Actor Jay Benedict, best known for his roles in 1986's "Aliens," 2012's "The Dark Knight Rises" and the U.K. TV series "Emmerdale," died April 4. Frederick Thomas, best known as his rap alias Fred The Godson, died April 23. He was 25. Chris Trousdale, a member of the boy band DreamStreet from the group’s inception in 1999 through its breakup in 2002, died June 2. Derek Jones, the guitarist for post-hardcore rock band Falling in Reverse, died April 21. He was 87. Mark Blum, a veteran character actor who starred in the films "Desperately Seeking Susan" and "Crocodile Dundee," as well as the recent TV series "You," died March 26. Bill Rieflin, a remarkably versatile drummer whose work over the past 30 years spanned Ministry, R.E.M., Swans, Nine Inch Nails and King Crimson, among many others, died March 24. He is survived by Brelet; his two sons by Olin, Claes and Henrik, who appeared with the actor in the film “Hawaii”; and two sons, Cedric and Yvan, by Brelet. David Schramm, a stage actor who was also a star on the NBC comedy “Wings,” died March 28. He was 82. He was 68. Legendary jazz guitarist John "Bucky" Pizzarelli, who played for presidents at the White House and with music icons including Paul McCartney, died March 1. Joe Diffie, a consistent country-music hitmaker throughout the Nineties, died March 29. He was previously involved in a Lucasfilm production when he played Sigmund Freud in an episode of The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles . Chynna Rogers, the hip-hop artist who first turned heads on the modeling runway and then with her talent as a rapper, died April 8. John Prine, the raspy-voiced singer-songwriter whose homespun, witty and insightful country-folk tunes influenced legions of musicians in a career that spanned five decades, died April 7. He made his American debut in the role of Jesus Christ in George Stevens’ turgid 1965 epic “The Greatest Story Ever Told” and went on to make strong impressions with audiences in “The Exorcist,” Woody Allen’s “Hannah and Her Sisters,” David Lynch’s “Dune,” “Three Days of the Condor,” “Hawaii,” “Conan the Barbarian” and “Awakenings.”, Von Sydow worked for other Scandinavian directors as well, drawing an Oscar nomination for his role in Bille August’s “Pelle the Conqueror” and starring in Jan Troell’s acclaimed two-part epic “The Emigrants” and “The New Land.”. He had a 70-year career in European and American cinema, television, and theatre, appearing in more than 150 films and several television series in multiple languages. Phil May, best known for fronting 1960s band "The Pretty Things", which he formed in 1963 as an R'n'B group, died May 15. Take your favorite fandoms with you and never miss a beat. He was 77. He was 86. Max von Sydow, the tall, tragic-faced Swedish actor whose name was virtually synonymous with the films of Ingmar Bergman, has died. Ben Cooper, a Western star of films and TV like "Johnny Guitar," "Bonanza," "Rawhide" and more, died February 24. She was 66. Mart Crowley, the author who wrote the landmark play "The Boys in the Band," died March 7. Ann E. Todd, a former child star in the 1930s and ‘40s who appeared in films such as “Intermezzo” and “All This, and Heaven Too" before making her mark in sitcoms during the '50s, died February 7. [Source]. He was 51. He was 89. Norma Michaels, a beloved character actress best known for her role as Josephine on "King of Queens", died January 11. Von Sydow was married twice, to actress Kerstin Olin in 1951 and to French filmmaker Catherine Brelet in 1997. Alan Merrill, the guitarist, vocalist and songwriter, best known for writing "I Love Rock 'n' Roll, " died March 29. She was 22. He was 92. Nicholas Parsons, British broadcaster who hosted BBC radio 4's "Just A Minute" game show for more than 50 years, died January 28. Star Wars: "Max Von Sydow". She was 54. She was 88. He was 86. Raphael Coleman, who starred alongside Emma Thompson and Colin Firth in the 2005 film “Nanny McPhee,” died February 7. She was 66. He was 64. She was 52. The Village Voice said, “The standout performance, unsurprisingly, is from 82-year-old von Sydow who, communicating with brief notes on tearaway notebook pages and ‘Yes’ and ‘No’ tattoos on his palms, puts a profound amount of nuanced inflection behind every accompanying expression.”