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WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 12:34 pm
Ernie Kovacs
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Ernie Kovacs (January 23, 1919 - January 13, 1962) was a creative and innovative entertainer from the early days of television. His on-air antics would go on to inspire TV shows like Laugh-In, the Uncle Floyd Show, Saturday Night Live and TV hosts like David Letterman.

Born in Trenton, New Jersey, Kovacs became a pioneer of television comedy as a distinct medium; earlier television comedians mostly continued comedy styles of vaudeville, film, or radio.

His shows were innovative for their time because of their ad-libbed routines; experimentation with video effects (including superimpositions, reverse polarity, and reverse scanning which flipped images upside down); the use of quick "blackouts" and running gags; abstraction and non-sequitur; and a willingness to break the "fourth wall" by allowing viewers to see activity beyond the set - including crew members and, on occasion, outside the studio itself. He would also talk to the off-camera crew, or introduce segments from the control room.

Visual Humor and Characters
Ernie Kovacs 1919-1962

Kovacs invented many camera tricks that are still common today. One of his most popular gags was a bit where Kovacs sat down at a table to eat his lunch. He took items out of his lunch box and one by one, each item mysteriously rolled down the table into a gentleman reading the newspaper at the other end. Kovacs then started to pour a glass of milk. The milk appeared to pour from the thermos in an unusual direction. The visual trick, which had not been seen on TV before, was created with a crooked table and an equally crooked camera tilted to the same angle as the table.

Kovacs constantly pushed the envelope of what was possible in the video medium, and accomplished many visual tricks with very primitive and improvised means to produce effects that later were more commonly done electronically. He once had the inspiration of attaching a children's kaleidoscope to the camera lens with cardboard and tape -- the resulting abstract images, set to music, were very avant-garde and very much ahead of his time.

Kovacs was rarely seen without a cigar, which he often incorporated as a prop. In one memorable segment, he was seen sitting in an easy chair, calmly reading a newspaper. After a short interval, he took the cigar out of his mouth and exhaled smoke. The unique feature of this otherwise ordinary sequence was that it took place entirely underwater. (The "smoke" was actually milk that Kovacs had filled his mouth with prior to submerging.)

Other popular bits included such gems as an all-gorilla version of Swan Lake; a poker game set to Beethoven's Fifth Symphony; The Nairobi Trio, three derby-hatted apes miming mechanically to the tune "Solfeggio"; the Silent Show, in which a nerdy character interacts with the world accompanied solely by music and sound effects; parodies of typical TV commercials and movie genres; and various musical segments with everyday items (such as kitchen appliances or office equipment) moving in sync to music. He used everything from long, extended sketches and mood pieces to quick "blackout" gags lasting a few seconds. (One famous example was a bit involving a used-car salesman, a jalopy, and a breakaway floor -- a bit that cost $50,000 to produce and lasted 6 seconds on screen!) There were no wasted moments in a Kovacs show, with gags starting during the opening theme song, and continuing even into the midst of the ending credits (which frequently incorporated bizarre fake credits and comments interspersed between the legitimate crew names and titles).

Recurring characters created by Kovacs included fey and lisping poet Percy Dovetonsils; German disc jockey Wolfgang von Sauerbraten; horror show host Auntie Gruesome; bumbling magician Matzoh Heppelwhite; Miklos Molnar, the sardonic Hungarian host of a children's show; Frenchman Pierre Ragout; and The Question Man, who would answer queries supposedly sent in by viewers.

Use of Music

His musical choices were certainly eclectic. His main theme was called "Oriental Blues", a quirky piano number derived from a Gershwin tune. A German version of "Mack the Knife" frequently underscored mimed sketches. Robert Maxwell's "Solfeggio" became so associated with the infamous derby-hatted apes that it became better known simply as "The Song of the Nairobi Trio". The piece de resistance, if that's the term, were tunes by Leona Anderson such as "Rats in My Room". Leona was reportedly a kind and gentle soul, whose singing voice, in contrast, could be unfavorably compared to fingernails on a blackboard. Naturally, Kovacs incorporated her songs at every opportunity. Kovacs also incorporated classical music into his shows, usually as background for abstract visual images and montages. Two such pieces used were the "Concerto for Orchestra" by Bela Bartok and music from the opera "The Love for Three Oranges" by Sergei Prokofiev. The classical piece most often associated with Kovacs is Haydn's "String Quartet, Opus 3, Number 5" (the "Serenade," which was indeed written by Haydn, not Roman Hoffstetter[1]), which was used in his memorable Dutch Masters commercials.



First marriage

Kovacs married his first wife, Bette Wilcox on August 13, 1945. When the marriage broke apart, he fought with her for custody of their children, Bette and Kippie. The courts awarded Kovacs full custody of them, which was extremely unusual at the time (in fact, setting a legal precedent), because they decided that his former wife was mentally unstable. Wilcox then kidnapped the children, taking them to Florida. After a long and expensive search that included many trips to the Sunshine State based on tips from private investigators, Kovacs was eventually reunited with his children, with the help of the police.


