I just tapped out ‘yes, [Dianne], I still can.”
    Senator Ben Sasse, a Republican of Nebraska, said he once asked McCain how long it took to learn that code. McCain, who was known in the halls of the Senate for his wit, replied: “Who cares?! What the hell else were we going to do? We had infinite time.”
    Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican Senate majority leader who sparred with McCain on occasion, remembered a “bright example” in what he called a political era “filled with cynicism”.

    “It’s an understatement to say the Senate will not be the same without our friend John,” McConnell added. “The nation mourns the loss of a great American patriot, a statesman who put his country first and enriched this institution through many years of service.”
    The Senate Democratic leader, Chuck Schumer, said McCain was a “truth teller – never afraid to speak truth to power in an era where that has become all too rare”.
    Schumer said he planned to introduce a resolution to rename the Russell Senate office building after McCain.

    “Now, in a way that would probably have him making wisecracks, we are wistful for John McCain,” Arizona senator Jeff Flake wrote in an op-ed for the Washington Post. “We may never see his like again, but it is his reflection of America that we need now more than ever.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/...rican-original
    “If we stop testing right now we’d have very few cases, if any.” Donald J Trump.

  6. #4581
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    Quote Originally Posted by uncle junior View Post
    fo earl
    Thought Police?

    Quote Originally Posted by Cujo View Post
    Why would you speak ill of him you piss gargling wanker?l
    Did I speak ill of McCain?
    No, therefore petty personal insults are more of a reflection of your own character.
    Deal with it!

  7. #4582
    Thailand Expat tomcat's Avatar
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    ...^FOE...

  8. #4583
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Earl View Post
    don't speak ill of the dead!
    good riddance.


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    Quote Originally Posted by Cujo View Post
    'American original': John McCain praised by political friends and foes
    Also by the guys who were with him in Hanoi prison and the ones who survived the fireworks on USS Forrestal?

  10. #4585
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    Robin Leach, 76, ‘Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous’ Host, Dies

    Robin Leach, who became a symbol of unapologetic opulence as host of the popular syndicated television show “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous” in the 1980s and ’90s, died on Friday in Las Vegas. He was 76.
    John Katsilometes, a columnist at The Las Vegas Review-Journal, where Mr. Leach was also a columnist, announced the death on Twitter. He said Mr. Leach had had a stroke in November and another on Monday.
    With his distinctive, British-accented voice and exuberant, exclamation-point delivery, Mr. Leach was widely recognized and just as widely parodied during the initial run of the show, from 1984 to 1995, and long after. But he rebelled at the perception that he himself was as rich as the people whose lavish homes and lives he was bringing to his audiences.
    “Everyone thinks I make what Oprah does, or Cosby,” he told The New York Times in 1990, “but I don’t, because we’re in syndication.”



    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/24/o...ch-famous.html

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    Pulitzer-prize winning playwright Neil Simon dies at 91

    One of Broadway’s most prolific and popular playwrights and father of The Odd Couple, Neil Simon, has died at the age of 91.
    Multi-award-winning writer died of complications from pneumonia at New York-Presbyterian Hospital in New York City, Broadway theatre representatives DKC/O&M said on Monday morning (AEST).
    He was admitted to the hospital a few days ago and the pneumonia was in his lungs, longtime publicist and friend Bill Evans said.
    Simon had more than 30 plays shown on Broadway, including The Odd Couple, Barefoot in the Park and The Sunshine Boys, and also wrote numerous films, some original and other adaptations of his theatre works.
    He won a Pulitzer Prize in 1991 for his play Lost in Yonkers, and received four Oscar and 16 Tony nominations.



    https://thenewdaily.com.au/entertain...simon-dies-91/

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    Crikey....John McCain's mother is still alive at 106 !

    https://www.businessinsider.com/who-...8-8/?r=AU&IR=T

  13. #4588
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    Hollywood star Burt Reynolds has died aged 82


    The RIP Famous Person Thread-00109576-800-jpg

    Hollywood star Burt Reynolds has died aged 82.


    The Oscar-nominated actor, acclaimed for his roles in Deliverance, The Longest Yard and Boogie Nights, passed away on Thursday (September 6) at Jupiter Medical in Florida, his manager Erik Kritzer told The Hollywood Reporter.

    The actor, born in Michigan in 1936, first rose to prominence starring in television series such as Gunsmoke in the '60s and Dan August in the '70s.


    His breakthrough film role was in Deliverance (1972), in which he played Lewis Medlock.

    The RIP Famous Person Thread-0010957a-614-jpg


    Throughout the 1970s, Reynolds played the leading role in a string of box office hits, including The Longest Yard (1974) Smokey and the Bandit (1977) and Hooper (1978).

    Reynolds was nominated for a best supporting actor Oscar for his performance in Paul Thomas Anderson's Boogie Nights in 1997.

    The actor had been battling health issues in recent years.

    In February 2010, he underwent a quintuple heart bypass but he had been working until recently.


    Reynolds was currently filming a role in Quentin Tarantino's film about the Charles Manson murders, Once Upon A Time in Hollywood.

    https://www.rte.ie/entertainment/201...-died-aged-82/
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  14. #4589
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    Goodbye, Bert.