. He was 35. Jason Davis, a voice actor on the Disney Channel show “Recess,” died February 16. James Drury, an actor best remembered as the stolid, black-hatted title character of the long-running NBC western “The Virginian,” died April 6. Ivan Passer, a leading figure of the Czech new wave who directed films including “Cutter’s Way,” died January 9. He was 91. He was 81. He also played the title role in the philosophical but bizarre film adaptation of Herman Hesse’s “Steppenwolf,” in 1974, and he racked up more bad-guy roles in “Three Days of the Condor” (menacing assassin), “Flash Gordon” (comicbook supervillain) and the James Bond film “Never Say Never Again” (it is said von Sydow had been offered the role of Dr. No, which he turned down in favor of the Christ role in “The Greatest Story Ever Told”). He was 88. Pop Smoke, the rising New York rapper who collaborated with Nicki Minaj, Travis Scott and more, died February 19. He joined the cast of HBO's hit series Game of Thrones in 2016 alongside fellow The Force Awakens cast mate Gwendoline Christie, where he portrayed the Three-Eyed Raven. She was 69. Brian Dennehy, the winner of two Tonys in a career that also spanned films including “Tommy Boy,” “First Blood” and “Cocoon,” and television, died April 15. Rapper Lexii Alijai, best known for using her talents to rap over Kehlani's 2015 hit song "Jealous," died January 1. Actor Stuart Whitman, an Oscar nominee for his role as a convicted child molester in the 1961 movie “The Mark,” died March 16. Larry Kramer, a noted playwright and AIDS activist known for his plays and novels, "The Normal Heart" and "The American People," died May 27. He was 27. Betty Wright, the Grammy-winning soul singer and songwriter whose influential 1970s hits included “Clean Up Woman” and “Where is the Love,” died May 10. He was 78. “Because I am a Swede, not an Englishman or an American, the parts I’m offered are always foreigners. Bob Kulick, guitarist and producer with the rock band "KISS," who also played with the West Coast heavy metal band "W.A.S.P." In 1955, the young actor was spotted by Bergman, for whom von Sydow worked onstage for a year before starring in “The Seventh Seal,” the film that put the director on the international map. March 8, 2020Provence, France[2] Show full articles without "Continue Reading" button for {0} hours. But it was not only Scandinavian helmers that drew the best from him: Italian director Francesco Rosi used the actor to good effect in his 1975 political tale “Cadaveri eccellenti,” and Woody Allen gave him an introspective role as a tortured artist in “Hannah and Her Sisters.” He also starred in Andrei Konchalovsky’s film version of “Duet for One,” opposite Faye Dunaway; as a good-hearted German ship’s captain in “Voyage of the Damned”; and in Wim Wenders’ “Until the End of the World.”, In 1988 he dipped into directing with a Danish-language adaptation of Herman Bang’s novel “Katinka.”, Von Sydow was nominated for an Emmy in 1990 for his role in the HBO thriller “Red King, White Knight.”, In 1991 he provided the narration of Lars von Trier’s “Europa,” and the following year the actor rose above the material and gave a fine, funny performance in European co-production “The Silent Touch.”, Variety was pleased with Von Sydow’s performance in 1999’s mediocre “Snow Falling on Cedars”: “By far the most delightful member of the cast is von Sydow, who now looks like a beautifully aged carved statue and has a great time providing intelligent and wryly hammy nuances to his characterization.”, During the 2000s, as the actor headed into his 70s, he was somewhat less busy, with roles in the high-profile “Minority Report,” “Rush Hour 3,” “Shutter Island” and “Robin Hood”; he also recurred as Cardinal Von Waldburg on Showtime’s “The Tudors.”. She was 73. He was 81. He was 84. He was 90. He was 70. The actor told the New York Times that, in his late 70s, he was working less only because of the dearth of quality material. Herbert Milton Stempel, an American television game show contestant and subsequent whistle-blower on the fraudulent nature of the industry, in what became known as the 1950s quiz show scandals, died April 7. Mel Winkler, a character actor known for appearances in films as “Devil in a Blue Dress,” “Doc Hollywood” and “Coach Carter,” died June 11. He was 86. He was 75. He was 52. He was known for his roles in a wide range of films such as The Seventh Seal (1957), The Exorcist (1973), Flash Gordon (1980), Never Say Never Again (1983), Dune (1984), Judge Dredd (1995), Minority Report (2002), and Extremely Loud And Incredibly Close (2011) (which earned him his second Oscar nomination). He was 85. Actor and acting coach Stan Kirsch, best known for his role in the TV series “Highlander,” died January 11. Elizabeth Wurtzel, who chronicled her struggle with depression in best-selling memoirs that helped spur a boom in confessional writing, turning her into a Gen X celebrity at 26 with the publication of “Prozac Nation,” died January 7. She was 86. Also in 1996, the actor starred again for Troell: The New York Times said, “In ‘Hamsun,’ Jan Troell’s epic study of the author’s fall from grace, Max von Sydow gives a career-crowning performance as the cranky, hearing-impaired writer who marched to a different political drum from most of his countrymen.”