Second marriage

Kovacs married actress and singer Edie Adams on September 12, 1954 in Mexico City. The ceremony was presided over by former New York City mayor William O'Dwyer, and performed in Spanish, which neither Kovacs nor Adams understood; O'Dwyer had to prompt each to say "Si" at the "I do" portion of the vows. Adams, who had a very white-bread middle-class upbringing in suburban New Jersey, was smitten by the quirkiness and eccentricities of the Hungarian Kovacs. They remained very happily married until his death. (Adams later said about Kovacs, "He treated me like a queen -- Women's Lib be damned!") The couple had one daughter, Mia Susan Kovacs. Ernie frequently incorporated his wife into sketches on his TV shows, always referring to her in a businesslike way, as "Edith Adams". She was always game for anything Ernie dreamed up for her to do, and was just as likely to take a pie in the face or a pratfall as she was to sing a serious and beautiful song or do a celebrity impersonation (she did an excellent Marilyn Monroe, among others).

Writing, TV, and Movie Credits

Kovacs wrote a novel entitled, ZOOMAR (A Sophisticated Novel About Love and TV) in 1956, published by Doubleday. While he worked on several other projects in book form, his only other published title was "How To Talk At Gin", published posthumously in 1962. During 1955-1958 he wrote for Mad Magazine, including the recurring "Strangely Believe It!" (a parody of Ripley's Believe It or Not! that also was featured on Kovacs' TV show) and "Gringo," a board game with ridiculously complicated rules that was renamed "Droongo" for the TV show.

His television programs included Three to Get Ready (local Philadelphia TV, 1950-1952), Time for Ernie in 1951, Ernie in Kovacsland in 1951, The Ernie Kovacs Show in 1952, The Tonight Show (as a 2-day per week substitute for Steve Allen) from 1956 to 1957, and the game show Take a Good Look from 1959 to 1961. He also did several TV specials, including the famous "Silent Show" in 1959, and a series of monthly half-hour specials for ABC in 1961-62. (These last shows, done on videotape and utilizing unprecedented editing and special effects techniques for the time, are said by many to be his best TV work.) Kovacs' comedic style was lost on many 1950's TV viewers, who were used to a steady diet of bland sitcoms and variety shows. (His pal Jack Lemmon said that no one ever understood his work because "he was always 15 years ahead of everyone else.") Consequently, while he always had a small, hard-core fan base who "got" what he was trying to do, he never had a long-lasting or highly-rated TV series.

In the last few years of his life, Kovacs found modest success as a character actor in Hollywood movies, often being typecast as a swarthy military officer in such films as Operation Mad Ball and Our Man in Havana. But he also garnered critical acclaim for such roles as the perennially inebriated writer in Bell, Book and Candle and as the cartoonishly evil head of a railroad company in It Happened to Jane. His own personal favorite film was the offbeat Five Golden Hours (1961), in which he portrayed a larcenous professional mourner who meets his match in professional widow Cyd Charisse.

Shortly before his death, Kovacs had been slated to appear as Melville Crump in Stanley Kramer's star-packed comedy It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, along with real-life spouse Edie Adams portraying his screen wife Monica Crump. The role eventually went to comedian Sid Caesar.


Lost and Surviving TV Work

Most of Kovacs' early shows, such as the local morning show he hosted in Philadelphia from 1950-52, do not survive as they were done live. Only a few short film clips of these shows still exist. Some, though not all of his later 1950's shows exist in the form of kinescopes. Videotapes of his 1960's ABC specials were preserved, but other videotaped shows such as his quirky game show "Take a Good Look" exist only in piecemeal fashion. After Kovacs' death, his widow Edie was horrified to find that the networks were starting to systematically erase and reuse the tapes of Ernie's shows. At great expense and effort, she managed to buy up the rights to the surviving footage and insure that future generations would not forget her husband's work.

Death

Kovacs died in a car accident in Los Angeles. He was driving a Corvair station wagon, a make of car later assailed as "unsafe at any speed" by Ralph Nader. During a rare Southern California rainstorm, he lost control of the car while making a turn, and crashed into a power pole. Kovacs was thrown halfway out the passenger door, killed almost instantly--his chest and head taking fatal injuries. Newsmen on the scene moments later put a full photograph of his dead body across front pages all over the United States. At the time of his death, he owed the IRS several hundred thousand dollars in back taxes. Kovacs had always felt the tax system was unfair, and had simply refused to pay, resulting in the eventual garnishment of up to 90% of his wages. Edie Adams eventually paid off the taxes herself, refusing help from their celebrity friends. Kovacs is buried in Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles. His epitaph reads "Nothing in moderation-We all loved him".

Kovacs' daughter with Edie Adams, Mia Susan, was killed in 1982, also in an automobile accident (off Mullholland Drive). His daughter Kippie died in 2001, after a lingering illness and an adult lifetime of poor health, largely due to addiction. She is buried next to her father and younger half sister. Ernie has one grandchild, Keigh, the daughter of Kippie and screenwriter Bill Lancaster(deceased), the son of actor Burt Lancaster. Kovacs' oldest daughter Elizabeth was alive doing well as of 2006.

