2018 deaths of noteables

Blackleaf

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I missed the very last episode until last night. It was brilliant and not comedic.

Blackadder Goes Forth is a great example of gallows humour from characters who are in a desperate and bleak situation.

The final moments of the last episode have gone down as one of the most memorable scenes in British TV history - with the chaps leaping from the trench and straight into a hail of German machine-gun fire.

In 2002, Blackadder was voted, by the British public, the second-greatest British sitcom of all time, behind Only Fools and Horses, a show about an ambitious Peckham market trader who dreams of becoming a millionaire (it was from that series that I got those quotes in that other thread).
 

Blackleaf

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Stormin MC: Tributes paid to 'grime legend'

19 February 2018
BBC News



Skepta, Giggs and Devlin have paid tributes to Stormin MC on Twitter.

The former N.A.S.T.Y Crew member, who rose to fame alongside Kano, Jammer and D Double E, is thought to have died from skin cancer.

The east London artist revealed to fans in 2016 that he had stage two skin cancer, which had spread to his neck.

Skepta is among those to pay tribute on social media, writing simply "R.I.P Stormin" alongside a picture of the musician.

N.A.S.T.Y Crew are credited as being some of grime's pioneers, finding fame through pirate radio station Deja Vu in the early 2000s.

Their songs include Take You Out and Good U Know.

Stormin, real name Shaun Lewis, addressed cancer on his album #BRB (Be Right Back), and had been using social media to document how it was affecting him.

Stormin MC: Tributes paid to 'grime legend' - BBC News
 

Torch light

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Dec 4, 2017
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Every year people die, whether they are notables or not.

Death does not distinguish between people.

Their importance will not avail them anything unless they believe and work the righteous work for God's sake and in His way and for His cause alone without associate or peer.

Some who seem notable may be trivial in God's sight unless he believes in God alone without associate or son, and unless he works the righteous work.

When man dies, he will leave his position, wealth, family and tribe behind him, and none may avail him anything against God's dealing him with justice.

(Now [after your death] have you come to Us solitary [naked] as did We create you at first [when you came out of your mothers' wombs], and you have left behind you [in the World] all [the wealth, mates and children] that We gave to you in deposit,

and We see not with you those your intercessors whom you claimed to be associates [of God] in your opinion.

Now is the bond between you severed, and [the intercession] that you claimed [in the World] has failed you.
)

The above in blue is the explanation of the Quran 6: 94.


http://quran-ayat.com/pret/6.htm#a6_94
quran-ayat.com/pret/6.htm#a6_94
 
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Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Eddy Amoo: The Real Thing singer dies at 73

23 February 2018
BBC News


Eddy Amoo (second left) with The Real Thing


Eddy Amoo, one of 1970s soul band The Real Thing - who had hits including You To Me Are Everything and Feel the Force - has died at the age of 73.

Amoo was a vocalist and songwriter with the pioneering Liverpool quartet.

Friend Simon Sheridan said he had died suddenly in Australia and paid tribute to him as an "inspirational character".

Sheridan told the BBC The Real Thing were "huge pioneers of black music in the UK" and the first all-black British band to have a UK number one single.

That was You To Me Are Everything, which topped the charts in 1976. The song returned to the charts in 1986, when it reached number five.

Amoo started his career leading Merseybeat a capella group The Chants in the 1960s. John Lennon was said to have championed them, and they were represented by The Beatles' manager Brian Epstein for a short time.

After their demise, Amoo joined his younger brother Chris in The Real Thing.

Their other hits included Can't Get By Without You, while French house duo The Freeloaders took them back into the charts in 2005 by sampling their song Love's Such a Wonderful Thing.

Eddy Amoo: The Real Thing singer dies at 73 - BBC News
 

Blackleaf

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Vicar of Dibley actress Emma Chambers dies aged 53

24 February 2018
BBC News



Actors Dawn French and Hugh Grant have led tributes to their former co-star Emma Chambers, who has died aged 53.

Known for playing Alice Tinker in The Vicar of Dibley, Doncaster-born Chambers also had roles in Notting Hill and a Martin Chuzzlewit adaptation.

Chambers died from natural causes on Wednesday evening and would be "greatly missed", her agent John Grant said.

"Emma created a wealth of characters and an immense body of work," he added.

She leaves a husband, fellow actor Ian Dunn.

French, who starred in The Vicar of Dibley alongside Chambers for 13 years, paid tribute to a "very bright spark and the most loyal and loving friend anyone could wish for".

"I will miss her very much", she said, while also posting a picture of the pair on Twitter.

Notting Hill star Hugh Grant, who played the older brother of Chambers' character Honey in the 1999 film, spoke of his sadness following the news, adding: "She brought laughter and joy to many."

Other well-wishers included Emma Freud, the partner of Richard Curtis, who created both the film and the TV comedy.

Chambers played the character of Alice Tinker, a village church verger, in The Vicar of Dibley between 1994 and 2007, with French in the title role.

