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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 12/28/09 at 7:10 am


I know I'm out of shape and could use some training ;D
We all need some training after the holiday season.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/28/09 at 7:12 am

* Edgar Winter..Edgar Holland Winter (born December 28, 1946, in Beaumont, Texas) is an American musician. Edgar is a multi-instrumentalist, performing on the keyboards, and as a vocalist, saxophonist and percussionist, well-versed in jazz, blues and rock. He was most successful in the 1970s with his band The Edgar Winter Group. He is easily recognized by his albinism.
As teens Edgar and his elder brother Johnny Winter began performing together at local establishments such as Tom's Fish Camp. The two played in R&B and blues groups; Johnny and the Jammers, The Crystaliers, and The Black Plague. By the time he was of college age Edgar had become competent on keyboards, saxophone, bass, guitar and drums. In 1969, Winter appeared with Johnny for two songs ("I Can't Stand It" and "Tobacco Road") at the Woodstock Festival.

After recording with his brother, Edgar was signed to his own Epic Records contract in 1970 and recorded two R&B flavored albums, Entrance and Edgar Winter's White Trash. In 1972 he formed The Edgar Winter Group which included Dan Hartman, Ronnie Montrose and Chuck Ruff. It was with this band that he had his biggest successes: first with the album They Only Come Out at Night (1972) which featured the #1 hit instrumental "Frankenstein" which pioneered the use of the synthesizer as a lead instrument. During the performances, Winter showed his virtuosity performing on the keyboards, synthesizer, trumpet, and drums, all within the confines of the single song on stage. The song reached number one in the U.S. in May 1973 and the top 15 single "Free Ride"; which reached number 14 that same year, then the album Shock Treatment which featured the song "Easy Street."
Winter playing saxophone 2006 in Winter Park, Florida

The preponderance of vocals and songwriting by Hartman on Shock Treatment led to the release of Jasmine Nightdreams (1975) with all vocals by Winter. It was nominally a solo album, but it used the same personnel as the Edgar Winter Group. A full band album followed, the Edgar Winter Group with Rick Derringer, featuring songs and vocals by Derringer.

Success was waning, however, and Edgar teamed with brother Johnny for a live album of blues and early rock classics, including "Harlem Shuffle" (later a revival hit for the Rolling Stones). The album, Together (1976) also fell below expectations, so the White Trash was reformed. In 1977, they recorded Recycled, and toured as an opening act to support the album. The tour was cut short by a tragic plane crash, which killed some members of the tour's headliner, Lynyrd Skynyrd. This was followed by two solo albums, an attempt at literate disco on the Edgar Winter Album and a return to 1970s rock with Standing on Rock, in 1981. Since then there have been more obscure solo albums and session work, namely with David Lee Roth on Crazy from the Heat in 1985, which included a cover version of the song "Easy Street".

With over 20 albums and many television and radio appearances both to promote his music and to give his opinion on everything politically incorrect, Edgar Winter's music is solidly in the popular vein. Winter's 1970s albums are bluesier than his later albums, but there are blues tunes like "Big City Woman" on his 1990 album Not a Kid Anymore. In 2005, "Frankenstein" was featured in the PlayStation 2 music video game Guitar Hero. It has also been covered by Gary Hoey on the 2003 album Wake Up Call, as well as by Derek Sherinian on his album Inertia. "Free Ride" is the main song used in the Disney/Pixar video game Cars, a video game spin off of the animated film of the same name, the initial guitar riff is used on the menu screens and the full song is featured during game play.

In 2006, Winter joined Hamish Stuart, Rod Argent, Richard Marx, Billy Squier, and Sheila E touring with Ringo Starr & His All-Starr Band. In 2008, he appeared in the 10th All-Starr Band with Colin Hay, Billy Squier, Hamish Stuart, first timer Gary Wright and, on drums, Gregg Bissonette. Winter is a Scientologist. He has appeared in at least seven issues of the Church of Scientology magazine Celebrity between 1995 and 2005, which list the Scientology courses that he has completed.

Winter also produced, arranged, and performed on the album Mission Earth (1986). This album's words and music were written by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. Hubbard is said to have left detailed instructions and audio tapes for the musicians and producers to follow when making the album. Edgar described Mission Earth as "both a return to rock’s primal roots and yet highly experimental." Winter had glowing words for Hubbard when he wrote, "Ron's technical insight of the recording process was outstanding." Winter also described Hubbard's delineation of counter-rhythm in rock as something "which was nothing short of phenomenal, particularly inasmuch as it had then been entirely unexplored and only later heard in the African-based rhythms of Paul Simon's work, some five years after Ron’s analysis.
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/28/09 at 7:13 am


We all need some training after the holiday season.

So true and there still is New Years Eve Parties to go to.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 12/28/09 at 7:16 am


So true and there still is New Years Eve Parties to go to.
Maybe training after the New Years Eve Parties.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/28/09 at 7:16 am


Maybe training after the New Years Eve Parties.

Sounds good :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 12/28/09 at 7:19 am


Sounds good :)
But lets enjoy the holiday season first.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 12/28/09 at 6:01 pm


But lets enjoy the holiday season first.


We all do.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Womble on 12/28/09 at 7:56 pm

Very nice bios. Thanks for sharing, Ninny.  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: gibbo on 12/29/09 at 12:49 am

Training?  This is my favourite training skit...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnSeKHnB_k8

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/29/09 at 3:39 am


Very nice bios. Thanks for sharing, Ninny.  :)

Thanks :)

Training?  This is my favourite training skit...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnSeKHnB_k8

Very nice :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/29/09 at 3:47 am

The word of the day...Cowboy
A cowboy is a male character in a western
A cowboy is a man employed to look after cattle in North America, especially in former times.
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/29/09 at 3:52 am

The birthday of the day...Jon Voight
Jonathan Vincent "Jon" Voight (born December 29, 1938) is an American film and television actor. He came to prominence at the end of the 1960s, with a performance as a would-be hustler in 1969's Best Picture winner, Midnight Cowboy, for which he earned his first Academy Award nomination. Throughout the following decades, Voight built his reputation with an array of challenging roles, appearing in such landmark films as Deliverance (1972), and Coming Home (1978), for which he received an Academy Award for Best Actor. Voight's portrayal of sportscaster/journalist Howard Cosell, in the 2001 biopic Ali, earned critical raves and his fourth Oscar nomination. He starred in the seventh season of 24 as the villain Jonas Hodges.

Voight is the father of actress Angelina Jolie and actor James Haven, as well as brother of singer-songwriter Chip Taylor and geologist Barry Voight.
In 1969, Voight was cast in the groundbreaking Midnight Cowboy, a film that would make his career. Voight played Joe Buck, a naïve male hustler from Texas, adrift in New York City. He comes under the tutelage of Dustin Hoffman's Ratso Rizzo, a tubercular petty thief and con artist. The film explored late sixties New York and the development of an unlikely, but poignant friendship between the two main characters. Directed by John Schlesinger and based on a novel by James Leo Herlihy, the film struck a chord with critics. Because of its controversial themes, the film was released with an X rating and would make history by being the only X-rated feature to win Best Picture at the Academy Awards. Both Voight and co-star Hoffman were nominated for Best Actor but lost out to John Wayne, star of that year's True Grit.

In 1970 Voight appeared in Mike Nichols' adaptation of Catch-22, and re-teamed with director Paul Williams to star in The Revolutionary, as a left wing college student struggling with his conscience.

Voight appeared in 1972's Deliverance, directed by John Boorman, from a script that poet James Dickey had helped to adapt from his novel of the same name. The story of a canoe trip gone awry in a feral, backwoods America. The film and the performances of Voight and co-star Burt Reynolds received great critical acclaim and were popular with audiences.

On 12 December 1971 Voight married model and actress Marcheline Bertrand. Their son James Haven was born in 1973, followed by daughter Angelina Jolie in 1975. Both children would go on to enter the film business, James as an actor and writer, and Angelina as a movie star in her own right. Angelina went on to receive three Golden Globe Awards, two Screen Actors Guild Awards, and an Academy Award. She is also the Goodwill Ambassador for the UN Refugee Agency.

Voight played a directionless young boxer in 1973's The All American Boy, then appeared in the 1974 film, Conrack, directed by Martin Ritt. Based on Pat Conroy's autobiographical novel The Water Is Wide, Voight portrayed the title character, an idealistic young schoolteacher sent to teach underprivileged black children on a remote South Carolina island. The same year he appeared in The Odessa File, based on Frederick Forsyth's thriller, playing a young German journalist who discovers a conspiracy to protect former Nazis still operating within Germany. This film first teamed him with the actor-director Maximilian Schell, for whom Voight would appear in 1976's End of the Game, a psychological thriller based on a story by Swiss novelist and playwright, Friedrich Dürrenmatt.

In 1978, Voight portrayed the paraplegic Vietnam veteran Luke Martin in Hal Ashby's film Coming Home. Voight, who was awarded Best Actor at the Cannes Film Festival, for his portrait of an embittered paraplegic, reportedly based on real-life Vietnam veteran-turned-anti-war activist Ron Kovic, with whom Fonda falls in love. The film included a much-talked-about love scene between the two. Jane Fonda won her second Best Actress award for her role, and Voight won for Best Actor in a Leading Role.

Voight's marriage to Marcheline Bertrand failed in 1978. The following year, Voight once again put on boxing gloves, starring in 1979's remake of the 1931 Wallace Beery and Jackie Cooper vehicle, The Champ, with Voight playing the part of an alcoholic ex-heavyweight and a young Rick Schroder playing the role of his adoring son. The film was an international success, but less popular with American audiences.
Filmography
Year Film Role Notes
1969 Midnight Cowboy Joe Buck BAFTA Award for Best Newcomer
Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer
National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
1970 The Revolutionary "A" Adapted from the novel by Hans Koning
1970 Catch-22 1st Lt. Milo Minderbinder
1972 Deliverance Ed Gentry Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
1974 The ODESSA File Peter Miller
Conrack Pat Conroy
1975 End of the Game Walter Tschanz
1978 Coming Home Luke Martin Academy Award for Best Actor
Best Actor Award (Cannes Film Festival)
Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
National Board of Review Award for Best Actor
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
1979 The Champ Billy Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
1982 Lookin' to Get Out Alex Kovac Co-writer
1983 Table for Five J.P. Tannen
1985 Runaway Train Oscar "Manny" Manheim Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Actor
1986 Desert Bloom Jack Chismore
1989 Eternity Edward/James Co-writer
1991 Chernobyl: The Final Warning Dr. Robert Peter Gale (TV)
1992 The Last of His Tribe Professor Alfred Kroeber CableACE Award for Actor in a Movie or Miniseries
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film
The Rainbow Warrior Peter Willcox
1995 Heat Nate
Tin Soldier Yarik Director
1996 Mission: Impossible James Phelps
1997 The Rainmaker Leo F. Drummond Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture
Rosewood John Wright
Anaconda Paul Sarone
U Turn Blind Man
Most Wanted Gen. Adam Woodward, alias Lt. Col. Grant Casey
1998 Enemy of the State Thomas Brian Reynolds
The General Ned Kenny
1999 Varsity Blues Coach Bud Kilmer
A Dog of Flanders Michel La Grande
Noah's Ark Noah
2001 Zoolander Larry Zoolander
Lara Croft: Tomb Raider Lord Richard Croft
Pearl Harbor Franklin D. Roosevelt
Ali Howard Cosell Nominated — Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture
Uprising Maj. Gen. Jürgen Stroop Nominated — Emmy Award for Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie
Jack and the Beanstalk: The Real Story Siggy (Sigfried Mannheim) Television mini-series
2003 Holes Mr. Sir
2004 The Five People You Meet in Heaven Eddie Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie
National Treasure Patrick Gates
SuperBabies: Baby Geniuses 2 Bill Biscane/Kane Nominated - Razzie Award for Worst Supporting Actor
The Manchurian Candidate Senator Thomas Jordan
The Karate Dog Hamilton Cage Executive Producer
2005 Pope John Paul II John Paul II Nominated — Emmy Award for Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie
2006 The Legend of Simon Conjurer Dr. Crazx
Glory Road Adolph Rupp
2007 Transformers Secretary of Defense John Keller
September Dawn Jacob Samuelson
Bratz Principal Dimly
National Treasure: Book of Secrets Patrick Gates
2008 Pride and Glory Francis Tierney Sr.
An American Carol George Washington
Tropic Thunder Himself Cameo appearance
24: Redemption Jonas Hodges (TV)
Four Christmases Creighton
2009 24 Jonas Hodges (TV)
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/29/09 at 3:55 am

The co-birthday..Jude Law
David Jude Heyworth Law (born 29 December 1972) is an English actor, film producer and director.

He began acting with the National Youth Music Theatre in 1987, and had his first television role in 1989. After starring in films directed by Andrew Niccol, Clint Eastwood and David Cronenberg, he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in 1999 for his performance in Anthony Minghella's The Talented Mr. Ripley. In 2000 he won a Best Supporting Actor BAFTA Award for his work in the film. In 2003, he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance in another Minghella film, Cold Mountain.

In 2006, he was one of the top ten most bankable movie stars in Hollywood. In 2007, he received an Honorary César and he was named a Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government
In 1987 Law began acting with National Youth Music Theatre. He played various roles in the Edinburgh Fringe-awarded play The Ragged Child. One of his first major stage roles was Foxtrot Darling in Philip Ridley's The Fastest Clock In The Universe. Law went on to appear as Michael in the West End production of Jean Cocteau's tragicomedy Les parents terribles, directed by Sean Mathias. For this play he was nominated for a Laurence Olivier Award for Outstanding Newcomer, and he received the Ian Charleson Award for Outstanding Newcomer.

Following a title change to Indiscretions, the play was reworked and transferred to Broadway in 1995, where Law acted opposite Kathleen Turner, Roger Rees and Cynthia Nixon. This role earned him a Tony Award nomination and the Theatre World Award. In 1989, Law got his first television role in a movie based on the Beatrix Potter children's book, The Tailor of Gloucester. After minor roles in British television, including a two-year stint in the Granada TV soap opera Families and the leading role in the BFI /Channel 4 short "The Crane", Law had his breakthrough with the British crime drama Shopping, which also featured his future wife Sadie Frost.

In 1997, he became more widely known with his role in the Oscar Wilde bio-pic Wilde. Law won the "Most Promising Newcomer" award from the Evening Standard British Film Awards for his role as Lord Alfred "Bosie" Douglas, the glamorous lover of Stephen Fry's Oscar Wilde. In Andrew Niccol's science fiction film Gattaca he played the role of a disabled former swimming star living in a eugenics-obsessed dystopia. In Clint Eastwood's Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil he played the role of the ill-fated hustler murdered by an art dealer, played by Kevin Spacey. He also played a mob hitman in Sam Mendes's 1930s period drama Road to Perdition.
2000s

Law was one of the Top Ten 2006 A-list of the most bankable movie stars in Hollywood, following the criteria of James Ulmer in the Ulmer Scale. On 1 March 2007, he was honoured with the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres conferred by the French government, in recognition of his contribution to World Cinema Arts. He was named a Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres. He has been nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in The Talented Mr. Ripley in 1999, and then again for the Academy Award for Best Actor for Cold Mountain in 2003. Both films were directed by Anthony Minghella.

For The Talented Mr. Ripley he learned to play saxophone and earned a MTV Movie Award nomination with Matt Damon and Fiorello for performing the song "Tu vuò fà l'americano" by Renato Carosone and Nicola Salerno. He learned ballet dancing for the film Artificial Intelligence: AI (2001).

Law, an admirer of Laurence Olivier, used the actor's image in the 2004 film Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow. Using computer graphics, footage of the young Olivier was merged into the film, playing Dr. Totenkopf, a mysterious scientific genius and supervillain.

He portrayed the title character in Alfie, the remake of Bill Naughton's 1966 film, playing the role originated by Michael Caine. He took on another of Caine's earlier roles in the 2007 film Sleuth adapted by Nobel Laureate in Literature Harold Pinter, while Caine played the role originated by Sir Laurence Olivier.

Law is one of three actors who took over the role of actor Heath Ledger in Terry Gilliam's film The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus. He had this to say about the role:

    "I have always loved Terry Gilliam's films. Their heart, their soul, their mind, always inventive, touching, funny and relevant. When I got the call, it was a double tug. I liked Heath very much as a man and admired him as an actor. To help finish his final piece of work was a tribute I felt compelled to make. To help Terry finish his film was an honour paid to a man I adore. I had a great time on the job. Though we were all there in remembrance, Heath's heart pushed us with great lightness to the finish."

Along with Law, actors Johnny Depp and Colin Farrell portray "three separate dimensions in the film." He appeared opposite Forest Whitaker in the dark sci-fi comedy Repo Men! and as Dr. Watson in Guy Ritchie's adaption of Sherlock Holmes, alongside Robert Downey, Jr. and Rachel McAdams. Law stars as a celebrity supermodel in the film Rage.
Hamlet

In May 2009, Law returned to the London stage to portray the title role in Shakespeare's Hamlet at the Donmar Warehouse West End season at Wyndham's Theatre. The BBC reported "a fine and solid performance" but included other reviews of Law's interpretation that were mixed. There was a further run of the production at Elsinore Castle in Denmark from 25-30 August 2009. In September 2009 the production transferred to the Broadhurst Theatre in New York. Again, the critics failed to agree on the merit of Law's interpretation: London's Daily Mail found only positive reviews, but The Washington Post felt that the much-anticipated performance was "highly disappointing
In 2004, Law launched a campaign to raise £2.5 million towards the Young Vic Theatre's £12.5 million redevelopment project. He is currently Chair of the Young Vic committee and has said that he is proud to help make the Young Vic "a nurturing bed" for young directors. He is an enthusiastic football fan and a supporter of the English football club Tottenham Hotspur. In 2006, he joined Robbie Williams in the "Soccer Aid" celebrity football match to benefit UNICEF.

In 2006, he starred in an anthology of Samuel Beckett readings and performances directed by director Anthony Minghella. With the Beckett Gala Evening at the Reading Town Hall, more than £22,000 was donated for the Macmillan Cancer Support. Also in 2006, Frost and Law directed a Shakespeare play in a South African orphanage. He travelled to Durban with Frost and their children in order to help children who have lost their parents to AIDS. In July 2007, as patron of the charity, he helped kick off the month-long tour of the AIDS-themed musical Thula Sizwe by The Young Zulu Warriors. Also in 2007, he encouraged the Friends of the Earth/The Big Ask campaign, asking British Government to take action against climate change.

Law does charity work for organizations such as Make Poverty History, the Rhys Daniels Trust, and the WAVE Trauma Centre. He supports the Make-A-Wish Foundation and the Pride of Britain Awards.

He is the chair of the Music For Tomorrow Foundation to help rebuild Katrina-devastated New Orleans.

Jude Law is an ambassador of HRH The Prince of Wales' Children and the Arts Foundation. He supports Breast Cancer Care, and in December 2008 he supported the Willow Foundation with a small canvas for their campaign Stars on Canvas. In April 2009 he supported the charity Education Africa with the gift of a mask he had painted and signed himself. The campaign was launched on eBay by Education Africa.

Stars including Dame Judi Dench and Jude Law have helped save St Stephen's Church in Hampstead. The celebrities supported the campaign, which raised £4.5 million to refurbish the Victorian church in north London. The building reopened in March 2009 as an arts and community centre
Filmography
Year Film Role Notes
1989 The Tailor of Gloucester Sam, Mayor's Stableboy (TV)
1990 Families Nathan Thompson (TV)
1991 The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes Joe Barnes (TV)
1992 The Crane Young Man
1993 The Marshal Bruno (TV)
1994 Shopping Billy
1996 I Love You, I Love You Not Ethan
1997 Bent Stormtrooper
Wilde Lord Alfred Douglas Evening Standard British Film Award — Most Promising Newcomer
Gattaca Jerome Eugene Morrow
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil Billy Carl Hanson
1998 Music From Another Room Danny
Final Cut Jude
The Wisdom of Crocodiles Steven Grlscz aka Immortality
1999 eXistenZ Ted Pikul
Presence of Mind Secretary
The Talented Mr. Ripley Dickie Greenleaf BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role
Blockbuster Entertainment Award for Favorite Supporting Actor - Suspense
Santa Fe Film Festival Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Empire Award — Best British Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture
Nominated — London Critics Circle Film Award — British Supporting Actor of the Year
Nominated — MTV Movie Award — Best Musical Performance
Nominated — Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Teen Choice Award — Film Choice Breakout Performance
Nominated — Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture
Tube Tales (director) "A Bird in the Hand"
2000 Love, Honour and Obey Jude
Happy M'Gee Tony M'Gee
2001 Enemy at the Gates Vasily Zaitsev Nominated — European Film Award Audience Award for Best Actor
Artificial Intelligence: A.I. Gigolo Joe Nominated — Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture
Nominated — Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor
2002 Road to Perdition Harlen Maguire Nominated — Empire Award for Best British Actor
Nominated — London Film Critics Circle Awards for Best British Supporting Actor
Nominated — Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor
2003 Cold Mountain W. P. Inman Nominated — Academy Award for Best Actor
Nominated — BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
Nominated — Empire Award for Best British Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
Nominated — IFTA Award – People's Choice Award for Best International Actor
Nominated — London Film Critics Circle Awards for Best British Actor
Nominated — MTV Movie Award — Best Trans-Atlantic Breakthrough Performer
Nominated — Golden Satellite Award - Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture, Drama
2004 I ♥ Huckabees Brad Stand
Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow Sky Captain / Joseph Sullivan Also Producer
Nominated — MTV Movie Award - Best Kiss shared with Gwyneth Paltrow
Nominated — Visual Effects Society Awards 2004 - Outstanding Performance by an Actor or Actress in a Visual Effects Film
Alfie Alfie
Closer Dan National Board of Review Award for Best Cast
Nominated — Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Cast
The Aviator Errol Flynn Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events Lemony Snicket Voice
ShoWest Convention /ShoWest Award — Male Star of the Year
Nominated — People's Choice Award — Favorite Leading Man
2006 All the King's Men Jack Burden
Breaking & Entering Will Francis
The Holiday Graham Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Best Kiss shared with Cameron Diaz
2007 My Blueberry Nights Jeremy
Sleuth Milo Tindle Also producer
2009 Rage Minx
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus Tony (2nd transformation)
Sherlock Holmes Dr. Watson
2010 Repo Men Remy, a repo man
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/29/09 at 3:59 am

* Mary Tyler Moore..Mary Tyler Moore (born December 29, 1936) is an American actress, primarily known for her roles in television sitcoms.

Moore is best known for The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970–1977), in which she starred as Mary Richards, a 30-something single woman who worked as a local news producer in Minneapolis, and for her earlier role as Dick Van Dyke's wife on The Dick Van Dyke Show (1961–1966). She also appeared in a number of films, most notably 1980's Ordinary People, in which she played a role that was the polar opposite of the television characters she had portrayed, and for which she was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress.

Moore has also been active in charity work and various political causes, particularly on behalf of Animal rights and Diabetes mellitus type 1.
At the age of 17, Moore aspired to be a dancer. She started her career as "Happy Hotpoint", a tiny elf dancing on Hotpoint appliances in TV commercials during the 1950s series Ozzie and Harriet. She filmed 39 TV spots in five days, ultimately earning about $6,000 from the first job of her career. Her time as "Happy Hotpoint" ended when it became difficult to conceal her pregnancy in the dancing elf costume.

Moore anonymously modelled on the covers of a number of record albums and auditioned for the role of the older daughter of Danny Thomas for his long-running hit TV show, but was turned down. Much later, Thomas explained that "no daughter of mine could have that nose." Moore's first regular television role was as a telephone receptionist on the show Richard Diamond, Private Detective; in that series, only her legs were shown and voice heard. About this time, she guest starred on John Cassavetes's NBC detective series Johnny Staccato. In 1960, she guest starred in two episodes, "The O'Mara's Ladies" and "All The O'Mara's Horses", of the William Bendix-Doug McClure NBC western series, Overland Trail. Several months later, she appeared in the first episode, entitled "One Blonde Too Many", of NBC one-season The Tab Hunter Show, a sitcom starring the former teen idol as a bachelor cartoonist.

In 1961, Moore appeared in several bit parts in movies and on television, including Bourbon Street Beat, 77 Sunset Strip, Surfside Six, Wanted: Dead or Alive, Steve Canyon, Hawaiian Eye, and Lock Up in 1961 where a woman named Laura helped save her from prison.

In 1961, Carl Reiner cast her in The Dick Van Dyke Show, an acclaimed weekly series based on Reiner's own life and career as a writer for Sid Caesar's television variety show, telling the cast from the outset that it would run no more than five years. The show was produced by Danny Thomas's company, and Thomas himself recommended her. He remembered Mary as "the girl with three names" whom he had turned down earlier. Moore's energetic comic performances as Van Dyke's character's wife, begun at age 24 (hence she was 11 years Van Dyke's junior), made both the actress and her signature tight capri pants extremely popular, and she became internationally famous. When she won an Emmy award for her portrayal of Laura Petrie, she said, through her tears, quite incorrectly, "I know this will never happen again!"

In 1970, after having appeared earlier in a pivotal one-hour musical special called "Dick Van Dyke and the Other Woman", Moore and husband Grant Tinker successfully pitched a sitcom centered on Moore to CBS. The Mary Tyler Moore Show was a half-hour newsroom sitcom featuring Ed Asner as her gruff boss Lou Grant, a character that would later be spun off into an hour-long dramatic series. The premise of the single working woman's life, alternating during the program between work and home, became a television staple that would often be used in the future. After six years of ratings in the top 20, the show slipped to number #39 during its seventh season. Producers argued for its cancellation due to its falling ratings, afraid that the show's legacy might be damaged if it were renewed for another season. To the surprise of the entire cast including Mary Tyler Moore herself, it was announced that they would soon be filming their final episode. After the announcement, the series finished strongly and the final show was the most watched show during the week it aired. The series had become a touchpoint of the Women's Movement because it was one of the first to show, in a serious way, an independent working woman.

After a brief respite, Moore threw herself into a completely different genre. She attempted two failed variety series in a row: Mary, which featured David Letterman, Michael Keaton, Swoosie Kurtz and Dick Shawn in the supporting cast and lasted three episodes, which was re-tooled as The Mary Tyler Moore Hour, a backstage show within a show, with Mary portraying a TV star putting on a variety show. To arouse curiosity and nostalgic feelings, Dick Van Dyke appeared as her guest, but the program was canceled within three months. About this time, she also made a one-off musical/variety special for CBS, titled Mary's Incredible Dream, which featured John Ritter, among others. It did poorly in the ratings and, according to Moore, was never repeated and will likely never be aired again due to legal problems surrounding the show.

In the 1985-86 season, she returned to CBS in a series titled "Mary", which suffered from poor reviews, sagging ratings, and internal strife within the production crew. According to Moore, she asked CBS to pull the show, as she was unhappy with the direction of the program and the producers.

She also starred in the short-lived "warmedy", Annie McGuire, in 1988.

In the mid-1990s, she had a cameo and a guest starring role as herself on two episodes of Ellen. She subsequently also guest starred on Ellen DeGeneres's next TV show, The Ellen Show, in 2001.

In 2004, Moore reunited with her Dick Van Dyke Show castmates for a reunion "episode" called The Dick Van Dyke Show Revisited. In August 2005, Moore guest-starred as Christine St. George, a high-strung host of a fictional TV show on three episodes of Fox sitcom That '70s Show. Moore's scenes were shot on the same soundstage where The Mary Tyler Moore Show was filmed in the 1970s.
Theatre

Moore appeared in several Broadway plays. She starred in Whose Life Is It Anyway with James Naughton, which opened on Broadway at the Royale Theatre on February 24, 1980 and ran for 96 performances, and in Sweet Sue, which opened at the Music Box Theatre (transferred to the Royale Theatre) on Jan. 8, 1988 and ran for 164 performances. She was the star of a new musical version of Breakfast at Tiffany's in December 1966, but the show, titled Holly Golightly, was a notorious flop that closed out-of-town before reaching Broadway. An urban legend has it that when Mary, as Holly, announced that she miscarried her baby, the audience applauded.

She appeared in previews of the Neil Simon play Rose's Dilemma at the off-Broadway Manhattan Theatre Club in December 2003 but was fired before the show opened, because she was not able to learn her lines.

During the 1980s, Moore and her production company produced five plays: Noises Off, The Octette Bridge Club, Joe Egg, Benefactors, and Safe Sex.
Movies

Moore made her film debut in 1961's X-15. She subsequently appeared in a string of 1960s films (after signing an exclusive contract with Universal Pictures), including 1967's Thoroughly Modern Millie with Julie Andrews and 1968's What's So Bad About Feeling Good? and Don't Just Stand There!. In 1969 she starred opposite Elvis Presley as a nun in Change of Habit. Moore's future television castmate Ed Asner also appeared in that film (as a cop). After that film's disappointing reviews and reception at the box office, Mary returned to television, and did not appear in another theatrical film for the next eleven years.

Moore was nominated for the Best Actress for 1980's Ordinary People. Other feature film credits include Six Weeks, Just Between Friends, Flirting with Disaster, Keys to Tulsa, Labor Pains and Cheats.

Moore has appeared in a number of telefilms, such as Like Mother, Like Son: The Strange Story of Sante and Kenny Kimes, Run a Crooked Mile, Heartsounds, The Gin Game (based on the Broadway play; it reunited her with Dick Van Dyke again), Mary and Rhoda, Lincoln (as Mary Todd Lincoln), Finnegan Begin Again, The Best Year, Miss Lettie and Me, Stolen Babies and Payback.
In addition to her acting work, Moore is the International Chairman of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation International. In this role, she has used her fame to help raise funds and raise awareness of diabetes mellitus type 1, which she has, almost losing her vision and at least one limb to the disease.

In 2007, in honor of Moore's dedication to the Foundation, JDRF created the "Forever Moore" research initiative which will support JDRF's Academic Research and Development and JDRF's Clinical Development Program. The program works on translating basic research advances into new treatments and technologies for those living with type 1 diabetes.

She also adopted a Golden Retriever puppy from Yankee Golden Retriever Rescue in Hudson, Massachusetts. She also is an animal rights activist and promoted her cause on the Ellen DeGeneres sitcom Ellen. She has worked for animal rights for many years. On the subject of fur, she has said, "Behind every beautiful fur, there is a story. It is a bloody, barbaric story."

She is also a co-founder of Broadway Barks, an annual animal adopt-a-thon held in New York City. Moore and friend Bernadette Peters work to make New York City a no-kill city and to promote adopting animals from shelters.

In honor of her father, George Tyler Moore, who was a life-long American Civil War enthusiast, in 1995 Moore donated funds to acquire an historic structure in Shepherdstown, West Virginia, for Shepherd College (now Shepherd University) to be used as a center for Civil War studies. The center, named the George Tyler Moore Center for the Study of the Civil War is housed in the historic Conrad Shindler house (ca. 1795), which is named in honor of her great, great, great-grandfather, who owned the structure from 1815-52. Moore also contributed to the renovation of the house used as headquarters during 1861-1862 by Major General Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson. Use of the house had been offered to Jackson by its owner, Lieutenant Colonel Lewis Tilghman Moore, commander of the 4th Virginia Infantry and a great-grandfather of Mary Tyler Moore.

Moore supports embryonic stem cell research. When President George W. Bush announced that he would veto the Senate's bill supporting the research, she said, "This is an intelligent human being with a heart, and I don't see how much longer he can deny those aspects of himself.
Filmography
Television

    * Richard Diamond, Private Detective
    * The Tab Hunter Show (1960), guest star in first episode
    * The Dick Van Dyke Show (1961-1966)
    * The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970-1977)
    * Rhoda (1974-1978)
    * Phyllis (1976-1977)
    * How To Survive the '70s (special) (1978)
    * Mary (1978)
    * First, You Cry (1978)
    * The Mary Tyler Moore Hour (1979)
    * Heartsounds (1984)
    * Finnegan Begin Again (1985)
    * Mary (1985-1986)
    * Lincoln (1988)
    * Annie McGuire (1988)
    * The Last Best Year (1990)
    * Thanksgiving Day (TV series) (1990)
    * Stolen Babies (1993)



    * New York News (1995)
    * Stolen Memories: Secrets from the Rose Garden (1996)
    * Ellen (1996)
    * Payback (1997)
    * Good as Gold (2000)
    * Mary and Rhoda (2000)
    * Like Mother, Like Son: The Strange Story of Sante and Kenny Kimes (2001)
    * The Ellen Show (2001)
    * Miss Lettie and Me (2002)
    * The Gin Game (2003)
    * Blessings (TV movie) (2003)
    * The Dick Van Dyke Show Revisited (2004)
    * Snow Wonder (2005)
    * That '70s Show (2006)
    * Lipstick Jungle (2008)
    * Oprah (May 19, 2008)
    * "Good Morning America" (March 31, 2009)

Film
Year Film Role Notes
1958 Once Upon a Horse... Dance Hall Girl (uncredited)
1961 X-15 Pamela Stewart
1967 Thoroughly Modern Millie Miss Dorothy Brown
1968 What's So Bad About Feeling Good? Liz
Don't Just Stand There! Martine Randall
1969 Run a Crooked Mile Elizabeth Sutton (TV)
Change of Habit Sister Michelle Gallagher
1980 Ordinary People Beth Jarrett Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Actress
Nominated — BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
1982 Six Weeks Charlotte Dreyfus
1986 Just Between Friends Holly Davis
1996 Flirting with Disaster Pearl Coplin Chlotrudis Award for Best Supporting Actress
The Blue Arrow Granny Rose (voice)
1997 Keys to Tulsa Cynthia Boudreau
1998 Reno Finds Her Mom Herself
2000 Labor Pains Esther Raymond
2002 Cheats Mrs. Stark
2009 Against The Current Mom
http://i290.photobucket.com/albums/ll262/BullsEyeRadio/100B3110.jpg
http://i46.photobucket.com/albums/f121/onelatham/mary7.gif

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 12/29/09 at 7:50 am


The word of the day...Cowboy
A cowboy is a male character in a western
A cowboy is a man employed to look after cattle in North America, especially in former times.
http://i196.photobucket.com/albums/aa42/shylena035/cowboy.jpg
http://i83.photobucket.com/albums/j308/dee_p_2006/1217092024b.jpg
http://i651.photobucket.com/albums/uu231/cobach_tkt_tj/Noviembre090193.jpg
http://i601.photobucket.com/albums/tt97/FireflyWine/cowboy1.jpg
http://i818.photobucket.com/albums/zz110/greeneyedgirlaz/cowboycactus2.jpg
http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/yy303/sbachali/Scrapbooking/SPJJ118-Cowboy.jpg
http://i198.photobucket.com/albums/aa316/erin_pretender13/country/1759139vewm6k4hqd.gif
http://i584.photobucket.com/albums/ss283/miklamx/CSS%20Cowboy%20Images/bullpen3.jpg
http://i294.photobucket.com/albums/mm109/oklahomacountry/Thinkinaboutyou.jpg



http://dontdatethatdude.files.wordpress.com/2008/02/naked-cowboy2.jpg

don't forget The Naked Cowboy. ;)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/29/09 at 9:52 am



http://dontdatethatdude.files.wordpress.com/2008/02/naked-cowboy2.jpg

don't forget The Naked Cowboy. ;)

But he's not naked ;D

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 12/29/09 at 3:55 pm


But he's not naked ;D


But he's in his tighty whities.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/29/09 at 8:14 pm


But he's in his tighty whities.

Yes he is :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Womble on 12/29/09 at 8:22 pm

I've always been a fan of Mary Tyler-Moore but never knew half the things about her you mentioned in her bio, Nnny. Nice job. thanks for posting.  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: gibbo on 12/30/09 at 4:13 am



http://dontdatethatdude.files.wordpress.com/2008/02/naked-cowboy2.jpg

don't forget The Naked Cowboy. ;)


Sounds like Howard is missing Sir Billzy... ;)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/30/09 at 5:44 am


Sounds like Howard is missing Sir Billzy... ;)

LOL ;D

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/30/09 at 5:48 am

The word of the day...Golfer
A golfer is a person who plays golf for pleasure or as a profession.
http://i93.photobucket.com/albums/l69/YuehanSione/Tonga/5_400.jpg
http://i562.photobucket.com/albums/ss67/whothefeck/golfer.jpg
http://i104.photobucket.com/albums/m178/lynscards/golfer.jpg
http://i170.photobucket.com/albums/u261/bnevius/golfer.jpg
http://i270.photobucket.com/albums/jj94/Susyt_photos/golfer.jpg
http://i240.photobucket.com/albums/ff232/yellowhampster/golfer.jpg
http://i748.photobucket.com/albums/xx128/nickie111/GOLFER.jpg
http://i681.photobucket.com/albums/vv177/jacnetpub/Golfer.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/30/09 at 6:00 am

The birthday of the day...Tiger Woods
Eldrick Tont Woods (born December 30, 1975), better known as Tiger Woods, is an American professional golfer whose achievements to date rank him among the most successful golfers of all time. Currently the World No. 1, he was the highest-paid professional athlete in 2008, having earned an estimated $110 million from winnings and endorsements.

Woods has won 14 professional major golf championships, the second highest of any male player, and 71 PGA Tour events, third all time. He has more career major wins and career PGA Tour wins than any other active golfer. He is the youngest player to achieve the career Grand Slam, and the youngest and fastest to win 50 tournaments on tour. Additionally, Woods is the second golfer to have achieved a career grand slam three times along with Jack Nicklaus. Woods has won 16 World Golf Championships and has won at least one event each of the 11 years they have been in existence.

Woods has held the number one position in the world rankings for the most consecutive weeks and for the greatest total number of weeks. He has been awarded PGA Player of the Year a record ten times, the Byron Nelson Award for lowest adjusted scoring average a record eight times, and has the record of leading the money list in nine different seasons. He has been named Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year a record-tying four times, and is the only person to be named Sports Illustrated's Sportsman of the Year more than once.

Since his record-breaking win at the 1997 Masters Tournament, golf's increased popularity is attributed to Woods' presence. He is credited for dramatically increasing prize money in golf, generating interest in new audiences as the first non-white person to win the Masters, and for drawing the largest TV audiences in golf history. He has been named "Athlete of the Decade" by the Associated Press in December 2009.

On December 11, 2009, Woods announced an indefinite leave from professional golf to focus on his marriage after his past infidelities came to light
With the announcement "Hello world," Tiger Woods became a professional golfer in August 1996, and signed endorsement deals worth $40 million from Nike, Inc. and $20 million from Titleist. He played his first round of professional golf at the Greater Milwaukee Open, tying for 60th place, but went on to win two events in the next three months to qualify for the Tour Championship. For his efforts, Woods was named Sports Illustrated's 1996 Sportsman of the Year and PGA Tour Rookie of the Year. He began his tradition of wearing a red shirt during the final round of tournaments, a link to his college days at Stanford and a color he believes symbolizes aggression and assertiveness.

The following April, Woods won his first major with a score of 18 under par, The Masters, by a record margin of 12 strokes, becoming the youngest Masters winner and the first African American to do so. He set a total of 20 Masters records and tied 6 others. He won another three PGA Tour events that year, and on June 15, 1997, in only his 42nd week as a professional, rose to number one in the Official World Golf Rankings, the fastest-ever ascent to world No. 1. He was named PGA Player of the Year, the first golfer to win the award the year following his rookie season.

While expectations for Woods were high, his form faded in the second half of 1997, and in 1998 he only won one PGA Tour event. He answered critics of his "slump" and what seemed to be wavering form by maintaining he was undergoing extensive swing changes with his coach, Butch Harmon, and was hoping to do better in the future.
1999–2002: Slams

In June 1999, Woods won the Memorial Tournament, a victory that marked the beginning of one of the greatest sustained periods of dominance in the history of men's golf. He completed his 1999 campaign by winning his last four starts—including the PGA Championship—and finished the season with eight wins, a feat not achieved in the past 25 years. He was voted PGA Tour Player of the Year and Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year for the second time in three years.

Woods started 2000 with his fifth consecutive victory and began a record-setting season, where he would win three consecutive majors, nine PGA Tour events, and set or tie 27 Tour records. He went on to capture his sixth consecutive victory at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am with a comeback for the ages. Trailing by seven strokes with seven holes to play, he finished eagle-birdie-par-birdie for a 64 and a two-stroke victory. His six consecutive wins were the most since Ben Hogan in 1948 and only five behind Byron Nelson's record of eleven in a row. In the 2000 U.S. Open, he broke or tied a total of nine U.S. Open records with his 15-shot win, including Old Tom Morris's record for the largest victory margin ever in a major championship, which had stood since 1862, and became the Tour's all-time career money leader. He led by a record 10 strokes going into the final round, and Sports Illustrated called it "the greatest performance in golf history." In the 2000 Open Championship at St Andrews, which he won by eight strokes, he set the record for lowest score to par (−19) in any major tournament, and he holds at least a share of that record in all four major championships. At 24, he became the youngest golfer to achieve the Career Grand Slam.

Woods's major championship streak was seriously threatened at the 2000 PGA Championship, however, when Bob May went head-to-head with Woods on Sunday at Valhalla Golf Club. Woods played the last twelve holes of regulation seven under par, and won a three-hole playoff with a birdie on the first hole and pars on the next two. He joined Ben Hogan (1953) as the only other player to win three professional majors in one season. Three weeks later, he won his third straight start on Tour at the Bell Canadian Open, becoming only the second man after Lee Trevino in 1971 to win the Triple Crown of Golf (U.S., British, and Canadian Opens) in one year. Of the twenty events he entered in 2000, he finished in the top three fourteen times. His adjusted scoring average of 67.79 and his actual scoring average of 68.17 were the lowest in PGA Tour history, besting his own record of 68.43 in 1999 and Byron Nelson's average of 68.33 in 1945. He was named the 2000 Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year, becoming the first and only athlete to be honored twice. Woods was ranked as the twelfth best golfer of all time by Golf Digest magazine just four years after he turned professional.

The following season, Woods continued dominating. His 2001 Masters Tournament win marked the only time within the era of the modern Grand Slam that any player has been the holder of all four major championship titles at the same time, a feat now known as the "Tiger Slam." It is not viewed as a true Grand Slam, however, because it was not achieved in a calendar year. Surprisingly, he was not a factor in the three remaining majors of the year, but finished with the most PGA Tour wins in the season, with five. In 2002, he started off strong, joining Nick Faldo (1989–90) and Jack Nicklaus (1965–66) as the only men to have won back-to-back Masters Tournaments.

Two months later, Woods was the only player under par at the U.S. Open, and resurrected buzz about the calendar Grand Slam, which had eluded him in 2000. All eyes were on Woods at the Open Championship, but his third round score of 81 ended Grand Slam hopes. At the PGA Championship, he nearly repeated his 2000 feat of winning three majors in one year, but bogeys at the thirteenth and fourteenth holes in the final round cost him the championship by one stroke. Nonetheless, he took home the money title, Vardon Trophy, and Player of the Year honors for the fourth year in a row.
2003–04: Swing adjustments
Woods putting at Torrey Pines during a practice round at the 108th U.S. Open

The next phase of Woods's career saw him remain among the top competitors on the tour, but lose his dominating edge. He did not win a major in 2003 or 2004, falling to second in the PGA Tour money list in 2003 and fourth in 2004. In September 2004, his record streak of 264 consecutive weeks as the world's top-ranked golfer came to an end at the Deutsche Bank Championship, when Vijay Singh won and overtook Woods in the Official World Golf Rankings.

Many commentators were puzzled by Woods's "slump," offering explanations that ranged from his rift with swing coach Butch Harmon to his marriage. At the same time, he let it be known that he was again working on changes to his swing, this time in hopes of reducing the wear and tear on his surgically repaired left knee, which was subjected to severe stress in the 1998–2003 version of his swing. Again, he anticipated that once the adjustments were complete, he would return to his previous form.
2005–2007: Resurgence

In the 2005 season, Woods quickly returned to his winning ways. He won the Buick Invitational in January and in March he outplayed Phil Mickelson to win the Ford Championship at Doral and temporarily return to the Official World Golf Rankings number one position (Singh displaced him once again two weeks later). In April, he finally broke his "drought" in the majors by winning the 2005 Masters Tournament in a playoff, which regained him the number one spot in the World Rankings. Singh and Woods swapped the #1 position several times over the next couple of months, but by early July Woods had reclaimed the top spot for good, propelled further by a victory at the 2005 Open Championship, a win that gave him his 10th major. He went on to win six official money events on the PGA Tour in 2005, topping the money list for the sixth time in his career. His 2005 wins also included two at the World Golf Championships.
Woods on the green at The Masters in 2006.

For Woods, the year 2006 was markedly different from 2005. While he began just as dominantly (winning the first two PGA tournaments he entered on the year) and was in the hunt for his fifth Masters championship in April, he never mounted a Sunday charge to defend his title, allowing Phil Mickelson to claim the green jacket.

Then, on May 3, 2006, Woods's father, mentor and inspiration, Earl, died after a lengthy battle with prostate cancer. Woods took a nine-week hiatus from the PGA Tour to be with his family. When he returned for the 2006 U.S. Open, the rust was evident—he missed the cut at Winged Foot, the first time he had missed the cut at a major as a professional, and ended his record-tying streak of 39 consecutive cuts made at majors. Still, a tie for second at the Western Open just three weeks later showed him poised to defend his Open crown at Hoylake.

At the 2006 Open Championship, Woods almost exclusively used long irons off the tee (he hit driver only one time the entire week—the 16th hole of the first round), he missed just four fairways all week (hitting the fairway 92 percent of the time), and his score of −18 to par (three eagles, nineteen birdies, 43 pars, and seven bogeys) was just one off of his major championship record −19, set at St Andrews in 2000. The victory was an emotional one for Woods, who dedicated his play to his father's memory.

Four weeks later at the 2006 PGA Championship, Woods again won in dominating fashion, making only three bogeys, tying the record for fewest in a major. He finished the tournament at 18-under-par, equaling the to-par record in the PGA that he shares with Bob May from 2000. In August 2006, he won his 50th professional tournament at the Buick Open—and at the age of thirty years and seven months, he became the youngest golfer to do so. He ended the year by winning six consecutive PGA Tour events, and won the three most prestigious awards given by the PGA Tour (Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, and Byron Nelson Awards) in the same year for a record seventh time.

At the close of his first eleven seasons, Woods's 54 wins and 12 major wins had surpassed the all time eleven-season PGA Tour total win record of 51 (set by Byron Nelson) and total majors record of 11 (set by Jack Nicklaus). He was named Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year for a record-tying fourth time.

Woods and tennis star Roger Federer, who share a major sponsor, first met at the 2006 U.S. Open tennis final. Since then, they have attended each other's events and have voiced their mutual appreciation for each other's talents.

Woods began 2007 with a two-stroke victory at the Buick Invitational for his third straight win at the event and his seventh consecutive win on the PGA Tour. The victory marked the fifth time he had won his first tournament of the season. With this win, he became the third man (after Jack Nicklaus and Sam Snead) to win at least five times in three different events on the PGA Tour (his two other events are the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational and WGC-CA Championship). He earned his second victory of the year at the WGC-CA Championship for his third consecutive and sixth win overall at the event. With this victory, he became the first player to have three consecutive victories in five different events.

At the 2007 Masters Tournament, Woods was in the final group on the last day of a major for the thirteenth time in his career, but unlike the previous twelve occasions, he was unable to come away with the win. He finished tied for second two strokes behind winner Zach Johnson.
Tiger Woods drives the ball down range at the inaugural Earl Woods Memorial Pro-Am Tournament, part of the AT&T National PGA Tour event, July 2007.

Woods earned his third victory of the season by two strokes at the Wachovia Championship, the 24th different PGA Tour tournament he won. He has collected at least three wins in a season nine times in his 12-year career. At the U.S. Open, he was in the final group for the fourth consecutive major championship, but began the day two strokes back and finished tied for second once again. His streak of never having come from behind to win on the final day of a major continued.

In search of a record-tying third consecutive Open Championship, Woods fell out of contention with a second-round 75, and never mounted a charge over the weekend. Although his putting was solid (he sank a 90-footer in the first round), his iron play held him back. "I wasn't hitting the ball as close as I needed to all week," he said, after he finished tied for twelfth, five strokes off the pace.

In early August, Woods won his record 14th World Golf Championships event at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational by 8 strokes for his third consecutive and sixth victory overall at the event. He became the first golfer to win the same event three straight times on two different occasions (1999-2001) and (2005-2007). The following week, he won his second straight PGA Championship by defeating Woody Austin by two strokes. He became the first golfer to win the PGA Championship in back-to-back seasons on two different occasions: 1999-2000 and 2006-2007. He became the second golfer, after Sam Snead, to have won at least five events on the PGA Tour in eight different seasons.

Woods earned his 60th PGA Tour victory at the BMW Championship by shooting a course record 63 in the final round to win by two strokes. He sank a fifty-foot putt in the final round and missed only two fairways on the weekend. He led the field in most birdies for the tournament, and ranked in the top five in driving accuracy, driving distance, putts per round, putts per green, and greens in regulation. Woods finished his 2007 season with a runaway victory at the Tour Championship to capture his fourth title in his last five starts of the year. He became the only two-time winner of the event, and the champion of the inaugural FedEx Cup. In his 16 starts on Tour in 2007, his adjusted scoring average was 67.79, matching his own record set in 2000. His substantial leads over the second, third, and fourth players were similar in 2000 (1.46 (Phil Mickelson), 1.52 (Ernie Els), 1.66 (David Duval)) and 2007 (1.50 (Els), 1.51 (Justin Rose), 1.60 (Steve Stricker)).
2008: Injury-shortened season

Woods started the 2008 season with an eight-stroke victory at the Buick Invitational. The win marked his 62nd PGA Tour victory, tying him with Arnold Palmer for fourth on the all time list. This marked his sixth victory at the event, the sixth time he has begun the PGA Tour season with a victory, and his third PGA Tour win in a row. The following week, he was trailing by four strokes going into the final round of the Dubai Desert Classic, but made six birdies on the back nine for a dramatic one-stroke victory. He took home his 15th World Golf Championships event at the Accenture Match Play Championship with a record-breaking 8 & 7 victory in the final.