TV-Movie Bio and Retrospectives

In 1984, a TV-movie was made about Kovacs' life called Ernie Kovacs: Between the Laughter, which starred Jeff Goldblum as Kovacs. It focused on his private life, especially his attempts to retrieve his kidnapped children.

The TV-Movie had been inspired by a resurgence of interest in Kovacs, due to the broadcast of some of his work (mostly his videotaped ABC specials) by PBS under the title "The Best of Ernie Kovacs." This package of shows introduced a new generation of fans to his unique style of humor. Later, in the early 1990's, the cable channel Comedy Central (which later merged with a competing channel called "Ha!" to become today's Comedy Channel) broadcast a series of Ernie's shows under the generic title of "The Ernie Kovacs Show." This package included both the ABC specials and some of his 1950's shows from NBC. There are no broadcast, cable or satellite channels currently scheduling any of Kovacs' TV work.

Trivia and Interesting Facts

* Kovacs may have said, "Television: a medium, so-called because it is neither rare nor well done." (This quip has also been attributed to radio star Fred Allen.)

* Kovacs was a frequent poker player with other entertainment friends such as Jack Lemmon, who called Kovacs and Walter Matthau two of the worst players he had ever known.

* Ernie disliked working in front of a live audience, as was the case with the shows he did for NBC in the 1950's. He found the presence of an audience distracting, and those in the seats frequently did not understand some of the more elaborate visual gags and special effects that could only be appreciated by watching studio monitors instead of the stage.

* His long battles with the IRS led Kovacs to tie up his money in a convoluted series of paper corporations, both in the U.S. and Canada. He would give them bizarre names, such as "The Bazooka Dooka Hicka Hocka Hookah Company" to thumb his nose at the Feds.

* At the time of his death, one of Ernie's half-hour specials for ABC had been videotaped and edited, but not yet aired. It was broadcast on schedule with an added announcement at the beginning indicating that all connected with the show felt that Ernie would certainly have wanted it to air. With a few shows remaining to be broadcast under the contract with ABC, friends of Ernie and Edie provided their talents at no charge to fill the remaining time slots so that Edie would not be burdened with legal problems for breach of contract.

* His tax woes also affected Kovacs' career, forcing him to take any offered work, no matter how ill-suited to his style of comedy, in order to pay off his debt. Thus, the odd ABC game show "Take a Good Look," appearances on variety shows such as "The Tennessee Ernie Ford Show," and some of his less memorable movie roles.

* In his early days of live television in Philadelphia (early 1950's), Ernie frequently made use of accidents and happenstance, incorporating the unexpected into his shows. One cold winter morning, a homeless man wandered into the studio seeking shelter from the elements. Ernie allowed him to sleep on the studio floor, and he became a silent, snoozing "cast member" of that day's sketches, introduced by Ernie as "Sleeping Schwartz."

* Although Kovacs was a long-time spokesman for Dutch Masters cigars (resulting in some of the most creative and humorous commercials of the time), in real life Ernie only smoked expensive Havana cigars, as many as 20 per day.

* Ernie was a major night-owl and insomniac, surviving on no more than 3 or 4 hours sleep at night, and often much less than that (sometimes no sleep at all if a good poker game was in progress). He credited frequent steambaths followed by a cold swim underwater in a pool for invigorating him and keeping him going when his energy lagged.

* One of the funniest practical jokes of the live TV era was played on Ernie in one of his NBC shows. Appearing as his inept magician character Matzoh Heppelwhite, he would frequently hit a gong, which was the signal for a sexy female assistant to bring out a bottle and shot glass for a quick snort. One evening, stagehands substituted real liquor for the iced tea normally used for the gag. The look on Ernie's face upon taking the first shot was priceless, but he pressed on with the sketch and was quite inebriated by the end of the show!

* Those who view Laugh-In as a direct descendant of Ernie's comedic style are right on the mark. Laugh-In producer George Schlatter was married to actress Jolene Brand, who had appeared in Kovacs' comic troupes over the years, and was a frequent participant in (or victim of) his pioneering bits.

* In another such link between TV generations, Kovacs' usual announcer (and sometimes sketch participant) was a young staffer named Bill Wendell. Decades later, Wendell spent many years as an announcer for David Letterman, whose show and style of humor were greatly influenced by Kovacs.

* Kovacs shared hosting duties on "The Tonight Show" with Steve Allen in 1956-57, taking over the Monday and Tuesday editions of the show while Allen was busy with other projects. Ernie later publicly accused Allen of stealing material and characters from him, then performing them in only slightly obfuscated form.

* Ernie appeared from time to time as a guest panelist on such popular game shows as "What's My Line?", often eschewing a legitimate question for the sake of a laugh. An example would be when industrialist Henry Kaiser was the Mystery Guest. Previous questioning had established that the Mystery Guest had a car named after him, prompting Kovacs to ask, "This may seem like a long shot, sir, but by any chance are you Abraham Lincoln?"