. He was 30. Kevin Conway, veteran stage and screen actor known for "Gettysburg", "The Quick and the Dead", and HBO’s "Oz", died February 5. He also took unchallenging roles in the likes of “Conan the Barbarian” and “Judge Dredd” but had a somewhat more complex part in Lynch’s “Dune” adaptation. Died Adam Schlesinger, a musician and songwriter highly regarded for his work as a member of Fountains of Wayne and an Emmy-winning songwriter for TV’s “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,” died April 1. Von Sydow had a small role in 2007’s critically acclaimed “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly” and was so grateful for the excellent script that he wrote a thank-you letter to screenwriter Ronald Harwood. Mary Pat Gleason, whose extensive list of film and television credits includes “A Cinderella Story” and more recently the CBS sitcom “Mom,” died June 2. She was 70. He was 92. She was 25. Christopher Tolkien, son of legendary “The Lord of the Rings” author J.R.R. Variety has confirmed that the actor died on Sunday. He was 78. He was 20. He was 73. He was 52. Most recently, the actor starred in “Game of Thrones” as the Three-Eyed Raven. She was 89. She was at 86. Reed Mullin, drummer and cofounder of long-running North Carolina hard rock outfit "Corrosion of Conformity", died January 27. Culture stars we lost in 2020. She was 91. Singer-songwriter Bill Withers, a soul legend best known songs like “Lean on Me,” “Lovely Day,” and “Ain’t No Sunshine,” died March 30 from heart complications in Los Angeles. He was 71. He was 56. Little Women: Atlanta's Ashley 'Minnie' Ross died April 27. Marj Dusay, veteran soap opera actress, who starred in "Guiding Light", "Santa Barbara", "All My Children" and "Days of Our Lives", died January 28. She was 21, Like us on Facebook to see similar stories, Fact check: New York Gov. David Roback, co-founder of the widely celebrated alt-rock group Mazzy Star, died February 24. and "Lou Reed," died May 29. Terrence McNally, a four-time Tony Award-winning playwright, died March 24. He was 90. Kellye Nakahara, the actress known for playing Nurse Kellye on the long-running sitcom "M*A*S*H," died February 16. Swedish actor Max von Sydow, who made his name in the films of Ingmar Bergman before featuring in international hits like "Game of Thrones," died March 8. Hana Kimura, a Japanese professional wrestler and a TV celebrity who appeared on Netflix’s reality show “Terrace House,” died May 23. He was 92. Actor Max von Sydow, who appeared in Star Wars: The Force Awakens and Game of Thrones, died Sunday at the age of 90. Nationality He was 72. She was 86. Little Richard, the screaming, preening, scene-stealing wild man of early rock 'n' roll with hits like "Tutti Frutti" and "Long Tall Sally," died May 9. Lyle Waggoner, known for his work on "The Carol Burnett Show" and "Wonder Woman," died March 17. Paul English, longtime drummer for Willie Nelson, died February 11. Brian Howe, former frontman for the British rock group Bad Company, died May 6. He was 84. British film and TV producer Tony Garnett, founder of “Bodyguard” producer World Productions, died January 12. She was 34. He was 59. He was the editor of his father's unpublished material, including “The Silmarillion” in 1977 and “The Fall of Gondolin” in 2018. Paula Kelly, Emmy-nominated actress who appeared in NBC’s "Night Court" and ABC miniseries "The Women of Brewster Place", died February 8. He was 76. Photographer and collaborator Astrid Kirchherr, renowned for taking the first ever photograph of The Beatles in her hometown of Hamburg, when they were an unknown five-piece, died May 12. Kirk Douglas, actor, producer, director and a star of Hollywood's golden age, died February 5. Occupation Italian actress Lucia Bosè, mostly known for appearing in films from acclaimed Italian directors such as Michelangelo Antonioni and Federico Fellini, died March 23. He was cast, somewhat strangely, in the central role of Christ in Stevens’ 1965 widescreen epic “The Greatest Story Ever Told,” and for several years in villain-type roles in films such as “The Quiller Memorandum,” “Hawaii,” “The Kremlin Letter” and “The Night Visitor.”