In his next event, the Arnold Palmer Invitational, Woods got off to a slow start, finishing the first round at even par and tied for 34th place. After finishing the third round in a five-way tie for first place, he completed his fifth consecutive PGA Tour victory with a dramatic 24-foot putt on the 18th hole to defeat Bart Bryant by a stroke. It was also his fifth career victory in this event. Geoff Ogilvy stopped Woods's run at the WGC-CA Championship, a tournament Woods had won in each of the previous three years. He remains the only golfer to have had more than one streak of at least five straight wins on the PGA Tour.

Despite bold predictions that Woods might again challenge for the Grand Slam, he did not mount a serious charge at the 2008 Masters Tournament, struggling with his putter through each round. He would still finish alone in second, three strokes behind the champion, Trevor Immelman. On April 15, 2008, he underwent his third left knee arthroscopic surgery in Park City, Utah, and missed two months on the PGA Tour. The first surgery he had was in 1994 when he had a benign tumor removed and the second in December 2002. He was named Men's Fitness's Fittest Athlete in the June/July 2008 issue.
Tiger Woods walks off the 8th green at Torrey Pines during a practice round at the 2008 U.S. Open

Woods returned for the 2008 U.S. Open in one of the most anticipated golfing groupings in history between him, Phil Mickelson and Adam Scott, the top three golfers in the world. Woods struggled the first day on the course, notching a double bogey on his first hole. He would end the round at +1 (72), four shots off the lead. He scored -3 (68) his second day, still paired with Mickelson, managing 5 birdies, 1 eagle and 4 bogeys. On the third day of the tournament, he started off with a double bogey once again and was trailing by 5 shots with six holes to play. However, he finished the round by making 2 eagle putts, a combined 100 feet (30 m) in length, and a chip-in birdie to take a one shot lead into the final round. His final putt assured that he would be in the final group for the sixth time in the last eight major championships.

On Sunday, June 15, Woods began the day with another double bogey, and trailed Rocco Mediate by one stroke after 71 holes. He winced after several of his tee shots, and sometimes made an effort to keep weight off of his left foot. Woods was behind by one stroke when he reached the final hole. Left with a 12-foot putt for birdie, he made the shot to force an 18-hole playoff with Mediate on Monday. Despite leading by as many as three strokes at one point in the playoff, Woods again dropped back and needed to birdie the 18th to force sudden death with Mediate, and did so. Woods made par on the first sudden death hole; Mediate subsequently missed his par putt, giving Woods his 14th major championship. After the tournament, Mediate said "This guy does things that are just not normal by any stretch of the imagination," and Kenny Perry added, "he beat everybody on one leg."

Two days after winning the U.S. Open, Woods announced that he would be required to undergo reconstructive anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) surgery on his left knee and would miss the remainder of the 2008 golf season including the final two major championships: The Open Championship, and the PGA Championship. Woods also revealed that he had been playing for at least 10 months with a torn ligament in his left knee, and sustained a double stress fracture in his left tibia while rehabbing after the surgery he had after the Masters. Publications throughout the world asserted his U.S. Open victory as "epic" and praised his efforts especially after learning of the extent of his knee injury. Woods called it "My greatest ever championship - the best of the 14 because of all the things that have gone on over the past week."

Woods' absence from the remainder of the season caused PGA Tour TV ratings to decline. Overall viewership for the second half of the 2008 season saw a 46.8 percent decline as compared to 2007.
2009: Returning to the PGA Tour

Called "one of the most anticipated returns in sports" by the Associated Press, Woods' first PGA Tour event after an eight month layoff came at the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship. He lost to Tim Clark in the second round. His first stroke play event was the WGC-CA Championship at Doral where he finished 9th (-11). Woods won his first title of the year at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, where he was five strokes behind Sean O'Hair entering the final round. Woods shot a final round 67 and made a 16-foot birdie putt at the final hole to defeat O'Hair by one stroke. Afterwards, he would continue to perform consistently. At The Masters, he finished sixth, four strokes behind eventual winner Ángel Cabrera. Then, despite having the 18-hole lead at the Quail Hollow Championship, he finished two strokes behind Sean O'Hair. At The Players Championship, he played in the final grouping on Sunday, but finished eighth.

Woods won his second event of 2009 at the Memorial Tournament. He trailed by four shots after three rounds but shot a final round 65, which included two consecutive birdies to end the tournament. The win was Woods' fourth at the event. Woods won his third event of the 2009 season on July 5 at the AT&T National, an event hosted by Woods himself. However, for the third time going into a 2009 major, Woods failed to capitalize on his preceding win. Instead, at the 2009 Open Championship, he missed the cut for only the second time in a major championship since turning professional.

On August 2, Woods captured the Buick Open for his fourth win of the season, a three-shot victory over three other players. After firing an opening-round 71 that put him in 95th place and outside of the cutline, Woods responded with a second-round 63, nine-under par, that vaulted him into contention. A third-round 65 put him atop the leaderboard and he coasted to victory with a final-round 69 for a 20-under 268 four-round total. This was the biggest turnaround pro victory to date.

Woods won his 70th career event the following week at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. He went head-to-head against Pádraig Harrington on Sunday until the 16th, where Harrington made a triple bogey 8 on the par 5 and Woods made birdie. Tiger went on to win the event by 4 strokes over Harrington and Robert Allenby.

At the 2009 PGA Championship, Woods shot a 5-under 67 to take the lead after the first round. He remained leader or co-leader through the second and third rounds. Going into the final round, Woods had a 2 stroke lead at 8-under. However, at the 68th hole, Woods was overtaken for the first time atop the leaderboard by Yang Yong-eun. Yang eventually won the tournament by three strokes over Woods who finished second. It marked the first time that Woods would fail to win a major when leading or co-leading after 54 holes and the first time he had lost any tournament on American soil when leading by more than one shot. It also meant that Woods would end the year without a major for the first time since 2004.

Woods won his 71st career title at the BMW Championship. The win moved him to first place in the FedEx Cup standings going into the final playoff event. It was his fifth win at the BMW Championship (including three wins as the Western Open) and marked the fifth time he had won an event five or more times in his career on the PGA Tour. Woods finished second at The Tour Championship to win his second FedEx Cup title.

At the 2009 Presidents Cup, Woods had an impressive and equally spectacular performance in which he won all five of his matches at the event. He joined his friend Mark O'Meara, who won all five of his matches at the 1996 Presidents Cup, and Shigeki Maruyama, who accomplished this feat in the 1998 Presidents Cup. In all three instances, their respective teams won the competition. Woods was paired with Steve Stricker all four rounds of the competition in foursomes and four-ball. On the first day of foursomes, they won 6 and 4 over the team of Ryo Ishikawa and Geoff Ogilvy. In Friday's match of four-ball, they won over the team of Ángel Cabrera and Geoff Ogilvy, 5 and 3. On Saturday, they beat the team of Tim Clark and Mike Weir after trailing for most of the match by winning the 17th and 18th holes to win 1-up in morning foursomes, and in the afternoon four-ball they defeated the team of Ryo Ishikawa and Y. E. Yang by the score of 4 and 2. In the singles match, Woods was paired with his nemesis from the 2009 PGA Championship, Yang. Yang grabbed the quick 1-up lead on the first hole, but on the third hole lost the lead and Woods went onto win the match by a score of 6 and 5. In addition, Woods was the one who clinched the Cup for the United States, which was his first time ever in his career he had the honor and opportunity to do this in a team event competition.

In November 2009, Woods was paid $3.3 million to play in the JBWere Masters, held at Kingston Heath in Melbourne, Australia from November 12 to 15. The event was sold out for the first time. He went on to win at 14 under par, two strokes over Australian Greg Chalmers, marking his 38th European Tour win and his first win of the PGA Tour of Australasia.
Woods has established several charitable and youth projects.

   * The Tiger Woods Foundation: The Tiger Woods Foundation was established in 1996 by Woods and his father Earl. It focuses on projects for children. Initially these comprised golf clinics (aimed especially at disadvantaged children), and a grant program. Further activities added since then include university scholarships, an association with Target House at St. Jude Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee; the Start Something character development program, which reached one million participants by 2003; and the Tiger Woods Learning Center. The Tiger Woods Foundation recently has teamed up with the PGA Tour to create a new PGA tour event that will take place in the nation's capital (Washington, D.C.) beginning in July, 2007.
   * In The City Golf Clinics and Festivals: Since 1997, the Tiger Woods Foundation has conducted junior golf clinics across the country. The Foundation began the “In the City” golf clinic program in 2003. The first three clinics were held in Indio, California, Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania, and San Juan, Puerto Rico, and were targeted to all youth, ages 7–17, and their families. Each three-day event features golf lessons on Thursday and Friday of clinic week and a free community festival on Saturday. Host cities invite 15 junior golfers to participate in the annual Tiger Woods Foundation Youth Clinic. This three-day junior golf event includes tickets to Disney Resorts, a junior golf clinic, and an exhibition by Tiger Woods.
   * Tiger Woods Learning Center: This is a 35,000-square-foot (3,300 m2) educational facility in Anaheim, California which opened in February 2006. It is expected to be used by several thousand students each year in grades 4 to 12. The center features seven classrooms, extensive multi-media facilities and an outdoor golf teaching area.
   * Tiger Jam: An annual fundraising concert which has raised over $10 million for the Tiger Woods Foundation. Past performers at Tiger Jam include Sting, Bon Jovi and Stevie Wonder.
   * Chevron World Challenge: An annual off-season charity golf tournament. The event carries generous prize money, and in 2007 Woods donated his $1.35 million first-place check to his Learning Center.
   * Tiger Woods Foundation National Junior Golf Team: An eighteen member team which competes in the annual Junior World Golf Championships.

Woods has also participated in charity work for his current caddy, Steve Williams. On April 24, 2006 Woods won an auto racing event that benefited the Steve Williams Foundation to raise funds to provide sporting careers for disadvantaged youth
   * PGA Tour wins (71)
   * European Tour wins (38)
   * Japan Golf Tour wins (2)
   * Asian Tour wins (1)
   * PGA Tour of Australasia wins (1)
   * Other professional wins (15)
   * Amateur wins (21)

Major championships
Wins (14)


   * Complete through the 2009 season.
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/30/09 at 6:04 am

The co-birthday of the day...Davey Jones
Davy Jones (born David Thomas Jones 30 December 1945) is an English pop singer-songwriter and actor best known as a member of The Monkees. Jones was born in Manchester, England on 30 December 1945. He lost his mother to emphysema when he was 14 years old. His father had hopes for him as a jockey, and just after his mother died, his father sent him to live with Basil Foster to train. Basil was approached by a friend who worked in the theatre on the West End of London during casting. Basil said, "I've got the kid." Jones then became more interested in being in show business. As a teenager he appeared on British TV soap operas, including Coronation Street. He appeared to great acclaim in the musical Oliver! as the Artful Dodger, playing the role both in London and on Broadway and was nominated for a Tony Award. On 9 February 1964, he appeared with the Broadway cast of Oliver on the Ed Sullivan show, the same episode on which The Beatles made their first appearance. Jones says of that night, "I watched the Beatles from the side of the stage, I saw the girls going crazy, and I said to myself, this is it, I want a piece of that."

Ward Sylvester of Screen Gems (then the television division of Columbia Pictures) signed Jones to a contract, following his Ed Sullivan appearance. A pair of American television appearances followed, in episodes of Ben Casey and The Farmer's Daughter. He also recorded a single and album for Colpix Records, which charted but weren't huge hits.

From 1965 to 1971, Jones was a member of The Monkees, a pop-rock group formed expressly for a TV show of the same name. With Screen Gems producing the series, Jones was shortlisted for auditions, as he was the only Monkee who was signed to a deal with the studio, but still had to meet producers Bob Rafelson and Bert Schneider's standards.

He appeared in one episode of The Brady Bunch and in two episodes of Love, American Style. He also appeared, in animated form, on an episode of The New Scooby-Doo Movies plus Spongebob Squarepants in Spongebob Vs. The Big One as himself.

As a Monkee, Jones sang lead vocals on many of the group's songs, including "I Wanna Be Free" and "Daydream Believer." After the show went off the air and the group disbanded, he continued to perform solo, later joining with fellow-Monkee Micky Dolenz and songwriters Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart as a short-lived group called Dolenz, Jones, Boyce & Hart.

He guest-starred as himself on the TV Show Sabrina The Teenage Witch and sang Daydream Believer to Sabrina.

In 1978 he appeared with Micky Dolenz in Harry Nilsson's play The Point at the Mermaid Theatre in London. Jones as Oblio and Dolenz as The Count. Also, Jones makes a cameo appearance as himself in the SpongeBob SquarePants episode "SpongeBob vs. The Big One" (his appearance was meant to be a pun on Davy Jones' Locker).

In recent years, Jones performed with his former bandmates in reunion tours and appeared in several productions of Oliver! as Fagin. He continued to race horses with some success in his native England, while residing in Beavertown, Pennsylvania, United States. He owns and races horses in the United States and served as a commercial spokesman for Colonial Downs racetrack in Virginia. He has a residence in Stuart, Florida.

In April 2006, Jones recorded the single "Your Personal Penguin," written by children's author Sandra Boynton, as a companion piece to her new board book of the same title. On 1 November 2007, the Boynton book and CD titled "Blue Moo" was released. Davy is featured in the book and on the CD, singing "Your Personal Penguin" and has become a close friend of Boynton as a result of the project. In 2007 Jones also recorded the theme for a campy movie comedy called Sexina: Popstar PI.

Jones also performed in the 2009 Flower Power Concert Series during Epcot's Flower and Garden Festival.

In December 2008, Yahoo Music named Davy Jones #1 teen idol of all time. In 2009 Jones was rated second in a list of 10 best teen idols compiled by Fox News.

In October 2009, Jones put to rest any rumours concerning a Monkees' reunion, stating he has no desire to work with the band. "It's not a case of dollars and cents. It's a case of satisfying yourself," said Jones. "I don't have anything to prove. The Monkees proved it for me."
Singles
Date Label/Catalog # Titles (A-side / B-side) Billboard Top Singles Cashbox Notes
??/1965 Colpix CP-764 Dream Girl / Take Me To Paradise
-

-
Credited as "David Jones."
??/1965 Colpix CP-784 What Are We Going To Do? / This Bouquet
93

94
Credited as "Mr. David Jones."
??/1965 Colpix CP-793 The Girl From Chelsea / Theme For A New Love
-

-
Credited as "David Jones."
04/1971 Bell 986 Do It In The Name Of Love / Lady Jane
-

-
By Micky Dolenz and Davy Jones. Released as by "The Monkees" in some countries, this is technically the group's last single during their original run, although by this point they had lost the rights to the name.
06/1971 Bell 45-111 Rainy Jane / Welcome To My Love
52

32

10/1971 Bell 45-136 I Really Love You / Sittin' In The Apple Tree
-

98

11/1971 Bell 45-159 Girl / Take My Love
-

-

01/1972 Bell 45-178 I'll Believe In You / Road To Love
-

-

??/1972 MGM K14458 You're A Lady / Who Was It
-

-

??/1973 MGM K14524 Rubberene / Rubberene
-

-
This single was released as a promo copy only.
05/1978 Warner Brothers 17161 (Hey Ra Ra Ra) Happy Birthday Mickey Mouse / You Don't Have To Be A Country Boy To Sing A Country Song
-

-
Issued in England only to commemorate Mickey Mouse's 50th Birthday
05/1981 Japan JAS-2007 It's Now / How Do You Know
-

-
Released in Japan only.
06/1981 Japan JAS-2010 Dance Gypsy / Can She Do It (Like She Dances)
-

-
Released in Japan only.
03/1982 Pioneer K-1517 Sixteen (Baby, You'll Soon Be Sixteen) / Baby, Hold Out
-

-
Released in Japan only.
12/1984 No Label JJ2001 I'll Love You Forever / When I Look Back On Christmas
-

-
Released in England only.
??/1987 Powderworks 374 After Your Heart / Hippy Hippy Shake
-

-
Released in Australia only.

NOTES: Jones recorded two singles with former Monkee Micky Dolenz and songwriters Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart under the group name "Dolenz, Jones, Boyce & Hart" on Capitol Records in 1975. They were "I Remember The Feeling"/"You & I" (Capitol 4180) and "I Love You (And I'm Glad That I Said It)"/"Savin' My Love For You" (Capitol 4271). Jones also released a single with Micky Dolenz and Peter Tork in 1976 titled "Christmas Is My Time of Year" / "White Christmas" (Christmas CDS-700/701) which saw a rerelease in 1986 (Christmas CDS-702/703). Lastly, Jones had an EP release in the UK with Micky Dolenz culling tracks from their performance in Harry Nilsson's "The Point!" performance in London in 1978: "Lifeline" (Jones) / "It's A Jungle Out There" (Dolenz) / "Gotta Get Up" (Jones & Dolenz). It was released as MCA 348.
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/30/09 at 6:13 am

* Michael Nesmith..Robert Michael Nesmith (December 30, 1942) is an American musician, songwriter, actor, producer, novelist, businessman, and philanthropist, perhaps best known for his time in the musical group The Monkees and on the TV series of the same name. Michael Nesmith is notable as a songwriter, including "Different Drum" sung by Linda Ronstadt with the Stone Poneys, as well as executive producer of the cult film Repo Man. In 1981 Nesmith won the first Grammy Award given for Video of the Year for his hour-long Elephant Parts. From 1965 to early 1970, Nesmith and Jones were members of the pop rock band The Monkees, created for the television situation comedy of the same name. The only Monkee to learn of the audition from the famous press advertisement asking for "four insane boys", Nesmith won his role largely by appearing blasé when he auditioned. He further distinguished himself by carrying a bag of laundry to be done on the way home, and wearing a wool cap to keep his hair out of his eyes, riding his motorcycle to the audition. Producers Bob Rafelson and Bert Schneider remembered "Wool Hat", and called Nesmith back.

Once he was cast, Screen Gems bought his songs so they could be used in the show. Many of the songs Nesmith wrote for The Monkees, such as "The Girl I Knew Somewhere", "Mary, Mary", and "Listen to the Band" became minor hits. One song he wrote, "You Just May Be The One", is in mixed meter, interspersing 5/4 bars into an otherwise 4/4 structure.

The Gretsch guitar company built a one-off natural finish 12-string electric guitar for Nesmith when he was performing with The Monkees (Gretsch had a promotional deal with the group). He earlier played a customized Gretsch twelve-string, which had originally been a six-string model.

As with the other Monkees, Nesmith came to be frustrated by the manufactured image of the whole project. He was permitted to write and produce two songs per album, and his music was frequently featured in episodes of the series.

The Monkees succeeded in ousting supervisor Don Kirshner (with Nesmith punching a hole in a wall, to make a point with Kirshner and attorney Herb Moelis), and took control of their records and song choices, but they worked as a four-man group on only one album. The band never overcame the credibility problems they faced when word spread that they had not played on their first records (at Nesmith's instigation, calling the band's first non-studio press conference, where he called More of The Monkees "probably the worst record in the history of the world"). However, their singles and albums continued to sell well, until the disastrous release of Head.

Nesmith's last Monkees commitment was a Kool-Aid commercial, in April 1970. With the band's fortunes continuing to fall, Nesmith asked to be released from his contract, and had to pay a default: "I had three years left... at $150,000 a year," which he had to pay back. He continued to feel the financial bite for years afterwards, telling Playboy in 1980 "I had to start telling little tales to the tax man while they were putting tags on the furniture.". Indeed, while Nesmith had continued to produce his compositions with the Monkees, he withheld many of the songs from the final Monkees' albums, only to release them on his post-Monkees solo records.
Later career
Further information: Pacific Arts Corporation

As he prepared for his exit from The Monkees, Nesmith was approached by John Ware of The Corvettes, a band that featured Nesmith's friend John London (who played on some of the earliest pre-Monkees Nesmith 45s as well as numerous Monkees sessions) and had 45s produced by Nesmith for the Dot label in 1969. Ware wanted Nesmith to put together a band. Nesmith said he would be interested only if noted pedal steel player Orville "Red" Rhodes would be a part of the project, and a long musical partnership was born that would continue until Rhodes' untimely death in 1995. The new band was christened Michael Nesmith and the First National Band and went on to record three albums for RCA Records in 1970.

Nesmith has been considered one of the pioneers of country-rock (along with Gram Parsons) and had moderate commercial success with the First National Band. Their second single, Joanne hit #21 on the Billboard chart & #17 on Cashbox, with the follow-up "Silver Moon" making #42 Billboard/#28 Cashbox. Two more singles charted ("Nevada Fighter" #70 Billboard/#73 Cashbox & "Propinquity" #95 Cashbox) and the first two LP's charted in the lower regions of the Billboard album chart. No clear answer has ever been given for the band's breakup, the albums they recorded remain on par with the Flying Burrito Brothers, Poco and New Riders of the Purple Sage as some of the best country-rock music.

Nesmith followed up with the Second National Band, a band that besides Nesmith, consisted of Michael Cohen (keyboards and Moog), Johnny Meeks (bass), Jack Panelli (drums) and the always present Orville Rhodes (pedal steel), as well as an appearance by singer, musician, and songwriter José Feliciano (conga drums). The album, Tantamount to Treason, Volume I, was a commercial and critical disaster. Nesmith then recorded And The Hits Just Keep On Comin', featuring only him on guitar and Red Rhodes on pedal steel.

Nesmith got more heavily involved in producing, and was given a label of his own through Elektra Records, Countryside. It featured a number of artists that were produced by Nesmith, including Garland Frady and Red Rhodes. The staff band at Countryside also helped Nesmith on his next, and last, RCA album, Pretty Much Your Standard Ranch Stash.

In the mid-1970s Nesmith briefly collaborated as a songwriter with Linda Hargrove, resulting in the tune "I've Never Loved Anyone More", a hit for Lynn Anderson and recorded by many others, as well as the songs "Winonah" and "If You Will Walk With Me" which were both recorded by Hargrove. Of all three songs, only "Winonah" was recorded by Nesmith himself. During this same period, Nesmith started his multimedia company Pacific Arts, which initially put out audio records, 8-tracks and cassettes, followed in 1981 with "video records." Nesmith recorded a number of LPs for his label, and had a moderate worldwide hit in 1977 with his song "Rio", the single taken from the album From A Radio Engine To The Photon Wing.

During this time, Nesmith created a video clip for "Rio" which, in a roundabout way, helped spur Nesmith's creation of a television program called Pop Clips for the Nickelodeon cable network. In 1980, Nesmith's Pop Clips was sold to Time Warner/Amex consortium. Time Warner/Amex developed Pop Clips into the MTV network. Nesmith's single "Cruisin'" was the first video of the MTV generation. Nesmith also won the first Grammy Award (1981) given for Video of the Year for his hour-long Elephant Parts and also had a short-lived series on NBC inspired by the video called "Michael Nesmith in Television Parts". Television Parts concept however included many other artists who were unknown at the time but who went on to become major stars in their own right. Jay Leno, Jerry Seinfeld, Garry Shandling, Whoopi Goldberg, Arsenio Hall all became well known artists after their appearances on Nesmith's show. The basic concept of the show was to have comics render their stand-up routines into short comedy films much like the ones in Elephant Parts. Nesmith assembled writers Jack Handy, William Martin, John Levenstein, and Michael Kaplan; Directors William Dear (who had directed Elephant Parts) and Alan Myerson, and Producer Ward Sylvester to create the show. The half hour show show ran for 8 episodes in the summer of 1985 on NBC Thursday nights in prime time.

Pacific Arts Video became a pioneer in the home video market, producing and distributing a wide variety of videotaped programs. Pacific Arts Video eventually ceased operations after an acrimonious contract dispute with PBS over home video licensing rights and payments for several series, including Ken Burns' The Civil War. The dispute escalated into a law suit that went to jury trial in Federal Court in Los Angeles. On February 3, 1999, a jury awarded Nesmith and his company Pacific Arts $48.875 million dollars in compensatory and punitive damages, prompting his widely-quoted comment, "It's like finding your grandmother stealing your stereo. You're happy to get your stereo back, but it's sad to find out your grandmother is a thief." PBS appealed the ruling, but the appeal never reached the court, and a settlement was reached with the amount paid to Pacifc Arts and Nesmith results kept confidential.

He was the executive producer for the movies Repo Man, Tapeheads, and Timerider, as well as his own solo recording and film projects. In 1998, Nesmith published his first novel, The Long Sandy Hair of Neftoon Zamora. His latest album, Rays was released on April 4, 2006.

During the 1990s, Nesmith, as Trustee and President of the Gihon foundation, hosted the Council on Ideas, a gathering of intellectuals from different fields who were asked to identify the most important issues of their day and publish the result. The Gihon ceased the program in 2000 and started a new Program for the Performing Arts.

In 1992, Nesmith undertook a concert tour of North America to promote the CD release of his RCA solo albums (although he included the song "Rio", from the album From a Radio Engine to the Photon Wing. The concert tour ended at the Britt Festival in Oregon. A video, Live at the Britt Festival, and a CD, Live at the Britt Festival were released capturing the 1992 concert .

In 1995, he reunited with the Monkees to record their last studio album (and first to feature all four since Head) titled Justus, released in 1996. He also wrote and directed a Monkees television special, and briefly toured the UK with the band in 1997.

Nesmith's first novel "The Long Sandy Hair of Neftoon Zamora" was developed originally as an online project and was later published as a hard cover book by St Martin's Press. Nesmith's second novel "The America Gene" was released in July, 2009 as an online download from Videoranch.com.

Nesmith spent a decade as a board of trustees member, nominating member and vice-chair of the American Film Institute and is currently President and chairman of the board of trustees of the Gihon Foundation.

Nesmith's current project is Videoranch 3D, a virtual environment on the internet that hosts live performances at various virtual venues inside the Ranch. He performed live inside Videoranch 3D on May 25, 2009. (http://www.videoranch.com/html/musicrise.html)

In the early 1980s, Nesmith teamed up with satirist P.J. O'Rourke to ride his vehicle Timerider in the annual Baja 1000 roadrace. This is chronicled in O'Rourke's 2009 book Driving Like Crazy.
U.S. Singles
Date Label/Catalog # Titles (A-side / B-side) Billboard Top Singles Cashbox Billboard Adult Contemp Notes
1963 Highness HN-13 Wanderin' / Well Well
-

-

-
Credited as "Mike Nesmith." Vanity pressing.
1963 Omnibus 239 How Can You Kiss Me / Just A Little Love
-

-

-
Credited as "Mike & John & Bill." John London is the bassist, later of Nesmith's First National Band. Bill Sleeper is the drummer. (The trio broke up when Sleeper was drafted into the US Army.)
01/1966 Edan 1001 Just A Little Love / Curson Terrace
-

-

-
A-side is same as Omnibus 239. B-side is credited to "Mike & Tony" and has no Nesmith involvement.
10/1965 Colpix CP-787 The New Recruit / A Journey With Michael Blessing
-

-

-
Credited to "Michael Blessing."
01/1966 Colpix CP-792 Until It's Time For You To Go / What Seems To Be The Trouble Officer
-

-

-
Credited to "Michael Blessing."
04/1966 RCA 47-8807 Do Not Ask For Love / Buttermilk
-

-

-
Credited to "The New Society." A-side has no Nesmith involvement. B-side was verified by Bill Chadwick, member of the group, as having Nesmith as a background vocalist.
07/1968 Dot 45-17152 Tapioca Tundra / Don't Cry Now
-

-

-
Credited to "The Wichita Train Whistle." Group was created and led by Nesmith, though he does not appear on the recordings as either musician or vocalist. "Don't Cry Now" is edited from LP version.
07/1970 RCA 47-9853 Little Red Rider / Rose City Chimes
-

-

-
Credited to "Michael Nesmith and the First National Band."
08/1970 RCA 74-0368 "Joanne"/ One Rose
21

17

6
Credited to "Michael Nesmith and the First National Band."
11/1970 RCA 74-0399 Silver Moon / Lady of the Valley
42

28

7
Credited to "Michael Nesmith and the First National Band."
04/1971 RCA 74-0453 Nevada Fighter / Here I Am
70

73

-
Credited to "Michael Nesmith and the First National Band." Issued with picture sleeve.
06/1971 RCA 74-0491 Texas Morning / Tumbling Tumbleweeds
-

-

-
Credited to "Michael Nesmith and the First National Band." Single released as promo with both songs on B-side and "Texas" only on A-side with release #SPS-45-263.
06/1971 RCA 74-0540 I've Just Begun To Care (Propinquity) / Only Bound
-

95

-
Credited to "Michael Nesmith and the First National Band."
01/1972 RCA 74-0629 Mama Rocker / Lazy Lady
-

-

-
Credited to "Michael Nesmith and the Second National Band." "Mama Rocker" is faded out early versus LP version.
08/1972 RCA 74-0804 Roll With The Flow / Keep On
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"Roll With The Flow" is edited from LP version.
1976 RCA 447-0868 Joanne / Silver Moon
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Reissue credited to "Michael Nesmith and the First National Band." Early pressings on red label, later pressings on black label.
03/1977 Pacific Arts WIP6373 Rio / Life, The Unsuspecting Captive
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06/1978 Pacific Arts PAC-101 Roll With The Flow / I've Just Begun To Care
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Both songs are edited from the LP versions.
1978? Pacific Arts PAC-104 Rio / Casablanca Moonlight
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Issued with picture sleeve.
06/1979 Pacific Arts PAC-106 Magic / Dance
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08/1979 Pacific Arts PAC-108 Cruisin' / Horserace
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1998 Collectibles COL-4759 Joanne / Silver Moon
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/30/09 at 6:28 am

* Jeff Lynne..Jeffrey Lynne (born 30 December 1947 in Shard End, Birmingham) is a two-time Ivor Novello Award recipient and Grammy Award-winning English songwriter, composer, arranger, singer, guitarist, and record producer who gained fame as the leader of Electric Light Orchestra and was a co-founder and member of The Traveling Wilburys. Lynne has produced recordings for artists such as The Beatles, Brian Wilson, Roy Orbison, Del Shannon and Tom Petty. He has co-written songs with Petty and also with George Harrison whose 1987 album Cloud Nine was co-produced by Lynne and Harrison. His compositions include "Evil Woman", "Telephone Line", "Livin' Thing", "Mr. Blue Sky", "Don't Bring Me Down" and "Sweet Talkin' Woman".

In 2008, The Washington Times named Lynne the fourth greatest record producer in music history..Lynne contributed songs to The Move's last two albums while formulating, with Roy Wood and Bev Bevan, a band built around a fusion of rock and European classical music, a project which would eventually become the highly successful Electric Light Orchestra (ELO). Problems led to Wood's departure in 1972, after the band's eponymous first album, leaving Jeff Lynne as the band's dominant creative force. Thereafter followed a succession of band personnel changes and increasingly popular albums: 1973's ELO II and On The Third Day, 1974's Eldorado and 1975's Face the Music.
Electric Light Orchestra (1973) On the Third Day US album cover.

By A New World Record, Lynne had almost completely abandoned the roots of the group for a dense and unique pop-rock sound mixed with studio strings and layered vocals and tight, catchy pop singles. Jeff Lynne's now almost complete creative dominance as producer, songwriter, arranger, lead singer and guitarist could make ELO appear to be an almost solo effort. However, the ELO sound and the focus of Lynne's writing was also indelibly shaped by Louis Clark's co-arranging (notably the large string sections), Bev Bevan's driving, primitivist drumming, and Richard Tandy's integration of then-novel keyboard technology.

The pinnacle of ELO's chart success and worldwide popularity was the expansive 1977 double album Out of the Blue, which was largely conceived in a Swiss chalet during a two-week writing marathon. The band's 1978 world tour featured an elaborate "space ship" set and laser light show. In order to recreate the complex instrumental textures of their albums, the band used pre-recorded supplemental backing tracks in live performances. Although that practice has now become commonplace, it caused considerable derision in the press of the time. Jeff Lynne has often stated that he prefers the creative environment of the studio to the rigours and tedium of touring.

In 1979, Lynne followed up the success of Out of the Blue with Discovery, an album primarily associated with its two disco-flavored singles ("Shine a Little Love" and "Last Train to London") and with a title that was a word play on "disco" and "very" . However, the remaining seven non-disco tracks on the album reflected Lynne's range as a pop-rock songwriter, including a heavy, mid-tempo rock anthem ("Don't Bring Me Down") that, despite its use of a drum loop, could be considered the antithesis of disco. In an April 2008 interview, Lynne fondly recalled his forays into dance music:
“ I love the force of disco. I love the freedom it gave me to make a different rhythms across it. I enjoyed that really steady driving beat. Just steady as a rock. I’ve always liked that simplicity in the bass drum.

In 1979, Lynne rejected an offer for ELO to headline the Knebworth Concert in the UK, allowing Led Zeppelin to headline instead.

In the absence of any touring to support Discovery, Lynne had time to contribute five tracks to the soundtrack for the 1980 movie musical Xanadu (film). The score yielded a pair of top-40 singles, with "Xanadu" reaching number one in the UK. Nevertheless, Lynne was not integrated into the development of the film and his material subsequently had only superficial attachment to the plot. Despite its later resurgence as a cult favourite, Xanadu performed weakly at the box-office. Lynne subsequently disavowed his limited contribution to the project, although he later re-recorded the title song (with his lead vocal) for the 2000 box-set Flashback. In 2007, the film was loosely adapted into a successful Broadway musical, incorporating almost all of the songs from the original film, and also using two other ELO hits: Strange Magic and Evil Woman.

In 1981, Lynne took the band in a somewhat different direction with the science-fiction themed album Time, reaching number one for two weeks in the UK, producing the second Top 3 single in less than two years, jettisoning the strings in favour of heavily synthesised textures. Following a marginally successful tour, Lynne kept this general approach with 1983's Secret Messages and a final contractually-obligated ELO album Balance of Power in 1986. Although ELO could still get a hit single into the Top 40, Lynne is assumed to have tired of the artistic constraints and promotional demands imposed by the ELO concept. Lynne discusses the contractually-obligated nature of the final albums on the short interview included with the 'Zoom' DVD. With only three remaining official members (Lynne, Bevan and Tandy) and the trending of pop music toward a new generation of video-friendly acts, ELO had run its course and Lynne began devoting his full energy to producing.

During his time in the Electric Light Orchestra, Lynne did manage to release a few recordings under his own name. In 1976, Lynne covered The Beatles songs "With a Little Help from My Friends" and "Nowhere Man" for All This and World War II. In 1977, Lynne released his first ever solo single, the disco-flavoured "Doin' That Crazy Thing"/"Goin' Down To Rio". Despite ELO's high profile at that time, it received little airplay and failed to chart. In 1984 Lynne and ELO keyboardist Richard Tandy contributed two original songs "Video!" and "Let It Run" to the film Electric Dreams (he also provided a third song, "Sooner or Later", which was released as the b-side of "Video!"). Lynne also wrote the song "The Story of Me" which was recorded by the Everly Brothers on their comeback album EB84.
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 12/30/09 at 7:54 am


Sounds like Howard is missing Sir Billzy... ;)


NOPE! :P

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 12/30/09 at 7:57 am

Now it looks like he's spending time with Rachel Uchitel.  ::)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: gibbo on 12/30/09 at 8:36 am


I've always been a fan of Mary Tyler-Moore but never knew half the things about her you mentioned in her bio, Nnny. Nice job. thanks for posting.  :)


I really enjoyed The Mary Tyler Moore Show!  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: gibbo on 12/30/09 at 8:38 am

That bio on Mike Nesmith made for interesting reading.

Jeff Lynne ... one of the all time greats. He had a purple patch with hose songs mentioned in the bio ("Evil Woman", "Telephone Line", "Livin' Thing", "Mr. Blue Sky", "Don't Bring Me Down" and "Sweet Talkin' Woman").  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/30/09 at 9:33 am


I really enjoyed The Mary Tyler Moore Show!  :)

As did I. :)

That bio on Mike Nesmith made for interesting reading.

Jeff Lynne ... one of the all time greats. He had a purple patch with hose songs mentioned in the bio ("Evil Woman", "Telephone Line", "Livin' Thing", "Mr. Blue Sky", "Don't Bring Me Down" and "Sweet Talkin' Woman").  :)

I was thinking it was too much reading, but if you read it..I guess not
ELO had some great songs. :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/30/09 at 9:36 am


Now it looks like he's spending time with Rachel Uchitel.  ::)

Doing the party scene together.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 12/30/09 at 1:10 pm

I met Davey Jones. My mother was working at a theatre and he was one of the actors (preforming in the play The Boyfriend along with Mary Jo Catlett from Differ't Strokes fame as well as other stuff). My mother introduced me to him. She told him that I wanted to go into acting. We shook hands and he asked me about it and I was totally speechless.  :-[  My mother had a big cast party at our house and he was supposed to come to it but didn't.  :\'( :\'( :\'(  I could say that I felt like Marcia Brady but that didn't happen. But Mary Jo Catlett did. I still have her autograph somewhere. I don't think I got Davey's.



BTW, Mike Nesmith was the driving force behind the formation of a little channel called MTV.




Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Frank on 12/30/09 at 1:28 pm


I met Davey Jones. My mother was working at a theatre and he was one of the actors (preforming in the play The Boyfriend along with Mary Jo Catlett from Differ't Strokes fame as well as other stuff). My mother introduced me to him. She told him that I wanted to go into acting. We shook hands and he asked me about it and I was totally speechless.  :-
As did I. :)I was thinking it was too much reading, but if you read it..I guess not
ELO had some great songs. :)


E.L.O, one of the better 70s bands. Telephone Line, Evil woman, Can't get it out of my head...good stuff.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/30/09 at 1:30 pm


I met Davey Jones. My mother was working at a theatre and he was one of the actors (preforming in the play The Boyfriend along with Mary Jo Catlett from Differ't Strokes fame as well as other stuff). My mother introduced me to him. She told him that I wanted to go into acting. We shook hands and he asked me about it and I was totally speechless.  :-[  My mother had a big cast party at our house and he was supposed to come to it but didn't.  :\'( :\'( :\'(  I could say that I felt like Marcia Brady but that didn't happen. But Mary Jo Catlett did. I still have her autograph somewhere. I don't think I got Davey's.



BTW, Mike Nesmith was the driving force behind the formation of a little channel called MTV.




Cat

Wow that is real interesting :) I know I would be nervous meeting anyone famous. Mary Jo was she the second housekeeper?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 12/30/09 at 2:05 pm


Wow that is real interesting :) I know I would be nervous meeting anyone famous. Mary Jo was she the second housekeeper?



Yup-she was. She was also on M*A*S*H (the Nurses episode where Margaret started crying to the nurses because they never offered her a lousy cup of coffee), on the old Black Flag commercials as well as the "Spirit of the first turkey lovers." I think she also does a voice on Spongebob.



Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 12/30/09 at 7:58 pm

Jeff Lynne was also with Traveling Wilburys.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Womble on 12/30/09 at 8:39 pm

I'm a big fan of E.L.O. and enjoyed the bio on Jeff Lynne. Thanks for posting, Ninny.  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/31/09 at 6:24 am


Jeff Lynne was also with Traveling Wilburys.

Yes he was,with Tom Petty, George Harrison,Roy Orbison & Bob Dylan

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/31/09 at 6:25 am


I'm a big fan of E.L.O. and enjoyed the bio on Jeff Lynne. Thanks for posting, Ninny.  :)

I've always enjoyed their music. Glad you enjoyed it :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/31/09 at 6:30 am

The word of the day...Ventriloquist
A ventriloquist is someone who can speak without moving their lips and who entertains people by making their words appear to be spoken by a puppet
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/31/09 at 6:34 am

The birthday of the day...Anthony Hopkins
Sir Philip Anthony Hopkins, CBE (born 31 December 1937) is a Welsh film, stage and television actor. Considered to be one of film's greatest living actors, he is known for his portrayal of cannibalistic serial killer Hannibal Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs, its sequel, Hannibal, and its prequel, Red Dragon. Other prominent film credits include Magic, The Elephant Man, 84 Charing Cross Road, Dracula, Legends of the Fall, The Remains of the Day, Amistad, Nixon and Fracture. Hopkins was born and raised in Wales, and became a U.S. citizen on 12 April 2000. He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2003 and was made a Fellow of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts in 2008.
In 1965, after several years in repertory, he was spotted by Sir Laurence Olivier, who invited him to join the Royal National Theatre. Hopkins became Olivier's understudy, and filled in when Olivier was struck with appendicitis during a production of August Strindberg's The Dance of Death. Olivier later noted in his memoir, Confessions of an Actor, that, "A new young actor in the company of exceptional promise named Anthony Hopkins was understudying me and walked away with the part of Edgar like a cat with a mouse between its teeth."

Despite his success at the National, Hopkins tired of repeating the same roles nightly and yearned to be in movies. In 1968, he got his break in The Lion in Winter playing Richard I, along with Peter O'Toole, Katharine Hepburn, and future James Bond star Timothy Dalton, who played Philip II of France.

Although Hopkins continued in theatre (most notably at the National Theatre as Lambert Le Roux in Pravda by David Hare and Howard Brenton and as Antony in Antony and Cleopatra opposite Judi Dench as well as in the Broadway production of Peter Shaffer's Equus, directed by John Dexter) he gradually moved away from it to become more established as a television and film actor. He made his small-screen debut in a 1967 BBC broadcast of A Flea in Her Ear. He has since gone on to enjoy a long career, winning many plaudits and awards for his performances. Hopkins was made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE) in 1987, and a Knight Bachelor in 1993 In 1996, Hopkins was awarded an honorary fellowship from the University of Wales, Lampeter.

Hopkins has stated that his role as Burt Munro, whom he portrayed in his 2005 film The World's Fastest Indian, was his favourite. He also asserted that Munro was the easiest role that he had played because both men have a similar outlook on life.

In 2006, Hopkins was the recipient of the Golden Globe Cecil B. DeMille Award for lifetime achievement. In 2008, he received the BAFTA Academy Fellowship Award.

Hopkins is set to portray Odin, the father of Thor, in the upcoming film adaptation of Marvel Comics' Thor.
Acting style

Hopkins is renowned for his preparation for roles. He has confessed in interviews that once he has committed to a project, he will go over his lines as many times as is needed (sometimes upwards of 200) until the lines sound natural to him, so that he can "do it without thinking". This leads to an almost casual style of delivery that belies the amount of groundwork done beforehand. While it can allow for some careful improvisation, it has also brought him into conflict with the occasional director who departs from the script, or demands what the actor views as an excessive number of takes. Hopkins has stated that after he is finished with a scene, he simply discards the lines, not remembering them later on. This is unlike others who usually remember their lines from a film even years later. Richard Attenborough, who has directed Hopkins on five occasions, found himself going to great lengths during the filming of Shadowlands (1993) to accommodate the differing approaches of his two stars (Hopkins and Debra Winger), who shared many scenes. Whereas Hopkins liked to keep rehearsals to a minimum, preferring the spontaneity of a fresh take, Winger rehearsed continuously. To allow for this, Attenborough stood in for Hopkins during Winger's rehearsals, only bringing him in for the last one before a take. The director praised Hopkins for "this extraordinary ability to make you believe when you hear him that it is the very first time he has ever said that line. It's an incredible gift."

In addition, Hopkins is a gifted mimic, adept at turning his native Welsh accent into whatever is required by a character. He duplicated the voice of his late mentor, Laurence Olivier, for additional scenes in Spartacus in its 1991 restoration. His interview on the 1998 relaunch edition of the British TV talk show Parkinson featured an impersonation of comedian Tommy Cooper.
Hannibal Lecter

Hopkins' most famous role is as the cannibalistic serial killer Hannibal Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Actor in 1992, opposite Jodie Foster as Clarice Starling, who won for Best Actress. The film won Best Picture, Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay. It is the shortest lead performance to win an Oscar, as Hopkins only appears on screen for little over sixteen minutes. Hopkins reprised his role as Lecter twice (Hannibal in 2001, Red Dragon in 2002). His original portrayal of the character in The Silence of the Lambs has been labelled by the American Film Institute as the number-one film villain. At the time he was offered the role, Hopkins was making a return to the London stage, performing in M. Butterfly. He had come back to Britain after living for a number of years in Hollywood, having all but given up on a career there, saying, "Well that part of my life's over; it's a chapter closed. I suppose I'll just have to settle for being a respectable actor poncing around the West End and doing respectable BBC work for the rest of my life."

Hopkins played the iconic villain in adaptations of the first three of the Lecter novels by Thomas Harris. The author was reportedly very pleased with Hopkins' portrayal of his antagonist. However, Hopkins stated that Red Dragon would feature his final performance as the character, and that he would not reprise even a narrative role in the latest addition to the series, Hannibal Rising.
Hopkins is a talented pianist. In 1986, he released a single called "Distant Star". It peaked at #75 in the UK charts. In 2007, he announced he would retire temporarily from the screen to tour around the world. Hopkins has also written music for the concert hall, in collaboration with Stephen Barton as orchestrator. These compositions include The Masque of Time, given its world premiere with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra in October 2008, and Schizoid Salsa.

In 1996, Hopkins directed his first film, August, an adaptation of Chekhov's Uncle Vanya set in Wales. His first screenplay, an experimental drama called Slipstream, which he also directed and scored, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2007.

Hopkins is a fan of the BBC sitcom Only Fools and Horses, and once remarked in an interview how he would love to appear in the series. Writer John Sullivan saw the interview, and with Hopkins in mind created the character Danny Driscoll, a local villain. However, filming of the new series coincided with the filming of The Silence of the Lambs, making Hopkins unavailable. The role instead went to his friend Roy Marsden.

Hopkins has played many famous historical and fictional characters including:

    * John Quincy Adams (Amistad, 1997)
    * Pierre Bezukhov (War and Peace, 1972)
    * William Bligh (The Bounty, 1984)
    * Donald Campbell (Across the Lake, 1988)
    * Count Galeazzo Ciano (Mussolini and I, 1985)
    * Charles Dickens (The Great Inimitable Mr. Dickens, 1970)
    * John Frost (A Bridge Too Far, 1977)
    * Bruno Hauptmann (The Lindbergh Kidnapping Case, 1976)
    * Abraham Van Helsing (Bram Stoker's Dracula, 1992)
    * Adolf Hitler (The Bunker, 1981)
    * Hrothgar (Beowulf, 2007)
    * Dr. John Harvey Kellogg (The Road to Wellville (film), 1994)
    * Dr. Hannibal Lecter (The Silence of the Lambs, 1991)
      (Hannibal, 2001) (Red Dragon, 2002)
    * C. S. Lewis (Shadowlands (film), 1993)



    * David Lloyd George (Young Winston, 1972)
    * Marcus Crassus (Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of Spartacus, 1992)
    * Burt Munro (The World's Fastest Indian, 2005)
    * Richard Nixon (Nixon, 1995)
    * Iago (Othello, 1981)
    * Paul the Apostle (Peter and Paul, 1981)
    * Pablo Picasso (Surviving Picasso, 1996)
    * Ptolemy I Soter (Alexander, 2004)
    * Quasimodo (The Hunchback of Notre Dame, 1982)
    * Yitzak Rabin (Victory at Entebbe, 1976)
    * Richard Lionheart (The Lion in Winter, 1968)
    * Titus Andronicus (Titus, 1999)
    * Frederick Treves (The Elephant Man, 1980)
    * Don Diego de la Vega/Zorro (The Mask of Zorro, 1998)

Awards

Besides his win for The Silence of the Lambs, Hopkins has been Oscar-nominated for The Remains of the Day (1993), Nixon (1995) and Amistad (1997).

Hopkins won the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in 1973 for his performance as Pierre Bezukhov in the BBC's production of War and Peace, and additionally for The Silence of the Lambs and Shadowlands. He received nominations in the same category for Magic and The Remains of the Day and as Best Supporting Actor for The Lion in Winter.

He won Emmy Awards for his roles in The Lindbergh Kidnapping Case and The Bunker, and was Emmy-nominated for The Hunchback of Notre Dame and Great Expectations. He won the directing and the acting award, both for Slipstream, at Switzerland's Locarno International Film Festival.

Hopkins became a Fellow of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) at the Orange British Academy Film Awards in February 2008.