* Ernie and Edie were the guest stars on the final installment of the one-hour "I Love Lucy" format (known in network airings as The Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Show and in syndication as The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour), a 1960 episode titled "Lucy Meets the Moustache." It was the last time Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz appeared together before the breakup of their marriage.

* Kovacs' local TV show Three to Get Ready on Philadelphia's Channel 3 (1950-52) was groundbreaking -- the first regularly scheduled early morning (7-9 am) show in a major TV market. Prior to this, it was assumed that no one would want to watch TV at such an early hour. The success of Three to Get Ready proved that theory wrong, and was one of the factors that led NBC to create The Today Show which, ironically, led to the cancellation of Ernie's show in favor of the network offering.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernie_Kovacs
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 12:35 pm
Jeanne Moreau
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Jeanne Moreau (born January 23, 1928 in Paris, France) is a French actress.

Moreau was born in Paris (to a French father and English mother) in 1928. She studied at the Conservatoire in Paris. In 1947, she made her theatre debut at the Avignon Festival of Theatre. By her twenties, Moreau was already one of France's leading stage actresses at the Comédie-Française. Thanks largely to the recognition given her by Louis Malle, whom she worked with on the film Ascenseur pour l'échafaud (Elevator to the Gallows), she became a leading film actress during the 1950s, and went on to work with venerable New Wave and avant garde directors. Truffaut's explosive New Wave film Jules and Jim (1962) is centered on her magnetic starring role, and is perhaps her most famous film. She has also appeared with a number of other notable directors such as Michelangelo Antonioni (La Notte), Jean-Luc Godard (Une femme est une femme/A Woman is a Woman), Orson Welles (The Immortal Story), Luis Buñuel (Le journal d'une femme de chambre/Diary of a Chambermaid), and Philippe Agostini (Le dialogue des Carmelites/Dialogue of the Carmélites). She has also co-produced several films, including Jules and Jim, and has tried her hand at directing. Throughout her life she has maintained friendships with prominent writers such as Jean Cocteau and Marguerite Duras. She remains one of France's most accomplished and diversely talented actresses.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeanne_Moreau
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 12:37 pm
Chita Rivera
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Chita Rivera (born Dolores Conchita Figueroa del Rivero on January 23, 1933 in Washington, D.C.) is a Broadway musical actress and dancer of Puerto Rican heritage, and the first Hispanic woman to receive a Kennedy Center Honors award.

Her father was from Puerto Rico; he played clarinet and saxophone for the Navy band. Chita's mother, Katherine Figueroa, went to work for The Pentagon when Chita was seven years old and her father passed away; Chita's mother herself passed away in 1983.

In 1944, Chita's mother enrolled her in the Jones-Hayward School of Ballet. Later, when Chita was 15, a teacher from George Balanchine's School of American Ballet visited their studio and Chita was one of two students picked to audition in New York City; she was accompanied to the audition by Doris Jones, one of the people who ran the Jones-Hayward School. Chita's audtion was successful and she was accepted into the school and given a scholarship by George Balanchine. Among her new teachers were Allegra Kent and Maria Tallchief.

In 1952, Chita accompanied a friend to the audition for a Broadway production of Call Me Madam and herself ended up winning the role. She followed this by landing further roles in other Broadway productions, such as:

* Guys and Dolls
* Can-Can
* Seventh Heaven
* Mr. Wonderful (with Sammy Davis Jr.)

Besides her ballet instructors, Chita considered that she learned a lot from Leonard Bernstein, and especially from the late Gwen Verdon, with whom she participated in the Broadway production of Chicago.

In 1957, Chita was cast in the role which was destined to make her a Broadway star - the firebrand "Anita" in the Broadway premiere of West Side Story. Years later the role of Anita was to bring fame and an Oscar to another Puerto Rican, Rita Moreno in the film version.

On December 1, 1957, Rivera married dancer Tony Mordente. Her performance was so important for the success of the show that the London production was posponed until after Chita gave birth to the couple's daughter, Lisa.

Chita also starred in the Broadway productions of:

* Bye Bye Birdie,
* Born Yesterday,
* The Rose Tattoo,
* Call Me Madam,
* The Rink,
* Threepenny Opera,
* Sweet Charity,
* Kiss Me, Kate,
* Kiss of the Spider Woman and
* Zorba.

She also went on a national tour with Can-Can. and played the role of Nicky in the movie version of Sweet Charity with Shirley MacLaine.

Rivera is regarded by many theatre aficiandos as a "living legend" and indeed "In Theatre" magazine has suggested in an interview by Goerge Horsfall: " You must be tired of the term "legend", but let's get it out of the way. You have long been considered a Broadway legend."" Rivera replied "Oh, God!" and laughed (See reference below "Chita a Go-Go" for quote).

Rivera received two Tony Awards and six additional nominations. She received her first Tony in 1984 for her role in The Rink and her second for Best Leading Actress in a Musical in 1993 for her role in Kiss of the Spider Woman.