Vicar of Dibley actress Emma Chambers dies aged 53 - BBC News
 

Walter

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Vicar of Dibley actress Emma Chambers dies aged 53

24 February 2018
BBC News



Actors Dawn French and Hugh Grant have led tributes to their former co-star Emma Chambers, who has died aged 53.

Known for playing Alice Tinker in The Vicar of Dibley, Doncaster-born Chambers also had roles in Notting Hill and a Martin Chuzzlewit adaptation.

Chambers died from natural causes on Wednesday evening and would be "greatly missed", her agent John Grant said.

"Emma created a wealth of characters and an immense body of work," he added.

She leaves a husband, fellow actor Ian Dunn.

French, who starred in The Vicar of Dibley alongside Chambers for 13 years, paid tribute to a "very bright spark and the most loyal and loving friend anyone could wish for".

"I will miss her very much", she said, while also posting a picture of the pair on Twitter.

Notting Hill star Hugh Grant, who played the older brother of Chambers' character Honey in the 1999 film, spoke of his sadness following the news, adding: "She brought laughter and joy to many."

Other well-wishers included Emma Freud, the partner of Richard Curtis, who created both the film and the TV comedy.

Chambers played the character of Alice Tinker, a village church verger, in The Vicar of Dibley between 1994 and 2007, with French in the title role.

Vicar of Dibley actress Emma Chambers dies aged 53 - BBC News
Brilliant actress, always makes me laugh when watching VoD.
 

spaminator

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Tower Records founder Russell Solomon dead at 92
Associated Press
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Published:
March 5, 2018
Updated:
March 5, 2018 8:14 PM EST
In this 1997 file photo, Russell Solomon, founder of Tower Records, is photographed inside a sculpture at the Tower Records headquarters in Sacramento, Calif. (Michael A. Jones/The Sacramento Bee via AP, File)
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Russell Solomon, founder of the Tower Records chain that became a global phenomenon and changed the way people consumed music, has died. He was 92.
Solomon died Sunday night of an apparent heart attack while drinking whisky and watching the Oscars, said his son, Michael Solomon.
Russell Solomon first began selling music in 1941, at age 16, out of his father’s Sacramento drug store inside the historic Tower Theater building.
The makeshift record shop officially became Tower Records in 1960. Solomon, who preferred jazz, country and classical music, offered something other stores didn’t: A place to sift through every genre of music in one place, with the help of employees who loved music even more.
Solomon expanded to San Francisco in 1968, then to Los Angeles and eventually all across the world, with Tower Records operating 271 stores and selling US$1 billion worth of records at its height in the 1990s.
In this undated file photo, Tower Records founder Russell Solomon poses for a picture at the company’s corporate headquarters in West Sacramento, Calif. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)
Michael Solomon said his father’s theories about what a music store should be were simple: Large inventories, long and late hours, and control by local managers about artists and records each individual store should stock. The company’s more than 8,000 employees were music lovers who wore their clothes and hair however they wanted and showed up to work because they loved music as much as Solomon did.
“I’m sure he’ll go down in history as having the greatest record store chain in the world,” Michael Solomon said.
Solomon and Tower Records were the subject of a 2015 documentary by actor Colin Hanks that examined its iconic role in music in the 1970s and 1980s, with stars like Elton John and Bruce Springsteen talking about their love of the store.
Solomon, who never graduated high school, eventually rose to be number 335 on the Forbes’ list of the 400 richest Americans, according to the Sacramento Bee.
He delighted in the challenges of expanding his business worldwide, to England, Japan and beyond. In 1985, he nearly went to jail after opening his store in London on Sundays, not knowing labour laws prohibited it.
“It’s like climbing up a mountain. It’s a little bit dangerous to do; a lot dangerous. But risk is part of the adventure,” he told The Associated Press in a 1988 interview about his business expansion.
Those risks are part of what made it difficult for Tower Records to survive when technology began to drastically change the music business in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Consumers began to shift to the internet to download music or to buy it from retailers such as Walmart, who offered lower prices in exchange for a less intimate customer experience than what Tower provided. Russell Solomon said in interviews years later than the debt from earlier expansions helped lead to the company’s downfall, the Bee reported.
Michael Solomon took over the business in 1998, with Russell remaining chairman of the board. The financial pressures eventually became too great in 2004, when Tower Records first filed for bankruptcy before closing its doors in 2006.
But Russell Solomon had always resisted retiring — “What would I do if I retire?” he said in 1988 — and wasn’t yet done with music. He re-entered the music business just months after Tower Records folded, opening another music store in the original drugstore location. It lasted only three years.
“Maybe I’m believing in something that’s drifting away,” he told the Sacramento Bee.
This is the legend of Russ Solomon and Tower Records | The Sacramento Bee
This is the legend of Russ Solomon and Tower Records | The Sacramento Bee
Russ Solomon, founder of Tower Records, dies in Sacramento at 92 | The Sacramento Bee
Tower Records founder Russell Solomon dead at 92 | Toronto Sun
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Jim Bowen: Comedian and former Bullseye host dies at 80

14 March 2018
BBC News


Jim Bowen with Bullseye mascot Bully

Broadcaster and comedian Jim Bowen, best known for hosting darts-based gameshow Bullseye in the 1980s and '90s, has died at the age of 80.