In 1979 Anthony Hopkins became an Honorary Member of the Royal Academy of Music, London.
Filmography
Year Film Role Notes
1967 A Flea in Her Ear Etienne Plucheux TV
The White Bus Brechtian
1968 The Lion in Winter Richard Nominated — BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role
1969 The Looking Glass War John Avery
Hamlet Claudius
Department S Greg Halliday TV
1970 The Great Inimitable Mr. Dickens Charles Dickens Television film
Hearts and Flowers Bob TV – Play for Today
Nominated — British Academy Television Award for Best Actor
1971 When Eight Bells Toll Philip Calvert
1972 Young Winston David Lloyd George
War and Peace Pierre Bezukhov British Academy Television Award for Best Actor
A Doll's House Torvald Helmer
1974 The Girl from Petrovka Kostya
QB VII Dr. Adam Kelno
Juggernaut Supt. John McCleod
All Creatures Great and Small Siegfried Farnon TV
The Childhood Friend Alexander Tashkov TV – Play for Today
1976 Dark Victory Dr. Michael Grant TV
The Lindbergh Kidnapping Case Bruno Richard Hauptmann Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor – Miniseries or a Movie
Victory at Entebbe Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
1977 A Bridge Too Far Lt. Col. John D. Frost
Audrey Rose Elliot Hoover Nominated — Saturn Award for Best Actor
1978 Magic Charles "Corky" Withers/Voice of Fats Nominated — BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
International Velvet Captain Johnson
1979 Mayflower: The Pilgrims' Adventure Capt. Jones TV
1980 The Elephant Man Dr. Frederick Treves
A Change of Seasons Adam Evans
1981 The Bunker Adolf Hitler Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor – Miniseries or a Movie
Peter and Paul Paul of Tarsus TV
Othello Othello TV
1982 The Hunchback of Notre Dame Quasimodo TV
Nominated — Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor – Miniseries or a Movie
1983 A Married Man John Strickland TV
1984 The Bounty Lieutenant William Bligh
1985 Hollywood Wives Neil Gray TV
Arch of Triumph Dr. Ravic TV
Guilty Conscience Arthur Jamison TV
Mussolini and I Count Galeazzo Ciano TV
CableACE Award for Actor in a Movie or Miniseries
The Good Father Bill Hooper
1987 84 Charing Cross Road Frank Doel Moscow International Film Festival Award for Best Actor
1988 The Dawning Angus Barrie
Across the Lake Donald Campbell CBE TV
A Chorus of Disapproval Dafydd Ap Llewellyn
The Tenth Man Jean Louis Chavel Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film
1989 Great Expectations Abel Magwitch TV miniseries
Nominated — Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor – Miniseries or a Movie
1990 Desperate Hours Tim Comell
1991 The Silence of the Lambs Dr. Hannibal Lecter Academy Award for Best Actor
BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor
Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actor
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
Sant Jordi Award for Best Foreign Actor
Saturn Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
Nominated — London Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
One Man's War Joel TV
1992 Freejack Ian McCandless
Spotswood Errol Wallace
Howards End Henry J. Wilcox
Bram Stoker's Dracula Professor Abraham Van Helsing Nominated — Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor
Chaplin George Hayden
1993 The Trial The Priest
The Innocent Bob Glass
The Remains of the Day James Stevens David di Donatello for Best Foreign Actor
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
London Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor also for Shadowlands
National Board of Review Award for Best Actor also for Shadowlands
Southeastern Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor also for Shadowlands
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Actor
Nominated — BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
Shadowlands Jack Lewis BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor also for The Remains of the Day
National Board of Review Award for Best Actor also for The Remains of the Day
Southeastern Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor also for The Remains of the Day
1994 The Road to Wellville Dr. John Harvey Kellogg
Legends of the Fall Col. William Ludlow Western Heritage Awards — Bronze Wrangler for Theatrical Motion Picture shared with Edward Zwick (director), William D. Wittliff (writer/producer) and Brad Pitt (principal actor)
1995 Nixon Richard Nixon Nominated — Academy Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role
Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
1996 August Ieuan Davies also directed, composed score
Surviving Picasso Pablo Picasso
1997 The Edge Charles Morse
Amistad John Quincy Adams Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture
Nominated — Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role
1998 The Mask of Zorro Don Diego de la Vega / Zorro
Meet Joe Black William Parrish Nominated — Saturn Award for Best Actor
1999 Instinct Ethan Powell
Titus Titus Andronicus Nominated — London Film Critics Circle Award for British Actor of the Year
2000 Mission: Impossible II Mission Commander Swanbeck uncredited
The Grinch The Narrator Voice
2001 Hannibal Dr. Hannibal Lecter Nominated — Saturn Award for Best Actor
Hearts in Atlantis Ted Brautigan
2002 Bad Company Officer Oakes
Red Dragon Dr. Hannibal Lecter
2003 The Human Stain Coleman Silk Hollywood Film Festival Award for Outstanding Achievement in Acting - Male Performer
2004 Alexander Ptolemy I Soter
2005 Proof Robert
The World's Fastest Indian Burt Munro New Zealand Screen Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role
2006 Bobby John Hollywood Film Festival Award for Ensemble of the Year
Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
All the King's Men Judge Irwin
2007 The Devil and Daniel Webster Daniel Webster TV
Slipstream Felix Bonhoeffer
Fracture Theodore "Ted" Crawford
Beowulf Hrothgar
The City of Your Final Destination Adam
2008 Where I Stand: The Hank Greenspun Story Hank Greenspun Voice
Immutable Dream of Snow Lion
2009 Bare Knuckles Xavier Jonas
2010 The Wolfman Sir John Talbot post-production
You Will Meet A Tall Dark Stranger filming
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/31/09 at 6:37 am

The co-birthday...Ben Kingsley
Sir Ben Kingsley, CBE (born Krishna Pandit Bhanji, 31 December 1943) is an English actor. He has won Oscar, BAFTA, Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild awards in his career. He is known for starring as Mohandas Gandhi in the film Gandhi in 1982, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Actor. Kingsley's first film role was a supporting turn in Fear Is the Key, released in 1972. Kingsley continued starring in bit roles in both film and television, including a role as Ron Jenkins on the soap opera Coronation Street from 1966 to 1967 and regular appearances as a defence counsel in the long-running British legal programme Crown Court. In 1975 he starred as Dante Gabriel Rossetti in the BBCs historical drama The Love School. He found fame only years later, starring as Mohandas Gandhi in the Academy Award-winning film Gandhi in 1982, his best-known role to date. The audience also agreed with the critics, and Gandhi was a box-office success. Kingsley won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal.
Kingsley at the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival

Kingsley has since appeared in a variety of roles. His credits included the films Turtle Diary, Maurice, Pascali's Island, Without a Clue (as Dr. Watson alongside Michael Caine's Sherlock Holmes), Suspect Zero, Bugsy, which led to an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor, Sneakers, Dave, Searching for Bobby Fischer, Schindler's List, Silas Marner, Death and the Maiden, Sexy Beast, for which he received another Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor, and House of Sand and Fog, which led to yet another Oscar nomination for Best Actor. He won a Crystal Globe award for outstanding artistic contribution to world cinema at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in 2001.

In 1997, he provided voice talent for the video game Ceremony of Innocence. In July 2006, he received an Emmy nomination for his performance in the made-for-TV film Mrs. Harris, in which he played famed cardiologist Herman Tarnower, who was murdered by his jilted lover, Jean Harris. Later that year, Kingsley appeared in an episode of The Sopranos entitled "Luxury Lounge", playing himself. In the show, Christopher Moltisanti and Carmine Lupertazzi offer him a role in the fictional slasher film "Cleaver", which he turns down. Lupertazzi offers him the role on the basis of Kingsley's real-life performance in Sexy Beast. In 2007, Kingsley appeared as a Polish American mobster in the Mafia comedy You Kill Me, and a Middle Eastern oil minister in War, Inc. Kingsley was asked to play Vulture in Spider-Man 3, but was cut out of the storyline.

Kingsley announced SBK-Pictures is bringing the story of the Native American Conley Sisters to the big screen in Whispers Like Thunder. Kingsley will be playing the role of Charles Curtis, the first part-Native American to become vice-president of the United States.
Honours

Kingsley was named a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2000. He was knighted in the 2001 New Years Honours list. On promotional material for the 2006 film Lucky Number Slevin, Kingsley was referred to as "Sir Ben Kingsley." At first, the actor was singled out for some criticism, as such titles had generally come to be omitted from professional credits by that time. It was claimed that the inclusion of "Sir" was a mistake by a studio executive.

His demand to be called 'Sir' was documented by the BBC, to some criticism. Since then, Kingsley appears to have altered his stance; credits for his latest films refer to him only as 'Ben Kingsley'. Penelope Cruz was unsure what to call him during the filming of Elegy as someone had told her she needed to refer to him as "Sir Ben". One day it slipped out as such, and she called him that for the rest of the shoot.

In 1984, he won a Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word or Nonmusical Recording for The Words of Gandhi. He was awarded the Indian civilian honor Padma Shri in 1985.

In addition, in 2008, Kingsley was awarded the "Cinema for Peace Honorary Award", for the portrayal of the humanitarian role-models Simon Wiesenthal, Itzhak Stern and Gandhi.
Filmography
Year Film Role Notes
1982 Gandhi Mohandas Gandhi film debut
Academy Award for Best Actor
1983 Betrayal Robert the film version of Harold Pinter's play
1985 Silas Marner: The Weaver of Raveloe Silas Marner
Harem Selim
1986 Turtle Diary William Snow screenplay by Harold Pinter
1987 The Secret of the Sahara (TV) Sholomon
Maurice Lasker-Jones
1988 Pascali's Island Basil Pascali
Without a Clue Dr. John Watson
Testimony - The Story of Shostakovich Dmitri Shostakovich
1989 Murderers Among Us: The Simon Wiesenthal Story Simon Wiesenthal
1990 The 5th Monkey Cunda
1991 Bugsy Meyer Lansky Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor
1992 Sneakers Cosmo
Freddie as F.R.O.7 Freddie The Frog Voice
1993 Searching for Bobby Fischer Bruce Pandolfini
Dave Vice President Gary Nance
Schindler's List Itzhak Stern
1994 Death and the Maiden Dr. Roberto Miranda
1995 Species Xavier Fitch
Joseph Potiphar
Moses Moses
1996 Twelfth Night Feste from the play by William Shakespeare
1997 Weapons of Mass Distraction (TV) Julian Messenger
The Assignment Amos
1998 The Tale of Sweeney Todd (TV) Sweeney Todd Screen Actors Guild Award nomination for Best Actor
1999 Alice in Wonderland (TV) Major Caterpillar
The Confession Harry Fertig
2000 What Planet Are YOU From? Graydon
Rules of Engagement Ambassador Mourain
Islam: Empire of Faith Narrator voice only
2001 Anne Frank: The Whole Story Otto Frank Won Screen Actor's Guild Award
Sexy Beast Don Logan Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor
AI: Artificial Intelligence Specialist voice
2002 The Triumph of Love Hermocrates Marivaux's play
Tuck Everlasting Man in the Yellow Suit
2003 House of Sand and Fog Massoud Behrani Academy Award nomination for Best Actor
2004 Thunderbirds "The Hood" loosely based on the super-marionation programme created by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson
Suspect Zero Benjamin O'Ryan
2005 A Sound of Thunder Charles Hatton
Oliver Twist Fagin
Mrs. Harris Herman Tarnower
BloodRayne Kagan
2006 The Sopranos (TV) Appearance as himself Season 6, Episode 72 - "Luxury Lounge"
Lucky Number Slevin The Rabbi
2007 You Kill Me Frank Falenczyk
The Last Legion Ambrosinus
The Ten Commandments Narrator (voice)
2008 Elegy David Kepesh
War, Inc. Walken
The Love Guru Guru Tugginmypudha
The Wackness Dr. Squires
Transsiberian Grinko
China's Stolen Children Narrator (voice)
Fifty Dead Men Walking Fergus
2009 Noah's Ark: The New Beginning Narrator (voice) post-production
Whispers Like Thunder Vice President Charles Curtis pre-production
Teen Patti Perci Trachtenberg post-production
Journey to Mecca Narrator (voice)
2010 Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time Nizam post-production
Shutter Island Dr. John Cawley post-production
2011 Taj Shah Jahan pre-production
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 12/31/09 at 6:39 am


The word of the day...Ventriloquist
A ventriloquist is someone who can speak without moving their lips and who entertains people by making their words appear to be spoken by a puppet
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Don't forget Waylan Flowers And Madam.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/31/09 at 6:41 am

*Val Kilmer..Val Edward Kilmer (born December 31, 1959) is an American actor. Originally a stage actor, Kilmer became popular in the mid-1980s after a string of appearances in comedy films, starting with Top Secret! (1984), then the cult classic Real Genius (1985), as well as blockbuster action films, including a role in Top Gun and a lead role in Willow.

During the 1990s, Kilmer gained critical respect after a string of films that were also commercially successful, including his roles as Jim Morrison in The Doors, Doc Holliday in 1993's Tombstone, Batman in 1995's Batman Forever, Chris Shiherlis in 1995's Heat and Simon Templar in 1997's The Saint. During the early 2000s, Kilmer appeared in several well-received roles, including The Salton Sea, Spartan, and supporting performances in Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, Alexander and as the voice of KITT in Knight Rider.
Filmography
Year Film Role Notes
1984 Top Secret! Nick Rivers Film debut
1985 Real Genius Chris Knight
1986 Top Gun Lt. Tom 'Iceman' Kazanski
The Murders in the Rue Morgue Phillipe Huron TV film
1987 The Man Who Broke 1,000 Chains Robert Eliot Burns/Eliot Roberts TV film
CableACE Award for Best Actor in a Movie or Miniseries
1988 Willow Madmartigan
1989 Billy the Kid William Bonney
Kill Me Again Jack Andrews
1991 The Doors Jim Morrison Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Best Performance - Male
1992 Thunderheart Ray Levoi
1993 The Real McCoy J.T. Barker
Tombstone Doc Holliday Based on a true story
Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Most Desirable Male
Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Best Performance - Male
True Romance Mentor
1995 Batman Forever Bruce Wayne/Batman Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Most Desirable Male also for Heat
Heat Chris Shiherlis Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Most Desirable Male also for Batman Forever
Nominated — Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor
Wings of Courage Jean Mermoz IMAX Film
1996 The Island of Dr Moreau Montgomery
The Ghost and the Darkness Col. John Henry Patterson Based on a true story
Dead Girl Dr. Dark
1997 The Saint Simon Templar
1998 The Prince of Egypt Moses/God Voice-over
1999 At First Sight Virgil 'Virg' Adamson
Joe the King Bob Henry
2000 Pollock Willem de Kooning
Red Planet Robby Gallagher
2002 The Salton Sea Danny Parker/ Tom Van Allen Limited release
Prism Award for Best Performance in a Theatrical Feature Film
Hard Cash FBI Agent Mark C. Cornell a.k.a. Run for the Money
2003 Wonderland John Holmes Based on the Wonderland Murders
The Missing Lt. Jim Ducharme
Blind Horizon Frank Kavanaugh
Masked and Anonymous Animal Wrangler
2004 Entourage The Sherpa Episode: "The Script and the Sherpa"
Spartan Robert Scott
Stateside Staff Sergeant Skeer
Alexander Philip
George and the Dragon El Cabillo uncredited
2005 Mindhunters Jake Harris
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang Perry Van Shrike/"Gay Perry" Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture
Nominated — Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor
2006 Summer Love The Wanted Man a.k.a. Dead Man's Bounty
Moscow Zero Andrey
10th & Wolf Murtha
Played Dillon
Déjà Vu Agent Andrew Pryzwarra
The Ten Commandments: The Musical Moses
2007 Have Dreams, Will Travel Henderson
Numb3rs Mason Lancer Episode: "Trust Metric"
2008 Comanche Moon Inish Scull TV mini-series based on the book
Knight Rider voice of KITT TV film based on 1980s TV series
Conspiracy MacPherson direct-to-video
Felon John Smith
Delgo Bogardus voice only
2:22 Maz
Columbus Day John
XIII Mongoose based on Belgian comic book XIII
2008 - 2009 Knight Rider voice of KITT TV series based on the 2008 TV film
2009 The Chaos Experiment Jimmy a.k.a. The Steam Experiment
Streets of Blood Detective Andy Devereaux
American Cowslip Todd Inglebrink
The Thaw Dr. David Kruipen
Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans Stevie Pruit
Hardwired Virgil
Fake Identity TBA awaiting release
Mr. Nobody The Stranger post-production
2010 Provinces of Night Warren Bloodworth post-production
The Irishman Joe Manditski post-production
MacGruber (I_am_a_loser_who_has_no_respect_for_women)h post-production
Tales of an Ancient Empire Rollo filming
Georgia Dutch Journalist filming
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 12/31/09 at 6:41 am

Val Kilmer is fantastic.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/31/09 at 6:46 am

*Donna Summer..Donna Summer (born LaDonna Adrian Gaines; December 31, 1948) is an American singer and songwriter who gained prominence during the disco era of music, earning the title "The Queen of Disco".

Summer was trained as a gospel singer before her introduction to the music industry and has always been known for her "powerhouse" vocal delivery. Though she is most notable for her disco hits, Summer's repertoire has expanded to include contemporary R&B, rock, pop, and gospel. Summer is one of the most successful recording artists of the 1970s and was the first artist to have three consecutive double albums hit number one on the Billboard charts. She also became the first female artist to have four number-one singles in a thirteen-month period. Summer's website claims that she has sold more than 130 million records worldwide n 1978 Summer acted in the film Thank God It's Friday and released the single "Last Dance". The song brought Summer her third Gold US million-selling single, reaching number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 and resulting in her first Grammy win. Written by the late Paul Jabara—who also co-wrote "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)"—Jabara took home the Oscar after the song was nominated for Song Of The Year. Summer also recorded a side-long version of Serge Gainsbourg's "Je t'aime... moi non plus" which was very similar in style to "Love to Love You, Baby", initially shelved and later released as a part of the Thank God It's Friday soundtrack.

That same year, Summer released her first live album, entitled Live And More. This was Summer's first Top 10 - as well as #1 album - and her first to reach sales of a million, earning Platinum status. Live And More replaced Linda Ronstadt's Living In The USA at #1 on Billboard's album chart. It included her first #1 American Pop single, a cover of the Jimmy Webb-penned "MacArthur Park" - another Gold-certified US single - originally made famous by the late actor-singer Richard Harris. The studio part of the album included the tracks "One Of A Kind" and "Heaven Knows" which also featured vocals by Joe "Bean" Esposito of the Brooklyn Dreams (group member Bruce Sudano would later become romantically involved with Summer). "Heaven Knows" became another Gold Million seller in the US and another Top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 reaching number four.

Summer was a guest artist on KISS bassist Gene Simmons's 1978 eponymous solo album, on the track "Burning Up With Fever".
Bad Girls and the break from disco

In 1979, Summer released the landmark double album Bad Girls. Unusual for a disco album, it mixed rock, funk, blues and soul to electronic beats. It yielded two consecutive singles reaching Platinum status with sales of two million each: the number-one one hits "Hot Stuff" and "Bad Girls". The number-two hit "Dim All The Lights" would go Gold as another million seller. "Bad Girls" also became Summer's first number-one song on Billboard's R&B singles chart. With U.S. record sales at an all-time apex in 1979, Summer had a run of five straight U.S. Gold singles (three of which went on to Platinum status) that year alone. The single "Hot Stuff" won Summer a second Grammy, winning the first ever award for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance. (Interestingly, the Grammys had a Best Disco Recording Award only once, in 1980, won by Gloria Gaynor for "I Will Survive".)

Bad Girls became Summer's second number-one double album and the most successful album of her entire career, eventually selling over three million copies in the U.S. Summer and Bruce Sudano grew closer during the making of this album and became engaged. During this period, Summer had two songs in the top three of Billboard's Hot 100 during the same week, with "Bad Girls" and "Hot Stuff". Just a few months later, she accomplished the same feat again, with "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)" and "Dim All the Lights". During the summer of 1979, she played eight sold-out nights at the Universal Amphitheater in Los Angeles.

Summer's first compilation album, On The Radio: Greatest Hits Volumes 1 & 2, was a global smash and her third straight number-one U.S. double album, also going on to sell over two million copies in the U.S. With this, Summer became the first artist to have three consecutive U.S. number-one double albums. The album also contained two new tracks — "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)", the Platinum-selling number-one duet with Barbra Streisand, and the Grammy-nominated Top-5 U.S. Gold hit "On the Radio", a song written for the film Foxes. The Streisand-Summer duet was her fourth and final number-one pop hit in the U.S. — and her fourth number-one single in thirteen months.

Disagreements between Summer and Casablanca Records led to her exit from the label in 1980. Summer was offered a very lucrative deal by David Geffen and became the first artist to be signed to his new Geffen label in 1980.
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* Burton Cummings...Burton Cummings, OC OM (born December 31, 1947) is a Canadian musician and songwriter. He was the lead singer and frequent keyboardist for the Canadian rock band The Guess Who. During his 10 years in The Guess Who, from 1965 to 1975, he sang and wrote or co-wrote many songs including "American Woman," "No Time," "Share the Land," "Hand Me Down World," "Undun," "Laughing," "Star Baby", "New Mother Nature," and "These Eyes." His solo career includes many Canadian singles including "Stand Tall", "My Own Way to Rock" and "You Saved My Soul".  In 1969, The Guess Who scored an international hit with "These Eyes", co-written by Cummings and guitarist Randy Bachman. It was followed up by hit "Laughing", again written by Cummings and Bachman. Another Guess Who song "Undun" featured Cummings on a jazzy flute solo. In 1970, the band hit No. 1 in Canada with "American Woman."

Ultimately, personal issues between Cummings and bandmate Randy Bachman – partially ignited by Bachman's deepening Mormon religious beliefs—caused a rift in the band. Bachman left and went on to form the band Brave Belt with former Guess Who mate Chad Allan, and later Bachman-Turner Overdrive.

Cummings became the band's leader and recorded songs that included: "Share the Land," "Hand Me Down World," "Albert Flasher," "Rain Dance," "Sour Suite," "Glamour Boy," "Star Baby" and "Clap for the Wolfman."
Going Solo

In 1975, after 10 years, Cummings left The Guess Who to become a solo artist and the group disbanded. One of his first projects included providing back-up vocals on Eric Carmen's second solo LP, Boats Against the Current, including "She Did It."

Cummings' subsequent solo hits in Canada included "Stand Tall" (also his biggest American hit, peaking at #10), "I'm Scared," "Break it to Them Gently," and "Fine State of Affairs." Cummings charted outside Canada with "Stand Tall" and "You Saved My Soul." His Dream of a Child album released in 1978 was the biggest Canadian album in history at that time. Cummings released a total of eight solo albums and collections from 1976 to 1990. In 1997 he released a live compilation album of his solo performances entitled Up Close and Alone.

Cummings became a resident of Sherman Oaks, California, and began writing and singing for films in the late 1970s. He currently winters in California and returns to Winnipeg in the summer, living in Canada throughout autumn. Besides his music, Cummings purchased Winnipeg's "Salisbury House" restaurant chain with manager Lorne Saifer and is an avid comic book collector.
The Guess Who returns

In 2000, Cummings, Bachman and original drummer Garry Peterson toured as The Guess Who. Bassist Jim Kale played one show and former Guess Who sidemen Donnie McDougall and Bill Wallace re-joined the line-up through the remainder of the tour in Canada and later in the U.S. The reformed The Guess Who toured with Cummings from 2000 through to the summer of 2003. In 2001, Cummings and the rest of The Guess Who received honorary doctorates at Brandon University in Brandon, Manitoba. Cummings was also made a member of the Order of Manitoba. In 2003, the band played at the so-called "SARSstock" concert in Toronto.
Bachman-Cummings

Cummings plays occasional shows with Randy Bachman as The Bachman-Cummings Band, featuring The Carpet Frogs, a band from Toronto and makes occasional appearances at various Canadian casinos as a solo performer. The Bachman-Cummings Band have released a compilation album titled the Bachman-Cummings Song Book featuring songs from The Guess Who, Bachman-Turner Overdrive and Cummings' solo career. They have also released an album titled The Thunderbird Trax, which is an album that Cummings and Bachman recorded in Bachman's toolshed in British Columbia in 1987. Previously unreleased until 2006, it was made available exclusively at Bachman-Cummings concerts, and is now available on the Bachman-Cummings website.

The Bachman-Cummings First Time Around CBC TV Special was released on DVD in November 2006 on the Sony BMG label. In June 2007, Bachman and Cummings released an album titled Jukebox that covered various songs from the 1960s that influenced them. A follow-up album to Jukebox as well as a television special have also been discussed
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 12/31/09 at 6:47 am


*Donna Summer..Donna Summer (born LaDonna Adrian Gaines; December 31, 1948) is an American singer and songwriter who gained prominence during the disco era of music, earning the title "The Queen of Disco".

Summer was trained as a gospel singer before her introduction to the music industry and has always been known for her "powerhouse" vocal delivery. Though she is most notable for her disco hits, Summer's repertoire has expanded to include contemporary R&B, rock, pop, and gospel. Summer is one of the most successful recording artists of the 1970s and was the first artist to have three consecutive double albums hit number one on the Billboard charts. She also became the first female artist to have four number-one singles in a thirteen-month period. Summer's website claims that she has sold more than 130 million records worldwide n 1978 Summer acted in the film Thank God It's Friday and released the single "Last Dance". The song brought Summer her third Gold US million-selling single, reaching number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 and resulting in her first Grammy win. Written by the late Paul Jabara—who also co-wrote "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)"—Jabara took home the Oscar after the song was nominated for Song Of The Year. Summer also recorded a side-long version of Serge Gainsbourg's "Je t'aime... moi non plus" which was very similar in style to "Love to Love You, Baby", initially shelved and later released as a part of the Thank God It's Friday soundtrack.

That same year, Summer released her first live album, entitled Live And More. This was Summer's first Top 10 - as well as #1 album - and her first to reach sales of a million, earning Platinum status. Live And More replaced Linda Ronstadt's Living In The USA at #1 on Billboard's album chart. It included her first #1 American Pop single, a cover of the Jimmy Webb-penned "MacArthur Park" - another Gold-certified US single - originally made famous by the late actor-singer Richard Harris. The studio part of the album included the tracks "One Of A Kind" and "Heaven Knows" which also featured vocals by Joe "Bean" Esposito of the Brooklyn Dreams (group member Bruce Sudano would later become romantically involved with Summer). "Heaven Knows" became another Gold Million seller in the US and another Top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 reaching number four.

Summer was a guest artist on KISS bassist Gene Simmons's 1978 eponymous solo album, on the track "Burning Up With Fever".
Bad Girls and the break from disco

In 1979, Summer released the landmark double album Bad Girls. Unusual for a disco album, it mixed rock, funk, blues and soul to electronic beats. It yielded two consecutive singles reaching Platinum status with sales of two million each: the number-one one hits "Hot Stuff" and "Bad Girls". The number-two hit "Dim All The Lights" would go Gold as another million seller. "Bad Girls" also became Summer's first number-one song on Billboard's R&B singles chart. With U.S. record sales at an all-time apex in 1979, Summer had a run of five straight U.S. Gold singles (three of which went on to Platinum status) that year alone. The single "Hot Stuff" won Summer a second Grammy, winning the first ever award for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance. (Interestingly, the Grammys had a Best Disco Recording Award only once, in 1980, won by Gloria Gaynor for "I Will Survive".)

Bad Girls became Summer's second number-one double album and the most successful album of her entire career, eventually selling over three million copies in the U.S. Summer and Bruce Sudano grew closer during the making of this album and became engaged. During this period, Summer had two songs in the top three of Billboard's Hot 100 during the same week, with "Bad Girls" and "Hot Stuff". Just a few months later, she accomplished the same feat again, with "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)" and "Dim All the Lights". During the summer of 1979, she played eight sold-out nights at the Universal Amphitheater in Los Angeles.

Summer's first compilation album, On The Radio: Greatest Hits Volumes 1 & 2, was a global smash and her third straight number-one U.S. double album, also going on to sell over two million copies in the U.S. With this, Summer became the first artist to have three consecutive U.S. number-one double albums. The album also contained two new tracks — "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)", the Platinum-selling number-one duet with Barbra Streisand, and the Grammy-nominated Top-5 U.S. Gold hit "On the Radio", a song written for the film Foxes. The Streisand-Summer duet was her fourth and final number-one pop hit in the U.S. — and her fourth number-one single in thirteen months.

Disagreements between Summer and Casablanca Records led to her exit from the label in 1980. Summer was offered a very lucrative deal by David Geffen and became the first artist to be signed to his new Geffen label in 1980.
http://i124.photobucket.com/albums/p14/speedyclick/donna.jpg
http://i209.photobucket.com/albums/bb224/devotion_album/Donna/donna_2008e.jpg


* Burton Cummings...Burton Cummings, OC OM (born December 31, 1947) is a Canadian musician and songwriter. He was the lead singer and frequent keyboardist for the Canadian rock band The Guess Who. During his 10 years in The Guess Who, from 1965 to 1975, he sang and wrote or co-wrote many songs including "American Woman," "No Time," "Share the Land," "Hand Me Down World," "Undun," "Laughing," "Star Baby", "New Mother Nature," and "These Eyes." His solo career includes many Canadian singles including "Stand Tall", "My Own Way to Rock" and "You Saved My Soul".  In 1969, The Guess Who scored an international hit with "These Eyes", co-written by Cummings and guitarist Randy Bachman. It was followed up by hit "Laughing", again written by Cummings and Bachman. Another Guess Who song "Undun" featured Cummings on a jazzy flute solo. In 1970, the band hit No. 1 in Canada with "American Woman."

Ultimately, personal issues between Cummings and bandmate Randy Bachman – partially ignited by Bachman's deepening Mormon religious beliefs—caused a rift in the band. Bachman left and went on to form the band Brave Belt with former Guess Who mate Chad Allan, and later Bachman-Turner Overdrive.

Cummings became the band's leader and recorded songs that included: "Share the Land," "Hand Me Down World," "Albert Flasher," "Rain Dance," "Sour Suite," "Glamour Boy," "Star Baby" and "Clap for the Wolfman."
Going Solo

In 1975, after 10 years, Cummings left The Guess Who to become a solo artist and the group disbanded. One of his first projects included providing back-up vocals on Eric Carmen's second solo LP, Boats Against the Current, including "She Did It."

Cummings' subsequent solo hits in Canada included "Stand Tall" (also his biggest American hit, peaking at #10), "I'm Scared," "Break it to Them Gently," and "Fine State of Affairs." Cummings charted outside Canada with "Stand Tall" and "You Saved My Soul." His Dream of a Child album released in 1978 was the biggest Canadian album in history at that time. Cummings released a total of eight solo albums and collections from 1976 to 1990. In 1997 he released a live compilation album of his solo performances entitled Up Close and Alone.

Cummings became a resident of Sherman Oaks, California, and began writing and singing for films in the late 1970s. He currently winters in California and returns to Winnipeg in the summer, living in Canada throughout autumn. Besides his music, Cummings purchased Winnipeg's "Salisbury House" restaurant chain with manager Lorne Saifer and is an avid comic book collector.
The Guess Who returns

In 2000, Cummings, Bachman and original drummer Garry Peterson toured as The Guess Who. Bassist Jim Kale played one show and former Guess Who sidemen Donnie McDougall and Bill Wallace re-joined the line-up through the remainder of the tour in Canada and later in the U.S. The reformed The Guess Who toured with Cummings from 2000 through to the summer of 2003. In 2001, Cummings and the rest of The Guess Who received honorary doctorates at Brandon University in Brandon, Manitoba. Cummings was also made a member of the Order of Manitoba. In 2003, the band played at the so-called "SARSstock" concert in Toronto.
Bachman-Cummings

Cummings plays occasional shows with Randy Bachman as The Bachman-Cummings Band, featuring The Carpet Frogs, a band from Toronto and makes occasional appearances at various Canadian casinos as a solo performer. The Bachman-Cummings Band have released a compilation album titled the Bachman-Cummings Song Book featuring songs from The Guess Who, Bachman-Turner Overdrive and Cummings' solo career. They have also released an album titled The Thunderbird Trax, which is an album that Cummings and Bachman recorded in Bachman's toolshed in British Columbia in 1987. Previously unreleased until 2006, it was made available exclusively at Bachman-Cummings concerts, and is now available on the Bachman-Cummings website.

The Bachman-Cummings First Time Around CBC TV Special was released on DVD in November 2006 on the Sony BMG label. In June 2007, Bachman and Cummings released an album titled Jukebox that covered various songs from the 1960s that influenced them. A follow-up album to Jukebox as well as a television special have also been discussed
http://i18.photobucket.com/albums/b120/jinxfur/BurtonCummingsCanadaday20081.jpg
http://i567.photobucket.com/albums/ss113/7jcg7/BurtonCummings.jpg


Donna Summer is great,love her music a lot.  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/31/09 at 6:48 am


Val Kilmer is fantastic.

He has had a lot of great roles :)


Donna Summer is great,love her music a lot.  :)

I thought you did :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 12/31/09 at 1:12 pm

I have one word to say about Val Kilmer-YUM!  :D ;D ;D ;D



Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 12/31/09 at 1:15 pm


I have one word to say about Val Kilmer-YUM!  :D ;D ;D ;D



Cat

Good word ;D

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/01/10 at 3:40 am


The word of the day...Ventriloquist
A ventriloquist is someone who can speak without moving their lips and who entertains people by making their words appear to be spoken by a puppet
http://i156.photobucket.com/albums/t14/kitlika/ventriloquist.gif
http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m301/OAKLEYRETAIL/Retail%20Assault%202008/RetailAssault2008101.jpg
http://i304.photobucket.com/albums/nn185/gwar2d2/IAmBatman%20customs/Ventriloquist.jpg
http://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e18/spraggero1/Ventriloquist.jpg
http://i211.photobucket.com/albums/bb201/pavementarian/ramdas.jpg
http://i176.photobucket.com/albums/w193/Irk-portfolio/vent1.jpg
http://i285.photobucket.com/albums/ll54/pink_hippo_photos/comedy-ventriloquist-2.jpg
http://i633.photobucket.com/albums/uu51/666gravedancer666/dummie8.jpg
http://i662.photobucket.com/albums/uu341/WillsonPhotography/_AWW4037.jpg
http://i477.photobucket.com/albums/rr139/HDSCOLLECTIBLES/IMG_4686.jpg
I once saw a topless ventriloquist act on stage. I never saw hte lips move.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/01/10 at 6:49 am

The word of the day...Sea
The sea is the salty water that covers about three-quarters of the Earth's surface.
http://i536.photobucket.com/albums/ff330/Lily_Lyrics/sea-side1.jpg
http://i879.photobucket.com/albums/ab360/luizageorgiana/mare.jpg
http://i565.photobucket.com/albums/ss93/denise960/DSC00322.jpg
http://i62.photobucket.com/albums/h99/WishayKillie/DSCF0110.jpg
http://i857.photobucket.com/albums/ab133/crazyhayzie69/035.jpg
http://i940.photobucket.com/albums/ad248/KLDsPhotography/Objects/Riggsandwhatnot001.jpg
http://i565.photobucket.com/albums/ss93/denise960/DSC00334.jpg
http://i851.photobucket.com/albums/ab78/lov_890/39698927_b12f98786d.gif

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/01/10 at 6:54 am

For 2010 we are going to do a birthday & a person of the day.
I also thought if Phil wanted to pick someone he could,also Frank & Peter could pick people from Canada & Australia that I may not know.
If anyone has any input let me know. :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/01/10 at 6:56 am

The birthday of the day...Frank Langella
Frank A. Langella, Jr. (born January 1, 1938) is an American stage and film actor. His Tonys include two for Best Featured Actor in a Play for Edward Albee's Seascape (1975), and Ivan Turgenev's Fortune's Fool (2002), and for Best Leading Actor in a Play for his performance as Richard Nixon in Peter Morgan's Frost/Nixon (2008). Langella was nominated for two other Best Leading Actor in a Play Tonys; first in 1978 for the Edward Gorey-designed revival of Bram Stoker's Dracula and again in 2004 for Stephen Belber's Match.
Langella made his first foray on stage in New York in William Gibson's A Cry of Players, playing a young, highly fictionalized William Shakespeare, opposite Anne Bancroft at Lincoln Center's Vivian Beaumont Theatre in 1968, and won film fame in two 1970 films: Mel Brooks' The Twelve Chairs and Frank Perry's Diary of a Mad Housewife, being nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer for the latter. Langella won his first Tony Award for his performance in Edward Albee's Seascape and 1975 and was nominated for another for what may have been the performance for which he was best known for in the early part of his career: the title role of the 1977 Broadway production of Dracula. Despite his initial misgivings about continuing to play the role, he was persuaded to star opposite Laurence Olivier in the subsequent film version directed by John Badham.

He eschewed the career of a traditional film star by always making the stage the focal point of his career, appearing on Broadway in such plays as Sherlock's Last Case, Strindberg's The Father (winning a Drama Desk Award), Match (Tony Award nomination), and Fortune's Fool, for which he won a second Tony Award.

But Langella would continue to juggle film and television with his stage work, playing Sherlock Holmes in an HBO adaptation (1981) of William Gillette's famous stage play. He repeated the role on Broadway in 1987 in Charles Marowitz's play Sherlock's Last Case. That same year, Langella would also portray the villain Skeletor in Masters of the Universe. In 1988, Langella co-starred in the movie And God Created Woman. In 1993 he made a memorable three-episode appearance on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine as the devious Jaro Essa. He also appeared as Al Baker in "Dominance", a 2003 episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and had a recurring role as Pino in the 2005 short-lived sitcom Kitchen Confidential. On film, he played Claire Quilty in Adrian Lyne's adaptation of Lolita and appeared as a villainous pirate in the summer 1995 release Cutthroat Island. His film work also includes roles in George Clooney's Good Night, and Good Luck (2005) as former CBS chief executive William S. Paley and Bryan Singer's Superman Returns (2006) as Daily Planet editor Perry White. Langella received critical acclaim as well as the Boston Society of Film Critics Award in 2007 for his sensitive portrayal of an elderly novelist in Starting Out in the Evening.

He was cast as Richard M. Nixon in Peter Morgan's Frost/Nixon, which received enthusiastic reviews during a run at the Donmar Warehouse and Gielgud Theatre in London before moving to New York's Bernard B. Jacobs Theater in April 2007, culminating in Langella's third Tony Award. He reprised the role of Nixon in the 2008 film Frost/Nixon, directed by Ron Howard. He received Golden Globe, Screen Actors Guild, and BAFTA nominations for Best Actor for his performance. He was also nominated for an Academy Award in the Best Actor category for the role, losing to Sean Penn's performance in Milk.

In 2000 he played the role of Ebenezer Scrooge in a musical version of A Christmas Carol at Madison Square Garden. He has also appeared in notable off-Broadway productions, including in the title role of Robert Kalfin's Chelsea Theater Center production of The Prince of Homburg, which was filmed by PBS for the Theatre in America series. He recently starred as Sir Thomas More in the 2008 Broadway revival of A Man for All Seasons, which finished its limited run in December.

In late 2009, he starred alongside Cameron Diaz and re-united with Superman Returns co-star James Marsden in the Richard Kelly film The Box.

Langella stars 2010 in the drama-thriller Unknown White Male, which is directed by Jaume-Collet-Serra.
Filmography
Year Film Role Notes
1970 Diary of a Mad Housewife George Prager National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actor also for The Twelve Chairs
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer - Male
The Twelve Chairs Ostap Bender National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actor also for Diary of a Mad Housewife
1971 The Deadly Trap Philippe
1972 The Wrath of God De La Plata
1974 The Mark of Zorro Don Diego de la Vega / Zorro
1979 Dracula Count Dracula
1981 Sherlock Holmes Sherlock Holmes
Sphinx Akmed Khazzan
1987 Masters of the Universe Skeletor
1988 And God Created Woman James Tiernan
1991 True Identity Leland Carver
1992 1492: Conquest of Paradise Santangel
1993 Body of Evidence Jeffrey Roston
Dave White House Chief of Staff Bob Alexander
1994 Brainscan Detective Hayden
Doomsday Gun Gerald Bull
Junior Noah Banes
1995 Cutthroat Island Dawg Brown
1996 Eddie Wild Bill Burgess
The Greatest Pharaohs Himself
1997 Lolita Clare Quilty
1998 Small Soldiers Archer (voice)
1999 The Ninth Gate Boris Balkan
2001 Sweet November Edgar Price
The Beast Jackson Burns
2004 House of D Reverend Duncan
The Novice Father Tew
2005 Back in the Day Lt. Bill Hudson
Now You See It... Max
Sweet William Professor Driskoll
Good Night, and Good Luck. William S. Paley Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
2006 Superman Returns Perry White
10.5 Apocalypse Dr. Earl Hill
2007 Starting Out in the Evening Leonard Schiller Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Independent Spirit Award for Best Lead Male
Nominated — Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Satellite Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture Drama
2008 The Caller Jimmy Stevens
Frost/Nixon Richard M. Nixon Las Vegas Film Critics Society Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Actor
Nominated — BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
Nominated — Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
Nominated — London Film Critics' Circle Award for Actor of the Year
Nominated — Satellite Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture Drama
Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role
Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
The Tale of Despereaux the Mayor (voice only)
2009 The Box Arlington Steward
2010 All Good Things TBA Completed
Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps Lewis Zabel Post-Production
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v196/paganpriest/Movies/People/franklangella.jpg
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http://i623.photobucket.com/albums/tt316/godzillavsdracula/Drac798.jpg
http://i246.photobucket.com/albums/gg112/vinniciusp/Fevereiro%202009/04langella.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/01/10 at 7:00 am

The person of the day...Shirley Chisholm
Shirley Anita St. Hill Chisholm (November 30, 1924 – January 1, 2005) was an American politician, educator, and author. She was a Congresswoman, representing New York's 12th Congressional District for seven terms from 1969 to 1983. In 1968, she became the first black woman elected to Congress. On January 25, 1972, she became the first major-party black candidate for President of the United States and the first woman to run for the Democratic presidential nomination (Margaret Chase Smith had previously run for the Republican presidential nomination). She received 152 first-ballot votes at the 1972 Democratic National Convention.
n 1964, Chisholm ran for and was elected to the New York State Legislature. In 1968, she ran as the Democratic candidate for New York's 12th District congressional seat and was elected to the House of Representatives. Defeating Republican candidate James Farmer, Chisholm became the first black woman elected to Congress. Chisholm joined the Congressional Black Caucus in 1969 as one of its founding members.

As a freshman, Chisholm was assigned to the House Agricultural Committee. Given her urban district, she felt the placement was irrelevant to her constituents and shocked many by asking for reassignment. She was then placed on the Veterans' Affairs Committee. Soon after, she voted for Hale Boggs as House Majority Leader over John Conyers. As a reward for her support, Boggs assigned her to the much-prized Education and Labor Committee, which was her preferred committee. She was the third highest-ranking member of this committee when she retired from Congress.

All those Chisholm hired for her office were women, half of them black. Chisholm said that during her New York legislative career, she had faced much more discrimination because she was a woman than because she was black.

In the 1972 U.S. presidential election, she made a bid for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination. George McGovern won the nomination in a hotly contested set of primary elections, with Chisholm campaigning in 12 states and winning 28 delegates during the primary process. At the 1972 Democratic National Convention, as a symbolic gesture, McGovern opponent Hubert H. Humphrey released his black delegates to Chisholm, giving her a total of 152 first-ballot votes for the nomination. Chisholm's base of support was ethnically diverse and included the National Organization for Women. Chisholm said she ran for the office "in spite of hopeless odds... to demonstrate the sheer will and refusal to accept the status quo." Among the volunteers who were inspired by her campaign was Barbara Lee, who continued to be politically active and was elected as a congresswoman 25 years later. Betty Friedan and Gloria Steinem attempted to run as Chisholm delegates in New York.

Chisholm created controversy when she visited rival and ideological opposite George Wallace in the hospital soon after his shooting in May 1972, during the 1972 presidential primary campaign. Several years later, when Chisholm worked on a bill to give domestic workers the right to a minimum wage, Wallace helped gain votes of enough Southern congressmen to push the legislation through the House.

From 1977 to 1981, during the 95th Congress and 96th Congress, Chisholm was elected to a position in the House Democratic leadership, as Secretary of the House Democratic Caucus.

Throughout her tenure in Congress, Chisholm worked to improve opportunities for inner-city residents. She was a vocal opponent of the draft and supported spending increases for education, health care and other social services, and reductions in military spending.
Shirley Chisholm (center) with Congressman Edolphus Towns (left) and his wife, Gwen Towns (right)

She announced her retirement from Congress in 1982. Her seat was won by a fellow Democrat, Major Owens, in 1983. After leaving Congress, Chisholm was named to the Purington Chair at Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, Massachusetts. She taught there for four years. She also lectured frequently as a public speaker.
In 1975, Chisholm was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Laws degree by Smith College.

In 1993, she was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame.

In 2002, scholar Molefi Kete Asante listed Shirley Chisholm on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans.
http://i73.photobucket.com/albums/i226/PopTart_2006/Hail%20Eris/dubyapaloozer/chisholm.jpg
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http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f281/thegirlthatplayshardball39/ShirleyChisholm1.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/01/10 at 7:13 am


The word of the day...Sea
The sea is the salty water that covers about three-quarters of the Earth's surface.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fd_nopTFuZA

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/01/10 at 7:14 am


For 2010 we are going to do a birthday & a person of the day.
I also thought if Phil wanted to pick someone he could,also Frank & Peter could pick people from Canada & Australia that I may not know.
If anyone has any input let me know. :)
Good Idea, but I may not be able to contribute everyday.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/01/10 at 9:35 am


Good Idea, but I may not be able to contribute everyday.

What ever you can do would be appreciated :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/01/10 at 9:39 am


What ever you can do would be appreciated :)
here goes!

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/01/10 at 9:46 am

British person of the day...Paul Lawrie

Paul Stewart Lawrie MBE (born 1 January 1969) is a Scottish professional golfer who is best known for winning The Open Championship in 1999.

CAREER
Lawrie was born in Aberdeen. He turned professional in 1986 and became a member of the European Tour in 1992. He performed steadily without doing much to draw attention to himself, aside from a 6th place finish in the 1993 Open Championship. In his first seven seasons his only top 50 finish on the Order of Merit came in 1996 when he was 21st. However he also finished in the top 100 in all but one of the other six seasons, and picked up a debut tour win at the 1996 Catalan Open.

Lawrie's career was transformed in 1999. After winning the Qatar Masters, which is a European Tour event, early in the season, he went on to win the 1999 Open Championship at Carnoustie in July. This was the Open where the Frenchman Jean Van de Velde famously threw away a three-shot lead on the final hole. Lawrie won a four-hole playoff against Van de Velde and the American Justin Leonard. An unusual aspect of Lawrie's victory was that he was neither leader or co-leader at any time during his regulation 72 holes, only moving into a share of the lead when the leaders came back to him after he had completed his final round. Also, Lawrie came back from the largest third-round deficit ever faced by a major championship winner; going into the final day, he trailed the leader, Van de Velde, by 10 shots. This is also the record for the biggest final-round comeback on the PGA Tour.

After his major championship victory, Lawrie's game shifted to a higher level without quite moving him into the global elite group of golfers. He finished 9th on the European Tour Order of Merit in 1999, 6th in 2001, when he captured the lucrative Dunhill Links Championship, and 10th in 2002, when he won his fifth European Tour title at the Wales Open.

After winning the Open, Lawrie was a member of the PGA Tour for several seasons, while also continuing to compete on the European Tour. He enjoyed little success in the U.S. and when his five year major championship exemption expired at the end of the 2004 season, he lost his PGA Tour card.

European Tour wins (5)
 
1999 Qatar Masters, The Open Championship
2001 Dunhill Links Championship
2002 Celtic Manor Resort Wales Open

Other professional wins
1990 Scottish Assistants Championship
1992 UAP Under 25s Championship, Scottish Brewers Championship
2002 Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Match Play Championship

Lawrie was the last European player to win a major until 2007, when that drought was ended by Pádraig Harrington of Ireland in The Open Championship.

Paul Lawrie achieved an albatross in the final round of the 2009 Open Championship.

http://i293.photobucket.com/albums/mm66/Phil_O-Sopher/Paul_Lawrie_Claret_Jug.jpg

http://i293.photobucket.com/albums/mm66/Phil_O-Sopher/paul-lawrie-burn.jpg



Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/01/10 at 10:04 am


The word of the day...Sea
The sea is the salty water that covers about three-quarters of the Earth's surface.
http://i536.photobucket.com/albums/ff330/Lily_Lyrics/sea-side1.jpg
http://i879.photobucket.com/albums/ab360/luizageorgiana/mare.jpg
http://i565.photobucket.com/albums/ss93/denise960/DSC00322.jpg
http://i62.photobucket.com/albums/h99/WishayKillie/DSCF0110.jpg
http://i857.photobucket.com/albums/ab133/crazyhayzie69/035.jpg
http://i940.photobucket.com/albums/ad248/KLDsPhotography/Objects/Riggsandwhatnot001.jpg
http://i565.photobucket.com/albums/ss93/denise960/DSC00334.jpg
http://i851.photobucket.com/albums/ab78/lov_890/39698927_b12f98786d.gif


There's also Sea of Love.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/01/10 at 1:14 pm


British person of the day...Paul Lawrie

Paul Stewart Lawrie MBE (born 1 January 1969) is a Scottish professional golfer who is best known for winning The Open Championship in 1999.

CAREER
Lawrie was born in Aberdeen. He turned professional in 1986 and became a member of the European Tour in 1992. He performed steadily without doing much to draw attention to himself, aside from a 6th place finish in the 1993 Open Championship. In his first seven seasons his only top 50 finish on the Order of Merit came in 1996 when he was 21st. However he also finished in the top 100 in all but one of the other six seasons, and picked up a debut tour win at the 1996 Catalan Open.

Lawrie's career was transformed in 1999. After winning the Qatar Masters, which is a European Tour event, early in the season, he went on to win the 1999 Open Championship at Carnoustie in July. This was the Open where the Frenchman Jean Van de Velde famously threw away a three-shot lead on the final hole. Lawrie won a four-hole playoff against Van de Velde and the American Justin Leonard. An unusual aspect of Lawrie's victory was that he was neither leader or co-leader at any time during his regulation 72 holes, only moving into a share of the lead when the leaders came back to him after he had completed his final round. Also, Lawrie came back from the largest third-round deficit ever faced by a major championship winner; going into the final day, he trailed the leader, Van de Velde, by 10 shots. This is also the record for the biggest final-round comeback on the PGA Tour.