In 2002 Chita Rivera became the first female Hispanic to receive the prestigious Kennedy Center Honors award presented by U.S. President George W. Bush, recognizing her contributions to U.S. culture.

On November 23, 2005, Chita Rivera began previews on Broadway of "A Dancer's Life," a retrospective of her career. The play opened on Broadway on December 11, 2005.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chita_Rivera
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 12:40 pm
Rutger Hauer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Rutger Oelsen Hauer is a Dutch actor, born January 23, 1944 in Breukelen, the Netherlands.


Background

The son of drama teachers Arend and Teunke, Hauer grew up in Amsterdam but at age 15 ran away to the sea and spent a year scrubbing decks aboard a freighter. Returning home, he worked as an electrician and a carpenter for three years while attending drama classes at night school. He went on to join an experimental acting troupe, which he stayed with for five years before getting the lead role in the very successful 1969 television series Floris, a Dutch Ivanhoe-like medieval action show, which made his name in the Netherlands.

Film career

His career changed course when director Paul Verhoeven gave him the lead in Turkish Delight (1973) (based on the Jan Wolkers book of the same name).The movie found box-office favour abroad as well as at home and within two years, its star was invited to make his English language debut in the British film The Wilby Conspiracy (1975). This film was set in South Africa and starred Michael Caine and Sidney Poitier, and was an action melodrama with a focus on apartheid. Hauer's supporting role, however, was hardly enough to establish him in Hollywood's eyes, and he returned to Dutch film making for several years. In this period he made Keetje Tippel (1975), and worked again with Verhoeven on Soldaat van Oranje (Soldier of Orange) (1979), and Spetters (1980). Incidentally these two films also paired Hauer with fellow international Dutch actor Jeroen Krabbé.


It was in the Sylvester Stallone vehicle Nighthawks (1981) that he finally made his American debut. Cast as a psychotically cold-blooded terrorist named Wulfgar, he made a strong impression, which was confirmed by a major role the following year as the chief android Roy Batty (pitted against Harrison Ford) in Ridley Scott's science fiction film Blade Runner (1982).

He went on to be the adventurer courting Gene Hackman's daughter (Theresa Russell) in Nicholas Roeg's poorly received Eureka (1983),the investigative reporter opposite John Hurt in Sam Peckinpah's The Osterman Weekend (1983) and the knight paired with Michelle Pfeiffer in the medieval romance Ladyhawke (1985). He continued to make an impression on audiences, especially in The Hitcher (1986), in which he was the mysterious Hitchhiker intent on murdering C. Thomas Howell's lone motorist and anyone who crossed his path en route. At the height of his fame he was even set to be cast as RoboCop in the film directed by old friend Verhoeven.

Italian director Ermanno Olmi mined the gentler, more mystic and soulful side of Hauer's personality in The Legend of the Holy Drinker (1989), the story of a lost soul who dies of drink in Paris while attempting to pay a debt of honour in a church. Phillip Noyce also attempted to capitalize, with far less success, on Hauer's spiritual qualities in the martial arts action adventure Blind Fury (1989). He returned to science fiction opposite Joan Chen with Salute of the Jugger (1990), in which he played a former champion in a post-apocalyptic world. He and Chen would again work together in two more science fictions films -- Wedlock and Precious Find.

By the 1990s, Hauer was as well known for his humorous appearances in Guinness commercials as for his screen roles. It seemed that he had increasingly become involved in lower budget films, including Split Second, which was set in a flooded London after global warming, Omega Doom, another post-apocalyptic story in which he plays a soldier-robot, and recently New World Disorder, opposite Tara Fitzgerald. In between these lower budgeted films, he appeared in the music video "On a Night Like This" by Kylie Minogue. In the late 1980s and 1990s, as well as 2000, he also appeared in several British and American television productions, including Inside the Third Reich (as Albert Speer), Escape from Sobibor, Fatherland, Hostile Waters, Merlin, and The 10th Kingdom.

Comeback


He has recently been on the comeback trail as small parts in big films, again playing villains with Confessions of a Dangerous Mind (2003), Sin City (2005) and Batman Begins (2005)


Other activities

Outside of acting as an environmentalist, he fought for the release of Greenpeace's co-founder, Paul Watson, who was convicted in 1994 for sinking an illegal Norwegian whaling vessel, and has set up an AIDS research foundation called the Rutger Hauer Starfish Foundation. He married his second wife, Ineke, in 1985, and has a daughter from his first marriage.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rutger_Hauer
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 12:42 pm
Richard Dean Anderson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Richard Dean Anderson (born January 23, 1950) is an American actor of Irish, Swedish, Norwegian and Mohawk Native American descent.

He was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and attended Ohio University and St. Cloud State University.

He started his acting career in soap opera (appearing on General Hospital as Dr. Jeff Webber from 1976 to 1981). He also starred as Adam in the television series Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (based very loosely on the movie of the same name), but came to fame with the hit television series MacGyver which lasted from 1985 to 1992 and was highly successful throughout its entire run.

