Cemetery with crosses - legends lost but remembered: Difference between revisions

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=== FRESH GRAVES ===
=== FRESH GRAVES ===


*'''WILSON, Hugh''' - 8/21/1943, Miami, Florida, U.S.A. - 1/14/2018, Charlottesville, Virginia, U.S.A.
*'''WILSON, Hugh (Hugh Hamilton Wilson Jr.)''' - 8/21/1943, Miami, Florida, U.S.A. - 1/14/2018, Charlottesville, Virginia, U.S.A.


Hugh Wilson, Emmy-winning writer-producer and ‘WKRP in Cincinnati’ TV series creator who also directed several features including The First Wives Club and the original Police Academy died January 14 in Charlottesville, Virginia. He was 74. Born in Miami, Florida on August 21, 1943 Wilson also directed, wrote the screenplay and acted in the U.S.A./Spanish Euro-western comedy “Rustlers’ Rhapsody’ (1985).
Hugh Wilson, Emmy-winning writer-producer and ‘WKRP in Cincinnati’ TV series creator who also directed several features including The First Wives Club and the original Police Academy died January 14 in Charlottesville, Virginia. He was 74. Born in Miami, Florida on August 21, 1943 Wilson also directed, wrote the screenplay and acted in the U.S.A./Spanish Euro-western comedy “Rustlers’ Rhapsody’ (1985).

Revision as of 00:35, 17 January 2018

KÜLOWThis page is our personal hall of fame. A reminder to us all that even though considered a B-genre, Spaghetti Westerns were full of great characters, played by great people. Many have passed away, and while we are young growing up re-watching all these classics, many more will probably leave us. May they be remembered. What follows, is a work-in-progress, a growing list of legends who have passed away...

sorted by their last names:

A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z|}

FRESH GRAVES

  • WILSON, Hugh (Hugh Hamilton Wilson Jr.) - 8/21/1943, Miami, Florida, U.S.A. - 1/14/2018, Charlottesville, Virginia, U.S.A.

Hugh Wilson, Emmy-winning writer-producer and ‘WKRP in Cincinnati’ TV series creator who also directed several features including The First Wives Club and the original Police Academy died January 14 in Charlottesville, Virginia. He was 74. Born in Miami, Florida on August 21, 1943 Wilson also directed, wrote the screenplay and acted in the U.S.A./Spanish Euro-western comedy “Rustlers’ Rhapsody’ (1985).


  • MARSH, Terence - 11/4/1931, London, England, U.K. - 1/9/2018, Pacific Palisades, California, U.S.A.

Across a more than 50-year career, the UK-born Terence Marsh worked on a host of award-winning films with directors including David Lean, Sydney Pollack, John Huston, Carol Reed, Fred Zinnemann and Frank Darabont. He won two Oscars for his work as an art director on David Lean’s romantic epic Doctor Zhivago and Carol Reed’s 1968 musical Oliver!, and was nominated for three Baftas. Marsh was born in London, England on November 4, 1931 and died in Pacific Palisades, California on January 9, 2018. He was a draughtsman on 1961’s Euro-western: “The Singer Not the Song”.


  • RHODES, Dynnelly - 12/4/1937, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada - 1/8/2018, Maple Ridge, British Columbia, Canada

Canadian actor Donnelly Rhodes died January 8, 2018 in Maple Ridge, British Columbia, Canada. He was 80. He was best remembered for his roles in “Sidestreet” and “Da Vinci’s Inquest,” but western fans will remember him as Joe Slade in 1966’s “Gunfight at Abilene” starring Bobby Darin and Leslie Nielsen. Rhodes appeared in one episode of the the 1989 Euro-western TV series ‘Bordertown’ as John Quincy McGraw.


  • SENECIC, Zeljko - 1/18/1933, Zagreb, Croatia, Yugoslavia - 1/2/2018, Zagreb, Croatia

Zeljko Senečić a prominent Croatian film and theater director, stage designer, painter, interior designer and screenwriter died in Zagreb, Croatia on January 2, 2018. He was born in Zagreb on January 18, 1933 and studied painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb. He graduated in the class of Professor Marijana Detoni in 1956, and by 1960 he was an associate of the master workshop Krste Hegedušić. The stage design at the Academy of Fine Arts ended in 1960. Zeljko was art director on 1973’s “The Hellhounds of Alaska”.


  • Di CLEMENTE, Giovanni (Antonio Di Clemente) - 1948, Rome, Lazio, Italy - 1/2/2018, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Italian producer Giovanni Di Clemente died in a Rome hospital on January 2, 2018. The winner of the David di Donatello for "We hope it's a girl". Among his most famous films "I picari", "Parenti serpenti" and "Pacco doppio pacco e contropaccotto". Born Antonio Di Clemente in Rome in 1948 he received a special David di Donatello award for all of his productions in 1996. Di Clemente was a production secretary on the 1972 Euro-western: “Beyond the Frontiers of Hate” starring Jeff Cameron.