After his major championship victory, Lawrie's game shifted to a higher level without quite moving him into the global elite group of golfers. He finished 9th on the European Tour Order of Merit in 1999, 6th in 2001, when he captured the lucrative Dunhill Links Championship, and 10th in 2002, when he won his fifth European Tour title at the Wales Open.

After winning the Open, Lawrie was a member of the PGA Tour for several seasons, while also continuing to compete on the European Tour. He enjoyed little success in the U.S. and when his five year major championship exemption expired at the end of the 2004 season, he lost his PGA Tour card.

European Tour wins (5)
 
1999 Qatar Masters, The Open Championship
2001 Dunhill Links Championship
2002 Celtic Manor Resort Wales Open

Other professional wins
1990 Scottish Assistants Championship
1992 UAP Under 25s Championship, Scottish Brewers Championship
2002 Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Match Play Championship

Lawrie was the last European player to win a major until 2007, when that drought was ended by Pádraig Harrington of Ireland in The Open Championship.

Paul Lawrie achieved an albatross in the final round of the 2009 Open Championship.

http://i293.photobucket.com/albums/mm66/Phil_O-Sopher/Paul_Lawrie_Claret_Jug.jpg

http://i293.photobucket.com/albums/mm66/Phil_O-Sopher/paul-lawrie-burn.jpg





Very nice,Thanks Phil :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Frank on 01/01/10 at 1:26 pm


For 2010 we are going to do a birthday & a person of the day.
I also thought if Phil wanted to pick someone he could,also Frank & Peter could pick people from Canada & Australia that I may not know.
If anyone has any input let me know. :)

Frank  may post one from time to time. Hopefully they won;t all be hockey players! ;)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Womble on 01/01/10 at 1:33 pm

Nice photos of the sea, Ninny. Thanks for posting and Happy New Year!  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/01/10 at 2:45 pm

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9-026ZCKR8




Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/01/10 at 2:48 pm


Frank  may post one from time to time. Hopefully they won;t all be hockey players! ;)
I could learn my Hockey players now ?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/01/10 at 4:20 pm


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9-026ZCKR8




Cat


This must've been from the 80's.^

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/01/10 at 5:44 pm


Nice photos of the sea, Ninny. Thanks for posting and Happy New Year!  :)

Happy New Year..I'm glad you enjoy the posts :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/01/10 at 5:45 pm


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9-026ZCKR8




Cat

Thanks Cat, I love this song :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/01/10 at 5:47 pm


This must've been from the 80's.^

1984

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/02/10 at 6:45 am

The word of the day...Radio
Radio is the broadcasting of programmes for the public to listen to, by sending out signals from a transmitter.
http://i568.photobucket.com/albums/ss121/yamir240/7.jpg
http://i562.photobucket.com/albums/ss63/Escursionista/b7aeddf2380aeb91ee5f9d258fa9ca7d.jpg
http://i278.photobucket.com/albums/kk100/danielbwr/requestba2.jpg
http://i492.photobucket.com/albums/rr289/eliza6_18/SS850744.jpg
http://i524.photobucket.com/albums/cc326/morenoee/IMG_0125.jpg
http://i630.photobucket.com/albums/uu23/gopherburger/CHIP.jpg
http://i41.photobucket.com/albums/e287/zerepdivad/FordSatRadio.jpg
http://i249.photobucket.com/albums/gg219/Memphis1935/IMG_0001-34.jpg
http://i402.photobucket.com/albums/pp108/foxhunter351/Henry%20Radio%203K/HenryRadio3KRFDeckRestoration001-1.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/02/10 at 6:49 am

The birthday of the day...Cuba Gooding Jr.
Cuba M. Gooding, Jr. (born January 2, 1968) is an American actor. He is best known for his Academy Award-winning portrayal as Rod Tidwell in Cameron Crowe's Jerry Maguire (1996) and his critically acclaimed performance as Tré Styles in John Singleton's Boyz n the Hood (1991). His first job as a professional entertainer was as a breakdancer performing with singer Lionel Richie at the closing ceremonies of the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. After high school, Gooding studied Japanese martial arts for three years, before turning his focus toward acting. Early on, he landed guest starring roles on shows like Hill Street Blues (1981) and MacGyver (1985). His first major role was in the John Singleton's box office surprise and critical hit Boyz n the Hood (1991). He followed this success with roles in major films like A Few Good Men (film), Men of Honor (2000), Lightning Jack (1994), and Outbreak (1995).

In 1996, he was cast as an arrogant football player on the brink of a career-ending injury in Cameron Crowe's Jerry Maguire (1996). The film became a huge box office smash and earned him an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. His "Show Me The Money" line in the film became a nationwide catchphrase. In 1997 he had a notable supporting role in As Good As It Gets (1997). The next several years, his films were inconsistently successful. He has also appeared in a series of films which were not as critically or commercially successful, such as Boat Trip (2002), Norbit (2006), and Daddy Day Camp (2007), all of which had either received extremely negative reviews or performed poorly at the box office. Gooding received brief acclaim for his cameo as Nickie Barnes in American Gangster. In 2002, he was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. In 2007, he appeared in a television commercial for Hanes underwear, alongside Michael Jordan.
Filmography
Year Film Role Other notes
1988 Coming to America Barber Shop Customer
1989 Judgement Night Officer Alvarez
Sing Stanley
1991 Boyz n the Hood Tré Styles
1992 Gladiator Abraham Lincoln Haines
A Few Good Men Cpl. Carl Hammaker
1993 Daybreak Torch (Stephen Tolkin)
Judgment Night Mike Peterson
1994 Lightning Jack Ben Doyle
1995 Outbreak Maj. Salt
The Tuskegee Airmen Billy Roberts
Losing Isaiah Eddie Hughes
1996 Jerry Maguire Rod Tidwell Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award
1997 As Good as It Gets Frank Sachs
Do Me a Favor Liquor Store Clerk
1998 What Dreams May Come Albert Lewis
A Murder of Crows Lawson Russel Produced by Derek Broes
1999 Instinct Theo Caulder
Chill Factor Arlo
2000 Men of Honor BM2/Chief/Senior Chief Carl Brashear
2001 Pearl Harbor Petty Officer Doris Miller
Rat Race Owen Templeton
Zoolander Himself
In the Shadows Draven
2002 Snow Dogs Theodore "Ted" Brooks
2003 Boat Trip Jerry Robinson
The Fighting Temptations Darrin Hill
Radio James Robert "Radio" Kennedy
2004 Home on the Range Buck voice-over
2005 Dirty Salim Adel
Shadowboxer Mikey
2006 End Game Alex Thomas
Lightfield's Home Videos
2007 Norbit Deion Hughes
What Love Is Tom
Daddy Day Camp Charlie Hinton
American Gangster Leroy Barnes
The Land Before Time XIII: The Wisdom of Friends Loofah voice-over
2008 Hero Wanted Liam Case
Harold Cromer
Linewatch Michael Dixon
The Way of War David Wolfe
2009 Gifted Hands: The Ben Carson Story Ben Carson TV film
Lies & Illusions Isaac
The Devil's Tomb Mack
Wrong Turn at Tahoe Joshua
Hardwired Luke Gibson
2010 Red Tails TBA
Ticking Clock Lewis Hicks
Hit List Jonas Archer
http://i159.photobucket.com/albums/t132/howard1024/cuba.jpg
http://i607.photobucket.com/albums/tt152/deads1972/cubagoodingjr.jpg
http://i161.photobucket.com/albums/t202/mathuisland/CubaGoodingJr3.jpg
http://i86.photobucket.com/albums/k82/FButts07/Cuba.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/02/10 at 6:51 am


The birthday of the day...Cuba Gooding Jr.
Cuba M. Gooding, Jr. (born January 2, 1968) is an American actor. He is best known for his Academy Award-winning portrayal as Rod Tidwell in Cameron Crowe's Jerry Maguire (1996) and his critically acclaimed performance as Tré Styles in John Singleton's Boyz n the Hood (1991). His first job as a professional entertainer was as a breakdancer performing with singer Lionel Richie at the closing ceremonies of the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. After high school, Gooding studied Japanese martial arts for three years, before turning his focus toward acting. Early on, he landed guest starring roles on shows like Hill Street Blues (1981) and MacGyver (1985). His first major role was in the John Singleton's box office surprise and critical hit Boyz n the Hood (1991). He followed this success with roles in major films like A Few Good Men (film), Men of Honor (2000), Lightning Jack (1994), and Outbreak (1995).

In 1996, he was cast as an arrogant football player on the brink of a career-ending injury in Cameron Crowe's Jerry Maguire (1996). The film became a huge box office smash and earned him an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. His "Show Me The Money" line in the film became a nationwide catchphrase. In 1997 he had a notable supporting role in As Good As It Gets (1997). The next several years, his films were inconsistently successful. He has also appeared in a series of films which were not as critically or commercially successful, such as Boat Trip (2002), Norbit (2006), and Daddy Day Camp (2007), all of which had either received extremely negative reviews or performed poorly at the box office. Gooding received brief acclaim for his cameo as Nickie Barnes in American Gangster. In 2002, he was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. In 2007, he appeared in a television commercial for Hanes underwear, alongside Michael Jordan.
Filmography
Year Film Role Other notes
1988 Coming to America Barber Shop Customer
1989 Judgement Night Officer Alvarez
Sing Stanley
1991 Boyz n the Hood Tré Styles
1992 Gladiator Abraham Lincoln Haines
A Few Good Men Cpl. Carl Hammaker
1993 Daybreak Torch (Stephen Tolkin)
Judgment Night Mike Peterson
1994 Lightning Jack Ben Doyle
1995 Outbreak Maj. Salt
The Tuskegee Airmen Billy Roberts
Losing Isaiah Eddie Hughes
1996 Jerry Maguire Rod Tidwell Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award
1997 As Good as It Gets Frank Sachs
Do Me a Favor Liquor Store Clerk
1998 What Dreams May Come Albert Lewis
A Murder of Crows Lawson Russel Produced by Derek Broes
1999 Instinct Theo Caulder
Chill Factor Arlo
2000 Men of Honor BM2/Chief/Senior Chief Carl Brashear
2001 Pearl Harbor Petty Officer Doris Miller
Rat Race Owen Templeton
Zoolander Himself
In the Shadows Draven
2002 Snow Dogs Theodore "Ted" Brooks
2003 Boat Trip Jerry Robinson
The Fighting Temptations Darrin Hill
Radio James Robert "Radio" Kennedy
2004 Home on the Range Buck voice-over
2005 Dirty Salim Adel
Shadowboxer Mikey
2006 End Game Alex Thomas
Lightfield's Home Videos
2007 Norbit Deion Hughes
What Love Is Tom
Daddy Day Camp Charlie Hinton
American Gangster Leroy Barnes
The Land Before Time XIII: The Wisdom of Friends Loofah voice-over
2008 Hero Wanted Liam Case
Harold Cromer
Linewatch Michael Dixon
The Way of War David Wolfe
2009 Gifted Hands: The Ben Carson Story Ben Carson TV film
Lies & Illusions Isaac
The Devil's Tomb Mack
Wrong Turn at Tahoe Joshua
Hardwired Luke Gibson
2010 Red Tails TBA
Ticking Clock Lewis Hicks
Hit List Jonas Archer
http://i159.photobucket.com/albums/t132/howard1024/cuba.jpg
http://i607.photobucket.com/albums/tt152/deads1972/cubagoodingjr.jpg
http://i161.photobucket.com/albums/t202/mathuisland/CubaGoodingJr3.jpg
http://i86.photobucket.com/albums/k82/FButts07/Cuba.jpg



and his father Cuba Gooding is part of a group.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/02/10 at 6:54 am

The person of the day...Una Merkel
Una Merkel (December 10, 1903 – January 2, 1986) was an American film actress.

Merkel resembled the popular actress Lillian Gish, and her resemblance allowed her to begin her career as a stand-in for Gish in 1920's Way Down East (she also did stand-in work for Gish in 1928's The Wind). She appeared in a few films during the silent era, including the two-reel Love's Old Sweet Song (1923) filmed by Lee DeForest in his Phonofilm sound-on-film process. However, she spent most of her time in New York City working on Broadway. Merkel returned to Hollywood and achieved her greatest success with the advent of "talkies".

She played Ann Rutledge in the film Abraham Lincoln (1930) directed by D. W. Griffith. During the 1930s, Merkel became a popular second lead in a number of films, usually playing the wisecracking best friend of the heroine, supporting actresses such as Jean Harlow, Carole Lombard, Loretta Young, and Dorothy Lamour. With her kewpie doll looks, combined with a strong Southern accent and wry line delivery, she enlivened scores of films of the era and worked with most of the stars of the period.

Merkel was an MGM contract player from 1932 to 1938, appearing in as many as twelve films in a year, often on loan-out to other studios. She was also often cast as leading lady to a number of comedians in their starring pictures, including Jack Benny, Harold Lloyd, and Charles Butterworth.

One of her most famous roles was in the Western Destry Rides Again (1939) in which her character, Lillibelle, gets into a famous "cat-fight" with Frenchie (Marlene Dietrich) over the possession of her husband's trousers, won by Frenchie in a crooked card game. She played the elder daughter to the W. C. Fields character, Egbert Sousé in the 1940 film The Bank Dick.

In the classic musical 42nd Street (1933), Merkel played a streetwise showgirl who was Ginger Rogers's best friend. In the famous "Shuffle Off To Buffalo" number, Merkel and Rogers both sing the immortal lyric, "Matrimony is baloney. She'll be wanting alimony in a year or so. / Still they go and shuffle, shuffle off to Buffalo."

She appeared in both the 1934 and the 1952 film versions of The Merry Widow, playing different roles in each.

Merkel's film career went into decline during the 1940s and although she continued working, it was in much smaller productions. In 1950 she was leading lady to William Bendix in a baseball comedy Kill the Umpire which was a surprise hit. She made a comeback as a middle-aged woman playing mothers and maiden aunts, and in 1956 won a Tony Award for her role on Broadway in The Ponder Heart. She had a major part in the MGM 1959 film, The Mating Game as Paul Douglas's wife and Debbie Reynolds's mother, and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress in Summer and Smoke (1961).

Merkel, whose final film role was in the Elvis Presley film Spinout (1966), has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contributions to Motion Pictures, at 6230 Hollywood Boulevard. She died in Los Angeles, California, aged 82, of undisclosed causes.
Filmography
Features

    * Way Down East (1920)
    * The Fifth Horseman (1924)
    * Abraham Lincoln (1930)
    * The Eyes of the World (1930)
    * The Bat Whispers (1930)
    * Command Performance (1930)
    * Don't Bet on Women (1931)
    * Six Cylinder Love (1931)
    * Daddy Long Legs (1931)
    * The Maltese Falcon (1931)
    * The Bargain (1931)
    * Wicked (1931)
    * The Secret Witness (1931)
    * Private Lives (1931)
    * She Wanted a Millionaire (1932)
    * Impatient Maiden (1932)
    * Man Wanted (1932)
    * Huddle (1932)
    * Red-Headed Woman (1932)
    * They Call It Sin (1932)
    * Men Are Such Fools (1932)
    * Whistling in the Dark (1933)
    * 42nd Street (1933)
    * The Secret of Madame Blanche (1933)
    * Clear All Wires! (1933)
    * Reunion in Vienna (1933)
    * Midnight Mary (1933)
    * Her First Mate (1933)
    * Broadway to Hollywood (1933)
    * Beauty for Sale (1933)
    * Bombshell (1933)
    * Day of Reckoning (1933)
    * The Women in His Life (1933)
    * This Side of Heaven (1934)
    * Murder in the Private Car (1934)
    * Paris Interlude (1934)
    * The Cat's-Paw (1934)
    * Bulldog Drummond Strikes Back (1934)
    * Have a Heart (1934)
    * The Merry Widow (1934)
    * Evelyn Prentice (1934)
    * Biography of a Bachelor Girl (1935)
    * The Night Is Young (1935)
    * One New York Night (1935)
    * Baby Face Harrington (1935)
    * Murder in the Fleet (1935)
    * Broadway Melody of 1936 (1935)
    * It's in the Air (1935)
    * Riffraff (1936)
    * Speed (1936)
    * We Went to College (1936)
    * Born to Dance (1936)
    * Don't Tell the Wife (1937)
    * The Good Old Soak (1937)
    * Saratoga (1937)
    * Checkers (1937)
    * True Confession (1937)
    * Four Girls in White (1939)
    * Some Like It Hot (1939)
    * On Borrowed Time (1939)
    * Destry Rides Again (1939)
    * Comin' Round the Mountain (1940)
    * Sandy Gets Her Man (1940)
    * The Bank Dick (1940)
    * Double Date (1941)
    * Road to Zanzibar (1941)
    * Cracked Nuts (1941)
    * The Mad Doctor of Market Street (1942)
    * Twin Beds (1942)
    * This Is the Army (1943)
    * Sweethearts of the U.S.A. (1944)
    * It's a Joke, Son! (1947)
    * The Bride Goes Wild (1948)
    * Man from Texas (1948)
    * Kill the Umpire (1950)
    * My Blue Heaven (1950)
    * Emergency Wedding (1950)
    * Rich, Young and Pretty (1951)
    * A Millionaire for Christy (1951)
    * Golden Girl (1951)
    * With a Song in My Heart (1952)
    * The Merry Widow (1952)
    * I Love Melvin (1953)
    * The Kentuckian (1955)
    * The Kettles in the Ozarks (1956)
    * Bundle of Joy (1956)
    * The Fuzzy Pink Nightgown (1957)
    * The Girl Most Likely (1957)
    * The Mating Game (1959)
    * The Parent Trap (1961)
    * Summer and Smoke (1961)
    * Summer Magic (1963)
    * A Tiger Walks (1964)
    * Spinout (1966)

Short subjects

    * Love's Old Sweet Song (1923)
    * Menu (1933)
    * Hollywood Goes to Town (1938)
    * Quack Service (1943)
    * To Heir Is Human (1944)
http://i661.photobucket.com/albums/uu333/roberttaylorfan/photos/public/studios-ground-4-unamerkel.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v11/thelastflower/Colorized%20Pictures/unamerkelcolorized.jpg
http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f257/tallulahbankhead/movie%20stars/unamerkel.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/02/10 at 8:44 am


The word of the day...Radio
Radio is the broadcasting of programmes for the public to listen to, by sending out signals from a transmitter.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iwuy4hHO3YQ

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/02/10 at 11:53 am


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iwuy4hHO3YQ

Classic :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/02/10 at 12:54 pm



http://i562.photobucket.com/albums/ss63/Escursionista/b7aeddf2380aeb91ee5f9d258fa9ca7d.jpg





I think I had one like this-or really close to it.




http://i159.photobucket.com/albums/t132/howard1024/cuba.jpg
http://i607.photobucket.com/albums/tt152/deads1972/cubagoodingjr.jpg
http://i161.photobucket.com/albums/t202/mathuisland/CubaGoodingJr3.jpg
http://i86.photobucket.com/albums/k82/FButts07/Cuba.jpg



Another YUM!



The person of the day...Una Merkel
Una Merkel (December 10, 1903 – January 2, 1986) was an American film actress.

Merkel resembled the popular actress Lillian Gish, and her resemblance allowed her to begin her career as a stand-in for Gish in 1920's Way Down East (she also did stand-in work for Gish in 1928's The Wind).



Way Down East was filmed in Vermont. There is a scene where Lillian Gish had to put her hand in the icy water. Because of that, she had trouble with that hand until her dying day.



Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/02/10 at 1:24 pm


Classic :)
Do you know who it is playing the keyboards for this song?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/02/10 at 1:25 pm


The word of the day...Radio
Radio is the broadcasting of programmes for the public to listen to, by sending out signals from a transmitter.
http://i562.photobucket.com/albums/ss63/Escursionista/b7aeddf2380aeb91ee5f9d258fa9ca7d.jpg
http://www.art-deco-shop.com/gallery/images/0009_large.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/02/10 at 1:27 pm

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GEI4U5KyAS0

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/02/10 at 4:24 pm

I remember transistor radios.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/02/10 at 4:25 pm


I remember transistor radios.
My transistor radio has been long gone.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/02/10 at 4:32 pm


My transistor radio has been long gone.


now time for Ipods.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/02/10 at 4:38 pm


now time for Ipods.
I do not poccess one.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/02/10 at 4:39 pm


I do not poccess one.


me neither.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/02/10 at 5:17 pm


My transistor radio has been long gone.

Mine too.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/02/10 at 5:17 pm


me neither.

Nor do I.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/02/10 at 5:19 pm

I am stuck for a British person of the day, I will try again tomorrow.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Frank on 01/02/10 at 6:07 pm


me neither.

me neither.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/02/10 at 6:08 pm


me neither.
Is it a generation thing?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Frank on 01/02/10 at 6:13 pm


Is it a generation thing?

Not necessarily.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Womble on 01/02/10 at 6:18 pm

I still have my transistor radio. It's in the garage. I don't think I will ever part with it.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: gibbo on 01/03/10 at 12:44 am

Australian's born on 2 January..

Germaine Greer  (I personally believe this woman to be as mad as a hatter and I have never liked her).

Germaine Greer (born 29 January 1939) is an Australian-born writer, academic, journalist and scholar of early modern English literature, widely regarded as one of the most significant feminist voices of the later 20th century.

Greer's ideas have created controversy ever since her book The Female Eunuch became an international best-seller in 1970, turning her into a household name and bringing her both adulation and opposition. She is also the author of many other books including, Sex and Destiny: The Politics of Human Fertility (1984); The Change: Women, Ageing and the Menopause (1991) and Shakespeare's Wife (2007). She currently serves as Professor Emeritus of English Literature and Comparative Studies at the University of Warwick.

Germaine Greer has defined her goal as 'women's liberation' as distinct from 'equality with men'.

Later career

In 1989, Greer was appointed as a special lecturer and fellow at Newnham College, Cambridge, but resigned after attracting negative publicity in 1996 for her actions regarding Dr. Rachael Padman, a transsexual colleague. Greer unsuccessfully opposed Padman's election to a fellowship, on the grounds that Padman had been born male, and Newnham was a women's college. A 25 June 1997 article by Clare Longrigg in The Guardian about the incident, entitled "A Sister with No Fellow Feeling", disappeared from websites on the instruction of the newspaper's lawyers.

Over the years Greer has continued to self-identify as an anarchist or a Marxist. In her books she has dealt very little with political labels of this type, but has reaffirmed her position in interviews. For example, she stated on ABC Television in 2008 that "I ought to confess I suppose that I'm a Marxist. I think that reality comes first and ideology comes second," and elaborated later in the program to a question on whether feminism was the only successful revolution of the 20th century saying:

    "The difficulty for me is that I believe in permanent revolution. I believe that once you change the power structure and you get an oligarchy that is trying to keep itself in power, you have all the illiberal features of the previous regime. What has to keep on happening is a constant process of criticism, renewal, protest and so forth."

Speaking on an interview for 3CR (an Australian community radio), also in 2008, she described herself as "an old anarchist" and reaffirmed that opposition to "hierarchy and capitalism" were at the centre of her politics.

Greer is now retired but retains her position as Professor Emeritus in the Department of English Literature and Comparative Studies at the University of Warwick, Coventry.

http://i461.photobucket.com/albums/qq338/keziagriffin/greer2.jpghttp://i86.photobucket.com/albums/k84/chootles/germaine.jpghttp://i148.photobucket.com/albums/s1/Seanchai-peg/Album%20II/germaine_greer.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: gibbo on 01/03/10 at 12:47 am

My Australian of the day is:

Stephanie Gilmore.

Stephanie Gilmore is a professional surfer on the Foster's ASP Women's World Tour. She was born in Murwillumbah, New South Wales, Australia on January 29, 1988 and currently resides in Tweed Heads, New South Wales, Australia.

Gilmore's life as a surfer began at age 10 when she stood on a bodyboard. By age 17 she was entering world tour events as a wildcard competitor, which paid off with a victory at the 2005 Roxy Pro Gold Coast. In her next season she won another wildcard event, the 2006 Havaianas Beachley Classic. Gilmore's success on the WQS (World Qualifying Series) tour qualified her for the 2007 Foster's ASP Women's World Tour and she did not disappoint. She won 4 events and claimed the 2007 World Title.

Steph is the daughter of Jeff and Tracy Gilmore, and has two older sisters named Whitney and Bonnie.

Although the 2007 season was Gilmore's rookie year, she captured the Foster's ASP Women's World Title. The title race came down to the final event of the season, the Billabong Pro Maui. She won three events in 2007 to enter the Billabong Pro Maui, and ranked first place in the final event. Gilmore needed a better result than former world champion Sofia Mulanovich and sophomore Silvana Lima, and won the title when both rivals bowed out before her. Gilmore quickly celebrated her title win and then went on to also win the event.
Career Victories

    * 2009
          o Roxy Pro Gold Coast - Australia
          o World Championship Title

    * 2008
          o Billabong Pro - Hawaii
          o Rip Curl Pro Mademoiselle - France
          o Movistar Classic Mancora - Peru
          o Rip Curl Pro Bells Beach - Australia
          o Roxy Pro Sunset Beach - Oahu, Hawaii
          o World Championship Title

    * 2007
          o Billabong Pro - Hawaii
          o Mancora Peru Classic - Peru
          o NAB Beachley Classic - Australia
          o Rip Curl Pro Bells Beach - Australia
          o World Championship Title

    * 2006
          o Havaianas Beachley Classic - Australia (wildcard competitor)

    * 2005
          o Roxy Pro Gold Coast - Australia (wildcard competitor)
http://i47.photobucket.com/albums/f184/charihoballer23/Stephanie-Gilmore-001Gal.jpghttp://i425.photobucket.com/albums/pp334/rachybum1995/stephanie-gilmore.jpghttp://i194.photobucket.com/albums/z21/coreybeth8/stephanie_gilmore_wideweb__430x321.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: gibbo on 01/03/10 at 12:49 am

It feels a bit strange posting about the 2 January when it is 3 January here.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Frank on 01/03/10 at 12:55 am


It feels a bit strange posting about the 2 January when it is 3 January here.

I think you can post for Jan 3. I will shortly.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: gibbo on 01/03/10 at 12:59 am


I think you can post for Jan 3. I will shortly.


It's nearly 4.00 pm here.... ;D

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Frank on 01/03/10 at 1:03 am

The person of the day...Bobby Hull

Robert Marvin "Golden Jet" Hull, OC (born January 3, 1939) is a retired Canadian ice hockey player. He is regarded as one of the greatest ice hockey players of all time and perhaps the greatest left winger to ever play the game. Hull was famous for his blonde hair, blinding skating speed, and having the fastest shot, earning him the nickname "the Golden Jet". He possessed the most feared slapshot of his day. In his 23 years in the National Hockey League and World Hockey Association, he played for the Chicago Black Hawks, Winnipeg Jets and Hartford Whalers.

On March 12, 1966, he became the first NHLer to score more than 50 goals in a season, surpassing Maurice Richard and Bernie Geoffrion's hallowed mark of 50 goals.

His slapshot was once clocked at 118.3 mph (190.4 km/h)  (hardest ever clocked) and he could skate 29.7 mph (47.8 km/h
Hull was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1983. Bobby is one of the most famous hockey platers ever. His son Brett was also a hockey superstar.

Awards and achievements

Art Ross Trophy winner (1960, 1962, and 1966)
NHL First All-Star Team Left Wing (1960, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, and 1972)
Stanley Cup championship (1961)
NHL Second All-Star Team Left Wing (1963 and 1971)
Hart Memorial Trophy winner (1965 and 1966)
Lady Byng Memorial Trophy winner (1965)
Lester Patrick Trophy winner (1969)


http://www.artknowledgenews.com/files2008/BobbyHull.jpg
http://i.cdn.turner.com/sivault/multimedia/photo_gallery/0903/this.day.sports.history.march12/images/bobby-hull.jpg
http://i.cdn.turner.com/sivault/si_online/covers/images/1968/0212_large.jpg
http://www.hockeyforum.com/photopost/data/2/1961_BOBBY_HULL_WITH_STANLEY_CUP.bmp

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/03/10 at 2:34 am

British Person of the day.....George Martin

Sir George Henry Martin CBE (3 January 1926) is a British record producer, arranger, composer and musician. He is sometimes referred to as "the Fifth Beatle"—a title that he owes to his work as producer of all but one of The Beatles' original records, as well as playing piano on some of The Beatles tracks—and is considered one of the greatest record producers of all time.

In 1965 he established the Associated Independent Recording (AIR) Studios. Although officially retired, he is still the chairman of the AIR board.

In recognition of his services to the music industry and popular culture, he was made a Knight Bachelor in 1996. He is the father of producer Giles Martin, and actor Gregory Paul Martin.

Awards and recognition
Academy Award 1964 - Nomination Scoring of Music (for A Hard Day's Night (film))
Grammy Award 1967 - Best Contemporary Album (as producer of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band)
Grammy Award 1967 - Album Of The Year (as producer of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band)
Grammy Award 1973 - Best Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s) (as arranger of 'Live and Let Die')
BRIT Awards 1977 - Best British Producer (of the past 25 years)
BRIT Awards 1984 - Outstanding Contribution To Music
Grammy Award 1993 - Best Musical Show Album (as producer of 'The Who's Tommy')
Grammy Award 2007 - Best Compilation Soundtrack Album For Motion Picture, Television Or Other Visual Media, producer together with Giles Martin, of The Beatles album Love
Grammy Award 2007 - Best Surround Sound Album, producer together with Giles Martin, of The Beatles album Lovehttp://johnniecraig.files.wordpress.com/2008/09/sir_george_martin.jpg

http://www.gibson.com/Files/aaFeaturesImages/george%20martin%20and%20the%20beatles.jpg

http://www.morethings.com/music/beatles/images/george_martin/george-martin_paul-mccartney_richard-starkey.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/03/10 at 4:30 am


My Australian of the day is:

Stephanie Gilmore.

Stephanie Gilmore is a professional surfer on the Foster's ASP Women's World Tour. She was born in Murwillumbah, New South Wales, Australia on January 29, 1988 and currently resides in Tweed Heads, New South Wales, Australia.

Gilmore's life as a surfer began at age 10 when she stood on a bodyboard. By age 17 she was entering world tour events as a wildcard competitor, which paid off with a victory at the 2005 Roxy Pro Gold Coast. In her next season she won another wildcard event, the 2006 Havaianas Beachley Classic. Gilmore's success on the WQS (World Qualifying Series) tour qualified her for the 2007 Foster's ASP Women's World Tour and she did not disappoint. She won 4 events and claimed the 2007 World Title.

Steph is the daughter of Jeff and Tracy Gilmore, and has two older sisters named Whitney and Bonnie.

Although the 2007 season was Gilmore's rookie year, she captured the Foster's ASP Women's World Title. The title race came down to the final event of the season, the Billabong Pro Maui. She won three events in 2007 to enter the Billabong Pro Maui, and ranked first place in the final event. Gilmore needed a better result than former world champion Sofia Mulanovich and sophomore Silvana Lima, and won the title when both rivals bowed out before her. Gilmore quickly celebrated her title win and then went on to also win the event.
Career Victories

    * 2009
          o Roxy Pro Gold Coast - Australia
          o World Championship Title

    * 2008
          o Billabong Pro - Hawaii
          o Rip Curl Pro Mademoiselle - France
          o Movistar Classic Mancora - Peru
          o Rip Curl Pro Bells Beach - Australia
          o Roxy Pro Sunset Beach - Oahu, Hawaii
          o World Championship Title

    * 2007
          o Billabong Pro - Hawaii
          o Mancora Peru Classic - Peru
          o NAB Beachley Classic - Australia
          o Rip Curl Pro Bells Beach - Australia
          o World Championship Title

    * 2006
          o Havaianas Beachley Classic - Australia (wildcard competitor)

    * 2005
          o Roxy Pro Gold Coast - Australia (wildcard competitor)
http://i47.photobucket.com/albums/f184/charihoballer23/Stephanie-Gilmore-001Gal.jpghttp://i425.photobucket.com/albums/pp334/rachybum1995/stephanie-gilmore.jpghttp://i194.photobucket.com/albums/z21/coreybeth8/stephanie_gilmore_wideweb__430x321.jpg

That was real interesting. Surfing is something I would never attempt to do.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/03/10 at 4:31 am


The person of the day...Bobby Hull

Robert Marvin "Golden Jet" Hull, OC (born January 3, 1939) is a retired Canadian ice hockey player. He is regarded as one of the greatest ice hockey players of all time and perhaps the greatest left winger to ever play the game. Hull was famous for his blonde hair, blinding skating speed, and having the fastest shot, earning him the nickname "the Golden Jet". He possessed the most feared slapshot of his day. In his 23 years in the National Hockey League and World Hockey Association, he played for the Chicago Black Hawks, Winnipeg Jets and Hartford Whalers.

On March 12, 1966, he became the first NHLer to score more than 50 goals in a season, surpassing Maurice Richard and Bernie Geoffrion's hallowed mark of 50 goals.

His slapshot was once clocked at 118.3 mph (190.4 km/h)  (hardest ever clocked) and he could skate 29.7 mph (47.8 km/h
Hull was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1983. Bobby is one of the most famous hockey platers ever. His son Brett was also a hockey superstar.

Awards and achievements

Art Ross Trophy winner (1960, 1962, and 1966)
NHL First All-Star Team Left Wing (1960, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, and 1972)
Stanley Cup championship (1961)
NHL Second All-Star Team Left Wing (1963 and 1971)
Hart Memorial Trophy winner (1965 and 1966)
Lady Byng Memorial Trophy winner (1965)
Lester Patrick Trophy winner (1969)


http://www.artknowledgenews.com/files2008/BobbyHull.jpg
http://i.cdn.turner.com/sivault/multimedia/photo_gallery/0903/this.day.sports.history.march12/images/bobby-hull.jpg
http://i.cdn.turner.com/sivault/si_online/covers/images/1968/0212_large.jpg
http://www.hockeyforum.com/photopost/data/2/1961_BOBBY_HULL_WITH_STANLEY_CUP.bmp



I saw his name and I thought, I know who Frank is going to do ;D..One of the all-time great hockey players :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/03/10 at 4:34 am


British Person of the day.....George Martin

Sir George Henry Martin CBE (3 January 1926) is a British record producer, arranger, composer and musician. He is sometimes referred to as "the Fifth Beatle"—a title that he owes to his work as producer of all but one of The Beatles' original records, as well as playing piano on some of The Beatles tracks—and is considered one of the greatest record producers of all time.

In 1965 he established the Associated Independent Recording (AIR) Studios. Although officially retired, he is still the chairman of the AIR board.

In recognition of his services to the music industry and popular culture, he was made a Knight Bachelor in 1996. He is the father of producer Giles Martin, and actor Gregory Paul Martin.

Awards and recognition
Academy Award 1964 - Nomination Scoring of Music (for A Hard Day's Night (film))
Grammy Award 1967 - Best Contemporary Album (as producer of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band)
Grammy Award 1967 - Album Of The Year (as producer of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band)
Grammy Award 1973 - Best Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s) (as arranger of 'Live and Let Die')
BRIT Awards 1977 - Best British Producer (of the past 25 years)
BRIT Awards 1984 - Outstanding Contribution To Music
Grammy Award 1993 - Best Musical Show Album (as producer of 'The Who's Tommy')
Grammy Award 2007 - Best Compilation Soundtrack Album For Motion Picture, Television Or Other Visual Media, producer together with Giles Martin, of The Beatles album Love
Grammy Award 2007 - Best Surround Sound Album, producer together with Giles Martin, of The Beatles album Lovehttp://johnniecraig.files.wordpress.com/2008/09/sir_george_martin.jpg

http://www.gibson.com/Files/aaFeaturesImages/george%20martin%20and%20the%20beatles.jpg

http://www.morethings.com/music/beatles/images/george_martin/george-martin_paul-mccartney_richard-starkey.jpg

Thanks Phil, George had a profound effect in our music history. :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/03/10 at 4:42 am

The word of the day...Buffalo
#
A buffalo is a wild animal like a large cow with horns that curve upwards. Buffalo are usually found in southern and eastern Africa. N-COUNT animal
#
A buffalo is the same as a water buffalo. N-COUNT animal
#
A buffalo is the same as a bison.
http://i619.photobucket.com/albums/tt273/xJennx426/momscamera205.jpg
http://i791.photobucket.com/albums/yy195/cbrummel/P1010206.jpg
http://i51.photobucket.com/albums/f399/Sensrookie/Rookies%20FT/2007-08/0708HotProspects181.jpg
http://i176.photobucket.com/albums/w188/komuuk/mudwallowing.jpg
http://i427.photobucket.com/albums/pp352/HorsesRAwesum/Breyerfest%202009/DSC03306.jpg
http://i406.photobucket.com/albums/pp141/kyleiiiix3/buffaaalobilll.jpg
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o265/scotthisey/buffalo.jpg
http://i227.photobucket.com/albums/dd221/nativestock/CSCL-14.jpg
http://i762.photobucket.com/albums/xx264/gregbishere/Football%20PC%20/Buffalo%20Bills/009-1.jpg
http://i188.photobucket.com/albums/z251/KellyKyra/Winter%20Weather%20Christmas%202009/IMG_1726.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/03/10 at 4:44 am


Australian's born on 2 January..

Germaine Greer  (I personally believe this woman to be as mad as a hatter and I have never liked her).

Germaine Greer (born 29 January 1939) is an Australian-born writer, academic, journalist and scholar of early modern English literature, widely regarded as one of the most significant feminist voices of the later 20th century.

Greer's ideas have created controversy ever since her book The Female Eunuch became an international best-seller in 1970, turning her into a household name and bringing her both adulation and opposition. She is also the author of many other books including, Sex and Destiny: The Politics of Human Fertility (1984); The Change: Women, Ageing and the Menopause (1991) and Shakespeare's Wife (2007). She currently serves as Professor Emeritus of English Literature and Comparative Studies at the University of Warwick.

Germaine Greer has defined her goal as 'women's liberation' as distinct from 'equality with men'.

Later career

In 1989, Greer was appointed as a special lecturer and fellow at Newnham College, Cambridge, but resigned after attracting negative publicity in 1996 for her actions regarding Dr. Rachael Padman, a transsexual colleague. Greer unsuccessfully opposed Padman's election to a fellowship, on the grounds that Padman had been born male, and Newnham was a women's college. A 25 June 1997 article by Clare Longrigg in The Guardian about the incident, entitled "A Sister with No Fellow Feeling", disappeared from websites on the instruction of the newspaper's lawyers.

Over the years Greer has continued to self-identify as an anarchist or a Marxist. In her books she has dealt very little with political labels of this type, but has reaffirmed her position in interviews. For example, she stated on ABC Television in 2008 that "I ought to confess I suppose that I'm a Marxist. I think that reality comes first and ideology comes second," and elaborated later in the program to a question on whether feminism was the only successful revolution of the 20th century saying:

    "The difficulty for me is that I believe in permanent revolution. I believe that once you change the power structure and you get an oligarchy that is trying to keep itself in power, you have all the illiberal features of the previous regime. What has to keep on happening is a constant process of criticism, renewal, protest and so forth."

Speaking on an interview for 3CR (an Australian community radio), also in 2008, she described herself as "an old anarchist" and reaffirmed that opposition to "hierarchy and capitalism" were at the centre of her politics.

Greer is now retired but retains her position as Professor Emeritus in the Department of English Literature and Comparative Studies at the University of Warwick, Coventry.

http://i461.photobucket.com/albums/qq338/keziagriffin/greer2.jpghttp://i86.photobucket.com/albums/k84/chootles/germaine.jpghttp://i148.photobucket.com/albums/s1/Seanchai-peg/Album%20II/germaine_greer.jpg

She sounds like a complex lady.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/03/10 at 4:50 am

The birthday of the day...Stephen Stills
Stephen Arthur Stills (born January 3, 1945; Dallas, Texas) is an American guitarist and singer/songwriter best known for his work with Buffalo Springfield and Crosby, Stills & Nash (and Young). He has performed on a professional level in several other bands as well as maintaining a solo career at the same time. Stills was ranked #28 in Rolling Stone Magazine's 2003 list of "The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time". Stills, Furay, and Young reunited in Los Angeles and formed the core of Buffalo Springfield. Legend has it that Stills and Furay recognized Young's converted hearse on the streets of LA and flagged him down, a meeting described in the recent solo track "Round the Bend". The band would release three albums (Buffalo Springfield, Buffalo Springfield Again, and Last Time Around) and one hit single (Stills' "For What It's Worth") before disbanding.

Stills' guitar playing continually evolved. Early on, it displayed sources in generic rock and roll, blues, and country music, as well as the chordings familiar in the acoustic-folk music scene. Soon Stills' playing showed the influence of his friend Jimi Hendrix and also sometimes the rhythms and riffs of various kinds of Latin music. Stills is notorious for experimenting with the guitar itself. This includes such things as soaking strings in barbecue sauce or flipping pickups to mimic Hendrix playing a right-handed guitar left-handed. He is also known for using unconventional tunings, particularly when performing acoustically. He is also adept at piano, organ and bass and plays some drums. "Stephen had a vision", Nash says. "David and I let him run with it". Stills played nearly every instrument on Crosby, Stills and Nash, earning the nickname Captain Manyhands from Rolling Stone.

During the disintegration of Buffalo Springfield, Stills joined up with ex-Byrd David Crosby and ex-Hollie Graham Nash to form the supergroup Crosby, Stills & Nash. Cass Elliot invited Graham Nash over to meet Stills and David Crosby at the home of well known folk musician and painter Joni Mitchell, who painted several artworks of the three. Mitchell also contributed the artwork seen on the cover of the CSNY collection album So Far, released in 1974. The cover photo pictured on the trio's first (self-titled) album in 1969 was taken on the back porch of a house in West Hollywood which was torn down the next day. Stills overdubbed much of the musical backing himself for the first Crosby, Stills, and Nash album with only Dallas Taylor's drums and some rhythm guitar from Crosby and Nash. Neil Young was added for their second album, and the group became Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young. Despite several breakups and reformations, CSN (and sometimes CSNY) still record and tour to this day.

Having played at the Monterey Pop Festival with Buffalo Springfield, and both Woodstock and Altamont with CSNY, Stills performed at all three of the iconic rock festivals of the 1960s.
Solo years

In the wake of CSNY's success, all four members recorded solo albums. In 1970, Stills released his eponymous album debut which featured guests Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix (on what was possibly his last recording before he died), "Mama" Cass Elliot, Booker T Jones and Ringo Starr (credited only as "Richie") as well as contributions from various members of the CSNY band. It provided Stills with the hit single "Love The One You're With" as well as the concert favorite "Black Queen." Stills followed this with Stephen Stills 2, which featured "Change Partners." Even though the song was written before CSN formed, Nash saw it as a metaphor for the many relationships in CSNY, while Stills viewed the band as something much less bland and repetitive.

The next year, Stills teamed up with ex-Byrd Chris Hillman and several CSNY sidemen to form the band Manassas. With Manassas Stills recorded the self-titled double album Manassas. The album was a mixture of blues, folk and Latin music divided into different sections, and is considered by many to be one of Stills' best albums.

During a Manassas tour in France, Stills met and married French singer-songwriter Veronique Sanson. Then he switched to Columbia Records, where he recorded two albums: Stills in 1975 and Illegal Stills, a pun on his name, in 1976. The former record found Stills in an uncharacteristically joyful mood; his marriage was going well, his son Chris had just been born, and he was happy living in Colorado. "To Mama From Christopher and the Old Man" was an exceptionally optimistic view of his new family.
Woodstock Reunion, September 7, 1979
Parr Meadows, Ridge, NY Photo: Bob Sanderson

In 1976, Stills attempted a reunion with Neil Young. At one point, Long May You Run was slated to be a CSNY record, but when Crosby and Nash left to fulfill recording and touring obligations, according to both David and Graham the other pair wiped their vocals from the recordings, as Stills and Young decided to go on without their erstwhile partners as The Stills-Young Band. However, Young would leave midway through the resulting tour due to an apparent throat infection. Stills was contractually bound to finish the tour, which he did, but upon returning home, his wife announced she wanted a divorce and wished to move back to France. Stills reunited with Crosby and Nash shortly afterwards, thanks to the efforts of Nash's future wife Susan, who got Nash to forgive Stills for wiping the Crosby and Nash vocals from Long May You Run. This led to the semi-permanent CSN reunion of 1977, which has persisted even though all three have released solo records since then.

In 1979 he travelled to Havana, Cuba, to participate in the historic Havana Jam festival that took place between 2-4 March, alongside Weather Report, the CBS Jazz All-Stars, the Trio of Doom, Fania All-Stars, Billy Swan, Bonnie Bramlett, Mike Finnegan, Kris Kristofferson, Rita Coolidge and Billy Joel, plus an array of Cuban artists such as Irakere, with whom he toured the US after the Havana concerts. His performance is captured on Ernesto Juan Castellanos's documentary Havana Jam '79.

Although Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young had difficulties with their differing individual goals, egos, and musical styles, in the early 1983 Daylight Again DVD from the 1982 CSN tour, Stills introduced the song, "Wasted on the Way", commenting that there were "three buddies who didn't know how to talk to one another for years"... finally 'making friends' getting rich, and it being good". Unfortunately, according to Crosby's biography, it was his lowest point in his crack cocaine addiction which left him nearly bankrupt, in prison without funds for a time.

In 1997, Stills became the first person to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice in the same night for his work with CSN and the Buffalo Springfield. Fender guitars crafted a custom guitar and presented it to Stills to commemorate the occasion, this Fender Telecaster style guitar bears an inscription on the neck plate.

2005 saw Stills release Man Alive!, his first solo offering in 14 years. Although not troubling the chart compilers on either side of the Atlantic, the record was critically well received and is regarded by many fans as his best since the mid seventies.

Throughout 2006 and 2007, Stills toured regularly as a solo artist with "The Quartet", which consisted of drummer Joe Vitale, either Mike Finnegan or Todd Caldwell on keyboards, and either Kevin McCormick or Kenny Pasarelli on bass. Often a long acoustic solo section of the show would feature songs rarely played and showcase agile fingerstyle playing in standard and altered tunings. Stills toured Europe as a solo artist for the first time during October 2008.
Discography
With Buffalo Springfield
Date of release Title Recording dates Peak Billboard chart position RIAA Certification
December 1966

Buffalo Springfield

June - September 1966

#80

November 18, 1967

Buffalo Springfield Again

January - September 1967

#44

July 18, 1968

Last Time Around

February 1967 - May 1968

#42

March 1969

The Best of … Retrospective
(compilation)

June 1966 - April 1968

#42

Platinum
1973

Buffalo Springfield (Collection)
(compilation)

June 1966 - May 1968

-

July 17, 2001

Buffalo Springfield (box set)
(compilation)

June 1966 - May 1968

#194

With Bloomfield/Kooper/Stills
Date of release

Title

Peak Billboard chart position

RIAA Certification
July 22, 1968

Super Session

#12

Gold


With Crosby, Stills & Nash (& Young)
Date of release Title Recording dates Peak Billboard chart position RIAA Certification
May 29, 1969 Crosby, Stills & Nash June 26, 1968 - April 3, 1969 #6 4x Multi-Platinum
March 11, 1970 Déjà Vu July - December 1969 #1 7x Multi-Platinum
April 7, 1971 Four Way Street June 2–July 5, 1970 #1 4x Multi-Platinum
August 19, 1974 So Far
(compilation) 1969-1970 #1 6x Multi-Platinum
June 17 1977 CSN 1976-77 #2 4x Multi-Platinum
June 21, 1982 Daylight Again 1980-1981 #8 Platinum
August 19, 1983 Replay
(compilation) June 6, 1983 #122 -
November 3, 1988 American Dream May 3, 1988 - September 16, 1988 #16 Platinum
June 11, 1990 Live It Up February 1, 1986 - February 5, 1990 #57 -
October 1991 CSN (box set) June 26, 1968 - April 3, 1990 #109 -
August 16, 1994 After The Storm January 27, 1994 - July 1, 1994 #98 -
October 26, 1999 Looking Forward 1996 - 1999 #26 -
March 14, 2005 Greatest Hits 1969-1999 #24
July 22, 2008 Déjà Vu Live 2006 - -
With The Stills-Young Band
Date of release

Title

Recording dates

Peak Billboard chart position

RIAA Certification

""
September 10, 1976

Long May You Run
with Stephen Stills
and the Stills-Young Band

February 16 - June 7, 1976

#26

Gold
Solo albums
Date of release

Title

Peak Billboard chart position

RIAA / CRIA Certifications

Label

Information
November 16, 1970

Stephen Stills

#3

Gold

Atlantic

Studio
June 30, 1971

Stephen Stills 2

#8

Gold

Atlantic

April 12, 1972

Manassas

#4

Gold

Atlantic

April 23, 1973

Down the Road

#7

-

Atlantic

June 1975

Stills

#22

-

Columbia

December 1975

Stephen Stills Live

#42

-

Atlantic

Live
March 1976

Illegal Stills

#30

-

Columbia

Studio
December 1976

Still Stills: The Best of Stephen Stills

#127

-

Atlantic

Compilation
September 1978

Thoroughfare Gap

#83

-

Columbia

Studio
July 1984

Right By You

#75

-

Atlantic

September 1991

Stills Alone

-

-

Vision/Gold Hill

November 2003

Turnin' Back The Pages

-

-

Columbia

Compilation
August 2005

Man Alive!