From 1997 to 2005, he starred as Colonel/Brigadier General Jack O'Neill in Stargate SG-1, based on the movie Stargate starring Kurt Russell and James Spader. In Season Eight, he opted to have a reduced role in the series due to his reduced availability. Anderson has decided to leave the show as a regular star in Season Nine, preferring instead to make a few guest appearances.

He was presented with an award and made an honorary Brigadier General at the Air Force Association's 57th Annual Air Force Anniversary Dinner in Washington, D.C. on September 14, 2004 because of his role as star and executive producer of Stargate SG-1, a series which has portrayed the Air Force in a positive light since it first premiered. It was presented by the Air Force Chief-of-Staff, General John P. Jumper. The last recipient of the award was James Stewart in 1987.

Anderson has always been a great fan of the television show The Simpsons and finally in 2005 he was invited to guest star on the show, which he had continually referenced during his time on SG-1. Anderson's MacGyver character is a longstanding heartthrob for Selma and Patty Bouvier, the sisters of Marge Simpson on The Simpsons. He also appears in the 1997 PC game Fallout as the voice of Killian Darkwater, who was the clever head of the city made entirely of post-nuclear junk (Junktown).

Anderson has a daughter named Wylie Quinn Annarose who was born in 1998 by his ex-partner, Apryl Prose.

He is also an avid Ice Hockey player and is so much of a fan of the sport that hockey has deliberately appeared in several of his TV shows, including MacGyver.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Dean_Anderson
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 12:43 pm
She was only a whisky maker but he loved her still.

She had a boyfriend with a wooden leg, but broke it off.

Those who jump off a Paris bridge are in Seine.

It wasn't school John disliked it was just the principal of it.

It's better to love a short girl than not a tall.
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 01:29 pm
Laughing at Bob's post. And

Wishing a Happy Birthday to Spidergal and

http://www.brmovie.com/Images/People/Rutger_Hauer_1.jpg

and remembering:

http://www.shurls.com/whatever.jpg
0 Replies
 
oldandknew
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 02:35 pm
Gone off the air huh. Didn't you pay the wage bill ?
Have you imposed a no smoking, no drinking regime in the building & caused a mutiny ? Or has everyone gone down with bird flu ?
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 02:56 pm
Hey, all. Sorry I haven't commented yet.

Wanted a chance to read through the hawkman's bio's. Thanks, Boston and Raggedy. Miss India did most of the history and although I couldn't find a song for her, the turtle did. <smile>What a marvelous voice he has.

Hey OAK, we're still on the air, Brit. I was just getting read to play a song by the Statler Brothers. My sister knows them all.

Back later after a search through the archives.
0 Replies
 
oldandknew
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 03:00 pm
knows them all ? Is that the songs or the brothers
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 03:01 pm
Randolph Scott looks somewhat like my father, really.



The Statler Brothers Lyrics - Whatever Happened To Randolph Scott Lyrics

Everybody knows when you go to the show you can't take the kids along

You've gotta read the paper and know the code of GPG and R and X

And you gotta know what the movie's about before you even go

Tex Ritter's gone and Disney's dead and the screen is filled with sex

Whatever happened to Randolph Scott ridin' the train alone

Whatever happened to Gene and Tex and Roy and Rex the Durango Kid

Oh whatever happened to Randolph Scott his horse plain as could be

Whatever happened to Randolph Scott has happened to the best of me

[ guitar ]

Everybody's tryin' to make a comment about our doubts and fears

True Grit's the only movie I've really understood in years

You gotta take your analyst along to see if it's fit to see

Whatever happened to Randolph Scott has happened to the industry

Whatever happened to Johnny Mack Brown and Alan Rocky Lane

Whatever happened to Lash LaRue I'd love to see them again

Whatever happened to Smiley Burnette Tim Holt and Gene Autry

Whatever happened to all of these has happened to the best of me

Whatever happened to Randolph Scott has happened to the industry
0 Replies
 
oldandknew
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 03:10 pm
Hey there, western heros. saturday kids show at the cinema & then the great tv westerns



Artist: Electric Light Orchestra Lyrics
Song: Wild West Hero Lyrics



WILD WEST HERO


Wish I was, yeah, a wild west hero.
Sometimes i look up high and then I think there might
just be a better life.
Away from all we know, that's where I wanna go,
out on the wild side
and I wish I was, o-oo-o-oh, a wild west hero.
Ride the range all the day till the first fading light,
be with my western girl round the fire, oh, so bright.
I'd be the Indians friend, let them live to be free,
ridin' into the sunset, I wish I could be.
I'd ride the desert sands and through the prairie lands,
try'n to do what's right.
The folks would come to me, they'd say, we need you here.
I'd stay there for the night.
Oh, I wish I was, o-oo-o-oh, a wild west hero.
Ride the range all the day till the first fading light,
be with my western girl round the fire, oh, so bright.
I'd be the Indians friend, let them live to be free,
ridin' into the sunset, I wish I could be.
Oh, I wish I was, o-oo-o-oh, a wild west hero.
Oh, I wish I was, o-oo-o-oh, a wild west hero.
Oh, I wish I was, o-oo-o-oh, a wild west hero.
Oh, I wish I was, o-oo-o-oh, a wild west hero.
Wish I was, o-o-oo-o-o-o-oo, a wild west hero.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 03:13 pm
Hey, you cheeky Brit. What do you know?

