smoe.org mailing lists
ivan@stellysee.de
From | "Stephen Thorn" <youngthorn@earthlink.net> |
Subject | Re: R.I.P. Darren McGavin |
Date | Sun, 26 Feb 2006 11:28:24 -0800 |
[Part 1 text/plain Windows-1252 (3.7 kilobytes)]
(View Text in a separate window)
Hi Jaimie--Nice overview of an actor who wore both masks of the theater
without any trouble.
I plan to leave my "leg lamp" on all night in his honor!!
Steve
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jaimie Vernon" <bullseyecanada@hotmail.com>
To: <audities@smoe.org>
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2006 8:31 AM
Subject: R.I.P. Darren McGavin
> It's been a difficult weekend for fans of classic TV and movies.
>
> Just hours after the announcement of the passing of comedy great Don
> Knotts, came word that another Hollywood veteran had passed away.
>
> Darren McGavin, a man whose career spanned everything from Mike Hammer to
> the original Kolchak the Night Stalker died on Saturday of natural
> causes. He was just three months shy of his 84th birthday.
>
> McGavin was an actor of incredible breadth, capable of hilarious comedic
> performances or tense dramatic turns.
>
> But it was as the renegade newspaper reporter in the white suit working
> for the fictional I.N.S. wire service that he became best known to a
> generation in the 70s.
>
> The TV show The Night Stalker featured McGavin as Karl Kolchak who
> continually faced down vampires, monsters, zombies and other bizarre
> creatures, although no one including his long suffering editor - ever
> believed him.
>
> The Night Stalker started as a series of TV movies and had a short run
> in 1974, but its fondly remembered as a cult show that would inspire a
> viewer named Chris Carter to create his own weird classic years later
> The X Files.
>
> The actor would later make a few cameos on the show.
>
> This season's remake was quickly cancelled, although it contained one
> golden moment in the first episode -- McGavins original character
> digitally inserted into one shot.
>
> McGavin was trained in New York and got his big break in the 1955 movie
> The Man with the Golden Arm, considered one of Frank Sinatras greatest
> films.
>
> That landed the young thespian his first TV role as Mickey Spillanes hard
> boiled detective Mike Hammer a year later.
>
> A long series of movies and TV parts followed, and he won an Emmy for
> playing Murphy Brown's father in a 1990 episode of the Candice Bergen
> series.
>
> But its one outstanding film role that assures McGavin will forever be
> remembered at least once a year.
>
> His turn as the irritable, constantly cursing Old Man, Ralphies dad in
> the classic A Christmas Story, turned the actor into a holiday icon.
>
> His warning that his son will put his eye out with his dreamed of Red
> Ryder BB gun is heard every year in December.
>
> Surveys show the film has become one of the favourite Christmas movies of
> all time, and a U.S. cable network runs it for 24 hours straight every
> December 25th.
>
> McGavins death was announced on his official website.
>
> It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Darren McGavin at
> approximately 7:10am Pacific time Saturday 25, 2006
>
> Darren is gone, but in many respects he will always be with us: as Carl
> Kolchak, fighting authority and battling monsters; the grumpy Old Man
> sending curses over Lake Michigan; as David Ross, the outsider, Grey
> Holden, captain of the Enterprise, the irascible detective Mike Hammer or
> any number of memorable guest star appearances.
>
> He leaves behind four children and a legion of fans.
>
>
>
> Jaimie Vernon,
> President, Bullseye Records
> "Not Infecting Our Customers' Computers Since 1985!!"
> http://www.bullseyecanada.com
> http://www.bullseyerecords.com
> Author, Canadian Pop Music Encyclopedia
> http://jam.canoe.ca/Music/Pop_Encyclopedia/
>
> http://www.myspace.com/jaimievernonsmovingtargetz
>
>
>
For assistance, please contact
the smoe.org administrators.