-

-

Titan/Pyramid

Studio
July 2007

Just Roll Tape

-

-

Eyewall/Rhino

Compilation
September 2009

Pieces

-

-

Rhino/Atlantic

October 2009

Live at Shepherd's Bush

-

-

Rhino

Live
http://i596.photobucket.com/albums/tt41/Mypostergallery/os0160.jpg
http://i242.photobucket.com/albums/ff93/sugarcubes_inmytea/Crosby_Stills_Nash_And_Young.gif
http://i85.photobucket.com/albums/k56/Crowder_02/Great%20Guitarists%202/8372.jpg
http://i19.photobucket.com/albums/b158/LlamaArse/stephenstills.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/03/10 at 4:54 am

The person of the day...Joy Adamson
Joy Adamson (20 January 1910 in Troppau, Austrian Silesia – 3 January 1980) was a naturalist and author, best known for her book, Born Free, which described her experiences in raising Elsa from cub to lioness. The book Born Free was an international bestseller and printed in several languages and it was made into an Academy Award-winning movie with the same title, Born Free. In addition to these major achievements, Joy was an accomplished artist and many of her paintings are displayed in a museum in Nairobi, Kenya.
Joy Adamson is best known for her conservation effort with Elsa the Lioness. In 1956, George Adamson, then game warden of the Northern Frontier District in Kenya, in the course of his job, shot and killed a lioness as she charged him and another man. He did not realize until later that the lioness was protecting her cubs and nearby were found the lioness' three cubs, which he took home to raise. The cubs did not eat for two days, but soon they were thriving. Early on, George attended to their physical needs, while Joy Adamson and her pet Pati, a rock hyrax, raised them. Joy was completely devoted to the cubs from the beginning. After six months, it became apparent that three growing cubs were too much for the Adamsons and their staff. The two larger cubs, Lustica and the Big One, were sent to a zoo in Rotterdam, but the third, Elsa, the Adamsons kept and remained attached to.

The Adamsons decided to set Elsa free rather than send her to a zoo. They spent many months training her to hunt and survive on her own and were successful in the end: Elsa became the first lioness released successfully, the first to have contact after release, and the first known to have cubs. The Adamsons did their best to keep their distance from the cubs so they would remain wild, but they got close enough to photograph them. Elsa would actually stand between the humans and the cubs if she felt her human friends were getting too close.

After Elsa’s death in January 1961, which was brought on by a disease from a tick bite, the Adamsons worked to rescue young Jespah, Gopa, and Little Elsa from possible execution. Without their mother to feed and guide them, the cubs had become a nuisance, killing livestock and angering the locals. The cubs were always somewhat aloof from their mother’s foster parents, so getting them near enough to capture was a challenge. George constructed three identical cage traps, and after much waiting, the three were captured and transported to neighboring country Tanzania, where they were promised a home at a national park. In The Story of Elsa, a compilation of the books about Elsa, Adamson wrote: "My heart was with them wherever they were. But it was also with these two lions here in front of us; and as I watched this beautiful pair, I realized how all the characteristics of our cubs were inherent in them. Indeed, in every lion I saw during our searches I recognized the intrinsic nature of Elsa, Jespah, Gopa and Little Elsa, the spirit of all the magnificent lions in Africa."

In the 1960s, she lived at Elsamere on the shores of Lake Naivasha. Elsamere is now an Education Center and visitors to Kenya can stay there and visit local wildlife.
Writer and celebrity

Using her own notes and George’s journals, Joy Adamson wrote the book Born Free. She submitted it to a number of publishers before it was bought by Harvill Press, part of HarperCollins, and published in 1960, the year it became a number-one New York Times bestseller. The success of the book was largely due not just to the captivating story of Elsa, but to the dozens of photographs of her. Readers had pictures of many of the events of Elsa’s life leading up to her release, and they found the whole story enchanting. All subsequent books by both George and Joy would be filled with photographs.

Born Free received largely favorable reviews from critics who were as spellbound as the public. The Adamsons became known the world over. Adamson, who had worked closely with publishers in order to properly promote the book, was not surprised by its success. She would spend the rest of her life earning money for wildlife, thanks to the popularity of Born Free. It was followed by Living Free, which is about Elsa as a mother to her cubs, and Forever Free, which tells of the release of Jespah, Gopa and Little Elsa. She was generous in some ways- all of the proceeds from the books went to fund conservation projects- but she did not share any of the proceeds with George, from whom she separated, though he was a driving force behind Elsa's release and though his journals formed the basis for Born Free.

The 1966 film Born Free, starring husband-and-wife actors Bill Travers and Virginia McKenna and filmed in the bush over the course of many months, was a worldwide hit. The stars got to know the real Adamsons, and the couples remained friends for life, working for wildlife causes. Travers and McKenna decided to do all of their own scenes with the lions in the film in order to recreate the close relationship that Joy and George Adamson had with Elsa, a serious commitment and risk on the actors’ part, but one that made the film more realistic. Perhaps the most important thing about the filming of Born Free is that some of the lions used for the film gained the same freedom Elsa had. This story was told in a documentary produced by Bill Travers titled The Lions Are Free which was made available on DVD in the United Kingdom in 2005.

The film, which went on to win two Academy Awards, both for music, is a family classic and true to the spirit of Elsa. Six years later, Susan Hampshire took over the role of Joy Adamson in Living Free, a film based on the third “Elsa book,” Forever Free.
On 3 January 1980, in Shaba National Reserve in Kenya, Joy Adamson's body was discovered by her assistant, Peter Morson (sometimes reported as Pieter Mawson). He mistakenly assumed that she had been killed by a lion, and this was what was initially reported by the media. Her two former husbands as well as George were alive at the time of her death; Von Klarwill and George Adamson came to the memorial service, but Bally preferred to keep his feelings private and said his goodbyes at the mortuary.

Further police investigation found that Adamson's wounds were too sharp and bloodless to have been caused by an animal, and concluded that she was murdered with a sharp instrument. Paul Nakware Ekai, a discharged labourer formerly employed by Adamson, was found guilty of murder and sentenced to life in prison, escaping capital punishment by hanging because the judge ruled that he was a minor when the crime was committed.

George Adamson was murdered nine years later, in 1989, near his camp in Kora National Park, while rushing to the aid of a tourist who was being attacked by poachers. George is credited with saving the tourist's life, but his act of bravery cost him his own.
http://i304.photobucket.com/albums/nn178/polen_89/za%20saitove/Joy_Adamson_Sitting_And_Pippa_BW_Cr.jpg
http://i184.photobucket.com/albums/x98/melbah/JoyandElsa.jpg
http://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e42/naturekitty/elsa3.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/03/10 at 8:00 am


The word of the day...Buffalo
#
A buffalo is a wild animal like a large cow with horns that curve upwards. Buffalo are usually found in southern and eastern Africa. N-COUNT animal
#
A buffalo is the same as a water buffalo. N-COUNT animal
#
A buffalo is the same as a bison.
http://i619.photobucket.com/albums/tt273/xJennx426/momscamera205.jpg
http://i791.photobucket.com/albums/yy195/cbrummel/P1010206.jpg
http://i51.photobucket.com/albums/f399/Sensrookie/Rookies%20FT/2007-08/0708HotProspects181.jpg
http://i176.photobucket.com/albums/w188/komuuk/mudwallowing.jpg
http://i427.photobucket.com/albums/pp352/HorsesRAwesum/Breyerfest%202009/DSC03306.jpg
http://i406.photobucket.com/albums/pp141/kyleiiiix3/buffaaalobilll.jpg
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o265/scotthisey/buffalo.jpg
http://i227.photobucket.com/albums/dd221/nativestock/CSCL-14.jpg
http://i762.photobucket.com/albums/xx264/gregbishere/Football%20PC%20/Buffalo%20Bills/009-1.jpg
http://i188.photobucket.com/albums/z251/KellyKyra/Winter%20Weather%20Christmas%202009/IMG_1726.jpg


Don't forget Buffalo wings.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/03/10 at 9:05 am


Don't forget Buffalo wings.

Very good Howie :)
http://i335.photobucket.com/albums/m473/chanfan56/wings.gif

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Womble on 01/03/10 at 7:44 pm

Nice bios. Thanks for posting, Ninny.  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/03/10 at 8:00 pm


Very good Howie :)
http://i335.photobucket.com/albums/m473/chanfan56/wings.gif


But they are very spicy.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/03/10 at 8:15 pm


Nice bios. Thanks for posting, Ninny.  :)

Thanks Vinny :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/03/10 at 8:17 pm


But they are very spicy.

To spicy for me..I like them sweet & sour or BBQ.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/03/10 at 8:17 pm

Buffalo Springfield.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/03/10 at 8:17 pm


To spicy for me..I like them sweet & sour or BBQ.


I'm used to spicy.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: gibbo on 01/04/10 at 3:30 am


Very good Howie :)
http://i335.photobucket.com/albums/m473/chanfan56/wings.gif


But why are they called 'Buffalo wings? :-\\

They look delicious.... :-*

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/04/10 at 5:33 am


Buffalo Springfield.

Yep that's where i got the word of the day.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/04/10 at 5:35 am


But why are they called 'Buffalo wings? :-\\

They look delicious.... :-*

They were first made in Buffalo,NY :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/04/10 at 5:50 am

The word of the day...Caddy(Caddie)
In golf, a caddie is a person who carries golf clubs and other equipment for a player
A tea caddy is a small tin in which you keep tea.
A Cadillac car
In computer hardware, a caddy refers to a sheath used to hold some media. If the media is a hard disk drive

http://i834.photobucket.com/albums/zz268/WalterMoores/Misc/regencysarcophagusteacaddy166.jpg
http://i196.photobucket.com/albums/aa237/mkriendeau/IMGP0038-1.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv212/yardsale2780/aaa.jpg
http://i964.photobucket.com/albums/ae129/pakngahman/1a775db9.jpg
http://i178.photobucket.com/albums/w258/pldarek99/c7745a69.jpg
http://i115.photobucket.com/albums/n289/btienzo/2009/JB%20Golf/IMG_1709.jpg
http://i468.photobucket.com/albums/rr44/Glade_Springs/Golf/06.jpg
http://i306.photobucket.com/albums/nn242/tanker49_2008/vehicle%20conversions/mikescars009.jpg
http://i213.photobucket.com/albums/cc224/Airfilter_01/vegyes/59Caddy.jpg
http://i271.photobucket.com/albums/jj160/cowie69/caddy.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/04/10 at 5:54 am

The birthday of the day...Dyan Cannon
Dyan Cannon (born Samille Diane Friesen; January 4, 1937) is an American film and television actress, director, screenwriter, editor, and producer. annon made her screen debut in 1960 in The Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond, however her small screen debut was in a late 1950s roles was as Mona Elliott, with fellow guest star Franchot Tone, in the episode "The Man Behind the Man" of the 1964 CBS drama, The Reporter, with Harry Guardino in the title role. She also made appearances on 77 Sunset Strip, the perennial western series Gunsmoke, The Untouchables and the syndicated Two Faces West in the 1960 episode entitled "Sheriff of the Town".

In 1969, Cannon starred with an ensemble cast led by Natalie Wood in Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, a film about sexual revolution in which she played Alice. She received an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in the film, as well as two Golden Globe nominations. Most of Cannon's later roles in the 1970s were less-successful, although she did receive a Best Actress Golden Globe nomination for Such Good Friends (1971). In addition, she became the first Oscar-nominated actress to be nominated in the Best Short Film, Live Action Category for Number One (1976), a project which Cannon produced, directed, wrote and edited. It was a story about adolescent sexual curiosity. In 1978, Cannon starred in Revenge of the Pink Panther. That same year, she appeared opposite Warren Beatty, Julie Christie and James Mason in Heaven Can Wait. This performance earned her a second Oscar nomination and also won her a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress.

In 1976, she hosted Saturday Night Live during its first season. She was a guest in the fourth season of The Muppet Show in 1979.

In the 1980s, Cannon, who is also a singer/songwriter, appeared in Honeysuckle Rose (1980) with Willie Nelson, Deathtrap (1982) with Christopher Reeve and Michael Caine, Caddyshack II (1988) and has starred in several TV movies.

In the 1990s, she appeared on the popular television shows Diagnosis Murder and The Practice, as well as being a semi-regular on Ally McBeal. She made appearances in films such as That Darn Cat (1997), 8 Heads in a Duffel Bag (1997), Out to Sea (1997) with the duo Walter Matthau and Jack Lemmon, and Kangaroo Jack (2003). She also starred on the short-lived sitcom Three Sisters (2001-2002). In 2005 she appeared in Boynton Beach Club, a movie about aging Floridians who have just lost their spouses.
Filmography
Year Film Role Notes
1960 The Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond Dixie
This Rebel Breed Wiggles (as Diane Cannon)
1969 Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice Alice Henderson New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year – Actress
1971 Doctors' Wives Lorrie Dellman
The Anderson Tapes Ingrid
The Love Machine Judith Austin
The Burglars Lena
Such Good Friends Julie Messinger Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
1973 Shamus Alexis Montaigne
The Last of Sheila Christine
1974 Child Under a Leaf Domino
1976 Number One Matt's mother Writer, director, producer, film editor
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film
1978 Heaven Can Wait Julia Farnsworth Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture
Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
Revenge of the Pink Panther Simone Legree
1980 Honeysuckle Rose Viv Bonham
Coast to Coast Madie Levrington
1982 Deathtrap Myra Bruhl
Author! Author! Alice Detroit
1988 Rock & Roll Mom Annie Hackett (TV)
She's Having a Baby Herself (uncredited)
Caddyshack II Elizabeth Pearce
1990 The End of Innocence Stephanie (also director and writer)
1991 Jailbirds Rosie LaCroix (TV)
1992 Christmas in Connecticut Elizabeth Blane (TV)
1993 The Pickle Ellen Stone
1997 Allie & Me Karen Schneider
That Darn Cat Mrs. Flint
8 Heads in a Duffel Bag Annette Bennett
Out to Sea Liz LaBreche
1997-2000 Ally McBeal Jennifer 'Whipper' Cone (17 episodes)
1998 The Sender Gina Fairfax
1999 Kiss of a Stranger Leslie
2003 Kangaroo Jack Anna Carbone
2004 After the Sunset Herself at the Basketball Game (uncredited)
2006 Boynton Beach Club Lois
http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k14/ronewc/1-ACTORS_ACTRESSES/cannondyan-a.jpg
http://i96.photobucket.com/albums/l168/bacoplely/Celebrity/179f5e98.jpg
http://i85.photobucket.com/albums/k62/cinemorgue/Ca/Cannon/Cannon-D-Deathtrap01.jpg
http://i206.photobucket.com/albums/bb311/CopperTop4X4/Celebrities/th7f21552e.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/04/10 at 6:00 am

The person of the day...T.S. Eliot
Thomas Stearns Eliot (September 26, 1888–January 4, 1965) was an Anglo/American poet, playwright, and literary critic, arguably the most important English-language poet of the 20th century. His first notable publication, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, begun in February 1910 and published in Chicago in June 1915, is regarded as a masterpiece of the modernist movement. It was followed by some of the best-known poems in the English language, including Gerontion (1920), The Waste Land (1922), The Hollow Men (1925), Ash Wednesday (1930), Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats (1939), and Four Quartets (1945). He is also known for his seven plays, particularly Murder in the Cathedral (1935) and The Cocktail Party (1949). He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature and the Order of Merit in 1948.

Eliot was born in St. Louis, Missouri, and was educated at Harvard University. After graduating in 1909, he studied philosophy at the University of Paris for a year, then won a scholarship to Merton College, Oxford in 1914, becoming a British citizen when he was 39. "y poetry has obviously more in common with my distinguished contemporaries in America than with anything written in my generation in England," he said of his nationality and its role in his work. "It wouldn't be what it is, and I imagine it wouldn't be so good ... if I'd been born in England, and it wouldn't be what it is if I'd stayed in America. It's a combination of things. But in its sources, in its emotional springs, it comes from America For a poet of his stature, Eliot produced a relatively small amount of poetry. He was aware of this early in his career. He wrote to J. H. Woods, one of his former Harvard professors, that, "My reputation in London is built upon one small volume of verse, and is kept up by printing two or three more poems in a year. The only thing that matters is that these should be perfect in their kind, so that each should be an event."

Typically, Eliot first published his poems individually in periodicals or in small books or pamphlets, and then collected them in books. His first collection was Prufrock and Other Observations (1917). In 1920, he published more poems in Ara Vos Prec (London) and Poems: 1920 (New York). These had the same poems (in a different order) except that "Ode" in the British edition was replaced with "Hysteria" in the American edition. In 1925, he collected The Waste Land and the poems in Prufrock and Poems into one volume and added The Hollow Men to form Poems: 1909–1925. From then on, he updated this work as Collected Poems. Exceptions are Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats (1939), a collection of light verse; Poems Written in Early Youth, posthumously published in 1967 and consisting mainly of poems published 1907–1910 in The Harvard Advocate,, and Inventions of the March Hare: Poems 1909–1917, material Eliot never intended to have published, which appeared posthumously in 1997.

Of his nationality and its role in his work Eliot said: "y poetry has obviously more in common with my distinguished contemporaries in America than with anything written in my generation in England." He added: "It wouldn't be what it is, and I imagine it wouldn't be so good ... if I'd been born in England, and it wouldn't be what it is if I'd stayed in America. It's a combination of things. But in its sources, in its emotional springs, it comes from America."
The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
Main article: The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock

In 1915 Ezra Pound, overseas editor of Poetry magazine, recommended to Harriet Monroe, the magazine's founder, that she publish "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock". Although the character Prufrock seems to be middle-aged, Eliot wrote most of the poem when he was only 22. Its now-famous opening lines, comparing the evening sky to "a patient etherised upon a table," were considered shocking and offensive, especially at a time when Georgian Poetry was hailed for its derivations of the 19th century Romantic Poets. The poem follows the conscious experience of a man, Prufrock (relayed in the "stream of consciousness" form characteristic of the Modernists), lamenting his physical and intellectual inertia, the lost opportunities in his life and lack of spiritual progress, with the recurrent theme of carnal love unattained. Critical opinion is divided as to whether the narrator leaves his residence during the course of the narration. The locations described can be interpreted either as actual physical experiences, mental recollections, or even as symbolic images from the sub-conscious mind, as, for example, in the refrain "In the room the women come and go." The poem's structure was heavily influenced by Eliot's extensive reading of Dante Alighieri, in the Italian, and refers to a number of literary works, including Hamlet and those of the French Symbolists.

Its reception in London can be gauged from an unsigned review in The Times Literary Supplement on June 21, 1917: "The fact that these things occurred to the mind of Mr Eliot is surely of the very smallest importance to anyone, even to himself. They certainly have no relation to poetry…"
The Waste Land
Main article: The Waste Land

In October 1922 Eliot published The Waste Land in The Criterion. It was composed during a period of personal difficulty for Eliot—his marriage was failing, and both he and Vivien were suffering from nervous disorders. The poem is often read as a representation of the disillusionment of the post-war generation. That year Eliot lived in Lausanne, Switzerland to take a treatment and to convalesce from a break-down. There he wrote the final section, "What the Thunder Said," which contains frequent references to mountains. Before the poem's publication as a book in December 1922, Eliot distanced himself from its vision of despair. On November 15, 1922, he wrote to Richard Aldington, saying, "As for The Waste Land, that is a thing of the past so far as I am concerned and I am now feeling toward a new form and style." The poem is known for its obscure nature—its slippage between satire and prophecy; its abrupt changes of speaker, location, and time; its elegiac but intimidating summoning up of a vast and dissonant range of cultures and literatures. Despite this, it has become a touchstone of modern literature, a poetic counterpart to a novel published in the same year, James Joyce's Ulysses. Among its best-known phrases are "April is the cruellest month", "I will show you fear in a handful of dust"; and "Shantih shantih shantih," the Sanskrit word that ends the poem.
The Hollow Men
Main articles: The Hollow Men and The Hollow Men in popular culture

The Hollow Men appeared in 1925. For the critic Edmund Wilson, it marked "the nadir of the phase of despair and desolation given such effective expression in The Waste Land." It is Eliot's major poem of the late twenties. Similar to other work, its themes are overlapping and fragmentary: post-war Europe under the Treaty of Versailles (which Eliot despised: compare Gerontion); the difficulty of hope and religious conversion; and Eliot's failed marriage.

Allen Tate perceived a shift in Eliot's method, writing that, "The mythologies disappear altogether in The Hollow Men." This is a striking claim for a poem as indebted to Dante as anything else in Eliot’s early work, to say little of the modern English mythology—the ‘Old Guy ’ of the Gunpowder Plot—or the colonial and agrarian mythos of Joseph Conrad and James George Frazer, which, at least for reasons of textual history, echo in The Waste Land. The "continuous parallel between contemporaneity and antiquity" that is so characteristic of his mythical method remained in fine form. The Hollow Men contains some of Eliot's most famous lines, most notably its conclusion:

    This is the way the world ends
    This is the way the world ends
    This is the way the world ends
    Not with a bang but a whimper.

Ash Wednesday
Main article: Ash Wednesday (poem)

Ash Wednesday is the first long poem written by Eliot after his 1927 conversion to Anglicanism. Published in 1930, it deals with the struggle that ensues when one who has lacked faith acquires it. Sometimes referred to as Eliot's "conversion poem," it is richly but ambiguously allusive, and deals with the aspiration to move from spiritual barrenness to hope for human salvation, inspired by Dante's Purgatorio. The style is different from the poetry that predates his conversion. Ash Wednesday and the poems that followed had a more casual, melodic, and contemplative method.

Many critics were particularly enthusiastic about it. Edwin Muir maintained that it is one of the most moving poems Eliot wrote, and perhaps the "most perfect," though it was not well-received by everyone. The poem's groundwork of orthodox Christianity discomfited many of the more secular literati.
Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats
Main article: Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats

In 1930, he published a book of light verse, Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats, "Old Possum" being Ezra Pound's nickname for him. This first edition had an illustration of the author on the cover. In 1954, the composer Alan Rawsthorne set six of the poems for speaker and orchestra, in a work entitled Practical Cats. After Eliot's death, it became the basis of the musical, Cats, by Andrew Lloyd Webber.Main articles: Murder in the Cathedral, The Rock (play), The Family Reunion, The Cocktail Party, The Confidential Clerk, and The Elder Statesman

With the important exception of his magnum opus Four Quartets, Eliot directed much of his creative energies after Ash Wednesday to writing plays in verse, mostly comedies or plays with redemptive endings. He was long a critic and admirer of Elizabethan and Jacobean verse drama; witness his allusions to Webster, Thomas Middleton, William Shakespeare and Thomas Kyd in The Waste Land. In a 1933 lecture he said: "Every poet would like, I fancy, to be able to think that he had some direct social utility. ... He would like to be something of a popular entertainer, and be able to think his own thoughts behind a tragic or a comic mask. He would like to convey the pleasures of poetry, not only to a larger audience, but to larger groups of people collectively; and the theatre is the best place in which to do it."

After The Waste Land (1922), he wrote that he was "now feeling toward a new form and style." One project he had in mind was writing a play in verse with a jazz tempo featuring Sweeney, a character who had appeared in a number of his poems. Eliot did not finish it. He did publish separately two pieces of what he had written. The two, Fragment of a Prologue (1926) and Fragment of an Agon (1927) were published together in 1932 as Sweeney Agonistes. Although Eliot noted that this was not intended to be a one-act play, it is sometimes performed as one.

A pageant play by Eliot called The Rock was performed in 1934 for the benefit for churches in the Diocese of London. Much of it was a collaborative effort; Eliot accepted credit only for the authorship of one scene and the choruses. George Bell, the Bishop of Chichester, had been instrumental in connecting Eliot with producer E. Martin Browne for the production of The Rock, and later asked Eliot to write another play for the Canterbury Festival in 1935. This one, Murder in the Cathedral, concerning the death of the martyr, Thomas Becket, was more under Eliot's control. After this, he worked on commercial plays for more general audiences: The Family Reunion (1939), The Cocktail Party (1949), The Confidential Clerk, (1953) and The Elder Statesman (1958). The Broadway production in New York of The Cocktail Party received the 1950 Tony Award for Best Play.
Eliot also made significant contributions to the field of literary criticism, strongly influencing the school of New Criticism. While somewhat self-deprecating and minimizing of his work—he once said his criticism was merely a “by-product” of his “private poetry-workshop”—Eliot is considered by some to be one of the greatest literary critics of the 20th century. The critic William Empson once said, "I do not know for certain how much of my own mind invented, let alone how much of it is a reaction against him or indeed a consequence of misreading him. He is a very penetrating influence, perhaps not unlike the east wind."

In his critical essay “Tradition and the Individual Talent,” Eliot argues that art must be understood not in a vacuum, but in the context of previous pieces of art: “In a peculiar sense ... must inevitably be judged by the standards of the past.” This essay was one of the most important works of the school of New Criticism. Specifically, it introduced the idea that the value of one work of art must be viewed in the context of all previous work, a “simultaneous order” or works. Also important to New Criticism was the idea—as articulated in Eliot’s essay "Hamlet and His Problems”—of an “objective correlative,” which posits a connection among the words of the text and events, states of mind, and experiences. This notion concedes that a poem means what it says, but suggests that there can be a non-subjective judgment based on different readers’ different—but perhaps corollary—interpretations of a work.

More generally, New Critics took a cue from Eliot in regards to his “‘classical’ ideals and his religious thought; his attention to the poetry and drama of the early seventeenth century; his deprecation of the Romantics, especially Shelley; his proposition that good poems constitute ‘not a turning loose of emotion but an escape from emotion'; and his insistence that ‘poets…at present must be difficult.’”

Eliot’s essays were a major factor in the revival of interest in the metaphysical poets. Eliot particularly praised the metaphysical poets' ability to show experience as both psychological and sensual, while at the same time infusing this portrayal with—in Eliot's view—wit and uniqueness. Eliot's essay "The Metaphysical Poets," along with giving new significance and attention to metaphysical poetry, introduced his now well-known definition of "unified sensibility," which is considered by some to mean the same thing as the term "metaphysical."

His 1922 poem The Waste Land—which at the time of its publication, many critics believed to be a joke or hoax—also can be better understood in light of his work as a critic. He had argued that a poet must write “programmatic criticism"; that is, a poet should write to advance his own interests rather than to advance “historical scholarship". Viewed from Eliot's critical lens, The Waste Land likely shows his personal despair about World War I rather than an objective historical understanding of it.

In 1958, the Archbishop of Canterbury appointed Eliot to a commission that produced The Revised Psalter (1963). A harsh critic of Eliot's, C. S. Lewis, was also a member of the commission, where their antagonism turned into a friendship
http://i726.photobucket.com/albums/ww263/rjbarryiv/writers/eliot.jpg
http://i69.photobucket.com/albums/i41/bn4md1/TS_Elliot.jpg
http://i498.photobucket.com/albums/rr345/Poehlein416/Tseliot.jpg
http://i842.photobucket.com/albums/zz349/bamboozlem/essentialeliot.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: gibbo on 01/04/10 at 6:28 am

I first saw Dyan Cannon in Bob, Carol, Ted & Alice .... I was only 18 and it certainly made an impact. After that film Dyan Cannon and Natalie Wood were two of my favourite actresses!  ::)

http://i182.photobucket.com/albums/x174/followfocus/Tony%20Nigro/2009/11/2009-11-18-MotW-Bob-and-Carol-and-T.jpghttp://i351.photobucket.com/albums/q474/gibbo4/bcta.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/04/10 at 7:42 am


The word of the day...Caddy(Caddie)
In golf, a caddie is a person who carries golf clubs and other equipment for a player
A tea caddy is a small tin in which you keep tea.
A Cadillac car
In computer hardware, a caddy refers to a sheath used to hold some media. If the media is a hard disk drive

http://i834.photobucket.com/albums/zz268/WalterMoores/Misc/regencysarcophagusteacaddy166.jpg
http://i196.photobucket.com/albums/aa237/mkriendeau/IMGP0038-1.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv212/yardsale2780/aaa.jpg
http://i964.photobucket.com/albums/ae129/pakngahman/1a775db9.jpg
http://i178.photobucket.com/albums/w258/pldarek99/c7745a69.jpg
http://i115.photobucket.com/albums/n289/btienzo/2009/JB%20Golf/IMG_1709.jpg
http://i468.photobucket.com/albums/rr44/Glade_Springs/Golf/06.jpg
http://i306.photobucket.com/albums/nn242/tanker49_2008/vehicle%20conversions/mikescars009.jpg
http://i213.photobucket.com/albums/cc224/Airfilter_01/vegyes/59Caddy.jpg
http://i271.photobucket.com/albums/jj160/cowie69/caddy.jpg


I assumed it was Chevy Chase's birthday when I saw the word of the day Caddy.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/04/10 at 8:47 am


I first saw Dyan Cannon in Bob, Carol, Ted & Alice .... I was only 18 and it certainly made an impact. After that film Dyan Cannon and Natalie Wood were two of my favourite actresses!  ::)

http://i182.photobucket.com/albums/x174/followfocus/Tony%20Nigro/2009/11/2009-11-18-MotW-Bob-and-Carol-and-T.jpghttp://i351.photobucket.com/albums/q474/gibbo4/bcta.jpg

Thanks for the pics. Peter.  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/04/10 at 8:49 am


I assumed it was Chevy Chase's birthday when I saw the word of the day Caddy.

That would of been a good guess :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/04/10 at 1:09 pm

Macavity  - The Mystery Cat
By T.S. Eliot


Macavity's a Mystery Cat: he's called the Hidden Paw--
For he's the master criminal who can defy the Law.
He's the bafflement of Scotland Yard, the Flying Squad's despair:
For when they reach the scene of crime--Macavity's not there!

Macavity, Macavity, there's no on like Macavity,
He's broken every human law, he breaks the law of gravity.
His powers of levitation would make a fakir stare,
And when you reach the scene of crime--Macavity's not there!
You may seek him in the basement, you may look up in the air--
But I tell you once and once again, Macavity's not there!

Macavity's a ginger cat, he's very tall and thin;
You would know him if you saw him, for his eyes are sunken in.
His brow is deeply lined with thought, his head is highly doomed;
His coat is dusty from neglect, his whiskers are uncombed.
He sways his head from side to side, with movements like a snake;
And when you think he's half asleep, he's always wide awake.

Macavity, Macavity, there's no one like Macavity,
For he's a fiend in feline shape, a monster of depravity.
You may meet him in a by-street, you may see him in the square--
But when a crime's discovered, then Macavity's not there!

He's outwardly respectable. (They say he cheats at cards.)
And his footprints are not found in any file of Scotland Yard's.
And when the larder's looted, or the jewel-case is rifled,
Or when the milk is missing, or another Peke's been stifled,
Or the greenhouse glass is broken, and the trellis past repair--
Ay, there's the wonder of the thing! Macavity's not there!

And when the Foreign Office finds a Treaty's gone astray,
Or the Admiralty lose some plans and drawings by the way,
There may be a scap of paper in the hall or on the stair--
But it's useless of investigate--Macavity's not there!
And when the loss has been disclosed, the Secret Service say:
"It must have been Macavity!"--but he's a mile away.
You'll be sure to find him resting, or a-licking of his thumbs,
Or engaged in doing complicated long division sums.

Macavity, Macavity, there's no one like Macacity,
There never was a Cat of such deceitfulness and suavity.
He always has an alibit, or one or two to spare:
And whatever time the deed took place--MACAVITY WASN'T THERE!
And they say that all the Cats whose wicked deeds are widely known
(I might mention Mungojerrie, I might mention Griddlebone)
Are nothing more than agents for the Cat who all the time
Just controls their operations: the Napoleon of Crime!




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LbjXHP7XifA




Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/04/10 at 2:52 pm


The word of the day...Caddy(Caddie)
In golf, a caddie is a person who carries golf clubs and other equipment for a player
A tea caddy is a small tin in which you keep tea.
A Cadillac car
In computer hardware, a caddy refers to a sheath used to hold some media. If the media is a hard disk drive

A tea caddy for me!

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/04/10 at 2:53 pm


The word of the day...Caddy(Caddie)
In golf, a caddie is a person who carries golf clubs and other equipment for a player
A tea caddy is a small tin in which you keep tea.
A Cadillac car
In computer hardware, a caddy refers to a sheath used to hold some media. If the media is a hard disk drive

http://i834.photobucket.com/albums/zz268/WalterMoores/Misc/regencysarcophagusteacaddy166.jpg
http://i196.photobucket.com/albums/aa237/mkriendeau/IMGP0038-1.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv212/yardsale2780/aaa.jpg
http://i964.photobucket.com/albums/ae129/pakngahman/1a775db9.jpg
http://i178.photobucket.com/albums/w258/pldarek99/c7745a69.jpg
http://i115.photobucket.com/albums/n289/btienzo/2009/JB%20Golf/IMG_1709.jpg
http://i468.photobucket.com/albums/rr44/Glade_Springs/Golf/06.jpg
http://i306.photobucket.com/albums/nn242/tanker49_2008/vehicle%20conversions/mikescars009.jpg
http://i213.photobucket.com/albums/cc224/Airfilter_01/vegyes/59Caddy.jpg
http://i271.photobucket.com/albums/jj160/cowie69/caddy.jpg
Which brings us back to Paul Lawrie.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/04/10 at 4:15 pm


Macavity  - The Mystery Cat
By T.S. Eliot


Macavity's a Mystery Cat: he's called the Hidden Paw--
For he's the master criminal who can defy the Law.
He's the bafflement of Scotland Yard, the Flying Squad's despair:
For when they reach the scene of crime--Macavity's not there!

Macavity, Macavity, there's no on like Macavity,
He's broken every human law, he breaks the law of gravity.
His powers of levitation would make a fakir stare,
And when you reach the scene of crime--Macavity's not there!
You may seek him in the basement, you may look up in the air--
But I tell you once and once again, Macavity's not there!

Macavity's a ginger cat, he's very tall and thin;
You would know him if you saw him, for his eyes are sunken in.
His brow is deeply lined with thought, his head is highly doomed;
His coat is dusty from neglect, his whiskers are uncombed.
He sways his head from side to side, with movements like a snake;
And when you think he's half asleep, he's always wide awake.

Macavity, Macavity, there's no one like Macavity,
For he's a fiend in feline shape, a monster of depravity.
You may meet him in a by-street, you may see him in the square--
But when a crime's discovered, then Macavity's not there!

He's outwardly respectable. (They say he cheats at cards.)
And his footprints are not found in any file of Scotland Yard's.
And when the larder's looted, or the jewel-case is rifled,
Or when the milk is missing, or another Peke's been stifled,
Or the greenhouse glass is broken, and the trellis past repair--
Ay, there's the wonder of the thing! Macavity's not there!

And when the Foreign Office finds a Treaty's gone astray,
Or the Admiralty lose some plans and drawings by the way,
There may be a scap of paper in the hall or on the stair--
But it's useless of investigate--Macavity's not there!
And when the loss has been disclosed, the Secret Service say:
"It must have been Macavity!"--but he's a mile away.
You'll be sure to find him resting, or a-licking of his thumbs,
Or engaged in doing complicated long division sums.

Macavity, Macavity, there's no one like Macacity,
There never was a Cat of such deceitfulness and suavity.
He always has an alibit, or one or two to spare:
And whatever time the deed took place--MACAVITY WASN'T THERE!
And they say that all the Cats whose wicked deeds are widely known
(I might mention Mungojerrie, I might mention Griddlebone)
Are nothing more than agents for the Cat who all the time
Just controls their operations: the Napoleon of Crime!




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LbjXHP7XifA




Cat



Thanks for sharing..most cats are mysterious ;D

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/04/10 at 4:16 pm


A tea caddy for me!

I never knew there was such a thing until I looked the word up.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/04/10 at 4:18 pm


I never knew there was such a thing until I looked the word up.
It is a common household accessory over here.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/04/10 at 4:20 pm


It is a common household accessory over here.

I see they come in assorted shapes and sizes.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Frank on 01/04/10 at 4:25 pm


I assumed it was Chevy Chase's birthday when I saw the word of the day Caddy.

I'm Chevy Chase, and you're not

I first saw Dyan Cannon in Bob, Carol, Ted & Alice .... I was only 18 and it certainly made an impact. After that film Dyan Cannon and Natalie Wood were two of my favourite actresses!  ::)

http://i182.photobucket.com/albums/x174/followfocus/Tony%20Nigro/2009/11/2009-11-18-MotW-Bob-and-Carol-and-T.jpghttp://i351.photobucket.com/albums/q474/gibbo4/bcta.jpg

Yes, Natalie And Dyan were 2 of my faves from that time period as well.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/04/10 at 4:25 pm


I see they come in assorted shapes and sizes.
And can become collector's items.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/04/10 at 4:54 pm


I'm Chevy Chase, and you're not


I used to live near Chevy Chase-the city, not the person.



Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Frank on 01/04/10 at 5:04 pm



I'm Chevy Chase, and you're not


I used to live near Chevy Chase-the city, not the person.



Cat

Whenever I think of Chevy Chase, I always remember Emily Litella, Gilda Radner's character on SNL.  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/04/10 at 5:10 pm


Whenever I think of Chevy Chase, I always remember Emily Litella, Gilda Radner's character on SNL.  :)



That's different, Chedder Cheese. Nevermind.



Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Frank on 01/04/10 at 5:14 pm



That's different, Chedder Cheese. Nevermind.



Cat

The good old days..and his clumsy imitations of Prez Ford.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/04/10 at 8:00 pm


That would of been a good guess :)


When was his birthday?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/05/10 at 8:17 am


When was his birthday?

October 8th

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/05/10 at 8:25 am

The word of the day...Lonesome
Someone who is lonesome is unhappy because they do not have any friends or do not have anyone to talk to
A lonesome place is one which very few people come to and which is a long way from places where people live.
http://i424.photobucket.com/albums/pp326/blihzzzARD/W1.jpg
http://i189.photobucket.com/albums/z127/maerivitz/lonesome.jpg
http://i259.photobucket.com/albums/hh292/xoxogossipgirll/lonesome.jpg
http://i275.photobucket.com/albums/jj281/sundayofthisweek/IMG_0018.jpg
http://i57.photobucket.com/albums/g236/ivisionsofhope/Lonesome.jpg
http://i452.photobucket.com/albums/qq247/JulieT814/Lonesome.jpg
http://i882.photobucket.com/albums/ac21/linmitch/bvnbv.jpg
http://i70.photobucket.com/albums/i88/joseroxs/loneliness.jpg
http://i284.photobucket.com/albums/ll30/fairybitch420/th232539cri51qns3d.gif

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/05/10 at 8:29 am

The birthday of the day...Robert Duvall
Robert Selden Duvall (born January 5, 1931) is an American actor and director. He has won an Academy Award, two Emmy Awards, and four Golden Globe Awards.

He began his career appearing in theatre during the late 1950s, moving into small to supporting television and film roles during the early 1960s in such works as To Kill a Mockingbird (1962) and Captain Newman, M.D. (1963). He started to land much larger roles during the early 1970s with movies like MASH (1970) and THX 1138 (1971). This was followed by a series of critical successes: The Godfather (1972), The Godfather Part II (1974), Network (1976), The Great Santini (1979), Apocalypse Now (1979), and True Confessions (1981).

Since then Duvall has remained an important presence in both film and television with such productions as Tender Mercies (1983), The Natural (1984), Colors (1988), Lonesome Dove (1989), Stalin (1992), The Man Who Captured Eichmann (1996), The Apostle (1997), A Civil Action (1998), Gods and Generals (2003) and Broken Trail (2006)
Duvall began his career in the theatre, making his professional debut Off-Broadway at the Gate Theatre as Frank Gardner in George Bernard Shaw's Mrs. Warren's Profession on June 25, 1958. Other notable early theatre credits include the role of Doug in the premiere of Michael Shurtleff's Call Me By My Rightful Name in 1961 and the role of Bob Smith in the premiere of William Snyder's The Days and Nights of BeeBee Fenstermaker in 1962, both at Off-Broadway theatres. He won an Obie Award in 1965 for his performance of Eddie in Arthur Miller's A View From the Bridge at the Sheridan Square Playhouse; a production directed by Ulu Grosbard and Dustin Hoffman. The following year he made his Broadway debut as Harry Roat, Jr in Frederick Knott's Wait Until Dark.

In 1959, Duvall made his first television appearance on Armstrong Circle Theatre in the episode The Jailbreak. He appeared regularly on television as a guest actor during the 1960s, often in action, suspense, detective, or crime dramas. His appearances during this time include performances on Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Naked City, The Untouchables, Route 66, The Twilight Zone, The Outer Limits, The Fugitive, T.H.E. Cat, and The Mod Squad to name just a few.

Duvall's screen debut was as Boo Radley in the critically acclaimed To Kill a Mockingbird (1962). He was cast in the film on the recommendation of screenwriter Horton Foote, who met Duvall at Neighborhood Playhouse during a 1957 production of Foote's play, The Midnight Caller. Foote, who would collaborate with Duvall many more times over the course of their careers, said he believed Duvall had a particular love of common people and ability to infuse fascinating revelations into his roles. Foote has described Duvall as "our number one actor."

After To Kill a Mockingbird, Duvall appeared in a number of films during the 1960s, mostly in mid sized parts but also in a few larger supporting roles. Some of his more notable appearances include the role of Capt. Paul Cabot Winston in Captain Newman, M.D. (1963), Chiz in Countdown (1968), Gordon in The Rain People (1969), and the notorious malefactor "Lucky" Ned Pepper in True Grit (1969), in which he engaged in a climactic shootout with John Wayne's Rooster Cogburn on horseback.
Mid career: 1970-1989

Duvall became an important presence in American films beginning in the 1970s. He drew a considerable amount of attention in 1970 for his portrayal of Major Frank Burns in the film MASH and for his portrayal of the title role in the cult classic THX 1138 in 1971. His first major critical success were came portraying consigliere (family counsel) Tom Hagen in The Godfather (1972) and The Godfather Part II (1974). The former film earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor.

He received another Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor and won both a BAFTA Award and Golden Globe Award for his role as Lt. Colonel Kilgore in Apocalypse Now (1979). His line "I love the smell of napalm in the morning" from Apocalypse Now is now regarded as iconic in cinema history. The full text is as follows:

    You smell that? Do you smell that? Napalm, son. Nothing else in the world smells like that. I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for twelve hours. When it was all over I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' dink body. But the smell! You know - that gasoline smell... the whole hill! Smelled like... victory.
    (Pause)
    Some day this war is going to end...

Duvall received a BAFTA Award nomination for his portrayal of television executive Frank Hackett in the critically acclaimed film Network (1976) and garnered an Oscar nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role in The Great Santini (1979) as the hard-boiled Marine and overbearing parent Lt. Col. "Bull" Meechum. The latter role was loosely based on a world-famous Marine aviator, Colonel Donald Conroy. He also portrayed United States President Dwight D. Eisenhower is the television miniseries Ike (1979).

In 1977 Duvall returned to Broadway to appear as Walter Cole in David Mamet's American Buffalo. For his performance he received a Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Actor in a Play. To date, Duvall has not returned to the New York stage.
"You can't concoct or push ahead something other than what you have at that moment as yourself, as that character. It's you at that moment in time. ... Between action and cut, it's a nice world, but you can't force that any more than you can force it in life.."
—Robert Duvall on acting

Duvall continued to appear in important films during the 1980s, including the roles of cynical sportswriter Max Mercy in The Natural (1984) and Los Angeles police officer Bob Hodges in Colors (1988). He won an Oscar for Best Actor as country western singer Mac Sledge in Tender Mercies (1983). Foote was rumored to have written the part for Duvall, who had always wanted to play a country singer and contributed ideas for the character. Foote denied this, claiming he found it too constraining to write roles for specific actors, but he did hope Duvall would be cast. Duvall was said to have written the music, but the actor said he wrote only a few "background, secondary songs." Duvall did do his own singing, insisting it be added to his contract that he sing the songs himself; Duvall said, "What's the point if you're not going to do your own (singing)? They're just going to dub somebody else? I mean, there's no point to that."

Actress Tess Harper, who co-starred, said Duvall inhabited the character so fully that she only got to know Mac Sledge and not Duvall himself. Director Bruce Beresford, too, said the transformation was so believable to him that he could feel his skin crawling up the back of his neck the first day of filming with Duvall. Beresford said of the actor, "Duvall has the ability to completely inhabit the person he's acting. He totally and utterly becomes that person to a degree which is uncanny." Nevertheless, Duvall and Beresford did not get along well during the production and often clashed during filming, including one day in which Beresford walked off the set in frustration.

In 1989, Duvall appeared in the landmark mini-series Lonesome Dove in the role of Augustus "Gus" McCrae. He has stated in several forums, including CBS Sunday Morning, that this particular role was his personal favorite. He won a Golden Globe Award and earned an Emmy Award nomination. For his role as a former Texas Ranger peace officer, Duvall was trained in the use of Walker revolvers by the Texas marksman Joe Bowman.
Later career: 1990-present
President George W. Bush stands with recipients of the 2005 National Medal of Arts on November 9, 2005, in the Oval Office. Among those recognized for their outstanding contributions to the arts were, from left: Leonard Garment, Louis Auchincloss, Paquito D'Rivera, James De Preist, Tina Ramirez, Robert Duvall, and Ollie Johnston.

Duvall has maintained a busy film career, sometimes appearing in as many as four in one year. He received Oscar nominations for his portrayals of evangelical preacher Euliss "Sonny" Dewey in The Apostle (1997) — a film he also wrote and directed — and lawyer Jerome Facher in A Civil Action (1998).

He directed Assassination Tango (2002), a thriller about one of his favorite hobbies, tango. He portrayed General Robert E. Lee in Gods and Generals in 2003 and is actually a relative of the Confederate general.

Other roles during this period that displayed the actor's wide range included that of a retiring cop in Falling Down (1992), a Hispanic barber in Wrestling Ernest Hemingway (1993), a New York tabloid editor in The Paper (1994), a rural doctor in Phenomenon (1996), an astronaut in Deep Impact (1998), a trail boss in Open Range (2003), a soccer coach in the comedy Kicking & Screaming (2005), a Las Vegas poker champion in Lucky You and a New York police captain in We Own the Night (both 2007).

He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on September 18, 2003.

Duvall has periodically worked in television during the last two decades. He won a Golden Globe and garnered an Emmy nomination for his portrayal of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin in the 1992 television movie Stalin. He was nominated for an Emmy again in 1997 for portraying Adolf Eichmann in The Man Who Captured Eichmann. In 2006, he won an Emmy for the role of Prentice "Print" Ritter in the revisionist Western miniseries Broken Trail.