Really, she does/did. I think one of them died, but I can't remember which.

Well, listeners, at least John of the oak tree is our rep from Europe.

No Walter; No Francis; No McTag.

Speaking of Hawks, I saw Rutger Hauer in Ladyhawke and Blade Runner. Know a lot of the bio's but too many to recognize. Incidentally, who is George Galloway?
0 Replies
 
oldandknew
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 03:25 pm
Yeah, well those other cowpokes eh. I expect that wily old hombre Gabby Hayes has got a posse up & is racin' across the prarie to bring 'em in
0 Replies
 
oldandknew
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 03:38 pm
whatever happened to Clint Eastwood



Rollin' Rollin' Rollin'

Keep movin', movin', movin',
Though they're disapprovin',
Keep them doggies movin' Rawhide!
Don't try to understand 'em,
Just rope and throw and grab 'em,
Soon we'll be living high and wide.
Boy my heart's calculatin'
My true love will be waitin', be waiting at the end of my ride.

Move 'em on, head 'em up,
Head 'em up, move 'em out,
Move 'em on, head 'em out Rawhide!
Set 'em out, ride 'em in
Ride 'em in, let 'em out,
Cut 'em out, ride 'em in Rawhide.

Full Lyrics

Rollin', rollin', rollin'
Rollin', rollin', rollin'
Rollin', rollin', rollin'
Rollin', rollin', rollin'
Rawhide!

Rollin', rollin', rollin'
Though the streams are swollen
Keep them dogies rollin'
Rawhide!
Rain and wind and weather
Hell-bent for leather
Wishin' my gal was by my side.
All the things I'm missin',
Good vittles, love, and kissin',
Are waiting at the end of my ride

CHORUS
Move 'em on, head 'em up
Head 'em up, move 'em on
Move 'em on, head 'em up
Rawhide
Count 'em out, ride 'em in,
Ride 'em in, count 'em out,
Count 'em out, ride 'em in
Rawhide!

Keep movin', movin', movin'
Though they're disapprovin'
Keep them dogies movin'
Rawhide!
Don't try to understand 'em
Just rope, throw, and brand 'em
Soon we'll be living high and wide.
My hearts calculatin'
My true love will be waitin',
Be waitin' at the end of my ride.

Rawhide!
Rawhide!
0 Replies
 
oldandknew
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 03:43 pm
George Galloway is a British MP & knows a lot about Iraq. He was accused by the American Senate of double dealing with Saddam & co. He gave evidence at a Senate Inquiery last year and tore them to shreds
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 03:44 pm
Good grief, and Clint has come a long way from Rowdy. Thanks for the memory, John.

How about some Hank, Jr. lyrics, listeners.

Lyrics for Song: All My Rowdy Friends (Have Settled Down)
Lyrics for Album: Greatest Hits
All my rowdy friends have settled down and it seems to be more in the laid back songs.
Nobody wants to get drunk and get loud.Everybody just wants to go back home.
I myself have seen my wilder days and I have seen my name at the top of the page,
but I need to find a friend just to run around.But no one wants to get high on the town
and all my rowdy friends have settled down.

And I think I know what my father meant when he sang about a lost highway and old George Jones I'm glad to see he's finally getting straight,
and Waylon staying home and loving Jesse more these days,
and nobody wants to get drunk and get loud and all my rowdy friends have settled down.

and the hang overs hurt more then they used to and corn bread and ice tea took the place of pills and ninety-proof,
and it seems like none of us do things quite like we used to do
and nobody wants to get high on the town and all my rowdy friends have settled down.

Yeah I think I know what my father meant when he sang about his lost highway and Johnny Cash don't act like he did back in '68
and Kriss he is a movie star and he's moved off to L.A.
and nobody wants to get drunk and get loud and all my rowdy friends have settled down

yeah me and my rowdy friends have rowdied on down.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 03:56 pm
Oops, missed your reply about George Galloway. There was something about him dressing up in drag which I didn't get, of course.

Now here's a great group of funnies to complete Bob's:

Real answers to questions by fifth and sixth graders concerning history questions.



Ancient Egypt was old. It was inhabited by gypsies and mummies who all

wrote in hydraulics. They lived in the Sarah Dessert. The climate of the

Sarah is such that all the inhabitants have to live elsewhere.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Moses led the Hebrew slaves to the Red Sea where they made unleavened

bread, which is bread made without any ingredients. Moses went up on

Mount Cyanide to get the ten commandos. He died before he ever reached

Canada but the commandos made it.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Solomon had three hundred wives and seven hundred porcupines. He was

A actual hysterical figure as well as being in the bible. It sounds

Like he was sort of busy too.