    The RIP Famous Person Thread-6a848aad-7be5-4fde-8894-57717c1187b8-jpeg
    He was not into manscaping.
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    Anyone see his film "The Man Who Loved Women" ? A classic.

  16. #4591
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    Former Carry On actress Liz Fraser has died aged 88.

    The RIP Famous Person Thread-4fd1dfe200000578-0-image-24_1536302545305-jpg


    The comic actress had a leading role in the British television's first soap opera, Sixpenny Corner on ITV from 1955 to 1956.

    Best known for her recurring role as perennially dizzy blonde in the Carry On franchise, buxom Liz Frazer starred in several Carry On films during the 1960s and 1970s.


    The south Londoner was in a number of the early Carry On films: Carry On Regardless (1961), Carry On Cruising (1962), and Carry On Cabby (1963), but was sacked by producer Peter Rogers after casually saying the series could be better marketed.

    She re-appeared in the series in Carry On Behind (1975), her salary apparently half of what it had been before.

    The British Comedy Society tweeted: 'Very sad to learn that the wonderful Liz Fraser has died. She was a delight.'
    She died on Thursday in the Brompton Hospital, London.
    Fraser defined herself as the bighearted comedy cockney blonde, attracting a string of admirers including Sean Connery ('we played lots of poker') and Stanley Baker.
    Her first notable film part was I'm All Right Jack (1959), where she played Cynthia, daughter of Fred Kite, the bolshie shop steward and the role which made Peter Sellers a star.
    The Boulting brothers were struggling to cast Cynthia, and Fraser was intially rejected by the directors.


    She later recalled: 'He couldn't be bothered because it was lunchtime,' she later recalled, 'but he said: 'Have make-up do something with her and I'll see her after lunch.
    'So they put me in a different bra and a very tight sweater with a tight belt and a long wig and eyelashes so I couldn't even recognise myself. Then I did the audition for John and I got the part.'
    The film, made in black and white, became the biggest box office hit of the year.

    Carry On star Liz Fraser dies aged 88 | Daily Mail Online
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  17. #4592
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    Quote Originally Posted by misskit View Post
    oodbye, Bert.


    He was not into manscaping.
    Best known for his redneck macho roles but he also possessed an understated comedic wit that was evident in films like Starting Over.

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    Heartbeat actor Peter Benson dies aged 75


    A personal favourite as he was amotor mechanic and looked like me in my prime according to my myopic mrs who learned English watching comic capers in Aidensfield

    Known for his role as Bernie Scripps in the long-running ITV series, Benson also appeared in Blackadder



    The RIP Famous Person Thread-images-jpg
    Peter Benson as Bernie Scripps in Heartbeat. Photograph: ITV/Rex/Shutterstock
    The actor Peter Benson, who played Bernie Scripps in the ITV series Heartbeat, has died aged 75, his agent has confirmed.
    Benson died on Thursday after a short illness.
    He played the funeral director Scripps in all of the show's 18 series from 1992 to 2010.
    His character also ran a garage in the fictional town of Aidensfield and often got involved in disastrous money-making schemes with Claude Greengrass (Bill Maynard) and half-brother Vernon Scripps (Geoffrey Hughes).
    Benson also appeared in BBC comedy Blackadder as Henry VII, ITV’s 1980s soap opera Albion Market and more recently in two episodes of hospital drama Casualty.
    Benson was a highly skilled singer and dancer and an accomplished theatre actor. He and Maynard starred on stage together in a production of Trinity Tales in the late 70s. He portrayed Henry VI in a BBC television adaption of Shakespeare’s play in 1983.
    One of Benson's former Heartbeat co-stars, Steven Blakeley, who played PC Geoff Younger in the show, was among those to pay tribute to him. Blakeley said: “Farewell Peter Benson. You made me laugh so much. There'll never be another like you – talented, kind and gentle in equal measure. Bless you and rest well sir.”

    Lisa Kay, who played the characters of Emma Bryden and Carol Cassidy, wrote on social media: "Such sad news that the wonderful Peter Benson has passed away. He was always a total gentleman and great fun to work with. He was dearly loved and shall be missed terribly by his Heartbeat family. RIP Peter."

    Fiona Dolman, who played Jackie Bradley, added: "What sad news. Peter Benson was one of the best. Kind, funny, brilliant, gentle and deliciously sarcastic. He was an absolute joy to work with and will be missed by so many."
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails The RIP Famous Person Thread-images-jpg  
    Quote Originally Posted by Latindancer View Post
    I just want the chance to use a bigger porridge bowl.

  19. #4594
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    Bill Daily, Major Healey in ‘I Dream of Jeannie,’ Dies at 91

    The RIP Famous Person Thread-2844cea5-2638-4d7e-9253-ba028f853188-jpeg

    Bill Daily, the affable TV actor who starred as Major Roger Healey in “I Dream of Jeannie” as well as on “The Bob Newhart Show,” died Sept. 4 in Santa Fe, N.M., his son J. Patrick Daily confirmed. He was 91.


    “He loved every sunset, he loved every meal — he just decided to be happy about everything,” said his son.