In 2005, Duvall was awarded a National Medal of Arts by President George W. Bush at the White House.
Filmography
Year Film Role Notes
1959 Armstrong Circle Theatre Berks Season #10, Episode #2, "The Jailbreak"
1960 Armstrong Circle Theatre Season #10, Episode #16, "Positive Identification"
Playhouse 90 Season #4, Episode #8, "John Brown's Raid"
1961 The Defenders Al Rogart Season #1, Episode #12, "Perjury"
Great Ghost Tales William Wilson Season #1, Episode #1, "William Wilson"
Shannon Joey Nolan Season #1, Episode #10, "The Big Fish"
Cain's Hundred Tom Nugent Season #1, Episode #6, "King of the Mountain"
Route 66 Roman Season #1, Episode #25, "The Newborn"
Route 66 Arnie Season #2, Episode #4, "Birdcage on My Foot"
Naked City Lewis Nunda Season #2, Episode #13, "A Hole in the City"
1962 To Kill a Mockingbird Arthur "Boo" Radley
Naked City L. Francis 'Frank' Childe Season #3, Episode #23, "The One Marked Hot Gives Cold "
Naked City Johnny Meigs Season #4, Episode #6, "Five Cranks for Winter... Ten Cranks for Spring"
Naked City Barney Sonners Season #4, Episode #8, "Torment Him Much and Hold Him Long "
1963 The Untouchables Eddie Moon Season #4, Episode #17, "Blues for a Gone Goose"
The Defenders Luke Jackson Season #2, Episode #24, "Metamorphosis"
Route 66 Lee Winters Season #3, Episode #18, "Suppose I Said I Was the Queen of Spain"
The Twilight Zone Charley Parkes Season #4, Episode #8, "Miniature"
The Virginian Johnny Keel Season #1, Episode #24, "The Golden Door"
Stoney Burke Joby Pierce Season #1, Episode #23, "Joby"
Arrest and Trial Morton Ware Season #1, Episode #10, "The Quality of Justice"
The Fugitive Eric Christian Season #1, Episode #4, "Never Wave Goodbye"
Captain Newman, M.D. Capt. Paul Cabot Winston
1964 The Lieutenant Season #1, Episode #25, "Man with an Edge"
Kraft Suspense Theatre Harvey Farnsworth Season #1, Episode #22, "Portrait of an Unknown Man"
The Outer Limits Adam Ballard Episodes #42, 43, "The Inheritors"
The Outer Limits Louis Mace Episode #31, "The Chameleon"
1965 Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea Zar Season #1, Episode #20, "The Invaders"
Combat! Karl Season #3, Episode #16, "The Enemy"
The Defenders Bill Andrews Season #4, Episode #30, "Only a Child"
The Fugitive Leslie Sessions Season #2, Episode #16, "Brass Ring"
Nightmare in the Sun Motorcyclist
1966 Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre Frank Reeser Season #3, Episode #15, "Guilty or Not Guilty"
The F.B.I. Johnny Albin Season #2, Episode #5, "The Scourge"
Combat! Peter Halsman Season #5, Episode #14, "Cry for Help"
Hawk Dick Season #1, Episode #6, "The Theory of the Innocent Bystander"
Felony Squad Albie Froehlich Season #1, Episode #8, "Death of a Dream"
Shane Tom Gary Season #1, Episode #9, "Poor Tom's A-Cold"
T.H.E. Cat Scorpio Season #1, Episode #9, "Crossing at Destino Bay"
Fame Is the Name of the Game Eddie Franchot
The Chase Edwin Stewart
1967 The Time Tunnel Raul Nimon Season #1, Episode #24, "Chase Through Time"
Cimarron Strip Joe Wyman Season #1, Episode #18, "The Roarer"
The Wild Wild West Dr. Horace Humphries Season #3, Episode #10, "The Night of the Falcon "
The F.B.I. Ernie Milden Season #2, Episode #25-26, "The Executioners"
T.H.E. Cat Laurent Season #1, Episode #24, "The Long Chase"
Combat! Michel Season #5, Episode #25, "The Partisan"
Cosa Nostra, Arch Enemy of the FBI Ernie Milden
1968 Flesh and Blood Howard
CBS Playhouse Dr. Margolin Season #2, Episode #1, "The People Next Door"
Run for Your Life Richard Fletcher Season #3, Episode #19, "The Killing Scene"
Judd, for the Defense Raymond Cane Season #1, Episode #24, "Square House"
The F.B.I. Joseph Troy Season #4, Episode #9, "The Harvest"
The Detective Nestor
Countdown Chiz
Bullitt Cab driver
1969 The Mod Squad Matt Jenkins Season #1, Episode #23, "Keep the Faith, Baby"
The F.B.I. Gerald Wilson Season #5, Episode #2, "Nightmare Road"
True Grit Ned Pepper
The Rain People Gordon
1970 M*A*S*H Frank Burns
The Revolutionary Despard
1971 THX 1138 THX 1138
Lawman Vernon Adams
1972 The Godfather Tom Hagen New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role
The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid Jesse James
Tomorrow Jackson Fentry
Joe Kidd Frank Harlan
1973 The Outfit Earl Macklin
Badge 373 Eddie Ryan
Lady Ice Ford Pierce
1974 The Conversation The Director uncredited
The Godfather: Part II Tom Hagen
1975 The Killer Elite George Hanson
Breakout Jay Wagner
1976 The Eagle Has Landed Oberst Max Radl
The Seven-Per-Cent Solution Dr. Watson
Network Frank Hackett Nominated — BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role
1977 The Greatest Bill McDonald
1978 Ike: The War Years Dwight D. Eisenhower
Invasion of the Body Snatchers Priest on swing uncredited
The Betsy Loren Hardeman III
1979 Ike Dwight D. Eisenhower TV mini-series
Apocalypse Now Lieutenant Colonel Bill Kilgore BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
The Great Santini Bull Meechum Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Actor
1981 True Confessions Thomas Spellacy Venice Film Festival Pasinetti Cup for Best Actor
The Pursuit of D.B. Cooper Gruen
1983 Tender Mercies Mac Sledge Academy Award for Best Actor
Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
The Terry Fox Story Bill Vigars Nominated — CableACE Award for Best Actor in a Dramatic Presentation
Angelo My Love n/a Director
1984 The Stone Boy Joe Hillerman
The Natural Max Mercy
1986 Let's Get Harry Norman Shrike
Belizaire the Cajun The Preacher
Waylon Jennings: America Doctor
The Lightship Calvin Caspary Venice Film Festival Pasinetti Cup for Best Actor
1987 Hotel Colonial Roberto Carrasco
1988 Colors Officer Bob Hodges
1989 Lonesome Dove Augustus "Gus" McCrae Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film
Nominated — Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor – Miniseries or a Movie
1990 A Show of Force Howard
Days of Thunder Harry Hogge
The Handmaid's Tale The Commander
1991 Rambling Rose Daddy Hilyer Nominated — Independent Spirit Award for Best Lead Male
Convicts Soll
1992 Stalin Josef Stalin Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film
Nominated — Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor – Miniseries or a Movie
Newsies Joseph Pulitzer
La Peste Joseph Grand
1993 Falling Down Prendergast
Wrestling Ernest Hemingway Walter
Geronimo: An American Legend Al Sieber
1994 The Paper Bernie White
1995 Something to Talk About Wyly King
The Stars Fell on Henrietta Mr. Cox
The Scarlet Letter Roger Chillingworth
1996 Sling Blade Karl's father Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
The Man Who Captured Eichmann Adolf Eichmann Nominated — Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor – Miniseries or a Movie
Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie
A Family Thing Earl Pilcher Jr.
Phenomenon Doc Brunder
1997 The Apostle Euliss 'Sonny' Dewey — The Apostle E.F. Writer/Director
Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
Florida Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
Independent Spirit Award for Best Lead Male
Independent Spirit Award for Best Director
Las Vegas Film Critics Society Award for Best Actor
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor
Satellite Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture Drama
Society of Texas Film Critics Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Independent Spirit Award for Best Screenplay
Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role
1998 The Gingerbread Man Dixon Doss
A Civil Action Jerome Facher Florida Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture
Nominated — Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture
Deep Impact Capt. Spurgeon 'Fish' Tanner
Saturday Night Live various Season #23, Episode #14, hosted by Garth Brooks
2000 Gone in 60 Seconds Otto Halliwell
The 6th Day Dr. Griffin Weir
A Shot at Glory Gordon McLeod
2002 John Q Lt. Frank Grimes
Assassination Tango John J. Anderson Writer/Director
2003 Gods and Generals Gen. Robert E. Lee
Secondhand Lions Hub
Open Range Boss Spearman
2005 American Experience Narrator Season #17, Episode #10, "The Carter Family: Will the Circle"
Kicking & Screaming Buck Weston
Thank You for Smoking Doak "The Captain" Boykin
2006 Broken Trail Prentice "Print" Ritter Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor – Miniseries or a Movie
Emmy Award for Outstanding Miniseries
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film
Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie
2007 Lucky You Mr. Cheever
We Own the Night Albert Grusinsky
2008 Four Christmases Howard
2009 Crazy Heart Wayne Kramer (post-production)
The Road Old Man
2010 Get Low (post-production)


Awards
Academy Awards
Year Category Film Result
1998 Best Supporting Actor A Civil Action Nominated
1997 Best Leading Actor The Apostle Nominated
1983 Best Leading Actor Tender Mercies Won
1980 Best Leading Actor The Great Santini Nominated
1979 Best Supporting Actor Apocalypse Now Nominated
1972 Best Supporting Actor The Godfather Nominated
http://i233.photobucket.com/albums/ee163/genhandgrenade42/Duvall.jpg
http://i616.photobucket.com/albums/tt248/Richlee86/robertduvall.jpg
http://i256.photobucket.com/albums/hh179/ronni3298/robertduvall.jpg
http://i132.photobucket.com/albums/q33/debicogburn/Media%20Stuff/My%20Favorite%20Celebs%20and%20Characters/duvall.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/05/10 at 8:33 am

The person of the day...Arthur Kennedy
Arthur Kennedy (February 17, 1914 – January 5, 1990) was an American stage and film actor.
Kennedy got his break when he was discovered by James Cagney. His first film role was of Cagney's younger brother in City for Conquest in 1940. He portrayed heroic and villainous characters equally, appearing in Western films and police dramas. He also portrayed a surgeon in 1966's Fantastic Voyage.

He starred in several well-received films from the late 1940s to the 1960s, including High Sierra, They Died with Their Boots On, Boomerang, Champion, The Window, The Glass Menagerie, Bright Victory, Bend of the River, The Lusty Men, Rancho Notorious, The Desperate Hours, Lawrence of Arabia, The Man from Laramie, Trial, Peyton Place, Some Came Running, A Summer Place and Elmer Gantry.

He appeared both on the stage and screen, receiving a Tony Award for the role of Biff Loman in Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman (1949). Kennedy also inaugurated three other major characters in Miller plays: Chris Keller in All My Sons (1947), John Proctor in The Crucible (1953), and Walter Franz in The Price (1968).
Oscar nominations

He and Claude Rains share the record of four losing nominations for the Best Supporting Actor Academy Award. He also received a nomination for Best Actor, in Bright Victory (1951).
Year Award Film Winner
1949 Best Supporting Actor Champion Dean Jagger – Twelve O'Clock High
1951 Best Actor Bright Victory Humphrey Bogart – The African Queen
1955 Best Supporting Actor Trial Jack Lemmon – Mister Roberts
1957 Best Supporting Actor Peyton Place Red Buttons – Sayonara
1958 Best Supporting Actor Some Came Running Burl Ives – The Big Country
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v306/jetdogy/SEPARATED_AT_BIRTH/PAGE_06/13-kieferkennedy.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Frank on 01/05/10 at 3:52 pm

"You smell that? Do you smell that? Napalm, son. Nothing else in the world smells like that. I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for twelve hours. When it was all over I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' dink body. But the smell! You know - that gasoline smell... the whole hill! Smelled like... victory."

Classic line from a classic film.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/05/10 at 5:29 pm


The person of the day...Arthur Kennedy
Arthur Kennedy (February 17, 1914 – January 5, 1990) was an American stage and film actor.
Kennedy got his break when he was discovered by James Cagney. His first film role was of Cagney's younger brother in City for Conquest in 1940. He portrayed heroic and villainous characters equally, appearing in Western films and police dramas. He also portrayed a surgeon in 1966's Fantastic Voyage.

He starred in several well-received films from the late 1940s to the 1960s, including High Sierra, They Died with Their Boots On, Boomerang, Champion, The Window, The Glass Menagerie, Bright Victory, Bend of the River, The Lusty Men, Rancho Notorious, The Desperate Hours, Lawrence of Arabia, The Man from Laramie, Trial, Peyton Place, Some Came Running, A Summer Place and Elmer Gantry.

He appeared both on the stage and screen, receiving a Tony Award for the role of Biff Loman in Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman (1949). Kennedy also inaugurated three other major characters in Miller plays: Chris Keller in All My Sons (1947), John Proctor in The Crucible (1953), and Walter Franz in The Price (1968).
Oscar nominations

He and Claude Rains share the record of four losing nominations for the Best Supporting Actor Academy Award. He also received a nomination for Best Actor, in Bright Victory (1951).
Year Award Film Winner
1949 Best Supporting Actor Champion Dean Jagger – Twelve O'Clock High
1951 Best Actor Bright Victory Humphrey Bogart – The African Queen
1955 Best Supporting Actor Trial Jack Lemmon – Mister Roberts
1957 Best Supporting Actor Peyton Place Red Buttons – Sayonara
1958 Best Supporting Actor Some Came Running Burl Ives – The Big Country
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the similarity is uncanny.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/05/10 at 5:33 pm

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QrojFR7jM9E



Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/05/10 at 5:34 pm

Lonesome Dove.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/05/10 at 6:13 pm


"You smell that? Do you smell that? Napalm, son. Nothing else in the world smells like that. I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for twelve hours. When it was all over I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' dink body. But the smell! You know - that gasoline smell... the whole hill! Smelled like... victory."

Classic line from a classic film.

Yep ;D

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/05/10 at 6:13 pm


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QrojFR7jM9E



Cat

Excellent song :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/05/10 at 6:14 pm


the similarity is uncanny.

I know it's weird

Lonesome Dove.

My inspiration for the word of the day :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Womble on 01/05/10 at 8:30 pm

Nice bio on Arthur Kennedy, Ninny. I've always felt he was underated. Thanks for posting.  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/06/10 at 6:29 am


Nice bio on Arthur Kennedy, Ninny. I've always felt he was underated. Thanks for posting.  :)

Thanks Vinny, I didn't know if too many people knew who he was.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/06/10 at 6:44 am

The word or phrase of the day...LPGA
The LPGA, in full the Ladies Professional Golf Association, is an American organization for female professional golfers. The organization, whose headquarters are in Daytona Beach, Florida, is best known for running the LPGA Tour, a series of weekly golf tournaments for elite female golfers from around the world that runs from February to December each year. In 2009, total prize money on the LPGA Tour was just under $47.6 million, a decrease of over $12 million from 2008, and there were 28 total official events, down from 34 in 2008. The 2010 season will see a further reduction in events, with 24 officially announced in November 2009, although the LPGA left open the possibility of one or two more events being added before the 2010 season begins.
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/06/10 at 6:49 am

The birthday of the day...Nancy Lopez
Nancy Lopez (born January 6, 1957) is an American professional golfer. She became a member of the LPGA Tour in 1977 and won 48 LPGA Tour events during her LPGA career, including three major championships.In 1978, her first full season on the LPGA Tour, Lopez won nine tournaments, including at one stretch, five tournaments in a row. She appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated, won the Vare Trophy for lowest scoring average, LPGA Rookie of the Year, Player of the Year and was named the Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year. She won another eight times in 1979. She won multiple times in each year from 1980 to 1984, although she played only half-seasons in 1983 and 1984 due to the birth of her first child.

Playing full time again in 1985, Lopez posted five wins, five seconds and five thirds, won the money title, the scoring title and the Player of the Year Award. She was also named Associate Press Female Athlete of the Year for a second time. She played only four tournaments in 1986, when her second daughter was born. But came back to win multiple times in 1987-89 - three times each in 1988 and 1989 - and once again won Player of the Year honors in 1988. Her schedule was curtailed again in the early 1990s when her third daughter was born. In 1992 she won twice. She continued to play short schedules - from 11 to 18 tournaments - through 2002, then in 2003 cut back to just a half dozen or fewer events a year.

Although considered one of the greats in the history of women's golf, and the best player from the late '70s to late '80s, Lopez did not win many majors and never won the U.S. Women's Open. She finished second at the U.S. Women's Open four times, the last coming in 1997 when she became the first golfer to score in the 60s for all four rounds, yet she still lost to Alison Nicholas. Her three major championships all came at the LPGA Championship, in 1978, 1985, and 1989.

Lopez was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1987. She was a member of the United States Solheim Cup team in 1990 and was captain of the team in 2005. She retired from regular tournament play in 2002, and then attempted a return in 2007 and 2008. In her return season, she played six tournaments, failed to make the cut in any of the tournaments and only broke 80 in three of the 12 rounds. In 2008 she played in three events, with a low score of 76, never making the cut.

Lopez is the only woman to win LPGA Rookie of the Year, Player of the Year, and the Vare Trophy in the same season (1978). Her company, Nancy Lopez Golf, makes a full line of women's clubs and accessories. She also does occasional television commentary. Her husband, Ray Knight, is a former All-Star baseball player.
Amateur wins

this list may be incomplete

    * 1969 New Mexico Women's Amateur
    * 1970 New Mexico Women's Amateur
    * 1971 New Mexico Women's Amateur
    * 1972 U.S. Girl's Junior, Wonen's Western Junior
    * 1973 Wonen's Western Junior
    * 1974 U.S. Girl's Junior, Wonen's Western Junior
    * 1975 Mexican Amateur
    * 1976 AIAW National Championship, Women's Western Amateur, Women's Trans National Amateur

LPGA Tour wins (48)

    * 1978 (9) Bent Tree Classic, Sunstar Classic, Greater Baltimore Classic, Coca-Cola Classic, Golden Lights Championship, LPGA Championship, Bankers Trust Classic, Colgate European Open, Colgate Far East Open
    * 1979 (8) Sunstar Classic, Sahara National Pro-Am, Women's International, Coca-Cola Classic, Golden Lights Championship, Lady Keystone Open, Colgate European Open, Mary Kay Classic
    * 1980 (3) Women's Kemper Open, The Sarah Coventry, Rail Charity Golf Classic
    * 1981 (3) Arizona Copper Classic, Colgate Dinah Shore, The Sarah Coventry
    * 1982 (2) J&B Scotch Pro-Am, Mazda Japan Classic
    * 1983 (2) Elizabeth Arden Classic, J&B Scotch Pro-Am
    * 1984 (2) Uniden LPGA Invitational, Chevrolet World Championship of Women's Golf
    * 1985 (5) Chrysler-Plymouth Classic, LPGA Championship, Mazda Hall of Fame Championship, Henredon Classic, Portland PING Championship
    * 1987 (2) Sarasota Classic, PING Cellular One LPGA Golf Championship
    * 1988 (3) Mazda Classic, Ai Star/Centinela Hospital Classic, Chrysler-Plymouth Classic
    * 1989 (3) LPGA Championship, Atlantic City Classic, Nippon Travel-MBS Classic
    * 1990 (1) MBS LPGA Classic
    * 1991 (1) Sara Lee Classic
    * 1992 (2) Rail Charity Golf Classic, PING Cellular One LPGA Golf Championship
    * 1993 (1) Youngstown-Warren LPGA Classic
    * 1997 (1) Chick-fil-A Charity Championship

LPGA Majors are shown in bold.

    Note: Lopez won the Colgate Dinah Shore (now known as the Kraft Nabisco Championship) before it became a major championship.

Other wins

    * 1980 JCPenney Mixed Team Classic (with Curtis Strange)
    * 1987 Mazda Champions (with Miller Barber)

Major championships
Wins (3)
Year Championship Winning Score
1978 LPGA Championship 275 (-13)
1985 LPGA Championship 275 (-15)
1989 LPGA Championship 274 (-14)
Results in LPGA majors
Tournament 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980
Kraft Nabisco Championship ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
LPGA Championship DNP DNP DNP DNP 1 T10 T19
U.S. Women's Open T18 T2LA CUT 2 T9 T11 T7
du Maurier Classic ... ... ... ... ... 2 T6
Tournament 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990
Kraft Nabisco Championship ... ... T6 T16 T11 DNP T33 T5 T18 CUT
LPGA Championship T5 T35 T21 T14 1 DNP T28 T24 1 T14
U.S. Women's Open WD T7 DNP T35 T4 DNP T21 T12 2 T14
du Maurier Classic T2 T9 WD T8 DNP DNP T21 T45 9 DNP
Tournament 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000
Kraft Nabisco Championship T30 CUT T8 T9 T3 T15 T23 T13 T21 T43
LPGA Championship DNP T18 T25 WD T18 T18 T37 T44 WD T65
U.S. Women's Open DNP T16 T7 T35 T28 CUT 2 CUT CUT T46
du Maurier Classic DNP DNP DNP T22 DNP T2 DNP T27 DNP DNP
Tournament 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Kraft Nabisco Championship T63 CUT CUT WD CUT DNP DNP
LPGA Championship CUT CUT CUT CUT DNP DNP DNP
U.S. Women's Open CUT CUT DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP
Women's British Open ^ DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP

^ The Women's British Open replaced the du Maurier Classic as an LPGA major in 2001.
LA = Low Amateur
DNP = did not play.
CUT = missed the half=way cut.
"T" = tied
WD = withdrew
Green background for a win. Yellow background for a top-10 finish.
See also

    * Golfers with most LPGA Tour wins
    * Golfers with most LPGA major championship wins

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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/06/10 at 6:52 am

The person of the day...Dizzy Gillespie
John Birks "Dizzy" Gillespie (pronounced /gɪˈlɛspi/; October 21, 1917 – January 6, 1993) was an American jazz trumpeter, bandleader, singer, and composer.

Together with Charlie Parker, he was a major figure in the development of bebop and modern jazz. He taught and influenced many other musicians, including trumpeters Miles Davis, Fats Navarro, Clifford Brown, Arturo Sandoval, Lee Morgan, and John Faddis.

In addition to featuring in the epochal moments in bebop, he was instrumental in founding Afro-Cuban jazz, the modern jazz version of what early-jazz pioneer Jelly Roll Morton referred to as the "Spanish Tinge". Gillespie was a trumpet virtuoso and gifted improviser, building on the virtuoso style of Roy Eldridge but adding layers of harmonic complexity previously unknown in jazz. Dizzy's beret and horn-rimmed spectacles, his scat singing, his bent horn, pouched cheeks and his light-hearted personality were essential in popularizing bebop. Dizzy's first professional job was with the Frank Fairfax Orchestra in 1935, after which he joined the respective orchestras of Edgar Hayes and Teddy Hill, essentially replacing Roy Eldridge as first trumpet in 1937. Teddy Hill’s band was where Dizzy Gillespie made his first recording, King Porter Stomp. At this time Dizzy met a young woman named Lorraine from the Apollo Theatre, whom he married in 1940. They remained married until his death in 1993. Dizzy stayed with Teddy Hill’s band for a year, then left and free-lanced with numerous other bands. In 1939, Dizzy joined Cab Calloway's orchestra, with which he recorded one of his earliest compositions, the instrumental Pickin' the Cabbage, in 1940. (Originally released on Paradiddle, a 78rpm backed with a co-composition with Cozy Cole, Calloway's drummer at the time, on the Vocalion label, #5467).

Dizzy left Calloway in late 1941 over a notorious incident with a knife. Calloway did not like how Dizzy played his music, nor did he like the humor that Dizzy gave his performances. Calloway even went so far as to call Dizzy’s music “Chinese Music”. During a performance one night Calloway was playing a solo when one of his band members hit him in the back with a spitball. Calloway was very angry and accused Dizzy first. Dizzy said that he did not throw the spitball and both musicians started arguing. The argument got so bad that Dizzy actually pulled out his weapon.

During his time in Calloway's band, Dizzy Gillespie started writing big band music for bandleaders like Woody Herman and Jimmy Dorsey. He then freelanced with a few bands - most notably Ella Fitzgerald's orchestra, composed of members of the late Chick Webb's band, in 1942.

In 1943, Dizzy joined the Earl Hines orchestra. The legendary big band of Billy Eckstine gave his unusual harmonies a better setting and it was as a member of Eckstine's band that he was reunited with Parker, a fellow member of Hines' more conventional band. In 1945, Dizzy left Eckstine's band because he wanted to play with a small combo. A "small combo" typically comprised no more than five musicians, playing the trumpet, saxophone, piano, bass and drums.
The rise of bebop

Bebop was known as the first modern jazz style. However, it was unpopular in the beginning and was not viewed as positively as swing music was. Bebop was seen as an outgrowth of swing, not a revolution. Swing introducted a diversity of new musicians in the bebop era like Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk, Bud Powell, Kenny Clarke, Oscar Pettiford, and Gillespie. Through these musicians, a new vocabulary of musical phrases was created. With Charlie Parker, Gillespie jammed at famous jazz clubs like Minton's Playhouse and Monroe's Uptown House, where the first seeds of bebop were planted. Charlie Parker's system also held methods of adding chords to existing chord progressions and implying additional chords within the improvised lines.

Gillespie compositions like "Groovin' High", "Woody n' You", "Salt Peanuts", and "A Night in Tunisia". sounded radically different, harmonically and rhythmically, from the Swing music popular at the time. Written in 1942, while Gillespie was playing with Earl Hines' band, the song is noted for have a feature that is common in today's music, a non-walking bass line. The song also displays Afro-Cuban rhythms. One of their first (and greatest) small-group performances together was only issued in 2005: a concert in New York's Town Hall on June 22, 1945. Gillespie taught many of the young musicians on 52nd Street, like Miles Davis and Max Roach, about the new style of jazz. After a lengthy gig at Billy Berg's club in Los Angeles, which left most of the audience ambivalent or hostile towards the new music, the band broke up. Unlike Parker, who was content to play in small groups and be an occasional featured soloist in big bands, Gillespie aimed to lead a big band himself; his first, unsuccessful, attempt to do this was in 1945.

After his work with Parker, Gillespie led other small combos (including ones with Milt Jackson, John Coltrane, Lalo Schifrin, Ray Brown, Kenny Clarke, James Moody, J.J. Johnson, and Yusef Lateef) and finally put together his first successful big band. Dizzy Gillespie and his band tried to popularize bop and make Dizzy Gillespie a symbol of the new music. He also appeared frequently as a soloist with Norman Granz's Jazz at the Philharmonic. He also headlined the 1946 independently-produced musical revue film Jivin' in Be-Bop.

In 1948 Dizzy was involved in a traffic accident when the bicycle he was riding was bumped by an automobile. He was slightly injured, and found that he could no longer hit the B-flat above high C. He won the case, but the jury awarded him only $1000, in view of his high earnings up to that point.

In 1956 he organized a band to go on a State Department tour of the Middle East and earned the nickname "the Ambassador of Jazz". During this time, he also continued to lead a big band that performed throughout the United States and featured musicians including Pee Wee Moore and others. This band recorded a live album at the 1957 Newport jazz festival that featured Mary Lou Williams as a guest artist on piano.
Afro-Cuban music

In the late 1940s, Gillespie was also involved in the movement called Afro-Cuban music, bringing Latin and African elements to greater prominence in jazz and even pop music, particularly salsa. Afro-Cuban jazz is based on traditional Cuban rhythms. Dizzy Gillespie was introduced to Chano Pozo in 1947 by Mario Bauza, a Latin jazz trumpet player. Chano Pozo became Gillespie's conga drummer for his band. Dizzy Gilespie also worked with Mario Bauza in New York jazz clubs on 52nd street and several famous dance clubs such as Palladium and the Apollo Theater in Harlem. They played together in the Chick Webb band and Cab Calloway's band, where Gillespie and Bauza became life-long friends. Dizzy helped develop and mature the Afro-Cuban jazz style.

Afro-Cuban jazz was considered bebop-oriented, and some musicians classified it as a modern style or swing. Afro-Cuban jazz was successful because it never decreased in popularity and it always attracted people to dance to its unique rhythms. Gillespie's most famous contributions to Afro-Cuban music are the compositions "Manteca" and "Tin Tin Deo" (both co-written with Chano Pozo); he was responsible for commissioning George Russell's "Cubano Be, Cubano Bop", which featured the great but ill-fated Cuban conga player, Chano Pozo. In 1977, Gillespie discovered Arturo Sandoval while researching music during a tour of Cuba.
Later years and death
Dizzy Gillespie at Nambassa festival 1981.
Credit: Nambassa Trust and Peter Terry http://www.nambassa.com

Unlike his contemporary Miles Davis, Gillespie essentially remained true to the bebop style for the rest of his career.

In 1960, he was inducted into the Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame.

In 1964 the artist put himself forward as a presidential candidate. He promised that if he were elected, the White House would be renamed "The Blues House," and a cabinet composed of Duke Ellington, (Secretary of State); Miles Davis, (Director of the CIA); Max Roach, (Secretary of Defense); Charles Mingus, (Secretary of Peace); Ray Charles, (Librarian of Congress); Louis Armstrong, (Secretary of Agriculture); Mary Lou Williams, (Ambassador to the Vatican); Thelonious Monk, (Travelling Ambassador) and Malcolm X, (Attorney General). He said his running mate would be Phyllis Diller.

Gillespie published his autobiography, To Be or Not to Bop, in 1979.

Gillespie was a vocal fixture in many of John Hubley and Faith Hubley's animated films, such as The Hole, The Hat, and Voyage to Next.

In the 1980s, Dizzy Gillespie led the United Nation Orchestra. For three years Flora Purim toured with the Orchestra and she credits Gillespie with evolving her understanding of jazz after being in the field for over two decades. David Sánchez also toured with the group and was also greatly influenced by Gillespie. Both artists later were nominated for Grammy awards. Gillespie also had a guest appearance on The Cosby Show as well as Sesame Street and The Muppet Show.

In 1982, Dizzy Gillespie had a cameo on Stevie Wonder's hit "Do I Do". Gillespie's tone gradually faded in the last years in life, and his performances often focused more on his proteges such as Arturo Sandoval and Jon Faddis; his good-humoured comedic routines became more and more a part of his live act.
Dizzy Gillespie with drummer Bill Stewart at 1984 Stanford Jazz Workshop

In 1988, Gillespie had worked with Canadian flautist and saxophonist Moe Koffman on their prestigious album Oo Pop a Da. He did fast scat vocals on the title track and a couple of the other tracks were played only on trumpet.

In 1989 Gillespie gave 300 performances in 27 countries, appeared in 100 U.S. cities in 31 states and the District of Columbia, headlined three television specials, performed with two symphonies, and recorded four albums. He was also crowned a traditional chief in Nigeria, received the Commandeur de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres -- France's most prestigious cultural award—was named regent professor by the University of California, and received his fourteenth honorary doctoral degree, this one from the Berklee College of Music. In addition, he was awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award the same year. The next year, at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts ceremonies celebrating the centennial of American jazz, Gillespie received the Kennedy Center Honors Award and the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers Duke Ellington Award for 50 years of achievement as a composer, performer, and bandleader. In 1993 he received the Polar Music Prize in Sweden.
Dizzy Gillespie with the Italian singer Sergio Caputo.

November 26, 1992 at Carnegie Hall in New York, following the Second Bahá'í World Congress was Dizzy's 75th birthday concert and his offering to the celebration of the centenary of the passing of Bahá'u'lláh. Gillespie was to appear at Carnegie Hall for the 33rd time. The line-up included: Jon Faddis, Marvin "Doc" Holladay, James Moody, Paquito D'Rivera, and the Mike Longo Trio with Ben Brown on bass and Mickey Roker on drums. But Gillespie didn't make it because he was in bed suffering from cancer of the pancreas. "But the musicians played their real hearts out for him, no doubt suspecting that he would not play again. Each musician gave tribute to their friend, this great soul and innovator in the world of jazz."

Gillespie also starred in a film called The Winter in Lisbon released in 2004. He has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7057 Hollywood Boulevard in the Hollywood section of the City of Los Angeles. He is honored by the December 31, 2006 - A Jazz New Year's Eve: Freddy Cole & the Dizzy Gillespie All-Star Big Band at The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.

A longtime resident of Corona, Queens, he died of pancreatic cancer January 6, 1993, aged 75, and was buried in the Flushing Cemetery, Queens, New York. Mike Longo delivered a eulogy at his funeral. He was also with Gillespie on the night he died, along with Jon Faddis and a select few others.

At the time of his death, Dizzy Gillespie was survived by his widow, Lorraine Willis Gillespie; a daughter, jazz singer Jeanie Bryson; and a grandson, Radji Birks Bryson-Barrett. Gillespie had two funerals. One was a Bahá'í funeral at his request, at which his closest friends and colleagues attended. The second was at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York open to the public.

Dizzy Gillespie, a Bahá'í since 1970, was one of the most famous adherents of the Bahá'í Faith which helped him make sense of his position in a succession of trumpeters as well as turning his life from knife-carrying roughneck to global citizen, and from alcohol to soul force, in the words of author Nat Hentoff, who knew Gillespie for forty years. He is often called the Bahá'í Jazz Ambassador. He is honored with weekly jazz sessions at the New York Bahá'í Center
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/06/10 at 7:55 am

Dizzy always had that ability to blow and his cheeks would get big.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/06/10 at 8:28 am


Dizzy always had that ability to blow and his cheeks would get big.

I noticed that in his pictures.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/06/10 at 3:51 pm


I noticed that in his pictures.


How did he learn to do that?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/06/10 at 4:00 pm


How did he learn to do that?

I guess experience :-\\

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/06/10 at 4:08 pm

I remember he was on an episode of Cosby Show.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/06/10 at 4:42 pm


I remember he was on an episode of Cosby Show.

I almost forgot that.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/06/10 at 4:59 pm

I remember him on the Muppet Show.



Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/07/10 at 7:01 am


I remember him on the Muppet Show.



Cat

Now that I did forget about :-[

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/07/10 at 7:10 am

The word of the day...Ghost
A ghost is the spirit of a dead person that someone believes they can see or feel.
The ghost of something, especially of something bad that has happened, is the memory of it.
If there is a ghost of something, that thing is so faint or weak that it hardly exists.
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/07/10 at 7:14 am

The birthday of the day...Nicolas Cage
Nicolas Cage (born Nicolas Kim Coppola; January 7, 1964) is an American actor.

Cage pursued acting as a career, making his debut on television in 1981. Cage has been featured in "bad boy" roles, and has won awards, beginning in 1989 with his Independent Spirit Award, an Academy Award for Best Actor for his lead role in Leaving Las Vegas, and his most recent Toronto Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor in 2002 for Adaptation.

Cage has appeared in over 60 films including Face/Off (1997), Ghost Rider (2007), and National Treasure (2004). Cage has been married three times: to Patricia Arquette, Lisa Marie Presley, and Alice Kim Cage, his current wife.
n order to avoid the appearance of nepotism as the nephew of Francis Ford Coppola, he changed his name early in his career from Nicolas Coppola to Nicolas Cage, inspired in part by the Marvel Comics superhero Luke Cage. Since his minor role in the film Fast Times at Ridgemont High, with Sean Penn, Cage has appeared in a wide range of films, both mainstream and offbeat. He tried out for the role of Dallas Winston in his uncle's film The Outsiders, based on S.E. Hinton's novel, but lost to Matt Dillon. He was also in Coppola's films Rumble Fish and Peggy Sue Got Married.

Other Cage roles included appearances in the acclaimed 1987 romantic-comedy Moonstruck, also starring Cher; The Coen Brothers cult-classic comedy Raising Arizona; David Lynch's 1990 offbeat film Wild at Heart; a lead role in Martin Scorsese's 1999 New York City paramedic drama Bringing Out the Dead; and Ridley Scott's 2003 quirky drama Matchstick Men, in which he played an agoraphobic, mysophobic, obsessive-compulsive con artist with a tic disorder.

Cage has been nominated twice for an Academy Award, winning once for his performance as a suicidal alcoholic in Leaving Las Vegas. His other nomination was for his portrayal of real-life screenwriter Charlie Kaufman and Kaufman's fictional twin Donald in Adaptation. Despite these successes, most of his lower-profile films have performed poorly at the box office compared to his mainstream action/adventure roles. The suspense thriller 8mm (1999) was not a box office success, but is now considered a cult film. He took the lead role in the 2001 film Captain Corelli's Mandolin and learned to play the mandolin from scratch for the part. In 2005, two offbeat films he headlined, Lord of War and The Weather Man, failed to find a significant audience despite nationwide releases and good reviews for his acting in those roles. Poor reviews for The Wicker Man resulted in low box office sales. The much criticized Ghost Rider (2007), based on the Marvel Comics character, was a significant hit, earning more than $45 million (the top earner) during its opening weekend and over $208 million worldwide through the weekend ending on March 25, 2007. Also in 2007, he starred in Next, which shares the concept of a glimpse into an alternate timeline with The Family Man (2000).

Most of Cage's movies that have achieved financial success were in the action/adventure genre. In his second-highest grossing film to date, National Treasure, he plays an eccentric historian who goes on a dangerous adventure to find treasure hidden by the Founding Fathers of the United States. Other action hits include The Rock, in which Cage plays a young FBI chemical weapons expert who infiltrates Alcatraz Island in hopes of neutralizing a terrorist threat, Face/Off, a John Woo film where he plays both a hero and a villain, and World Trade Center, director Oliver Stone's film regarding the September 11, 2001 attacks. He had a small but notable role as the Chinese criminal mastermind Dr. Fu Manchu in Rob Zombie's fake trailer Werewolf Women of the S.S. from the B-movie double feature Grindhouse.

In recent years, Cage made his directorial debut with Sonny, a low-budget drama starring James Franco as a male prostitute whose mother (Brenda Blethyn) serves as his pimp. Cage had a small role in the grim film, which received poor reviews and a short run in a limited number of theatres. Cage's producing career includes Shadow of the Vampire, the first film from Saturn Films.

In early December 2006, Cage announced at the Bahamas International Film Festival that he planned to curtail his future acting endeavors in order to pursue other interests. On the The Dresden Files for the Sci-Fi Channel, Cage is listed as the executive producer. Cage said:

    I feel I've made a lot of movies already and I want to start exploring other opportunities that I can apply myself to, whether it's writing or other interests that I may develop.

In November 2007, Cage was spotted backstage at a Ring of Honor wrestling show in New York City researching his role for the The Wrestler. Ultimately, Nicolas Cage was replaced in "The Wrestler" with Mickey Rourke, in a role that has earned a Best Actor Academy Award nomination for Rourke.

Wrestler Director Darren Aronofsky, in an interview with slashfilm.com, said of Cage's replacement that:

    Nic was a complete gentleman, and he understood that my heart was with Mickey and he stepped aside. I have so much respect for Nic Cage as an actor and I think it really could have worked with Nic but ... you know, Nic was incredibly supportive of Mickey and he is old friends with Mickey and really wanted to help with this opportunity, so he pulled himself out of the race.

In 2008, Cage appeared as Joe, a contract killer who undergoes a change of heart while on a work outing in Bangkok, in the film Bangkok Dangerous. The film is shot by the Pang Brothers and has a distinct South-East Asian flavor.

In 2009, Cage starred in sci-fi thriller Knowing, directed by Alex Proyas. In the film, he plays an MIT professor who examines the contents of a time capsule unearthed at his son's elementary school. Startling predictions found inside the capsule that have already come true lead him to believe the world is going to end at the close of the week, and that he and his son are somehow involved in the destruction. The film received mainly negative reviews but was the box office winner on its opening weekend.

Also in 2009, Cage appeared in the film Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans, directed by acclaimed German director Werner Herzog. He portrayed a corrupt police officer with gambling, drug and alcohol addictions. This film reunited Cage with Eva Mendes, who played his love interest in Ghost Rider.

Cage will star in the period piece Season of the Witch, playing a 14th-century knight transporting a girl accused of causing the Black Plague to a monastery, and The Sorcerer's Apprentice, in which he will play the sorcerer.

It is rumored that he will star in National Treasure 3, which has a possible release date as early as 2011. He would again take the role of Benjamin Gates, a cryptologist-turned-treasure hunter.
Praise and criticism

The acting work of Cage has been praised by influential film critic Roger Ebert who writes, in his "Great Movies" essay about the film Adaptation., that:

    There are often lists of the great living male movie stars: De Niro, Nicholson and Pacino, usually. How often do you see the name of Nicolas Cage? He should always be up there. He's daring and fearless in his choice of roles, and unafraid to crawl out on a limb, saw it off and remain suspended in air. No one else can project inner trembling so effectively.... He always seems so earnest. However improbable his character, he never winks at the audience. He is committed to the character with every atom and plays him as if he were him.

Roger Ebert, in response to mixed reviews of Knowing and their focus on criticizing Cage, wrote an article in which he defends both Cage as an actor and the movie which, in stark contrast to other critics, Ebert gave 4/4 stars.

Despite such praise, Cage has his detractors. Cage is often criticized for choosing to star in thrillers and/or big-budget action-adventure movies. Many feel that, in recent years, he has abandoned altogether any desire to star in smaller character-driven dramas, the type of film that initially garnered him praise. Entertainment Weekly critic Owen Gleiberman wrote an article in March 2009, after the debut of Knowing accusing Cage of such "selling out" In the article, titled "Nicolas Cage: Artist or hack? The choice is his", Gleiberman calls Cage out to return to dramas as opposed to high-paying blockbusters.
Filmography
Year Film Role Notes
1980 Brubaker Extra Uncredited
1981 Best Of Times Nicholas
1982 Fast Times at Ridgemont High Brad's Bud
1983 The Outsiders cameo in rumble scene Uncredited
Valley Girl Randy
Rumble Fish Smokey
1984 Racing with the Moon Nicky and Bud
The Cotton Club Vincent Dwyer
Birdy Sergeant Al Columbato
1986 The Boy in Blue Ned Hanlan
Peggy Sue Got Married Charlie Bodell
1987 Raising Arizona H. I. McDunnough
Moonstruck Ronny Cammareri Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
1988 Never on Tuesday Man In Red Sports Car
1989 Vampire's Kiss Peter Leow Festival de Cine de Sitges Award for Best Actor Tied with Sir Michael Gambon for The Cook, The Thief, His Wife & Her Lover (1989)
Nominated — Independent Spirit Award for Best Lead Male
1990 Tempo di uccidere Enrico Silvestri
Fire Birds Jake Preston aka Wings of the Apache
Wild at Heart Sailor
Zandalee Johnny
1992 Honeymoon in Vegas Jack Singer Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
1993 Amos & Andrew Amos Odell
Deadfall Eddie
1994 A Century of Cinema Himself
Red Rock West Michael Williams
Guarding Tess Doug Chesnic
It Could Happen to You Charlie Lang
Trapped in Paradise Bill Firpo
1995 Kiss of Death Little Junior Brown
Leaving Las Vegas Ben Sanderson Academy Award for Best Actor
Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor
Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
National Board of Review Award for Best Actor
National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
San Sebastián International Film Festival Silver Seashell
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role
Nominated — BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
Nominated — Chlotrudis Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Independent Spirit Award for Best Lead Male
Nominated — London Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor
1996 The Rock Dr. Stanley Goodspeed
1997 Con Air Cameron Poe
Face/Off Castor Troy/Sean Archer Nominated — Saturn Award for Best Actor
1998 City of Angels Seth
Snake Eyes Rick Santoro
1999 8mm Tom Welles
Bringing Out the Dead Frank Pierce
2000 Gone in Sixty Seconds Randall "Memphis" Raines
The Family Man Jack Campbell
Welcome to Hollywood Himself
2001 Italian Soldiers Himself
Captain Corelli's Mandolin Captain Antonio Corelli
Christmas Carol: The Movie Jacob Marley Voice
2002 Windtalkers Sgt. Joe Enders
Adaptation. Charlie and Donald Kaufman Toronto Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Actor
Nominated — BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
Nominated — Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Chlotrudis Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
Nominated — Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Actor
Nominated — Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Cast
Nominated — Satellite Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role
Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
Sonny Acid Yellow Director
Nominated — Deauville Film Festival Grand Prix du jury
2003 Matchstick Men Roy Waller
2004 National Treasure Benjamin Gates
2005 Lord of War Yuri Orlov
The Weather Man David Spritz
2006 The Ant Bully Zoc Voice
The Wicker Man Edward Malus
World Trade Center John McLoughlin
2007 Ghost Rider Ghost Rider/Johnny Blaze
Grindhouse Dr. Fu Manchu Segment Werewolf Women of the S.S.
Next Cris Johnson
National Treasure: Book of Secrets Benjamin Gates
2008 Bangkok Dangerous Joe
2009 Knowing Professor Jonathan "John" Koestler
G-Force Speckles the Mole Voice
Astro Boy Dr. Tenma Voice
Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans The Lieutenant
2010 Season of the Witch Lavey post-production
Kick-Ass Damon Macready/ Big Daddy post-production
The Sorcerer's Apprentice Balthazar Blake post-production
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/07/10 at 7:18 am

The person of the day...Trevor Howard
Trevor Howard (29 September 1913 – 7 January 1988), born Trevor Wallace Howard-Smith, was an English film, stage and television actor. oward moved back to the theatre in The Recruiting Officer (1943), where he met the actress Helen Cherry; they married in 1944 and stayed together until Howard's death in 1988; they had no children.

A short part in one of the best British war films, The Way Ahead (1944), provided an entry into the cinema. This was followed by The Way to the Stars (1945), which led to the role for which Howard is probably best remembered, the doctor in the 1945 film Brief Encounter illicitly involved with Celia Johnson's housewife. Directed by David Lean, the film won an award at the Cannes Film Festival and considerable critical acclaim for Howard. Next came two successful Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat thrillers, I See a Dark Stranger (1945) and Green for Danger (1946), followed by They Made Me a Fugitive (1947), to which the roots of British realism in cinema can be traced. In 1947, he was invited by Laurence Olivier to play Petruchio in an Old Vic production of The Taming of the Shrew. Despite The Times declaring, "We can remember no better Petruchio", the opportunity of working again with David Lean, in The Passionate Friends (1949), drew Howard back to film and, although he had a solid reputation as a theatre actor, his dislike of long runs, and the attractions of travel afforded by film, convinced him to concentrate on cinema from this point. The Passionate Friends though, in which Howard played a similar character to Alec in Brief Encounter also featured Ann Todd and Claude Rains, but was not successful.

Howard's film reputation was secured in The Third Man (1949). As Major Calloway, he played the character type with which he became most associated, the slightly dry, slightly crusty, but capable British military officer. He also starred in The Key, (1958; based on a Jan de Hartog novel), for which he received the best actor award from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts and Sons and Lovers, (1960), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor. Another notable film was The Heart of the Matter (1953), from another Graham Greene story.

Over time Howard easily shifted to being one of England's finest character actors. Howard's later works included such films as Mutiny on the Bounty (1962), Father Goose (1964), Morituri (1965), Von Ryan's Express (1965), The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968), Battle of Britain (1969), Ryan's Daughter (1970), Superman (1978), and Gandhi (1982). The Dawning (1988) was his final film. One of his strangest films, and one he took great delight in, was Vivian Stanshall's 1980 Sir Henry at Rawlinson End in which he played the title role.

In television, Howard began to find more substantial roles. In 1962, he played Løvborg in Hedda Gabler, her former love, with Ingrid Bergman. He won an Emmy award the following year as Disraeli in The Invincible Mr Disraeli. In the 1970s, he played an abbot in the ITV Saturday Night Theatre production of Catholics (1973). He received an Emmy nomination in 1975 for his role as Abbé Faria in a television version of The Count of Monte Cristo. The decade ended with him reunited with Celia Johnson in Staying On (1980), an adaptation of Paul Scott's sequel to his Raj Quartet novels.

The 1980s saw a revival of Howard's career as a film actor. The role of a Cheyenne Indian in Windwalker (1980) revitalized his acting. He continued with cameo roles, including Judge Broomfield in Gandhi (1982). His final films were White Mischief and The Dawning, both released in 1988.

Howard did not abandon the theatre altogether in 1947, returning to the stage on occasion, most notably as Lopakhin in The Cherry Orchard (1954) and the captain in The Father (1964). His last appearance on the British stage was in Waltz of the Toreadors in 1974.

Throughout his film career Howard insisted that all of his contracts held a clause excusing him from work whenever a cricket Test Match was being played.
Howard was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for Sons and Lovers (1960). He won one BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role for The Key (1958) and was nominated four more times. He won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor – Miniseries or a Movie for Hallmark Hall of Fame: Invincible Mr. Disraeli in 1963 and received two other nominations, one as a lead and the other as a supporting actor. He also got three Golden Globe Award nominations.

A British government document leaked to the Sunday Times in 2003 shows that Howard was among almost 300 celebrities to decline honors.
Partial filmography

    * The Way Ahead (1944)
    * Brief Encounter (1945)
    * The Way to the Stars (1945)
    * I See a Dark Stranger (1946)
    * Green for Danger (1946)
    * They Made Me a Fugitive (1947)
    * So Well Remembered (1947)
    * The Passionate Friends (1949)
    * The Third Man (1949)
    * Odette (1950)
    * The Clouded Yellow (1951)
    * Outcast of the Islands (1952)
    * The Gift Horse (1952)
    * The Heart of the Matter (1953)
    * The Cockleshell Heroes (1955)
    * Run for the Sun (1956)
    * Around the World in Eighty Days (1956)
    * Interpol (1957)
    * Manuela (1957)
    * The Key (1958)
    * The Roots of Heaven (1958)
    * Sons and Lovers (1960)
    * The Lion (1962)
    * Mutiny on the Bounty (1962)
    * Father Goose (1964)
    * Operation Crossbow (1965)
    * Von Ryan's Express (1965)
    * Morituri (1965)
    * The Liquidator (1965)
    * The Poppy Is Also a Flower (1966)
    * Triple Cross (1966)
    * Pretty Polly (1967)
    * The Long Duel (1967)
    * The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968)
    * Battle of Britain (1969)
    * Ryan's Daughter (1970)
    * Kidnapped (1971)
    * Mary, Queen of Scots (1972)
    * The Offence (1972)
    * Pope Joan (1972)
    * Ludwig (1972)
    * A Doll's House (1973) (TV)
    * 11 Harrowhouse (1974)
    * Persecution (1974)
    * The Count of Monte Cristo (1975) (TV)
    * Conduct Unbecoming (1975)
    * Aces High (1976)
    * Albino (1976)
    * The Last Remake of Beau Geste (1977)
    * Superman (1978)
    * Meteor (1979)
    * The Sea Wolves (1980)
    * Windwalker (1980)
    * Sir Henry at Rawlinson End (1980)
    * Light Years Away, also known as Les Années lumière (1981)
    * The Missionary (1982)
    * Gandhi (1982)
    * Sword of the Valiant (1984)
    * Time After Time (1986)
    * Shaka Zulu (1986)
    * The Dawning (1988)
    * The Unholy (1988)

http://i278.photobucket.com/albums/kk119/lint_clouds/Harvest%20Lily/Trevor_Howard.jpg
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/07/10 at 7:46 am


The word of the day...Ghost
A ghost is the spirit of a dead person that someone believes they can see or feel.
The ghost of something, especially of something bad that has happened, is the memory of it.
If there is a ghost of something, that thing is so faint or weak that it hardly exists.
http://i594.photobucket.com/albums/tt26/MaffMoose/img020.jpg
http://i272.photobucket.com/albums/jj173/geraldean_2008/emilysghost.jpg
http://i573.photobucket.com/albums/ss171/gunl/NortonGhost2003.jpg
http://i190.photobucket.com/albums/z31/snowwhiteangel2006/misc/ghost_stairs.gif
http://i104.photobucket.com/albums/m176/niascissorhands/ghost_teengaecryingboy.jpg
http://i940.photobucket.com/albums/ad248/MoonshineVision/PICT0017.jpg
http://i681.photobucket.com/albums/vv175/xxGothicxxBeautyxx/ghost_adventure.jpg
http://i704.photobucket.com/albums/ww47/SaralondeDreamcatcher/Halloween/ghosts.gif
http://i525.photobucket.com/albums/cc335/TERRORIZEme/creepy/skeletons/ghost.gif


I'm taking a guess, Patrick Swayze's or Demi Moore's Birthday? ???

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/07/10 at 9:22 am


I'm taking a guess, Patrick Swayze's or Demi Moore's Birthday? ???

No, It's Nicolas Cage(Ghost Rider)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Frank on 01/07/10 at 12:45 pm

I liked Nicholas Cage in "Raising Arizona"
Likes that film in general.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/07/10 at 1:28 pm


I liked Nicholas Cage in "Raising Arizona"
Likes that film in general.