His wife Phyllis confirmed the news to BBC Radio Lancashire.

The former deputy headmaster, who lived in north Lancashire, began his career as a stand-up comedian on the club circuit in the 1960s.

He became a household name when he began presenting Bullseye in 1981. The Sunday tea time show ran for 14 years.

It attracted 17.5 million viewers at its peak and involved three pairs of contestants - with a "thrower", who would throw the darts, and a "knower", who would answer general knowledge questions.


Bullseye's prizes included cars and speedboats

Bowen became known for catchphrases including "Super, smashing, great", "You can't beat a bit of Bully!" and "Let's look at what you could have won".

Another favourite phrase - "keep out of the black and in to the red, nothing in this game for two in a bed" - referred to the segments of the darts board that the players had to hit.

His warm-hearted and quick-witted rapport with the contestants was a big part of the show's appeal.

Bowen became Bullseye host after appearing on ITV show The Comedians, alongside the likes of Frank Carson, Russ Abbott and Bernard Manning.

He also had a number of TV acting roles, including in Muck and Brass, Jonathan Creek, The Grimleys, and as Hoss Cartwright in the second series of Peter Kay's Phoenix Nights.



Jim Bowen: Comedian and former Bullseye host dies at 80 - BBC News

Sir Ken Dodd: Comedy legend dies, aged 90


12 March 2018
BBC News



Sir Ken Dodd, creator of the Diddy Men and one of the most popular comedians of his time, has died aged 90.

The Liverpool legend had recently been released from hospital after six weeks of treatment for a chest infection.

On Friday, he had married Anne Jones, his partner of 40 years, at their house, the same one he grew up in, in the Liverpool suburb of Knotty Ash.

Lady Dodd described him as "a most life-enhancing, brilliant, creative comedian".

Speaking outside their home, she said Sir Ken "just wanted to make people happy".

She added: "I have lost a most wonderful husband. He lived to perfect his art and entertain his live and adoring audiences.

"I've been overwhelmed by the love and affection which I've already received from dear friends and the public."

Sir Paul McCartney tweeted a picture of Sir Ken with The Beatles, saying he was "a champion of his home city and comedy".



Sir Ken Dodd: Comedy legend dies, aged 90 - BBC News
 
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Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Eurovision: First winner Lys Assia dies aged 94

25 March 2018
BBC News


Switzerland's Lys Assia performing in the first Eurovision Song Contest in Lugano, Switzerland, in 1956

The first person to win the Eurovision Song Contest, Lys Assia, has died at the age of 94, competition organisers have announced.

She took the prize for Switzerland in 1956, with the song Refrain, and went on to perform in two more contests.

Lys Assia died on Saturday at the Zollikerberg Hospital in Zurich.

Eurovision described her as the "first lady" of the competition, and said it planned further tributes to her in the coming days.

Assia's triumph in the first-ever Eurovision came in Lugano, Switzerland. She finished eighth in the 1957 contest but achieved more success a year later, coming second with her song Giorgio.

View image on Twitter


Eurovision ✔
@Eurovision

We’re very sad to hear that Lys Assia - the Grande Dame of #Eurovision - has passed away. Our very first winner in 1956 and a huge supporter of the Contest ever since. The whole Eurovision family sends our condolences to Lys’ loved ones. http://bit.ly/FarewellLys @LysAssia

Mar 24, 2018

942 Likes 591 people are talking about this
Born in Rupperswil, northern Switzerland, in 1924, she began her career as a dancer before turning to singing.

Her association with Eurovision was long-lasting and in 2005 she performed in celebration of its 50th anniversary.

At the age of 87 she decided to return to the contest and tried - unsuccessfully - to represent Switzerland in 2012 and 2013.

Her death closely follows that of former Eurovision host Katie Boyle, who died at her home in the UK aged 91 last week.

Watch Lys Assia perform her winning song "Refrain" in the inaugural Eurovision Song Contest in 1956:



Eurovision: First winner Lys Assia dies aged 94 - BBC News
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Eric Bristow: Five-time darts world champion dies aged 60

BBC News
6 April 2018


Eric Bristow was awarded an MBE for his services to sport in 1989

Five-time world darts champion Eric Bristow has died at the age of 60 after suffering a heart attack.

Professional Darts Corporation chairman Barry Hearn told BBC Sport he collapsed at a Premier League event in Liverpool.

As news of his death reached the crowd at the Echo Arena, fans repeatedly sang: "There's only one Eric Bristow."

Hearn said Bristow, known by his nickname the Crafty Cockney, would "always be a legend in the world of darts and British sport".

World champion five times between 1980 and 1986, Bristow also won five World Masters titles and was a founder player when the PDC was formed in 1993. He was awarded an MBE for his services to sport in 1989.

He also worked as a TV pundit and appeared on ITV show I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here in 2012.

"When Alexander of Macedonia was 33, he cried salt tears because there were no more worlds to conquer … Bristow's only 27." - Darts commentator Sid Waddell

Eric Bristow: Five-time darts world champion dies aged 60 - BBC Sport