. He was 34. Esther Scott, who appeared in “Boyz N The Hood,” voiced Shodu in the “Ewoks” series and guest starred on dozens of TV series, died February 14. Terry Jones, the Welsh actor, director, author, historian and the founding member of the seminal comedy group "Monty Python", died January 21. Americana singer and songwriter David Olney, whose music was recorded by Linda Ronstadt, Steve Young, Emmylou Harris and others, died January 18. Occasionally more was demanded of him, and he worked extensively with another Swedish director, Jan Troell, first in the multipart “4 x 4,” in 1965, then in two-part epic “The Emigrants” and “The New Land,” with Bergman co-star Liv Ullman, in the early ’70s and Troell’s Hollywood failure “Hurricane” in 1979. He was the son of Baroness Maria Margareta (Rappe), a teacher, and Carl Wilhelm von Sydow, an ethnologist and folklore professor. He was 77. He was 84. He also appeared in “Kursk: The Last Mission” (2018) and “Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens” (2017). Andy Gill, founding member and guitarist for the British post-punk outfit Gang of Four, died February 1. James Lipton, an actor-turned-drama-school-dean who got hundreds of Hollywood luminaries to open up about their life and art and became an unlikely celebrity himself as the longtime host of “Inside the Actors Studio,” died March 2. Allen Garfield, an actor who appeared in movies like “Nashville” and “The Stunt Man,” died April 7. Manu Dibango, the pioneering Cameroonian jazz musician whose song “Soul Makossa” was interpolated in Michael Jackson’s hit “Wanna Be Starting Something,” died March 24. Maria Mercader, a longtime journalist and CBS News producer and talent executive died March 26. Florian Schneider, the co-founder of the German electronic band Kraftwerk, died May 6. Von Sydow became Bergman’s on-screen alter ego and a regular Bergman player along with Gunnar Bjornstrand, Ingrid Thulin, Bibi Andersson, Gunnel Lindblom and Liv Ullman. Robert Conrad, the actor best known for his role in the television show "The Wild Wild West", died February 8. Andrew Cuomo announced he would defer his annual raise. The Seventh SealMinority ReportRush Hour 3Judge DreddGhostbusters 2DuneNever Say Never AgainHannah and Her SistersConan the Barbarian (1982)Flash Gordon (1980)The Exorcist (1973)Elder Scrolls V: SkyrimExtremely Loud And Incredibly CloseShutter IslandRobin Hood (2010) Actor Harry Hains, who played roles in titles including "American Horror Story," died January 7. He was 53. April 10, 1929[1]Lund, Skåne län, Sweden[source?] He was 79. Jerry Bishop, famed announcer for the television show "Judge Judy," died of heart disease on April 21. Max von Sydow. He was 52. Robb Forman Dew, a prize-winning fiction writer famous for novels such as “Dale Loves Sophie to Death” and “The Evidence Against Her,” died May 22. Jimmy Heath, a Grammy-nominated jazz saxophonist and composer who performed with such greats as Miles Davis and John Coltrane before forming the popular family group the Heath Brothers in middle age, died January 19. He was 95. Marge Redmond, who played the wry Sister Jacqueline on "The Flying Nun" and also starred in the "Cool Whip" commercial died February 10. He was 66. Mostly they’re villains, and villains are usually too much cliche,” he once said. She was 95. He was 90. He was 94. He was 87. She was 54. Max von Sydow ( April 10, 1929 — March 8, 2020) was a Swedish–French actor who starred in Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens as Lor San Tekka. Von Sydow also found time that year to do a stirring turn in director Ullman’s “Private Confessions,” based on a script by Bergman. Max von Sydow was born Carl Adolf von Sydow on April 10, 1929 in Lund, Skåne, Sweden, to a middle-class family. Von Sydow starred in … Claude Heater, the famed opera singer who appeared with his face unseen as Jesus Christ in William Wyler's epic 1959 production of "Ben-Hur," died May 28. Ken Shimura, a comedian who was a fixture on Japanese television for decades, died March 29. He was 96. He became a French citizen in 2002, and lived in France for the last decades of his life.
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