I like quite a few of his movies :)
I discovered while doing his profile that he doesn't use the h in his name I thought it was Nicholas ,but it is actually Nicolas :-\\

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/07/10 at 1:32 pm

One of my favorite shows.


http://www.syfy.com/ghosthunters/




Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/07/10 at 2:16 pm


One of my favorite shows.


http://www.syfy.com/ghosthunters/




Cat

I've seen preview, but have never checked it out.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: gibbo on 01/07/10 at 5:01 pm

Not a big fan of Nicholas Cage...but enjoyed the National Treasure movies. Could actually take the whole family (no sex and no swearing)!!  :o

Trevor Howard was a great actor. First saw him in The Third Man (great movie)....and then later on in Mutiny On The Bounty.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/07/10 at 5:08 pm


Not a big fan of Nicholas Cage...but enjoyed the National Treasure movies. Could actually take the whole family (no sex and no swearing)!!  :o





I agree with you on that.



Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: gibbo on 01/07/10 at 5:10 pm



I agree with you on that.



Cat


I appreciate you agreeing with me at least once per year!  I guess your obligations have now been fulfilled!  ;)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/07/10 at 7:53 pm


I liked Nicholas Cage in "Raising Arizona"
Likes that film in general.


The Weatherman was my favorite.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/08/10 at 7:58 am


Not a big fan of Nicholas Cage...but enjoyed the National Treasure movies. Could actually take the whole family (no sex and no swearing)!!  :o

Trevor Howard was a great actor. First saw him in The Third Man (great movie)....and then later on in Mutiny On The Bounty.

I love the National treasure movies :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/08/10 at 8:04 am

The word of the day...Spider
A spider is a small creature with eight legs. Most types of spider make structures called webs in which they catch insects for food
http://i189.photobucket.com/albums/z111/charlottesweb54/Spiders.png
http://i335.photobucket.com/albums/m458/AwayToTheSky/spiderfcgood3.jpg
http://i124.photobucket.com/albums/p4/T-DAME/spiders.jpg
http://i190.photobucket.com/albums/z277/nicholspeyton/spiders.jpg
http://i162.photobucket.com/albums/t245/dukeofdisc/Spiders.jpg
http://i626.photobucket.com/albums/tt341/tkwi/spiders.jpg
http://i62.photobucket.com/albums/h112/maryhochschild/spiders.jpg
http://i272.photobucket.com/albums/jj179/Jenn_2186/Spiders.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/08/10 at 8:07 am

Spiderman's birthday,I'm guessing?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/08/10 at 8:08 am

The birthday of the day...David Bowie
David Bowie (pronounced /ˈboʊ.iː/, BOH-ee; born David Robert Jones, 8 January 1947) is an English musician, actor, record producer and arranger. Active in five decades of popular music and frequently reinventing his music and image, Bowie is widely regarded as an innovator, particularly for his work in the 1970s. He has been cited as an influence by many musicians and is known for his distinctive voice and the intellectual depth of his work.

Although he released an album (David Bowie) and several singles earlier, David Bowie first caught the eye and ear of the public in the autumn of 1969, when the song "Space Oddity" reached the top five of the UK Singles Chart. After a three-year period of experimentation he re-emerged in 1972 during the glam rock era as the flamboyant, androgynous alter ego Ziggy Stardust, spearheaded by the hit single "Starman" and the album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. The relatively short-lived Ziggy persona epitomised a career often marked by musical innovation, reinvention and striking visual presentation.

In 1975, Bowie achieved his first major American crossover success with the number-one single "Fame", co-written with John Lennon, and the hit album Young Americans, which the singer identified as "plastic soul". The sound constituted a radical shift in style that initially alienated many of his UK devotees. He then confounded the expectations of both his record label and his American audiences by recording the minimalist album Low (1977)—the first of three collaborations with Brian Eno over the next two years. The so-called "Berlin Trilogy" albums all reached the UK top five and garnered lasting critical praise.

After uneven commercial success in the late 1970s, Bowie had UK number ones with the 1980 single "Ashes to Ashes" and its parent album, Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps). He paired with Queen for the 1981 UK chart-topping single "Under Pressure", but reached a commercial peak in 1983 with the album Let's Dance, which yielded the hit singles "Let's Dance", "China Girl", and "Modern Love". Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, Bowie continued to experiment with musical styles, including blue-eyed soul, industrial, adult contemporary, and jungle. His last recorded album was Reality (2003), which was supported by the 2003-2004 Reality Tour.

In the BBC's 2002 poll of the 100 Greatest Britons, Bowie ranked 29. Throughout his career he has sold an estimated 136 million albums, and ranks among the ten best-selling acts in UK pop history. In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine ranked him 39th on their list of the 100 Greatest Rock Artists of All Time and the 23rd best singer of all time
Bowie's first flirtation with fame came in 1969 with his single "Space Oddity," written the previous year but recorded and released to coincide with the first moon landing. This ballad told the story of Major Tom, an astronaut who becomes lost in space, though it has also been interpreted as an allegory for taking drugs. It became a Top 5 UK hit. Bowie put the finishing touches to the track while living with Mary Finnigan as her lodger. Finnigan and Bowie joined forces with Christina Ostrom and the late Barrie Jackson to run a Folk Club on Sunday nights at The Three Tuns pub in Beckenham High Street, south London. This soon morphed into the Beckenham Arts Lab and became extremely popular. In August 1969, The Arts Lab hosted a Free Festival in a local park, later immortalised by Bowie in his song "Memory of a Free Festival". In 1969 and 1970, "Space Oddity" was used by the BBC during both its Apollo 11 moon landing coverage and its coverage of Apollo 13.

The corresponding album, his second, was released in November 1969 and originally titled David Bowie, which caused some confusion as both of Bowie's first and second albums were released with that name in the UK. In the US the same album originally bore the title Man of Words, Man of Music to overcome that confusion. In 1972, the album was re-released on both sides of the Atlantic by RCA Records as Space Oddity, the title it has kept ever since.

In 1970, Bowie released his third album, The Man Who Sold the World, rejecting the acoustic guitar sound of the previous album and replacing it with the heavy rock backing provided by Mick Ronson, who would be a major collaborator through to 1973. Much of the album resembles British heavy metal music of the period, but the album provided some unusual musical detours, such as the title track's use of Latin sounds and rhythms. The original UK cover of the album showed Bowie in a dress, an early example of his androgynous appearance. In the US, the album was originally released in a cartoonish cover that did not feature Bowie.

His next record, Hunky Dory in 1971, saw the partial return of the fey pop singer of "Space Oddity", with light fare such as the droll "Kooks". Elsewhere, the album explored more serious themes on tracks such as "Oh! You Pretty Things" (a song taken to UK number twelve by Herman's Hermits' Peter Noone in 1971), the semi-autobiographical "The Bewlay Brothers", and the Buddhist-influenced "Quicksand". Lyrically, the young songwriter also paid unusually direct homage to his influences with "Song for Bob Dylan", "Andy Warhol", and "Queen Bitch", which Bowie's somewhat cryptic liner notes indicate as a Velvet Underground pastiche. As with the single "Changes", Hunky Dory was not a big hit but it laid the groundwork for the move that would shortly lift Bowie into the first rank of stars, giving him four top-ten albums and eight top ten singles in the UK in eighteen months between 1972 and 1973.

Bowie further explored his androgynous persona in June 1972 with the seminal concept album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, which presents a world destined to end in five years and tells the story of the ultimate rock star, Ziggy Stardust. The album's sound combined the hard rock elements of The Man Who Sold the World with the lighter experimental rock of Hunky Dory and the fast-paced glam rock pioneered by Marc Bolan's T. Rex. Many of the album's songs have become rock classics, including "Ziggy Stardust," "Moonage Daydream," "Rock & Roll Suicide" and "Suffragette City."

The Ziggy Stardust character became the basis for Bowie's first large-scale tour beginning in 1972, where he donned his famous flaming red mullet and wild outfits, designed by Kansai Yamamoto. The tour featured a three-piece band representing The Spiders from Mars: Ronson on guitar, Trevor Bolder on bass, and Mick Woodmansey on drums. This was Bowie’s first tour to visit the US, making his first appearance on 22 September 1972 at Music Hall in Cleveland, Ohio. The album made number five in the UK on the strength of the number ten placing of the single "Starman". Their success made Bowie a star, and soon the six-month-old Hunky Dory eclipsed Ziggy Stardust, when it peaked at number three on the UK chart. At the same time the non-album single "John, I’m Only Dancing" (not released in the US until 1979) peaked at UK number twelve, and "All the Young Dudes", a song he had given to, and produced for, Mott the Hoople, made UK number three.

Around the same time Bowie began promoting and producing his rock and roll heroes, two of whom he met at the popular New York hangout Max's Kansas City: former Velvet Underground singer Lou Reed, whose solo breakthrough Transformer was produced by Bowie and Ronson; and Iggy Pop, whose band, The Stooges, signed with Bowie's management, MainMan Productions, to record their third album, Raw Power. Though he was not present for the tracking of the album, Bowie later performed its much-debated mix. Bowie sang back-up vocals on both Reed's Transformer, and Iggy's The Idiot.

The Spiders From Mars came together again on Aladdin Sane, released in April 1973 and his first number one album in the UK. Described by Bowie as "Ziggy goes to America", all the new songs were written on ship, bus or trains during the first leg of his US Ziggy Stardust tour. The album's cover, featuring Bowie shirtless with Ziggy hair and a red, black, and blue lightning bolt across his face, has been described as being as "startling as rock covers ever got." Aladdin Sane included the UK number two hit "The Jean Genie", the UK number three hit "Drive-In Saturday", and a rendition of The Rolling Stones' "Let's Spend the Night Together". Mike Garson joined Bowie to play piano on this album, and his solo on the title track has been cited as one of the album's highlights.

Bowie's later Ziggy shows, which included songs from both Ziggy Stardust and Aladdin Sane, as well as a few earlier tracks like "Changes" and "The Width of a Circle", were ultra-theatrical affairs filled with shocking stage moments, such as Bowie stripping down to a sumo wrestling loincloth or simulating oral sex with Ronson's guitar. Bowie toured and gave press conferences as Ziggy before a dramatic and abrupt on-stage "retirement" at London's Hammersmith Odeon on 3 July 1973. His announcement—"Of all the shows on this tour, this particular show will remain with us the longest, because not only is it the last show of the tour, but it's the last show that we'll ever do. Thank you."—was preserved in a live recording of the show, filmed by D. A. Pennebaker and belatedly released under the title Ziggy Stardust - The Motion Picture in 1983 after many years circulating as an audio bootleg.

Pin Ups, a collection of covers of his 1960s favourites, was released in October 1973, spawning a UK number three hit in "Sorrow" and itself peaking at number one, making David Bowie the best-selling act of 1973 in the UK. By this time, Bowie had broken up the Spiders from Mars and was attempting to move on from his Ziggy persona. Bowie's own back catalogue was now highly sought: The Man Who Sold the World had been re-released in 1972 along with the second David Bowie album (Space Oddity). Hunky Dory's "Life on Mars?" was released as a single in 1973 and made number three in the UK, the same year Bowie's novelty record from 1967, "The Laughing Gnome", hit number six.
n 1980, Bowie's style retrogressed, integrating the lessons learnt on Low, Heroes, and Lodger while expanding upon them with chart success. Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) included the number one hit "Ashes to Ashes", featuring the textural work of guitar-synthesist Chuck Hammer, and revisiting the character of Major Tom from "Space Oddity". The imagery Bowie used in the song's music video gave international exposure to the underground New Romantic movement and, with many of the followers of this phase being devotees, Bowie visited the London club "Blitz"—the main New Romantic hangout—to recruit several of the regulars (including Steve Strange of the band Visage) to act in the video, renowned as being one of the most innovative of all time.

While Scary Monsters utilised principles that Bowie had learned in the Berlin era, it was considered by critics to be far more direct musically and lyrically, reflecting the transformation Bowie had gone through during his time in Germany and Europe. By 1980 Bowie had divorced his wife Angie, stopped the drug use of the "Thin White Duke" era, and radically changed his concept of the way music should be written. The album had a hard rock edge that included conspicuous guitar contributions from King Crimson's Robert Fripp, The Who's Pete Townshend, and Television's Tom Verlaine. As "Ashes to Ashes" hit number one on the UK charts, Bowie opened a three-month run on Broadway starring in The Elephant Man on 23 September 1980.

In 1981, Queen released "Under Pressure", co-written and performed with Bowie. The song was a hit and became Bowie's third UK number one single. In the same year Bowie made a cameo appearance in the German movie Christiane F. Wir Kinder vom Bahnhof Zoo, the real-life story of a 13 year-old girl in Berlin who becomes addicted to heroin and ends up prostituting herself. Bowie is credited with "special cooperation" in the credits and his music features prominently in the movie. The soundtrack was released in 1982 and contained a version of "Heroes" sung partially in German that had previously been included on the German pressing of its parent album. The same year Bowie appeared in the BBC's adaptation of Bertolt Brecht's play Baal. Coinciding with transmission of the film, a five-track EP of songs from the play was released as David Bowie in Bertolt Brecht's Baal, recorded at Hansa by the Wall the previous September. It would mark Bowie’s final new release on RCA, as 1983 saw him change record labels from RCA to EMI America. In April 1982, Bowie released "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)" with Giorgio Moroder, for director Paul Schrader's film Cat People.
David Bowie on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

Bowie scored his first truly commercial blockbuster with Let's Dance in 1983, a slick dance album co-produced by Chic's Nile Rodgers. The title track went to number one in the United States and United Kingdom. The album also featured the singles "Modern Love" and "China Girl", the latter causing something of a stir due to its suggestive promotional video. "China Girl" was a remake of a song which Bowie co-wrote several years earlier with Iggy Pop, who recorded it for The Idiot. In an interview by Kurt Loder, Bowie revealed that the motivation for recording "China Girl" was to help out his friend Iggy Pop financially, contributing to Bowie's history of support for musicians he admired. Let's Dance was also notable as a stepping stone for the career of the late Texan guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan, who played on the album and was to have supported Bowie on the consequent Serious Moonlight Tour. Vaughan, however, never joined the tour after various disputes with Bowie. Vaughan was replaced by the Bowie tour veteran Earl Slick. Frank and George Simms from The Simms Brothers Band appeared as backing vocalists for the tour.

Bowie's next album was originally planned to be a live album recorded on the Serious Moonlight Tour, but EMI demanded another studio album instead. The resulting album, 1984's Tonight, was also dance-oriented, featuring collaborations with Tina Turner and Iggy Pop, as well as various covers, including one of The Beach Boys' "God Only Knows". The album bore the transatlantic Top Ten hit "Blue Jean" whose complete video — the 21-minute short film "Jazzin' for Blue Jean" - reflected Bowie's long-standing interest in combining music with drama. This video would win Bowie his only Grammy to date, for Best Short Form Music Video. It also featured "Loving the Alien", a remix of which was a minor hit in 1985. The album also has a pair of dance rewrites of "Neighborhood Threat" and "Tonight", old songs Bowie wrote with Iggy Pop which had originally appeared on Lust for Life.

In 1985, Bowie performed several of his greatest hits at Wembley for Live Aid. At the end of his set, which comprised "Rebel Rebel", "TVC 15", "Modern Love" and 'Heroes', he introduced a film of the Ethiopian famine, for which the event was raising funds, which was set to the song "Drive" by The Cars. At the event, the video to a fundraising single was premièred – Bowie performing a duet with Mick Jagger on a version of "Dancing in the Street", which quickly went to number one on release. In the same year Bowie worked with the Pat Metheny Group on the song "This Is Not America", which was featured in the film The Falcon and the Snowman. This song was the centrepiece of the album, a collaboration intended to underline the espionage thriller's central themes of alienation and disaffection.
Bowie performing in 1987

In 1986, Bowie contributed several songs to as well as acted in the film Absolute Beginners. The movie was not well reviewed but Bowie's theme song rose to number two in the UK charts. He also took a role in the 1986 Jim Henson film Labyrinth, as Jareth, the Goblin King who steals the baby brother of a girl named Sarah (played by Jennifer Connelly), in order to turn him into a goblin. Bowie wrote five songs for the film, the script of which was partially written by Monty Python's Terry Jones.

Bowie's final solo album of the 80s was 1987's Never Let Me Down, where he ditched the light sound of his two earlier albums, instead offering harder rock with an industrial/techno dance edge. The album, which peaked at number six in the UK, contained hit singles "Day-In, Day-Out", "Time Will Crawl", and "Never Let Me Down". Bowie himself later described it as "my nadir" and "an awful album".

Bowie decided to tour again in 1987, supporting the Never Let Me Down album. The Glass Spider Tour was preceded by nine promotional press shows before the 86-concert tour actually started on 30 May 1987. In addition to the actual band, that included Peter Frampton on lead guitar, five dancers appeared on stage for almost the entire duration of each concert. Taped pieces of dialogue were also performed by Bowie and the dancers in the middle of songs, creating an overtly theatrical effect. Several visual gimmicks were also recreated from Bowie's earlier tours. Critics of the tour described it as overproduced and claimed it pandered to then-current stadium rock trends in its special effects and dancing. However, fans that saw the shows from the Glass Spider Tour were treated to many of Bowie's classics and rarities, in addition to the newer material.
Main article: David Bowie discography

   * David Bowie (1967)
   * Space Oddity (1969)
   * The Man Who Sold the World (1970)
   * Hunky Dory (1971)
   * The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1972)
   * Aladdin Sane (1973)
   * Pin Ups (1973)
   * Diamond Dogs (1974)
   * Young Americans (1975)
   * Station to Station (1976)
   * Low (1977)
   * "Heroes" (1977)
   * Lodger (1979)
   * Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) (1980)
   * Let's Dance (1983)
   * Tonight (1984)
   * Never Let Me Down (1987)
   * Black Tie White Noise (1993)
   * The Buddha of Suburbia (1993)
   * 1. Outside (1995)
   * Earthling (1997)
   * 'Hours...' (1999)
   * Heathen (2002)
   * Reality (2003)


In August 1988, Bowie portrayed Pontius Pilate in the Martin Scorsese film The Last Temptation of Christ.
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/08/10 at 8:12 am

The person of the day...Terry-Thomas
Thomas Terry Hoar-Stevens (14 July 1911 – 8 January 1990) was a distinctive English comic actor, known as Terry-Thomas. He was famous for his portrayal of disreputable members of the upper classes, especially cads, with a "toothbrush" moustache, the trademark gap in his front teeth, cigarette holder, smoking jacket, and catch-phrases such as "What an absolute shower!" and "Good show!
Initially billed as Thomas (or Thos) Stevens, he considered the stage name Thomas Terry, but fearing that this might be taken as an attempt to pass himself off as a relation of the actress Ellen Terry, he reversed this to Terry Thomas. In 1948, he affected a hyphen between the two names in order to be more distinctive, largely to stop people calling him "Mr. Thomas" (which he disliked) and, according to biographer Graham McCann, "because it felt right".
Career

He played a variety of exuberant, malevolent and silly characters during the 1960s, and became famous for his humorous portrayal of the archetypal English upper-class cad and bounder. (Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines; Monte Carlo or Bust; How Sweet It Is!; Jules Verne's Rocket to the Moon). In the 1970s he reprised his character from the first two of the films above along with Eric Sykes to make high quality cinema and TV advertisements for Benson and Hedges cigarettes.

In 1966, he played a notable but very different role as an RAF airman travelling through occupied France – and nicknamed "Big Moustache" by his French helpers – in the French film La Grande Vadrouille, which for over forty years remained the most successful film in the history of cinema in France.
Filmography

    * Once in a Million (1935)
    * Rhythm in the Air (1936)
    * Sam Goes Shopping (1939)
    * For Freedom (1940)
    * If You Don't Save Paper (1948) (short) as Shop Assistant
    * A Date with a Dream (1948)
    * Melody Club (1949) as Freddy Forrester
    * What's Cooking (1951) (short) as Husband
    * The Green Man (1956)
    * Private's Progress (1956) as Major Hitchcock
    * Lucky Jim (1957)
    * Brothers in Law (1957)
    * The Naked Truth (1957) as Lord Mayley
    * Blue Murder at St Trinian's (1957) as Captain Romney Carlton-Ricketts
    * Happy is the Bride (1958) as Policeman
    * Tom Thumb (1958) as Ivan
    * I'm All Right Jack (1959) reprising the role of Major Hitchcock
    * Carlton-Browne of the FO (1959)
    * Too Many Crooks (1959) as Billy Gordon
    * Make Mine Mink (1960) as Major Albert Rayne
    * School for Scoundrels (1960)
    * A Matter of WHO (1961) as Bannister
    * His and Hers (1961) as Reggie Blake
    * Operation Snatch (1962) as Lt. 'Piggy' Wigg
    * The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm (1962)
    * Bachelor Flat (1962) as Professor Bruce Patterson
    * Kill or Cure (1962) as Jerry Barkey-Rynde
    * It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) as Lt. Col. J. Algernon Hawthorne
    * The Mouse on the Moon (1963) as Spender
    * The Wild Affair (1965) as Godfrey Deane
    * You Must Be Joking! (1965) Major Foskett
    * Strange Bedfellows (1965)
    * How to Murder Your Wife (1965) as Charles
    * Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines (1965) as Sir Percy Ware-Armitage
    * The Sandwich Man (1966) as Scoutmaster
    * The Daydreamer (1966) as Brigadier Zachary Zilch
    * Our Man in Marrakesh (1966) as El Caid
    * La Grande Vadrouille (1966) as Sir Reginald
    * Top Crack (1966)
    * Munster, Go Home! (1966) as Cousin Freddie Munster
    * Se Tutte le Donne del Mondo (1966) as James
    * Dr. Coppelius (1966)
    * Jules Verne's Rocket to the Moon (1967) as Captain Sir Harry Washington-Smythe
    * Arabella (1967) as the hotel manager
    * Don't Raise the Bridge, Lower the River (1967)
    * A Guide for the Married Man (1967) as Technical Advisor
    * The Perils of Pauline (1967) as Sten Martin
    * Arriva Dorellik (1967) as Commissario Green
    * Seven Times Seven (1968)
    * Diabolik (1968) as the Minister of Finance
    * How Sweet It Is! (1968) as Gilbert Tilly
    * Sette volte sette (1968) as Police Inspector
    * Where Were You When the Lights Went Out? (1968) as Ladislaus Walichek
    * Monte Carlo or Bust (1969) as Sir Cuthbert Ware-Armitage, son of Sir Percy of Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines
    * It's Your Move (1969) as Il direttore Dorgeant
    * 2000 Years Later (1969) as Goodwyn
    * 12 + 1 (1969) as Albert
    * Arthur!Arthur! (1969)
    * Mur de l'Atlantique, Le (1970) as Perry
    * The Abominable Dr. Phibes (1971)
    * Dr. Phibes Rises Again (1972)
    * The Cherry Picker (1972) as Appleby
    * Special London Bridge Special (1972) as Bus Conductor
    * Robin Hood (1973), as the voice of Sir Hiss (who had a gap between his teeth similar to Terry-Thomas)
    * The Vault of Horror (1973) as Critchit
    * Eroi, Gli (1973) as John Cooper
    * Side by Side (1975) as Max Nugget
    * Spanish Fly (1975) as Sir Percy De Courcy
    * The Bawdy Adventures of Tom Jones (1976)
    * The Last Remake of Beau Geste (1977)
    * The Hound of the Baskervilles (1978), his last film role

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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/08/10 at 8:12 am


Spiderman's birthday,I'm guessing?

David Bowie..Spiders From Mars

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/08/10 at 11:30 am

Another one of my photos.


http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3002/2958870997_c967c275ba.jpg



Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/08/10 at 7:59 pm


The birthday of the day...David Bowie
David Bowie (pronounced /ˈboʊ.iː/, BOH-ee; born David Robert Jones, 8 January 1947) is an English musician, actor, record producer and arranger. Active in five decades of popular music and frequently reinventing his music and image, Bowie is widely regarded as an innovator, particularly for his work in the 1970s. He has been cited as an influence by many musicians and is known for his distinctive voice and the intellectual depth of his work.

Although he released an album (David Bowie) and several singles earlier, David Bowie first caught the eye and ear of the public in the autumn of 1969, when the song "Space Oddity" reached the top five of the UK Singles Chart. After a three-year period of experimentation he re-emerged in 1972 during the glam rock era as the flamboyant, androgynous alter ego Ziggy Stardust, spearheaded by the hit single "Starman" and the album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. The relatively short-lived Ziggy persona epitomised a career often marked by musical innovation, reinvention and striking visual presentation.

In 1975, Bowie achieved his first major American crossover success with the number-one single "Fame", co-written with John Lennon, and the hit album Young Americans, which the singer identified as "plastic soul". The sound constituted a radical shift in style that initially alienated many of his UK devotees. He then confounded the expectations of both his record label and his American audiences by recording the minimalist album Low (1977)—the first of three collaborations with Brian Eno over the next two years. The so-called "Berlin Trilogy" albums all reached the UK top five and garnered lasting critical praise.

After uneven commercial success in the late 1970s, Bowie had UK number ones with the 1980 single "Ashes to Ashes" and its parent album, Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps). He paired with Queen for the 1981 UK chart-topping single "Under Pressure", but reached a commercial peak in 1983 with the album Let's Dance, which yielded the hit singles "Let's Dance", "China Girl", and "Modern Love". Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, Bowie continued to experiment with musical styles, including blue-eyed soul, industrial, adult contemporary, and jungle. His last recorded album was Reality (2003), which was supported by the 2003-2004 Reality Tour.

In the BBC's 2002 poll of the 100 Greatest Britons, Bowie ranked 29. Throughout his career he has sold an estimated 136 million albums, and ranks among the ten best-selling acts in UK pop history. In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine ranked him 39th on their list of the 100 Greatest Rock Artists of All Time and the 23rd best singer of all time
Bowie's first flirtation with fame came in 1969 with his single "Space Oddity," written the previous year but recorded and released to coincide with the first moon landing. This ballad told the story of Major Tom, an astronaut who becomes lost in space, though it has also been interpreted as an allegory for taking drugs. It became a Top 5 UK hit. Bowie put the finishing touches to the track while living with Mary Finnigan as her lodger. Finnigan and Bowie joined forces with Christina Ostrom and the late Barrie Jackson to run a Folk Club on Sunday nights at The Three Tuns pub in Beckenham High Street, south London. This soon morphed into the Beckenham Arts Lab and became extremely popular. In August 1969, The Arts Lab hosted a Free Festival in a local park, later immortalised by Bowie in his song "Memory of a Free Festival". In 1969 and 1970, "Space Oddity" was used by the BBC during both its Apollo 11 moon landing coverage and its coverage of Apollo 13.

The corresponding album, his second, was released in November 1969 and originally titled David Bowie, which caused some confusion as both of Bowie's first and second albums were released with that name in the UK. In the US the same album originally bore the title Man of Words, Man of Music to overcome that confusion. In 1972, the album was re-released on both sides of the Atlantic by RCA Records as Space Oddity, the title it has kept ever since.

In 1970, Bowie released his third album, The Man Who Sold the World, rejecting the acoustic guitar sound of the previous album and replacing it with the heavy rock backing provided by Mick Ronson, who would be a major collaborator through to 1973. Much of the album resembles British heavy metal music of the period, but the album provided some unusual musical detours, such as the title track's use of Latin sounds and rhythms. The original UK cover of the album showed Bowie in a dress, an early example of his androgynous appearance. In the US, the album was originally released in a cartoonish cover that did not feature Bowie.

His next record, Hunky Dory in 1971, saw the partial return of the fey pop singer of "Space Oddity", with light fare such as the droll "Kooks". Elsewhere, the album explored more serious themes on tracks such as "Oh! You Pretty Things" (a song taken to UK number twelve by Herman's Hermits' Peter Noone in 1971), the semi-autobiographical "The Bewlay Brothers", and the Buddhist-influenced "Quicksand". Lyrically, the young songwriter also paid unusually direct homage to his influences with "Song for Bob Dylan", "Andy Warhol", and "Queen Bitch", which Bowie's somewhat cryptic liner notes indicate as a Velvet Underground pastiche. As with the single "Changes", Hunky Dory was not a big hit but it laid the groundwork for the move that would shortly lift Bowie into the first rank of stars, giving him four top-ten albums and eight top ten singles in the UK in eighteen months between 1972 and 1973.

Bowie further explored his androgynous persona in June 1972 with the seminal concept album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, which presents a world destined to end in five years and tells the story of the ultimate rock star, Ziggy Stardust. The album's sound combined the hard rock elements of The Man Who Sold the World with the lighter experimental rock of Hunky Dory and the fast-paced glam rock pioneered by Marc Bolan's T. Rex. Many of the album's songs have become rock classics, including "Ziggy Stardust," "Moonage Daydream," "Rock & Roll Suicide" and "Suffragette City."

The Ziggy Stardust character became the basis for Bowie's first large-scale tour beginning in 1972, where he donned his famous flaming red mullet and wild outfits, designed by Kansai Yamamoto. The tour featured a three-piece band representing The Spiders from Mars: Ronson on guitar, Trevor Bolder on bass, and Mick Woodmansey on drums. This was Bowie’s first tour to visit the US, making his first appearance on 22 September 1972 at Music Hall in Cleveland, Ohio. The album made number five in the UK on the strength of the number ten placing of the single "Starman". Their success made Bowie a star, and soon the six-month-old Hunky Dory eclipsed Ziggy Stardust, when it peaked at number three on the UK chart. At the same time the non-album single "John, I’m Only Dancing" (not released in the US until 1979) peaked at UK number twelve, and "All the Young Dudes", a song he had given to, and produced for, Mott the Hoople, made UK number three.

Around the same time Bowie began promoting and producing his rock and roll heroes, two of whom he met at the popular New York hangout Max's Kansas City: former Velvet Underground singer Lou Reed, whose solo breakthrough Transformer was produced by Bowie and Ronson; and Iggy Pop, whose band, The Stooges, signed with Bowie's management, MainMan Productions, to record their third album, Raw Power. Though he was not present for the tracking of the album, Bowie later performed its much-debated mix. Bowie sang back-up vocals on both Reed's Transformer, and Iggy's The Idiot.

The Spiders From Mars came together again on Aladdin Sane, released in April 1973 and his first number one album in the UK. Described by Bowie as "Ziggy goes to America", all the new songs were written on ship, bus or trains during the first leg of his US Ziggy Stardust tour. The album's cover, featuring Bowie shirtless with Ziggy hair and a red, black, and blue lightning bolt across his face, has been described as being as "startling as rock covers ever got." Aladdin Sane included the UK number two hit "The Jean Genie", the UK number three hit "Drive-In Saturday", and a rendition of The Rolling Stones' "Let's Spend the Night Together". Mike Garson joined Bowie to play piano on this album, and his solo on the title track has been cited as one of the album's highlights.

Bowie's later Ziggy shows, which included songs from both Ziggy Stardust and Aladdin Sane, as well as a few earlier tracks like "Changes" and "The Width of a Circle", were ultra-theatrical affairs filled with shocking stage moments, such as Bowie stripping down to a sumo wrestling loincloth or simulating oral sex with Ronson's guitar. Bowie toured and gave press conferences as Ziggy before a dramatic and abrupt on-stage "retirement" at London's Hammersmith Odeon on 3 July 1973. His announcement—"Of all the shows on this tour, this particular show will remain with us the longest, because not only is it the last show of the tour, but it's the last show that we'll ever do. Thank you."—was preserved in a live recording of the show, filmed by D. A. Pennebaker and belatedly released under the title Ziggy Stardust - The Motion Picture in 1983 after many years circulating as an audio bootleg.

Pin Ups, a collection of covers of his 1960s favourites, was released in October 1973, spawning a UK number three hit in "Sorrow" and itself peaking at number one, making David Bowie the best-selling act of 1973 in the UK. By this time, Bowie had broken up the Spiders from Mars and was attempting to move on from his Ziggy persona. Bowie's own back catalogue was now highly sought: The Man Who Sold the World had been re-released in 1972 along with the second David Bowie album (Space Oddity). Hunky Dory's "Life on Mars?" was released as a single in 1973 and made number three in the UK, the same year Bowie's novelty record from 1967, "The Laughing Gnome", hit number six.
n 1980, Bowie's style retrogressed, integrating the lessons learnt on Low, Heroes, and Lodger while expanding upon them with chart success. Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) included the number one hit "Ashes to Ashes", featuring the textural work of guitar-synthesist Chuck Hammer, and revisiting the character of Major Tom from "Space Oddity". The imagery Bowie used in the song's music video gave international exposure to the underground New Romantic movement and, with many of the followers of this phase being devotees, Bowie visited the London club "Blitz"—the main New Romantic hangout—to recruit several of the regulars (including Steve Strange of the band Visage) to act in the video, renowned as being one of the most innovative of all time.

While Scary Monsters utilised principles that Bowie had learned in the Berlin era, it was considered by critics to be far more direct musically and lyrically, reflecting the transformation Bowie had gone through during his time in Germany and Europe. By 1980 Bowie had divorced his wife Angie, stopped the drug use of the "Thin White Duke" era, and radically changed his concept of the way music should be written. The album had a hard rock edge that included conspicuous guitar contributions from King Crimson's Robert Fripp, The Who's Pete Townshend, and Television's Tom Verlaine. As "Ashes to Ashes" hit number one on the UK charts, Bowie opened a three-month run on Broadway starring in The Elephant Man on 23 September 1980.

In 1981, Queen released "Under Pressure", co-written and performed with Bowie. The song was a hit and became Bowie's third UK number one single. In the same year Bowie made a cameo appearance in the German movie Christiane F. Wir Kinder vom Bahnhof Zoo, the real-life story of a 13 year-old girl in Berlin who becomes addicted to heroin and ends up prostituting herself. Bowie is credited with "special cooperation" in the credits and his music features prominently in the movie. The soundtrack was released in 1982 and contained a version of "Heroes" sung partially in German that had previously been included on the German pressing of its parent album. The same year Bowie appeared in the BBC's adaptation of Bertolt Brecht's play Baal. Coinciding with transmission of the film, a five-track EP of songs from the play was released as David Bowie in Bertolt Brecht's Baal, recorded at Hansa by the Wall the previous September. It would mark Bowie’s final new release on RCA, as 1983 saw him change record labels from RCA to EMI America. In April 1982, Bowie released "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)" with Giorgio Moroder, for director Paul Schrader's film Cat People.
David Bowie on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

Bowie scored his first truly commercial blockbuster with Let's Dance in 1983, a slick dance album co-produced by Chic's Nile Rodgers. The title track went to number one in the United States and United Kingdom. The album also featured the singles "Modern Love" and "China Girl", the latter causing something of a stir due to its suggestive promotional video. "China Girl" was a remake of a song which Bowie co-wrote several years earlier with Iggy Pop, who recorded it for The Idiot. In an interview by Kurt Loder, Bowie revealed that the motivation for recording "China Girl" was to help out his friend Iggy Pop financially, contributing to Bowie's history of support for musicians he admired. Let's Dance was also notable as a stepping stone for the career of the late Texan guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan, who played on the album and was to have supported Bowie on the consequent Serious Moonlight Tour. Vaughan, however, never joined the tour after various disputes with Bowie. Vaughan was replaced by the Bowie tour veteran Earl Slick. Frank and George Simms from The Simms Brothers Band appeared as backing vocalists for the tour.

Bowie's next album was originally planned to be a live album recorded on the Serious Moonlight Tour, but EMI demanded another studio album instead. The resulting album, 1984's Tonight, was also dance-oriented, featuring collaborations with Tina Turner and Iggy Pop, as well as various covers, including one of The Beach Boys' "God Only Knows". The album bore the transatlantic Top Ten hit "Blue Jean" whose complete video — the 21-minute short film "Jazzin' for Blue Jean" - reflected Bowie's long-standing interest in combining music with drama. This video would win Bowie his only Grammy to date, for Best Short Form Music Video. It also featured "Loving the Alien", a remix of which was a minor hit in 1985. The album also has a pair of dance rewrites of "Neighborhood Threat" and "Tonight", old songs Bowie wrote with Iggy Pop which had originally appeared on Lust for Life.

In 1985, Bowie performed several of his greatest hits at Wembley for Live Aid. At the end of his set, which comprised "Rebel Rebel", "TVC 15", "Modern Love" and 'Heroes', he introduced a film of the Ethiopian famine, for which the event was raising funds, which was set to the song "Drive" by The Cars. At the event, the video to a fundraising single was premièred – Bowie performing a duet with Mick Jagger on a version of "Dancing in the Street", which quickly went to number one on release. In the same year Bowie worked with the Pat Metheny Group on the song "This Is Not America", which was featured in the film The Falcon and the Snowman. This song was the centrepiece of the album, a collaboration intended to underline the espionage thriller's central themes of alienation and disaffection.
Bowie performing in 1987

In 1986, Bowie contributed several songs to as well as acted in the film Absolute Beginners. The movie was not well reviewed but Bowie's theme song rose to number two in the UK charts. He also took a role in the 1986 Jim Henson film Labyrinth, as Jareth, the Goblin King who steals the baby brother of a girl named Sarah (played by Jennifer Connelly), in order to turn him into a goblin. Bowie wrote five songs for the film, the script of which was partially written by Monty Python's Terry Jones.

Bowie's final solo album of the 80s was 1987's Never Let Me Down, where he ditched the light sound of his two earlier albums, instead offering harder rock with an industrial/techno dance edge. The album, which peaked at number six in the UK, contained hit singles "Day-In, Day-Out", "Time Will Crawl", and "Never Let Me Down". Bowie himself later described it as "my nadir" and "an awful album".

Bowie decided to tour again in 1987, supporting the Never Let Me Down album. The Glass Spider Tour was preceded by nine promotional press shows before the 86-concert tour actually started on 30 May 1987. In addition to the actual band, that included Peter Frampton on lead guitar, five dancers appeared on stage for almost the entire duration of each concert. Taped pieces of dialogue were also performed by Bowie and the dancers in the middle of songs, creating an overtly theatrical effect. Several visual gimmicks were also recreated from Bowie's earlier tours. Critics of the tour described it as overproduced and claimed it pandered to then-current stadium rock trends in its special effects and dancing. However, fans that saw the shows from the Glass Spider Tour were treated to many of Bowie's classics and rarities, in addition to the newer material.
Main article: David Bowie discography

   * David Bowie (1967)
   * Space Oddity (1969)
   * The Man Who Sold the World (1970)
   * Hunky Dory (1971)
   * The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1972)
   * Aladdin Sane (1973)
   * Pin Ups (1973)
   * Diamond Dogs (1974)
   * Young Americans (1975)
   * Station to Station (1976)
   * Low (1977)
   * "Heroes" (1977)
   * Lodger (1979)
   * Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) (1980)
   * Let's Dance (1983)
   * Tonight (1984)
   * Never Let Me Down (1987)
   * Black Tie White Noise (1993)
   * The Buddha of Suburbia (1993)
   * 1. Outside (1995)
   * Earthling (1997)
   * 'Hours...' (1999)
   * Heathen (2002)
   * Reality (2003)


In August 1988, Bowie portrayed Pontius Pilate in the Martin Scorsese film The Last Temptation of Christ.
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David Bowie is great.  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Womble on 01/08/10 at 8:16 pm

I loved Terry-Thomas in the Vault of Horror even though his character got what he deserved. Nice Bio, Ninny. Thanks for posting.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/08/10 at 8:26 pm


I loved Terry-Thomas in the Vault of Horror even though his character got what he deserved. Nice Bio, Ninny. Thanks for posting.

Your Welcome, Vinny :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/09/10 at 5:49 am

The word of the day...Stairway
A stairway is a staircase or a flight of steps, inside or outside a building.
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/09/10 at 5:54 am


I love the National treasure movies :)
I now have number 2 to watch on DVD.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/09/10 at 5:56 am

The birthday of the day...Jimmy Page
James Patrick Page OBE (born 9 January 1944) is an English guitarist, songwriter and record producer. He began his career as a studio session guitarist in London and was subsequently a member of The Yardbirds from 1966 to 1968, after which he founded the English rock band Led Zeppelin.

Page has been described as "unquestionably one of the all-time most influential, important, and versatile guitarists and songwriters in rock history". In 2003, Rolling Stone magazine ranked Page #9 in its list of the 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time. He has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice, once as a member of The Yardbirds (1992) and once as a member of Led Zeppelin (1995).While still a student, Page would often jam on stage at The Marquee with bands such as Cyril Davies' All Stars, Alexis Korner's Blues Incorporated and with guitarists Jeff Beck and Eric Clapton. He was spotted one night by John Gibb of Brian Howard & The Silhouettes, who asked him to help record a number of singles for Columbia Graphophone Company, including "The Worrying Kind". It wasn't until an offer from Mike Leander of Decca Records that Page was to receive regular studio work. His first session for the label was the recording "Diamonds" by Jet Harris and Tony Meehan, which went to Number 1 on the singles chart in early 1963.

After brief stints with Carter-Lewis and the Southerners, Mike Hurst and the Method, and Mickey Finn and the Blue Men, Page committed himself to full-time session work. As a session guitarist he was known as 'Little Jim' so there was no confusion with Big Jim Sullivan. Page was mainly called in to sessions as "insurance" in instances when a replacement or second guitarist was required by the recording artist. "It was usually myself and a drummer", he explained, "though they never mention the drummer these days, just me ... Anyone needing a guitarist either went to Big Jim or myself"

Page was the favoured session guitarist of producer Shel Talmy, and therefore he ended up doing session work on songs for The Who and The Kinks as a direct result of the Talmy connection. Page's studio output in 1964 included Marianne Faithfull's "As Tears Go By", The Nashville Teens' "Tobacco Road", The Rolling Stones' "Heart of Stone" (released on Metamorphosis), Van Morrison & Them's "Baby Please Don't Go" and "Here Comes the Night", Dave Berry's "The Crying Game" and "My Baby Left Me", and Brenda Lee's "Is It True". Under the auspices of producer Talmy, Page contributed to The Kinks' 1964 debut album and he sat in on the sessions for The Who's first single "I Can't Explain" (although Pete Townshend was reluctant to allow Page's contribution on the final recording, Page did play on the B-side "Bald Headed Woman".)

In 1965 Page was hired by Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham to act as house producer and A&R man for the newly-formed Immediate Records label, which also allowed him to play on and/or produce tracks by John Mayall, Nico, Chris Farlowe, Twice as Much and Eric Clapton. Page also formed a brief songwriting partnership with then romantic interest, Jackie DeShannon. He also composed and recorded songs for the John Williams (not the classical guitarist) album The Maureeny Wishful Album with Big Jim Sullivan. Page worked as session musician on the Al Stewart album Love Chronicles in 1969, and played guitar on five tracks of Joe Cocker's debut album, With a Little Help from My Friends.

When questioned about which songs he played on, especially ones where there exists some controversy as to what his exact role was, Page often points out that it is hard to remember exactly what he did given the huge number of sessions he was playing at the time.

Although Page recorded with many notable musicians, many of these early tracks are only available through bootlegged copies, several of which were released by the Led Zeppelin fan club in the late 1970s. One of the rarest of these is the early jam session featuring Jimmy Page playing with Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards, featuring a cover of "Little Queen of Spades" by Robert Johnson. Several songs which featured Page's involvement were compiled on the twin album release: James Patrick Page: Session Man Volume One and James Patrick Page: Session Man Volume Two.

Page decided to leave studio work when the increasing influence of Stax Records on popular music led to the greater incorporation of brass and orchestral arrangements into recordings at the expense of guitars. However, he has stated that his time as a session player served as extremely good schooling for his development as a musician:

   My session work was invaluable. At one point I was playing at least three sessions a day, six days a week! And I rarely ever knew in advance what I was going to be playing. But I learned things even on my worst sessions -- and believe me, I played on some horrendous things. I finally called it quits after I started getting calls to do Muzak. I decided I couldn't live that life anymore; it was getting too silly. I guess it was destiny that a week after I quit doing sessions Paul Samwell-Smith left The Yardbirds, and I was able to take his place. But being a session musician was good fun in the beginning -- the studio discipline was great. They'd just count the song off, and you couldn't make any mistakes.

The Yardbirds
Main article: The Yardbirds
The Yardbirds, 1966. Clockwise from left: Jeff Beck, Jimmy Page, Keith Relf, Jim McCarty, and Chris Dreja.

In late 1964, Page was approached about the possibility of replacing Eric Clapton in The Yardbirds, but he declined the offer out of loyalty to his friend. In February 1965 Clapton quit the Yardbirds, and Page was formally offered Clapton's spot, but because he was unwilling to give up his lucrative career as a session musician, and because he was still worried about his health under touring conditions, he suggested his friend, Jeff Beck. On 16 May 1966, drummer Keith Moon, bass player John Paul Jones, keyboardist Nicky Hopkins, Jeff Beck and Page recorded "Beck's Bolero" in London's IBC Studios. The experience gave Page an idea to form a new supergroup featuring Beck, along with The Who's John Entwistle on bass and Keith Moon on drums. However, the lack of a quality vocalist and contractual problems prevented the project from getting off the ground. During this time, Moon suggested the name "Lead Zeppelin" for the first time, after Entwistle commented that the proceedings would take to the air like a lead balloon.

Within weeks, Page attended a Yardbirds concert at Oxford. After the show he went backstage where Paul Samwell-Smith announced that he was leaving the group. Page offered to replace Samwell-Smith and this was accepted by the group. He initially played electric bass with the Yardbirds before finally switching to twin lead guitar with Beck when Chris Dreja moved to bass. The musical potential of the line-up was scuttled, however, by interpersonal conflicts caused by constant touring and a lack of commercial success, although they released one single, "Happenings Ten Years Time Ago". (While Page and Jeff Beck played together in The Yardbirds, the trio of Page, Beck and Clapton never played in the original group at the same time. The three guitarists did appear on stage together at the ARMS charity concerts in 1983.)

After Beck's departure, the Yardbirds remained a quartet. They recorded one album with Page on lead guitar, Little Games. The album received indifferent reviews and was not a commercial success, peaking at only number 80 on the Billboard Music Charts. Though their studio sound was fairly commercial at the time, the band's live performances were just the opposite, becoming heavier and more experimental. These concerts featured musical aspects that Page would later perfect with Led Zeppelin, most notably performances of "Dazed and Confused".

After the departure of Keith Relf and Jim McCarty in 1968, Page reconfigured the group with a new line-up to fulfill unfinished tour dates in Scandinavia. As he said:

   Once decided not to continue, then I was going to continue. And shift the whole thing up a notch ... The whole thing was putting a group together and actually being able to play together. There were a lot of virtuoso musicians around at the time who didn't gel as a band. That was the key: to find a band that was going to fire on all cylinders.

To this end, Page recruited vocalist Robert Plant and drummer John Bonham, and he was also contacted by John Paul Jones who asked to join. During the Scandinavian tour the new group appeared as "The New Yardbirds", but soon recalled the old joke by Keith Moon and John Entwistle. Page stuck with that name to use for his new band. Peter Grant changed it to "Led Zeppelin", to avoid a mispronunciation of "Leed Zeppelin."
Led Zeppelin
Main article: Led Zeppelin

Page has explained that he had a very specific idea in mind as to what he wanted Led Zeppelin to be, from the very beginning:

   I had a lot of ideas from my days with The Yardbirds. The Yardbirds allowed me to improvise a lot in live performance and I started building a textbook of ideas that I eventually used in Zeppelin. In addition to those ideas, I wanted to add acoustic textures. Ultimately, I wanted Zeppelin to be a marriage of blues, hard rock and acoustic music topped with heavy choruses -- a combination that had never been done before. Lots of light and shade in the music
For the recording of most of Led Zeppelin material from Led Zeppelin's second album onwards, Page used a Gibson Les Paul guitar with Marshall amplification. During the studio sessions for Led Zeppelin, and later for recording the guitar solo in "Stairway to Heaven", he used a Fender Telecaster (a gift from Jeff Beck). He also used a Danelectro 3021, mainly for slide guitar parts. He usually recorded in studio with a Vox AC30, Fender, and Orange amplification. His use of the Sola Sound Tone Bender Professional MKII fuzzbox ("How Many More Times"), slide guitar ("You Shook Me", "Dancing Days", "In My Time of Dying", "What Is and What Should Never Be"), pedal steel guitar ("Your Time Is Gonna Come", "Babe I'm Gonna Leave You", "Tangerine", "That's the Way" and for effect at the very end of "Over the Hills and Far Away"), and acoustic guitar ("Gallows Pole", "Going To California", "Bron-Yr-Aur", "Bron-Y-Aur Stomp") also demonstrated his versatility and creativity as a composer.

Page is famous for playing his guitar with a violin bow, as on the live versions of the songs "Dazed and Confused" and "How Many More Times". This was a technique he developed during his session days, although he was not the first guitarist to use a bow, since Eddie Phillips of The Creation had done so prior to Page. On MTV's Led Zeppelin Rockumentary, Page said that he obtained the idea of playing the guitar with a bow from David McCallum, Sr. who was also a session musician. Page used his Fender Telecaster and later his Gibson Les Paul for his bow solos.

On a number of Led Zeppelin songs Page experimented with feedback devices and a theremin. He used a Wah-wah pedal, both in the traditional method of rocking the pedal back and forth as done by Jimi Hendrix and Eric Clapton, but also by simply leaving the pedal fully forward to enhance the treble. The latter technique was used on the solos for "Communication Breakdown" and "Whole Lotta Love," while the former was mostly seen in live performances.
Music production techniques

Page is credited for the innovations in sound recording he brought to the studio during the years he was a member of Led Zeppelin, many of which he had initially developed as a session musician. He developed a reputation for employing effects in new ways and trying out different methods of using microphones and amplification. During the late 1960s, most British music producers placed microphones directly in front of amplifiers and drums, resulting in the sometimes "tinny" sound of the recordings of the era. Page commented to Guitar World magazine that he felt the drum sounds of the day in particular "sounded like cardboard boxes." Instead, Page was a fan of 1950s recording techniques, Sun Studios being a particular favourite. In the same Guitar World interview, Page remarked, "Recording used to be a science", and " used to have a maxim: distance equals depth." Taking this maxim to heart, Page developed the idea of placing an additional microphone some distance from the amplifier (as much as twenty feet) and then recording the balance between the two. By adopting this technique, Page became one of the first British producers to record a band's "ambient sound" - the distance of a note's time-lag from one end of the room to the other.