    The longtime New Mexico resident was a staple on series of the 1960s through 1980s, notably as Bob Newhart’s daffy neighbor, airline pilot Howard Borden, on CBS’ “The Bob Newhart Show” sitcom from 1972 to 1978. In the 1980s, he appeared as psychiatrist Dr. Larry Dykstra on NBC’s “ALF.”

    More. https://variety.com/2018/tv/news/bil...ie-1202933026/
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  20. #4595
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    ^ I used to enjoy watching I Dream of Jeannie.

    Ninety one, eh? Good innings. RIP.

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    RIP Turd Ferguson



  22. #4597
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    Fenella Fielding dies aged 90: A classical actress of rare intelligence with wit that deserves celebration


    The RIP Famous Person Thread-telemmglpict000145962527_trans_nvbqzqnjv4bqg6s3skfcan3iuvukjfunw85z2pczqbxwtccp5yad69q-jpg

    The name Fenella Fielding will prompt a wry smile from anyone over the age of 45. They will be thinking, of course, of that defining role in Carry on Screaming!, one of the best of the film comedy series, which pastiched Hammer horrors and saw Fielding, who has died at the age of 90 following a stroke, win many male admirers for her vampish Valeria, purring seductively at Harry H Corbett’s dim-witted plod. It’s a great performance from Fielding but it’s a shame that it’s this for which she will be best remembered.

    She was, first and foremost, a stage actress who came to prominence in the Fifties when she appeared in Sandy Wilson’s musical version of Valmouth and forged a varied theatrical career which included revue and many of the classics, including a stunning Hedda Gabler opposite Ian McKellen. These were important to her - she kept a copy of Plato’s Republic by her bedside and once turned down an offer from Fellini in order to appear at Chichester.

    Writing in the Independent in 2008, Robert Chalmers said: “one of the mysteries of British life [is] that Fenella Fielding whose wit and distinctive stage presence captivated figures such as Kenneth Tynan, Noel Coward and Federico Fellini, should have drifted into obscurity rather than being celebrated.”

    Certainly after the Sixties, Fielding’s career went into the doldrums early. Some of this can be attributed to her supreme choosiness, but there is also a hint that perhaps she was difficult to cast - too bound up with the public perception of Fenella Fielding: eccentric and highly theatrical.

    When she did appear on film and TV, it was often in roles that adhered to this image, such as the fatuous, celebrity-obsessed Mrs Leo Hunter in the BBC’s 1985 adaptation of Charles Dickens’s The Pickwick Papers. A particularly fallow period occurred from 1979 when she was swindled by her manager and she was forced to sell her home.

    Her voice, however, velvety and commanding, did at least ensure some lucrative income. Back in 1967, she was the voice that hailed the villagers in cult TV show The Prisoner and its star Patrick McGoohan told her to tone it down, to not be too sexy. At the start of the 21st century, she began working with recording company Savoy on a number of readings including TS Eliot’s Four Quartets and JG Ballard’s Crash.

    The producer David Britton had been impressed by Fielding’s voice and its “subtext of menace”. There is a sense with this literary work that Fielding was fulfilling her intellectual ambitions - after all she had a reputation of holding her own with such clubbable thinkers of the day as the impresario Henry Donaldson and the journalist Jeffrey Bernard, with whom she had an affair.

    Fielding was known to be reclusive, but she did grant an interview to the Telegraph last year to promote her memoir, Do You Mind if I Smoke?, talking to Jasper Rees about the cruelty she suffered at the hands of her Lithuanian-born father who managed a cinema in Silvertown, east London, and of how Kenneth Williams (her co-star in both revues and Carry on Screaming!) had a tendency to steal all the best lines.

    Rees noted how Fielding wore her hair “styled exactly like the MGM publicity still of her in the 1966 film Drop Dead Darling”.

    And this perhaps is how we remember Fenella Fielding, a Sixties vamp preserved in aspic. In reality, this crisp-voiced woman was a clever classical actress of rare intelligence.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/films/20...-intelligence/
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    Denis Norden RIP

    One of the wittiest people ever

    I grew up listening to steam radio under the bed covers on freezing nights in the Mts where there was no TV reception at all !

    His shows My Word with his partner "Kentish Lad' Frank Muir was one tge finest double acts of all time.

    Unike modern shows recorded with 50 'kke' writers they were live and thier quips inspirational

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denis_Norden

    Will lokk for some clips later

  25. #4600
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    Vietnam president Tran Dai Quang dies aged 61


    The RIP Famous Person Thread-stream_2-38659931-jpg

    Vietnamese president Tran Dai Quang has died aged 61.
    The official Vietnam News Agency said Mr Quang died at the 108 Military Hospital in Hanoi on Friday due to a serious illness.

    Quang hosted US president Donald Trump during his first state visit to the communist country last year.
    His last public appearance was at a Politburo meeting of the ruling Communist Party and a reception for a Chinese delegation on Wednesday.

    Mr Quang did not appear in public for more than a month last year, raising speculation about his health.
    A career security officer, Mr Quang was elected president in April 2016.


    Vietnam president Tran Dai Quang dies aged 61 - ITV News
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