-------------------------------------------------------------

The Greeks were a highly sculptured people, and without them we

wouldn't have history. The Greeks also had myths. A myth is a young female

moth.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Socrates was a famous old Greek teacher who went around giving people

advice. They killed him. He later died from an overdose of wedlock which

is apparently poisonous. After his death, his career suffered a

Dramatic decline.

-------------------------------------------------------------

In the first Olympic games, Greeks ran races, jumped, hurled

biscuits, and threw the java. The games were messier then than they show

on TV now.

-------------------------------------------------------------------

Julius Caesar extinguished himself on the battlefields of Gaul. The Ides

of March murdered him because they thought he was going to be made

king.

Dying, he gasped out "Same to you, Brutus."

-------------------------------------------------------------

Joan of Arc was burnt to a steak and was canonized by Bernard Shaw

for reasons I don't really understand. The English and French still have

problems.

-------------------------------------------------------------



It was an age of great inventions and discoveries. Gutenberg invented

removable type and the Bible. Another important invention was the

circulation of blood.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Sir Walter Raleigh is a historical figure because he invented

Cigarettes and started everyone smoking.

----------------------------------------------------------

The greatest writer of the Renaissance was William Shakespeare. He

was born in the year 1564, supposedly on his birthday. He never made much

money and is famous only because of his plays. He wrote tragedies,

comedies, and hysterectomies, all in Islamic pentameter.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Writing at the same time as Shakespeare was Miguel Cervantes. He

wrote Donkey Hote. The next great! author was John Milton. Milton wrote

Paradise Lost. Since then no one ever found it.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Delegates from the original 13 states formed the Contented Congress.

Thomas Jefferson, a Virgin, and Benjamin Franklin were two singers of

the Declaration of Independence. Franklin discovered electricity by

Rubbing two cats backward and also declared, "A horse divided against

itself cannot stand." He was a naturalist for sure. Franklin died in

1790 and is still dead.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Abraham Lincoln became America's greatest Precedent. Lincoln's Mother

died in infancy, and he was born in a log cabin which he built with

his own hands. Abraham Lincoln freed the slaves by signing the

Emasculation Proclamation.

-------------------------------------------------------------

On the night of April 14, 1865, Lincoln went to the theater and got

shot in his seat by one of the actors in a moving picture show. They

believe the assinator was John Wilkes Booth, a supposingly insane actor. This

ruined Booth's career.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Johann Bach wrote a great many musical compositions and had a large

number of children. In between he practiced on an old spinster which

he kept up in his attic. Bach died from 1750 to the present. Bach was

the most famous composer in the world and so was Handel. Handel was half

German, half Italian, and half English. He was very large.

------------------------------------------------------------

Beethoven wrote music even though he was deaf. He was so deaf that he

wrote loud music and became the father of rock and roll. He took long

walks in the forest even when everyone was calling for him. Beethoven

expired in 1827 and later died for this.

-------------------------------------------------------------

The nineteenth century was a time of a great many thoughts and

inventions. People stopped reproducing by hand and started reproducing by

machine. The invention of the steamboat caused a network of rivers to spring

up.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Cyrus McCormick invented the McCormick raper, which did the work of a

hundred men.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Louis Pasteur discovered a cure for rabbits but I don't know why.

-------------------------------------------------------------

9 Curie discovered radio. She was the first woman to do what she did.

Other women have become scientists since her but they didn't get to


find radios because they were already taken.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Karl Marx was one of the Marx Brothers. The other three were in the

movies. Karl made speeches and started revolutions. Someone in the family

had to have a job, I guess.

Laughing
0 Replies
 
oldandknew
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 04:00 pm
you been trawling the reference books ? that's quite a list.

dressing up in drag /// it's when an entertainer puts on womens clothing. it's a comedy thing, as in pantomime. he did it on celebrity big brother, not that i saw it
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Jan, 2006 04:08 pm
Sheeeze, John. I know what dressing in drag is, but thanks for the explanation about George.

news from Canada:


Polls Predict Conservative Win in Canada By BETH DUFF-BROWN, Associated Press Writer
39 minutes ago



OTTAWA - Canadians voted Monday in an election sure to dramatically change the country's political landscape. All the polls predict a victory for Conservative leader Stephen Harper. That would end nearly 13 years of Liberal Party rule, shift the country to the right and move to improve relations with the U.S. If Prime Minister Paul Martin somehow eked out a victory, he would likely head a weak minority government and find it difficult to get legislation past a divided House of Commons.







Many Canadians have grown weary of the broken promises and corruption scandals under the Liberal Party and appeared willing to give Harper the benefit of doubt, despite fears the 46-year-old economist is too extreme in his views opposing abortion and gay marriage.

"Today will be a great day. Western Canada is finally going to get some representation," said Don Smythe, after casting his ballot for the Conservatives in Calgary, Alberta, Harper's constituency. "I think Canada has finally realized that it's time for a change and Stephen Harper and the Conservatives are the ones to do it."

Harper has pledged to cut the red tape in social welfare programs, lower the national sales tax from 7 percent to 5 percent and grant more autonomy and federal funding to Canada's 13 provinces and territories.
0 Replies
 
 

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