  • HEATON, Tom (Thomas Heaton) - 1940, Bronx, New York, U.S.A. - 12/?/2017 Gibsons, British Columbia, Canada

American Actor Tom Heaton has died in Gibsons, British Columbia, Canada. He was 77. An actor, singer/songwriter and artist, Tom was born in 1940 and raised in the Bronx, NY when it was still a rural community. He appeared in 155 films and TV appearances from 1967 to 2009. Tom appeared in two Euro-westerns the TV series “Bordertown” (1989, 1990) and “Johnson County War” (2002).


  • HARTWIG. Wolf C. - 9/8/1921, Düsseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany - 12/18/2017, Paris, Île-de-France, France

German producer Wolf C. Hartwig, best known for Sam Peckinpah’s 1977 blockbuster “Cross of Iron,” died in Paris on December 18, 2017 at the age of 98. Born on September 8, 1921 in Düsseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, Hartwig was a controversial figure within the Teutonic film biz given his role as the mogul behind a series of sexploitation movies. Hartwig’s career as a producer began in 1953 with a controversial WWII documentary and, while the style and subject-matter of his projects would change markedly over the next three decades, controversy remained at the core of most of his work. He truly believed there was no such thing as bad publicity. In the early ’60s Hartwig saw profit in the Near and Far East, where he would use European funding to bankroll international co-productions with projects shot in Asian countries. These films where often Westerns or based on popular pre-war pulp-fiction characters. In 1977 Hartwig produced his first big-budget blockbuster, Sam Peckinpah’s only war film, “Cross of Iron,” starring James Coburn, Maximilian Schell and James Mason. The picture was the most expensive German post-war film up to that point. And, although U.S. admissions were hampered by the concurrent release of “Star Wars,” the film took in Germany’s largest box-office returns since 1965’s “The Sound of Music.” Hartwig’s produced three Euro-westerns: “Black Eagle of Santa Fe” (1963), “Massacre at Marble City” (1964) and “Black Eagle of Santa Fe” (1965).


  • OSINAGA, Pedro (Pedrito Osinaga) - 12/15/1936, Pamplona, Navarre, Spain - 12/29/2017, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

Theater and film actor Pedro Osinaga died in Madrid, Spain on December 29th. He was 81. Osinaga was born Pedrito Osinaga in Pamplon, Navarre, Spain on December 15, 1936. He was one of Spain’s most popular stage actors, as proven by the jury of the XV Pepe Isbert Theater Award that was granted to him in June 2011. The actor confessed in 1988 that his professional career was possible only because he left his position with the regional soccer team of Pamplona where he played to go to Madrid to make a career as an interpreter. Osinaga appeared in only one Euro-western: “Murieta” (1965) as Claudio ‘Cucaracha’.


  • HUNTER, Thomas (Thomas O’Driscoll Hunter) - 12/19/1932, Savannah, Georgia, U.S.A. - 12/27/2017, Rowayton, Connecticut, U.S.A.

Thomas O’Driscoll Hunter died peacefully in his home in Rowayton, Connecticut, on Dec. 27, 2017. He was 85. Born in Savannah, Georgia, on December 19, 1932, he led a creative and adventurous life. He graduated from the University of Virginia with a degree in art and proudly served as a captain in the United States Marine Corps. In the late ’50s, he embarked on an exciting career as an actor, which led to a 10-year residence in Italy and a number of starring roles in “Spaghetti westerns” and other movies shot around the world. In Rome, he formed his own theater company and co-wrote the screenplays for the films “The Human Factor” and “The Final Countdown.” Upon returning to the United States, he wrote and directed plays, ran theater workshops and published a novel, “Softly Walks the Beast,” and an autobiography, “Memoirs of a Spaghetti Cowboy: Oddball Tales of Luck and Derring-Do.” Hunter appeared in three Euro-westerns: “The Hills Run Red” (1966), “Death Walks in Laredo” (1967) and the TV film “Carlos” (197).


  • BOLOGNINI, Manolo - 10/26/1925, Pistoia, Tuscany Italy - 12/23/2017, Rome, Lazio, Italy

Italian producer Manolo Bolgnini died of an apparent heart attack at his home Via Cassia in Rome, Italy today December 23rd. He was 92. Born in Pistoia, Tuscany, Italy on October 26, 1925, he was the brother of director Mauro Bolognini and the the producer of such films as “The Gospel According to Matthew”, “Django”, “Viva, Django”, “Texas, Adios”, “Boot Hill”, “The Forgotten Pistolero”, “Little Rita in the West”, “Keoma” and “California”.


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