For the recording of several Led Zeppelin tracks, such as "Whole Lotta Love" and "You Shook Me", Page additionally utilised "reverse echo" - a technique which he claims to have invented himself while with The Yardbirds (he had originally developed the method when recording the 1967 single "Ten Little Indians"). This production technique involved hearing the echo before the main sound instead of after it, achieved by turning the tape over and employing the echo on a spare track, then turning the tape back over again to get the echo preceding the signal.

Page has stated that, as producer, he deliberately changed the audio engineers on Led Zeppelin albums, from Glyn Johns for the first album, to Eddie Kramer for Led Zeppelin II, to Andy Johns for Led Zeppelin III and later albums. He explained that "I consciously kept changing engineers because I didn't want people to think that they were responsible for our sound. I wanted people to know it was me."

John Paul Jones has acknowledged Page's production techniques as being a key component of the success of Led Zeppelin:

   The backwards echo stuff a lot of the microphone techniques were just inspired. Using distance-miking… and small amplifiers. Everybody thinks we go in the studio with huge walls of amplifiers, but doesn’t. He uses a really small amplifier and he just mikes it up really well, so that it fits into a sonic picture.

In an interview Page himself gave to Guitar World magazine in 1993, he remarked on his work as a producer:

   Many people think of me as just a riff guitarist, but I think of myself in broader terms... As a producer I would like to be remembered as someone who was able to sustain a band of unquestionable individual talent, and push it to the forefront during its working career. I think I really captured the best of our output, growth, change and maturity on tape -- the multifaceted gem that is Led Zeppelin.
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/09/10 at 5:57 am


I now have number 2 to watch on DVD.

I wish I did, Missy took our DVD player to a girl's house and now that girl claims it is buried in storage. >:(

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/09/10 at 5:58 am

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vNc5o9TU0t0

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/09/10 at 6:00 am

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IPOIy4Kb9M4

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/09/10 at 6:01 am

The person of the day...John Gilbert
ohn Gilbert (July 10, 1895 – January 9, 1936) was an American actor and a major star of the silent film era.

Known as "the great lover", he rivaled even Rudolph Valentino as a box office draw. Though he was often cited as one of the high profile examples of an actor who was unsuccessful in making the transition to talkies, his decline as a star in fact had to do with studio politics and money and not the sound of his screen voice. According to the actress Eleanor Boardman and others, a fight between Louis B. Mayer and Gilbert erupted at what was to be his marriage to Greta Garbo, for which she failed to turn up, when Mayer made a snide remark. Gilbert promptly knocked his boss down, for which Mayer swore he'd get even. Gilbert's daughter has alleged that Mayer then proceeded to sabotage the recording of his voice by increasing the treble; giving direction of his films to an inexperienced director who was on narcotic pain medication; refusing him good scripts, such as 1930's The Dawn Patrol which directors wanted to star him in; and editing his projects to ruin his films. Born John Cecil Pringle in Logan, Utah to stock company actor parents, he struggled through a childhood of abuse and neglect before moving to Hollywood as a teenager. He first found work as an extra with the Thomas Ince Studios, and soon became a favorite of Maurice Tourneur, who also hired him to write and direct several pictures. He quickly rose through the ranks, building his reputation as an actor in such films as Heart o' the Hills with Mary Pickford. In 1921, Gilbert signed a three year contract with Fox Film Corporation, where he was cast as a romantic leading man. Some of his films for Fox include Monte Cristo, an adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo; St. Elmo, an adaptation of a popular book of the period; The Wolf Man, not a horror film, the story of a man who believes he murdered his fiancee's brother while drunk and many others. At the time, Gilbert did not sport his famous mustache, which made his features more uneven and a little less handsome, and Fox plainly did not realize what huge potential he had.

In 1924, he moved to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, where he became a full-fledged star with such high-profile films as His Hour directed by King Vidor and written by Elinor Glyn; He Who Gets Slapped (1924), co-starring Lon Chaney, Sr. and Norma Shearer, and directed by Victor Sjöström; and The Merry Widow (1925) directed by Erich von Stroheim and co-starring Mae Murray. In 1925, Gilbert was once again directed by Vidor in the war epic The Big Parade, which became the second highest grossing silent film. His performance in this film made him a major star. The following year, Vidor reunited Gilbert with two of his co-stars from that picture, Renée Adorée and Karl Dane, for the film La Bohème which also starred Lillian Gish.

Gilbert married the successful film actress Leatrice Joy in 1922. The union produced a daughter, Leatrice Gilbert Fountain, but the tempestuous marriage only lasted two years. The couple divorced in 1924, with Joy charging that Gilbert was a compulsive philanderer.

In 1926, Gilbert made Flesh and the Devil, his first film with Greta Garbo. They soon began a very public relationship, much to the delight of their fans. Gilbert planned to marry her, but Garbo changed her mind and never showed up for the ceremony. Despite their rocky off-screen relationship, they continued to generate box-office revenue for the studio, and MGM paired them in two more silents Love (1927), a modern adaptation of Anna Karenina, and A Woman of Affairs (1928). The former film was slyly advertised by MGM as "Garbo and Gilbert in Love."
Career decline

Throughout his time at MGM, Gilbert frequently clashed with studio head Louis B. Mayer over creative, social and financial matters. One crucial event occurred on September 8, 1926. While guests were waiting for Garbo to show up for a proposed double wedding ceremony - Garbo and Gilbert with the director King Vidor and his fiancee, actress Eleanor Boardman - Mayer allegedly made a crude remark about Garbo to the distraught Gilbert that caused him to fly into a rage and he physically attacked the mogul. Rumor had it that after that event, Gilbert's career began its downward slide. This story has been disputed by some historians, despite its having been reported over a period of twenty years by one major eyewitness, the other bride, Eleanor Boardman who described Mayer's final look at Gilbert as "terrifying". Gilbert did have a powerful supporter in production head Irving Thalberg. The two were old friends and Thalberg made efforts to reinvigorate Gilbert's career, but Thalberg's failing health probably limited such efforts.

With the coming of sound, Gilbert first spoke in the film His Glorious Night, in which his voice allegedly recorded in a high-pitched tone that made audiences giggle. He spoke again in the all-talking musical Hollywood Revue of 1929, appearing in a Romeo and Juliet Technicolor sequence along with Norma Shearer in which they first played the part straight and then modernized it. Reviewers for the film did not note any problems with Gilbert's voice at this time and, in fact, some praised it. A documentary, The Dawn of Sound: How the Movies Learned to Talk (2007), demonstrates that with improved recording equipment Gilbert's voice was suitably deep.

According to film reviews of the day, audiences actually laughed at Gilbert's overly ardent love-making in His Glorious Night. In one scene, Gilbert keeps kissing his leading lady (Catherine Dale Owen) while saying over and over again "I love you". This scene was famously later parodied in the MGM musical Singin' in the Rain (1952) where a preview of the fictional The Dueling Cavalier flops disastrously. Director King Vidor stated that Rudolph Valentino, Gilbert's main rival in the 1920s for romantic leads, probably would have suffered the same fate in the talkie era, had he lived.

His Glorious Night has never been shown on television by Turner Entertainment because MGM sold the rights to Paramount for a remake, and Universal - which owns the rights to all pre-1948 Paramount films - has not done anything with it. He appeared in 1931's The Phantom of Paris, a project designed for Lon Chaney to star in until his death from cancer in 1930.

In 1932 MGM made the film Downstairs from Gilbert's original story, in which Gilbert played against type as a scheming, blackmailing chauffeur. The film was well received by critics, but did nothing to restore Gilbert's popularity. Shortly after making the film he married co-star Virginia Bruce; the couple divorced in 1934.

Gilbert starred opposite Garbo for the last time in Queen Christina directed by Rouben Mamoulian. Garbo was top-billed and Gilbert's name beneath the title. The picture failed to revive his career, with his next film, The Captain Hates the Sea, being his last.
Gilbert has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1755 Vine Street and in 1994, he was honoured with his image on a United States postage stamp designed by caricaturist Al Hirschfeld.
Selected filmography

   * The Coward (1915) uncredited, directed by Reginald Barker and Thomas H. Ince
   * Hell's Hinges (1916) uncredited, directed by Charles Swickard, William S. Hart and Clifford Smith
   * The Apostle of Vengeance (1916) directed by William S. Hart and Clifford Smith
   * Heart o' the Hills (1919) directed by Joseph De Grasse and Sidney Franklin
   * Cameo Kirby (1923) directed by John Ford
   * He Who Gets Slapped (1924) directed by Victor Sjöström
   * His Hour (1924) directed by King Vidor
   * The Snob (1924) directed by Monta Bell
   * The Wife of the Centaur (1924) directed by King Vidor
   * The Wolf Man directed by Edmund Mortimer
   * The Merry Widow (1925) directed by Erich von Stroheim
   * The Big Parade (1925) directed by King Vidor
   * Ben-Hur (1925)
   * Bardelys the Magnificent (1926)
   * La Bohème (1926) with Lillian Gish
   * Flesh and the Devil (1926) with Greta Garbo
   * Love (1927) with Greta Garbo
   * The Show (1927) with Lionel Barrymore
   * Twelve Miles Out (1927) with Joan Crawford
   * A Woman of Affairs (1928) with Greta Garbo
   * Desert Nights (1929)
   * The Phantom of Paris (1931)
   * Downstairs (1932)
   * Fast Workers (1933)
   * Queen Christina (1933) with Greta Garbo, directed by Rouben Mamoulian
   * The Captain Hates The Sea (1934) with the cast of the Three Stooges

http://i692.photobucket.com/albums/vv285/stahr_monroe/Matinee%20idols/John.jpg
http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j1/aappleton218/classicmisc1/Actors01/gilbert.jpg
http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j1/aappleton218/classicmisc1/Actors01/johngilbert.jpg
http://i256.photobucket.com/albums/hh200/tnguitargrl/1060222409_l.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/09/10 at 6:59 am


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vNc5o9TU0t0

This was the first time I heard this version :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/09/10 at 8:15 am


This was the first time I heard this version :)
Rodrigo y Gabriela have been play on the online radio station I listen to for some time now, and now are beginning to hit the UK.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/09/10 at 8:19 am

Stairway To Heaven,a great song. :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/09/10 at 8:20 am


Stairway To Heaven,a great song. :)
Good song to do in kare-oke!

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/09/10 at 8:23 am


Good song to do in kare-oke!


That's if you know the lyrics.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/09/10 at 8:26 am


That's if you know the lyrics.
When singing kare-oke the lyrics on screen to read.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/09/10 at 8:27 am


When singing kare-oke the lyrics on screen to read.


if you can sing good.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/09/10 at 8:28 am


if you can sing good.
It helps.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/09/10 at 8:28 am


It helps.


helps to sound like Jimmy Page.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/09/10 at 8:31 am


helps to sound like Jimmy Page.
That does not matter.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/09/10 at 8:33 am


That does not matter.


you're right.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/09/10 at 8:36 am


you're right.
Just sing in your own style

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/09/10 at 8:46 am


Just sing in your own style



word of advice.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/09/10 at 9:47 am


Stairway To Heaven,a great song. :)

Probably in my top 3 songs of all time :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/09/10 at 12:55 pm


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IPOIy4Kb9M4



I have heard that version before. I must confess, I think it is pretty good.  :D ;D ;D ;D



Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/09/10 at 7:51 pm


Probably in my top 3 songs of all time :)



any others?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/09/10 at 8:04 pm



any others?

One of my favorites is Bridge Over Troubled Water- Simon & Garfunkel.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Womble on 01/09/10 at 8:23 pm

love the staircases. Thanks for posting, Ninny.  :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 2:35 am


The word of the day...Stairway
A stairway is a staircase or a flight of steps, inside or outside a building.
http://blogs.suntimes.com/ebert/Annex%20-%20Stewart,%20James%20%28Vertigo%29_01.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 2:42 am

British person of the day: Rod Stewart

Roderick David "Rod" Stewart, CBE (born 10 January 1945) is a British singer-songwriter born and raised in London, England and currently residing in Epping. He is of Scottish and English lineage.

With his distinctive raspy singing voice, Stewart came to prominence in the late 1960s and early '70s with The Jeff Beck Group and then Faces. He launched his solo career in 1969 with his debut album An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down (US: The Rod Stewart Album). His work with The Jeff Beck Group and Faces proved to be influential on the formation of the heavy metal and punk rock genres, respectively. Both bands were also pioneers of blues-rock.

With his career in its fifth decade, Stewart has achieved numerous solo hit singles worldwide, most notably in the UK, where he has garnered six consecutive number one albums and his tally of 62 hit singles include 31 that reached the top 10, six of which gained the number one position. He has had 16 top ten singles in the USA, with four of these reaching number one. He was voted at #33 in Q Magazine's list of the top 100 Greatest Singers of all time.

Awards and recognition:
    * Awarded CBE in 2007 New Year's Honours.
    * Grammy Award for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album, 2005, Stardust ... The Great American Songbook Volume III
    * Diamond Award of World Music Awards show for over 100 million records sold worldwide, 2001.
    * Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, 1994
    * Inducted into the UK Music Hall of Fame, 2006
    * "Bar none, he's the best singer I've heard in rock 'n' roll. He's also the greatest white soul singer." —Elton John on Rod Stewart
    * "Is this a white guy? You are kidding me!!" Chuck Berry commented when asked what he thought about Stewart's cover of Sweet Little Rock & Roller in an interview by the Belgian Rock magazine Humo in 1975.
    * Rod Stewart played to the largest concert crowd ever, with 3.5 million fans in attendance. This was at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro for the 1994 New Year’s Eve celebrations.
    * According to Stewart, soul legend James Brown called him music's "best white soul singer" in September 2006

List of bands:
During his career, Rod Stewart has been a member of a number of groups including:
    * Jimmy Powell and the Five Dimensions (1963)
    * The Hoochie Coochie Men (1964–1965)
    * Soul Agents (1965-1966)
    * Shotgun Express (1966)
    * The Jeff Beck Group (1966–1969)
    * Faces (1969–1975)

Discography: Rod Stewart discography

Stewart's album and single sales total have been variously estimated as more than 100 million, or at 200 million, in either case earning him a place on the list of best-selling music artists.

UK/US number one albums
    * 1971 Every Picture Tells a Story (UK / US)
    * 1972 Never a Dull Moment (UK )
    * 1973 Sing It Again Rod (UK )
    * 1974 Smiler (UK )
    * 1975 Atlantic Crossing (UK )
    * 1976 A Night on the Town (UK )
    * 1977 Foot Loose & Fancy Free (UK / US)
    * 1978 Blondes Have More Fun (US )
    * 1979 Greatest Hits, Vol. 1 (UK )
    * 2004 Stardust: the Great American Songbook 3 (US )
    * 2006 Still the Same... Great Rock Classics of Our Time (US )
    * 2009 Soulbook

UK/US number one singles
    * 1971 "Maggie May" / "Reason to Believe" (UK/US)
    * 1972 "You Wear It Well" (UK)
    * 1975 "Sailing" (UK)
    * 1976 "Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)" (US)
    * 1977 "I Don't Want to Talk About It" / "The First Cut Is the Deepest" (UK)
    * 1978 "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?" (UK, US)
    * 1983 "Baby Jane" (UK)
    * 1990 "Downtown Train" (US Adult Contemporary)
    * 1990 "This Old Heart of Mine" with Ronald Isley (US Adult Contemporary)
    * 1993 "All for Love" (US) (featuring Bryan Adams and Sting, first appearing on the official soundtrack from the movie "The Three Musketeers")
    * 1993 "Have I Told You Lately" (US Adult Contemporary)

http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B0002X94Y8.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg
http://www.babble.com/CS/blogs/famecrawler/2009/06/rod-stewart-family.jpg
http://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2007/07_01/RodStewartTH_486x608.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 2:46 am


British person of the day: Rod Stewart

Roderick David "Rod" Stewart, CBE (born 10 January 1945) is a British singer-songwriter born and raised in London, England and currently residing in Epping. He is of Scottish and English lineage.

With his distinctive raspy singing voice, Stewart came to prominence in the late 1960s and early '70s with The Jeff Beck Group and then Faces. He launched his solo career in 1969 with his debut album An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down (US: The Rod Stewart Album). His work with The Jeff Beck Group and Faces proved to be influential on the formation of the heavy metal and punk rock genres, respectively. Both bands were also pioneers of blues-rock.

With his career in its fifth decade, Stewart has achieved numerous solo hit singles worldwide, most notably in the UK, where he has garnered six consecutive number one albums and his tally of 62 hit singles include 31 that reached the top 10, six of which gained the number one position. He has had 16 top ten singles in the USA, with four of these reaching number one. He was voted at #33 in Q Magazine's list of the top 100 Greatest Singers of all time.

Awards and recognition:
    * Awarded CBE in 2007 New Year's Honours.
    * Grammy Award for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album, 2005, Stardust ... The Great American Songbook Volume III
    * Diamond Award of World Music Awards show for over 100 million records sold worldwide, 2001.
    * Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, 1994
    * Inducted into the UK Music Hall of Fame, 2006
    * "Bar none, he's the best singer I've heard in rock 'n' roll. He's also the greatest white soul singer." —Elton John on Rod Stewart
    * "Is this a white guy? You are kidding me!!" Chuck Berry commented when asked what he thought about Stewart's cover of Sweet Little Rock & Roller in an interview by the Belgian Rock magazine Humo in 1975.
    * Rod Stewart played to the largest concert crowd ever, with 3.5 million fans in attendance. This was at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro for the 1994 New Year’s Eve celebrations.
    * According to Stewart, soul legend James Brown called him music's "best white soul singer" in September 2006

List of bands:
During his career, Rod Stewart has been a member of a number of groups including:
    * Jimmy Powell and the Five Dimensions (1963)
    * The Hoochie Coochie Men (1964–1965)
    * Soul Agents (1965-1966)
    * Shotgun Express (1966)
    * The Jeff Beck Group (1966–1969)
    * Faces (1969–1975)

Discography: Rod Stewart discography

Stewart's album and single sales total have been variously estimated as more than 100 million, or at 200 million, in either case earning him a place on the list of best-selling music artists.

UK/US number one albums
    * 1971 Every Picture Tells a Story (UK / US)
    * 1972 Never a Dull Moment (UK )
    * 1973 Sing It Again Rod (UK )
    * 1974 Smiler (UK )
    * 1975 Atlantic Crossing (UK )
    * 1976 A Night on the Town (UK )
    * 1977 Foot Loose & Fancy Free (UK / US)
    * 1978 Blondes Have More Fun (US )
    * 1979 Greatest Hits, Vol. 1 (UK )
    * 2004 Stardust: the Great American Songbook 3 (US )
    * 2006 Still the Same... Great Rock Classics of Our Time (US )
    * 2009 Soulbook

UK/US number one singles
    * 1971 "Maggie May" / "Reason to Believe" (UK/US)
    * 1972 "You Wear It Well" (UK)
    * 1975 "Sailing" (UK)
    * 1976 "Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)" (US)
    * 1977 "I Don't Want to Talk About It" / "The First Cut Is the Deepest" (UK)
    * 1978 "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?" (UK, US)
    * 1983 "Baby Jane" (UK)
    * 1990 "Downtown Train" (US Adult Contemporary)
    * 1990 "This Old Heart of Mine" with Ronald Isley (US Adult Contemporary)
    * 1993 "All for Love" (US) (featuring Bryan Adams and Sting, first appearing on the official soundtrack from the movie "The Three Musketeers")
    * 1993 "Have I Told You Lately" (US Adult Contemporary)

http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B0002X94Y8.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg
http://www.babble.com/CS/blogs/famecrawler/2009/06/rod-stewart-family.jpg
http://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2007/07_01/RodStewartTH_486x608.jpg

In fact it his 65th bithday today, he become a pensioner (he can reitre!)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 2:47 am


In fact it his 65th bithday today, he become a pensioner (he can reitre!)
Do Yah Think I'm Sixty!

Nah! You're 65!

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 7:08 am

The word of the day...Ice
Ice is frozen water.
If you ice a cake, you cover it with icing.
An ice is an ice cream.
http://i873.photobucket.com/albums/ab297/towelcakeshop/icecream.jpg
http://i326.photobucket.com/albums/k402/CandyApple_015_2008/ice.jpg
http://i666.photobucket.com/albums/vv24/unique_latina2009/ice.jpg
http://i275.photobucket.com/albums/jj304/angeljunk/icefish10040.jpg
http://i291.photobucket.com/albums/ll285/GTO_Judge/0104101149a.jpg
http://i559.photobucket.com/albums/ss40/fashline/akebonoiceshvr.jpg
http://i602.photobucket.com/albums/tt105/nj_ganga/cross/DSCF1167.jpg
http://i816.photobucket.com/albums/zz83/BananaManda12/BannerforBreakTheIce.jpg
http://i1010.photobucket.com/albums/af223/rikiternadi/smirnoff-ice.jpg
http://i818.photobucket.com/albums/zz107/ArtOfSeeking/icesculpture15.jpg

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 7:09 am


love the staircases. Thanks for posting, Ninny.  :)

Your Welcome.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 7:10 am


http://blogs.suntimes.com/ebert/Annex%20-%20Stewart,%20James%20%28Vertigo%29_01.jpg

Classic :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 7:11 am


British person of the day: Rod Stewart

Roderick David "Rod" Stewart, CBE (born 10 January 1945) is a British singer-songwriter born and raised in London, England and currently residing in Epping. He is of Scottish and English lineage.

With his distinctive raspy singing voice, Stewart came to prominence in the late 1960s and early '70s with The Jeff Beck Group and then Faces. He launched his solo career in 1969 with his debut album An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down (US: The Rod Stewart Album). His work with The Jeff Beck Group and Faces proved to be influential on the formation of the heavy metal and punk rock genres, respectively. Both bands were also pioneers of blues-rock.

With his career in its fifth decade, Stewart has achieved numerous solo hit singles worldwide, most notably in the UK, where he has garnered six consecutive number one albums and his tally of 62 hit singles include 31 that reached the top 10, six of which gained the number one position. He has had 16 top ten singles in the USA, with four of these reaching number one. He was voted at #33 in Q Magazine's list of the top 100 Greatest Singers of all time.

Awards and recognition:
    * Awarded CBE in 2007 New Year's Honours.
    * Grammy Award for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album, 2005, Stardust ... The Great American Songbook Volume III
    * Diamond Award of World Music Awards show for over 100 million records sold worldwide, 2001.
    * Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, 1994
    * Inducted into the UK Music Hall of Fame, 2006
    * "Bar none, he's the best singer I've heard in rock 'n' roll. He's also the greatest white soul singer." —Elton John on Rod Stewart
    * "Is this a white guy? You are kidding me!!" Chuck Berry commented when asked what he thought about Stewart's cover of Sweet Little Rock & Roller in an interview by the Belgian Rock magazine Humo in 1975.
    * Rod Stewart played to the largest concert crowd ever, with 3.5 million fans in attendance. This was at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro for the 1994 New Year’s Eve celebrations.
    * According to Stewart, soul legend James Brown called him music's "best white soul singer" in September 2006

List of bands:
During his career, Rod Stewart has been a member of a number of groups including:
    * Jimmy Powell and the Five Dimensions (1963)
    * The Hoochie Coochie Men (1964–1965)
    * Soul Agents (1965-1966)
    * Shotgun Express (1966)
    * The Jeff Beck Group (1966–1969)
    * Faces (1969–1975)

Discography: Rod Stewart discography

Stewart's album and single sales total have been variously estimated as more than 100 million, or at 200 million, in either case earning him a place on the list of best-selling music artists.

UK/US number one albums
    * 1971 Every Picture Tells a Story (UK / US)
    * 1972 Never a Dull Moment (UK )
    * 1973 Sing It Again Rod (UK )
    * 1974 Smiler (UK )
    * 1975 Atlantic Crossing (UK )
    * 1976 A Night on the Town (UK )
    * 1977 Foot Loose & Fancy Free (UK / US)
    * 1978 Blondes Have More Fun (US )
    * 1979 Greatest Hits, Vol. 1 (UK )
    * 2004 Stardust: the Great American Songbook 3 (US )
    * 2006 Still the Same... Great Rock Classics of Our Time (US )
    * 2009 Soulbook

UK/US number one singles
    * 1971 "Maggie May" / "Reason to Believe" (UK/US)
    * 1972 "You Wear It Well" (UK)
    * 1975 "Sailing" (UK)
    * 1976 "Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)" (US)
    * 1977 "I Don't Want to Talk About It" / "The First Cut Is the Deepest" (UK)
    * 1978 "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?" (UK, US)
    * 1983 "Baby Jane" (UK)
    * 1990 "Downtown Train" (US Adult Contemporary)
    * 1990 "This Old Heart of Mine" with Ronald Isley (US Adult Contemporary)
    * 1993 "All for Love" (US) (featuring Bryan Adams and Sting, first appearing on the official soundtrack from the movie "The Three Musketeers")
    * 1993 "Have I Told You Lately" (US Adult Contemporary)

http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B0002X94Y8.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg
http://www.babble.com/CS/blogs/famecrawler/2009/06/rod-stewart-family.jpg
http://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2007/07_01/RodStewartTH_486x608.jpg


Very good choice,if you hadn't picked him I was going to. :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 7:16 am

The birthday of the day...Pat Benatar
Pat Benatar (born January 10, 1953) is a four-time Grammy Award-winning American singer best known for her mezzo-soprano vocal range and establishing herself as one of rock's top vocalists and one of music's top-selling female artists with hit songs such as "Love Is a Battlefield", "Hit Me with Your Best Shot", "We Belong" and "Heartbreaker".

Benatar is one of the top-selling female artists of all-time, and one of the 1980s Top Platinum Album Recipients, according to the Recording Industry Association of America with two RIAA-certified Multi-Platinum albums and five RIAA-certified Platinum albums, plus three RIAA-certified Gold albums and 19 Top 40 singles to her credit.

In addition, Benatar is the first female artist featured on MTV, and her music video, You Better Run, is the second video aired by the network following its debut with The Buggles' "Video Killed the Radio Star" Patricia Mae Andrzejewski was born in Greenpoint, Brooklyn to Andrew and Mildred Andrzejewski, a sheet-metal worker and a beautician. Her family moved to Lindenhurst, New York on Long Island, when she was 3 years old. I have wonderful childhood memories of picking berries in the "woods" by our house, driving to the "docks" on the South Bay to get freshly harvested clams, she recounted once.

Patti (as she was known) became interested in theater and began voice lessons, singing at Daniel Street Elementary School her first solo, a song called “It Must Be Spring,” at age eight. She said, "As a kid, I sang at any choir, any denomination, anywhere I could." At Lindenhurst Senior High School (1967-71), Benatar participated in musical theater, playing Queen Guinevere in the school production of Camelot, marching in the homecoming parade, singing at the annual Christmas Tree Lighting ceremony, and performing a solo of "The Christmas Song" on a holiday recording of the Lindenhurst High School Choir her senior year.

Benatar was cut off from the rock scene in nearby Manhattan though because her parents were "ridiculously strict - I was allowed to go to symphonies, opera and theater but I couldn't go to clubs. Her musical training was strictly classical and theatrical. She said, "I was singing Puccini and West Side Story but I spent every afternoon after school with my little transistor radio listening to the Rolling Stones..."

Training as a coloratura and accepted to The Juilliard School, Benatar surprised family, friends and teachers by deciding a classical career was not for her and pursued health education at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. At 19, after one year at Stony Brook, she dropped out to marry her high school sweetheart Dennis Benatar, an army draftee who trained at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, and then served with the Army Security Agency at Fort Devens, Massachusetts, before being stationed at Fort Lee, Virginia. Specialist (E-4) Dennis Benatar was stationed there for three years, and Pat worked as a bank teller in Richmond, Virginia.

In 1973, Benatar quit her job as a bank teller to pursue a singing career after being inspired by a Liza Minnelli concert she saw in Richmond. She got a job as a singing waitress at a flapper-esque nightclub named The Roaring Twenties and got a gig singing in lounge band Coxon's Army, a regular at Sam Miller's basement club. The band garnered enough attention to be the subject of a never-aired PBS special, and the band's bassist Roger Capps also would go on to be the original bass player for the Pat Benatar Band. The period also yielded Benatar's first and only single until her eventual 1979 debut on Chrysalis Records: "Day Gig" (1974), Trace Records, written and produced by Coxon's Army band leader Phil Coxon and locally released in Richmond. Her big break came in 1975 at an amateur night at the renowned comedy club Catch a Rising Star in New York. Her rousing rendition of Judy Garland's "Rock-a-Bye Your Baby With a Dixie Melody" earned her a call back by club owner Rick Newman, who would become her manager. Benatar said:

    I came in from Virginia one night. I had straight red hair and I wore a dress. I sang a Judy Garland song and I don’t know what happened, I never sang in New York before in my life, even though I grew up there, everybody just went crazy. I didn't do anything spectacular. I don’t know what happened, it was just one of those magical things. came right in and said, 'Let's talk about you playing here some more...' Newman said, 'It was 2:45 in the morning. We had 30 performers and she was about #27. I was on the other side of the room drinking with some friends--then I suddenly heard this voice!'

The couple headed back to New York following Dennis' discharge from the army, and Benatar went on to be a regular member at Catch A Rising Star for close to three years, until signing a record contract. Catch A Rising Star was not the only break Benatar got in 1975. She landed the part of Zephyr in Harry Chapin's futuristic rock musical, The Zinger. Benatar's first foray into rock. The production, which debuted on March 19, 1976, at the Performing Arts Foundation's (PAF) Playhouse in Huntington Station, Long Island, ran for a month and also featured Beverly D'Angelo and Christine Lahti. Benatar noted: "I was 22 by the time I started to sing rock, so at first I was very conscious of technique and I was overly technical. That proved to be inhibiting so it was a disadvantage until I began to sing intuitively. That’s the only way to sing rock – from your gut level feelings. It's the instinct that the best singers have."

Halloween 1977 proved a pivotal night in Benatar's early, spandexed stage persona. Rather than change out of the vampire costume she had worn to a Greenwich Village cafe party that evening, she went on-stage wearing black tights, black eyeliner and a short black top. Despite performing her usual array of songs, she received a standing ovation. Benatar has said that "he crowd was always polite, but this time they went out of their minds. It was the same songs, sung the same way, and I thought, 'Oh my god ... t's these clothes and this makeup!'"

Between appearances at Catch A Rising Star and recording commercial jingles for Pepsi Cola and a number of regional concerns, she headlined New York City’s famous Tramps nightclub from March 29 - April 1, 1978, where her performance impressed representatives from several record companies. She was signed to Chrysalis Records by founder Terry Ellis the following week."There was a long period of three years, when I spent my time taking demo tapes around and being rejected by one record company after another. Then just two days after the debut concert with the band, we were signed to a record contract..." Recorded in June and July 1979, Benatar debuted the week of August 27, 1979 with the release of I Need A Lover from the album In the Heat of the Night. She said, "My album was the last of a bunch by female singers to come out so I was told not to expect much, even though Mike Chapman was producing."

She won an unprecedented four consecutive Grammy Awards for Best Female Rock Performance from 1980 to 1983 for Crimes of Passion, "Fire and Ice", "Shadows of the Night", and "Love Is a Battlefield". Of the ten Grammy Award ceremonies in the 1980s, Benatar was nominated for Best Female Rock Performance eight times, including for "Invincible" in 1985, "Sex as a Weapon" in 1986, "All Fired Up" in 1988 and in 1989 for "Let's Stay Together".

Benatar also earned Grammy Award nominations in 1985 for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female with "We Belong" and in 1986 for Best Rock Vocal Performance, Duo or Group as a member of Artists United Against Apartheid for their single, "Sun City". Benatar is also the winner of three American Music Awards: Favorite Female Pop/Rock Vocalist of 1981 and 1983, and Favorite Female Pop/Rock Video Artist of 1985. Benatar was twice named Rolling Stone magazine's Favorite Female Vocalist, and Billboard magazine ranks her as the most successful female rock vocalist of all time based on overall record sales and the number of hit songs and their charted positions.

Pat Benatar was inducted into the Long Island Music Hall of Fame at the Second Induction Award Ceremony and Fundraising Gala held October 30, 2008. In her acceptance letter, she said, “My upbringing, and the values and ideals I learned back in my hometown kept me grounded. I never forget that a small town girl from Lindenhurst, LI actually got the chance to live her dreams.”
Family

Pat and Dennis Benatar divorced in 1979. Pat and band leader/lead guitarist Neil "Spyder" Giraldo married on February 20, 1982. They have two daughters, Haley Egeana (born February 16, 1985) and Hana Juliana (born March 12, 1994).
Benatar's debut album In the Heat of the Night was released in October 1979, and reached #12. It established Benatar as a new force in rock. Producer Mike Chapman, who had worked with Blondie and The Knack, broke his vow not to take on any new artists when he heard Benatar's demo tape. Chapman personally produced three tracks on the album, while his long-time engineer and now independent producer, Peter Coleman (who also supervised Nick Gilder) oversaw the rest. In addition, Chapman and his partner, Nicky Chinn, wrote three original songs for the LP, in addition to a rearranged version of a song they wrote for Sweet, "No You Don't". The album also featured two songs written by Roger Capps and Benatar, as well as "I Need a Lover" written by John Mellencamp, "Don't Let It Show" written by Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson. The album would be Benatar's first RIAA certified platinum album.
Crimes of Passion

In August 1980, Benatar released her second and most popular LP, Crimes of Passion, featuring her signature song "Hit Me with Your Best Shot" along with the controversial song Hell is for Children, which was inspired by reading a series of articles in the New York Times about child abuse in America. "Hit Me With Your Best Shot" (U.S. #9) was her first single to break the U.S. Top 10 and eventually sold more than 1 million copies (at that time, gold status) in the United States alone. The album peaked at U.S. #2 in January 1981 for 6 consecutive weeks (behind Yoko Ono and John Lennon's Double Fantasy) and eventually sold over 5 million copies, and a month later, Benatar won her first Grammy Award for "Best Female Rock Vocal Performance" of 1980. Other singles released from Crimes of Passion were "Treat Me Right" (US #18) and the Rascal's cover, "You Better Run" (US #42), which gained some later notoriety when it was the second music video ever played on MTV, after the Buggles' "Video Killed the Radio Star". The album also featured a changed-tempo cover of Kate Bush's Wuthering Heights. Produced by Keith Olsen, Crimes of Passion remained on the US album charts for 93 weeks and in the top 10 for more than six months, eventually becoming her second consecutive platinum certification by the RIAA. In October 1980, Benatar (along with future husband Neil Giraldo) graced the cover of Rolling Stone magazine.
Although billed as a solo artist, Benatar recorded and toured with a consistent set of band members over most of her career, who contributed greatly to the writing and producing of songs and are recognizable characters on album photos and in many of her music videos.

    * Neil "Spyder" Giraldo (incorrectly spelled as "Geraldo" in early liner notes/credits) is the distinctive lead guitarist of the band and has performed on all of Benatar's albums. Born in Cleveland on December 29, 1955, Giraldo began playing the guitar at 6-years-old and learned to play the piano at age 12. Giraldo performed in Rick Derringer's touring band before working with Benatar, appearing in a possible bootleg entitled Derringer Live At The Paradise Theater Boston, Massachusetts, July 7, 1978 (UPC 672627400428). Giraldo's appearance on the video for Benatar's "You Better Run" distinguished him as the first guitarist on MTV. The video, the second ever aired on MTV, followed The Buggles, who had no guitar player. In addition to playing lead guitar, Giraldo is credited with composing and producing much of Benatar's work. Giraldo's first outside production credit was on John Waite's debut album Ignition. He has also given a helping musical hand to artists such as The Del-Lords, Rick Springfield, and Kenny Loggins. In addition, Giraldo was the musical composer for the 2005 movie Smile starring Beau Bridges, Linda Hamilton, Sean Astin and directed by Jeffrey Kramer. The soundtrack features an original song by Giraldo and Scott Kempner of The Del-Lords, appearing as The Paradise Brothers, titled "Beautiful Something." Proceeds from the movie go to Operation Smile. The Paradise Brothers also contributed a cover of "Light Of Day" for a Bruce Springsteen Tribute album.
    * Myron Grombacher, who played with Neil in Rick Derringer's touring band, is drummer on nine of Benatar's original albums and has numerous writing credits. Myron is easily recognizable in the music videos, particularly as the mad dentist in Get Nervous.
    * Charlie Giordano performed keyboard duties on five albums, and is identifiable by his glasses and distinctive array of berets, blazers and 80s-style ties. In 2007, he replaced the late Danny Federici in the E Street Band.
    * Mick Mahan is the band's bassist and has performed with Benatar since 1995. The original bassist, Roger Capps, was replaced by Donnie Nossov on Tropico, and then later by Frank Linx.
    * Scott Sheets is credited on rhythm guitar on the first three albums.

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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 7:20 am

The person of the day...Paul Lynde
Paul Edward Lynde (June 13, 1926 – January 10, 1982) was an American comedian and actor. A noted character actor, Lynde was well known for his roles as Uncle Arthur on Bewitched and Harry McAfee, the befuddled father in Bye Bye Birdie. He was also the regular "center square" guest on the game show, Hollywood Squares, from 1968 to 1981.
Paul Lynde was born in Mount Vernon, Ohio, and studied drama at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, where his fellow students included Cloris Leachman, Charlotte Rae, Patricia Neal, Jeffrey Hunter and Claude Akins. At Northwestern University, he joined the Upsilon chapter of Phi Kappa Sigma and is listed amongst the most famous members of the fraternity. He graduated in 1948 and moved to New York City, where he initially worked as a stand-up comic.
Career

Lynde made his Broadway debut in the hit revue New Faces of 1952 in which he co-starred with fellow newcomers Eartha Kitt, Alice Ghostley, and Carol Lawrence. In his monologue from that revue, the "Trip of the Month Club," Lynde portrayed a man on crutches recounting his misadventures on the African safari he took with his late wife. The show was filmed and released as New Faces in 1954.

After the revue's run, Lynde co-starred in the short-lived sitcom Stanley opposite Buddy Hackett and Carol Burnett, both of whom were also starting out their careers in show business. In 1960, Lynde returned to Broadway when he was cast as the father in Bye Bye Birdie. He reprised the role in the play's film adaptation, which was released in 1963 and co-starred Dick Van Dyke, Janet Leigh, and Ann-Margret.

Over the years, Lynde made regular appearances on sitcoms such as The Phil Silvers Show, The Munsters, and I Dream of Jeannie, and variety shows such as The Perry Como Show and The Dean Martin Show. Lynde first appeared in episode 26 of Bewitched, "Driving is the Only Way to Fly", as Samantha's driving instructor Harold Harold, before taking on the recurring role of Uncle Arthur, Endora's brother. He was a frequent guest on the Donny and Marie Osmond Show.

Lynde also did extensive voice work on animated cartoons, particularly those of Hanna-Barbera Productions. His most notable roles included Sylvester Sneakly ("The Hooded Claw") in The Perils of Penelope Pitstop, Mildew Wolf from It's the Wolf (a segment of Cattanooga Cats), and Pertwee from Where's Huddles?. He also voiced the role of Templeton the gluttonous rat in the animated feature Charlotte's Web. Lynde's sardonic inflections added a dimension to such lines as the sly, drawn-out whine, "What's in it for meeee?" Lynde's trademark voice is popular among impressionists. In the 1999 animated Queer Duck the character Bi-Polar Bear (voiced by Billy West) speaks with an imitation of Lynde's voice.

In 1972, Lynde starred in the short-lived ABC sitcom, The Paul Lynde Show, playing an uptight attorney and father at odds with his liberal-minded son-in-law. The series was canceled after only one season. The network then "transferred" Lynde to another comedy series that had debuted in 1972, Temperatures Rising, for the 1973 season, but his presence in the cast did not help flagging ratings and this series, too, was not renewed. The series’ failure reportedly exacerbated Lynde’s pre-existing drinking problem, which led to numerous run-ins with the law and frequent arrests for public intoxication.
Hollywood Squares

In 1966, Lynde debuted on the fledgling game show Hollywood Squares and quickly became its iconic guest. Eventually he assumed a permanent spot as the "center square," a move which ensured that he would be called upon by contestants at least once in almost every round. Though the producers' decision, Universal Studios tour guides told a different tale during the 1970’s. They claimed that Lynde was deathly afraid of earthquakes, and after a taping was interrupted by tremors, he was told by engineers that the center square was the safest.

It was on Hollywood Squares that Lynde was best able to showcase his comedic talents with short, salty one-liners. Many of these gags were thinly-veiled allusions to his homosexuality. Asked "You're the world's most popular fruit. What are you?", Lynde replied, "Humble." In response to the question "How many men on a hockey team?" Lynde quipped, "About half."

Others relied on double entendre, an alleged fondness for deviant behaviors, or dealt with "touchy" subject matter for 1970s television. Examples include:

    Q: What is said to be wasted on the young?
    Lynde: A whipping.

    Q: Paul, what profession is the most common for prostitutes after they retire?
    Lynde: Smuggling.

The show made a habit of asking Lynde about fairy tales and children's stories, making Lynde's punchlines all the more inappropriate. On one episode, Lynde humorously suggested that the Lewis Carroll character Alice was the one to say "I'm late! I'm late!" rather than the White Rabbit, "...and her mother is just sick about it." On another, Lynde claimed that, in The Wizard of Oz, what the Scarecrow really wanted was for the Tin Man to notice him.

Even the more generic punchlines were often punched up by Lynde's trademark snickering delivery. Asked "What is the most abused and neglected part of the body?" Lynde said, "Well, mine may be abused, but it certainly isn't neglected."

Lynde left the show in 1979 after thirteen seasons, but returned for the 1980-81 season.
Personal life

In 1965, Lynde was involved in an accident where his lover, a young actor, fell to his death from the window of their hotel room in San Francisco's Sir Francis Drake Hotel. The two had been drinking for hours before 24-year-old James "Bing" Davidson slipped and fell eight stories, an event witnessed by two policemen. Even though the scandal did not ruin his career, the incident offered insight into the precarious life of drinking and partying that Lynde enjoyed.
Death

Lynde was found dead in his Beverly Hills, California, home by friend Paul Barresi on Monday, January 11, 1982. The coroner ruled the death a heart attack. It has been suggested that he might have been dead for two days, but his death appears in most references as having occurred on January 10, 1982.

Lynde's cremated remains are interred in a cemetery near his hometown of Mt. Vernon, OH, at Amity Cemetery, in Amity, OH. He is buried next to his brother Johnny, and his sister Helen. It is also reported that Lynde lies near ill-fated sweetheart James "Bing" Davidson in Amity Cemetery, but this has been unconfirmed.
Legacy

Paul Lynde's popularity has continued after his death. According to cartoon creator/voice actor Seth McFarlane, the voice of Roger the Alien on the Fox television show American Dad! was modelled after him. The voice and humor of Queer Duck character Bi-Polar Bear (voiced by Ren & Stimpy and Futurama actor Billy West), is also done in the style of Paul Lynde.

Actor/Comedian Michael Airington also plays Paul Lynde in the show Oh My Goodness it's Paul Lynde. He plays him in An Evening with Paul Lynde recreating Lynde's 1976 live show and in Off Center: The Paul Lynde Show. Airington Licenses the rights from the Paul Lynde Estate.
Filmography
Television

    * The Red Buttons Show (1955)
    * Stanley (1956–1957)
    * The Perry Como Show (1961–1963)
    * The Munsters (1964)
    * Bewitched (1965) (1966–1971)
    * The Hollywood Squares (1968–1981)
    * Dean Martin Presents the Golddiggers (1968–1969)
    * The Cattanooga Cats (1969–1971) (voice)
    * Love, American Style (1969-1974)
    * The Perils of Penelope Pitstop (1969–1971) (voice)
    * Gidget Grows Up (1969)
    * Where's Huddles (1970) (voice)
    * Gidget Gets Married (1972)
    * I Dream of Jeannie (1966–1968)
    * The Paul Lynde Show (1972–1973)
    * The New Temperatures Rising Show (1973–1974)
    * The Paul Lynde Halloween Special (1976)
    * Donny & Marie (1975)
    * 'Twas the Night Before Christmas (1977)
    * Paul Lynde at the Movies (1979)


Film

    * New Faces (1954) (also writer)
    * Son of Flubber (1963)
    * Bye Bye Birdie (1963)
    * Under the Yum Yum Tree (1963)
    * For Those Who Think Young (1964)
    * Send Me No Flowers (1964)
    * Beach Blanket Bingo (1965)
    * The Glass Bottom Boat (1966)
    * How Sweet It Is! (1968)
    * Charlotte's Web (1973) (voice)
    * Journey Back to Oz (1974) (voice)
    * Hugo the Hippo (1975) (voice)
    * Rabbit Test (1978)
    * The Villain (1979)
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Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 7:20 am


Very good choice,if you hadn't picked him I was going to. :)
I was worried that you may had prepared for him.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 7:23 am


The word of the day...Ice
Ice is frozen water.
If you ice a cake, you cover it with icing.
An ice is an ice cream.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rog8ou-ZepE

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 7:23 am


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rog8ou-ZepE
Plagiarist!

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 7:25 am

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0A7tLVIsuNw

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 7:33 am


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0A7tLVIsuNw

So hillarious ;D

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 7:34 am


So hillarious ;D
It cheered me up for the day!

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 7:35 am


Plagiarist!

Did David Bowie or Queen ever get any money from that?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 7:35 am


It cheered me up for the day!

Me too :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 7:36 am


Did David Bowie or Queen ever get any money from that?
I need to research on that.

Paul would know.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 7:39 am


Did David Bowie or Queen ever get any money from that?
"Ice Ice Baby" samples the bassline of "Under Pressure" by Queen and David Bowie, who did not initially receive songwriting credit or royalties until after it had become a hit.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/10/10 at 7:55 am

Rod Stewart will never retire.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 8:08 am


Rod Stewart will never retire.
His voice will go on.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/10/10 at 8:09 am


His voice will go on.


still has had the same hairdo for 20 years.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 8:10 am


still has had the same hairdo for 20 years.
His hair has survived.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 8:10 am


"Ice Ice Baby" samples the bassline of "Under Pressure" by Queen and David Bowie, who did not initially receive songwriting credit or royalties until after it had become a hit.

They  had to sue first...I believe.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 8:11 am


His hair has survived.

Must be a turn on for all those young ladies ;D

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/10/10 at 8:11 am


His hair has survived.


how does he do that?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 8:12 am


how does he do that?
....keeps in a cardboard box?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/10/10 at 8:13 am


....keeps in a cardboard box?


or tons of hairspray.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 8:16 am


or tons of hairspray.
Hair gel?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/10/10 at 8:16 am


Hair gel?


that could be his trick.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 8:21 am


that could be his trick.
Is there any long term effects in continually using hair gel?

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Howard on 01/10/10 at 8:29 am


Is there any long term effects in continually using hair gel?


dry hair or flakes.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Philip Eno on 01/10/10 at 8:37 am


dry hair or flakes.
We need a hair care expert here.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: Womble on 01/10/10 at 10:04 am

Thanks for the bio's on Pat Benatar and Paul Lynde, Ninny. I have always been a fan of Lynde's and was fortunate enough to see Benatar in concert. She was wonderful and so are you.  :) Great job!  :) :) :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 10:32 am


Thanks for the bio's on Pat Benatar and Paul Lynde, Ninny. I have always been a fan of Lynde's and was fortunate enough to see Benatar in concert. She was wonderful and so are you.  :) Great job!  :) :) :)

Thanks Vinny, I've always been a fan of both myself. :)

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 10:33 am


....keeps in a cardboard box?

Like a wig ;D

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/10/10 at 2:02 pm

One of my sisters had a crush on Rod Stewart. I don't know if she still does-probably.

I LOVE Pat Benatar. I love her Crimes of Passion album. That was one of the albums I played the most in my senior year of high school.

As a kid, I had a gerbil named Paul Lynde.  :D ;D ;D ;D  Seriously. He was the voice of the rat in the movie Charlotte's Web and a gerbil was close to a rat so I named him (or was it a her?  :-\\ :D ;D ;D ) Paul Lynde. I named the other one after my best friend.  ;D ;D ;D



Cat

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: ninny on 01/10/10 at 2:41 pm


One of my sisters had a crush on Rod Stewart. I don't know if she still does-probably.

I LOVE Pat Benatar. I love her Crimes of Passion album. That was one of the albums I played the most in my senior year of high school.

As a kid, I had a gerbil named Paul Lynde.  :D ;D ;D ;D   Seriously. He was the voice of the rat in the movie Charlotte's Web and a gerbil was close to a rat so I named him (or was it a her?  :-\\ :D ;D ;D ) Paul Lynde. I named the other one after my best friend.  ;D ;D ;D



Cat

Crimes of Passion, great  songs like Hell Is for Children, Treat Me Right,You Better Run & Hit Me With Your Best Shot.

Subject: Re: ninny's New Person & Word of the Day

Written By: CatwomanofV on 01/10/10 at 2:49 pm


Crimes of Passion, great  songs like Hell Is for Children, Treat Me Right,You Better Run & Hit Me With Your Best Shot.



I like some of the lesser known songs: I'm Gonna Follow You, Out A Touch, and of course, Wuthering Heights.



Cat

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