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Monday, February 5, 2018

John Mahoney, who played Martin Crane, beloved father of TV's Frasier, dies at 77


John Mahoney Dies: The Emmy-Nominated ‘Frasier’ Star Was 77



Actor John Mahoney died Sunday at age 77, EW confirms.
Born in Blackpool, England, in 1940, Mahoney became best known for his role as Martin Crane in NBC’s Frasier, though he didn’t kick-start his acting career until later in life. As a child, Mahoney — who was one of eight children from an Irish-Catholic family — witnessed the struggles of war firsthand as it quickly tore apart his parents’ marriage.

The British native attended St. Joseph’s College in Blackpool but was determined to immigrate to the United States. At 19, he moved to America with the help of his older sister, Vera, a war bride living in Illinois. As Mahoney acclimated himself with life Stateside, he began studying at Quincy University in Illinois. Shortly after, he spent three years in the United States Army and received his citizenship in 1959.
“It was so bleak and dark in England — those gray and foggy postwar years,” he previously told the Chicago Tribune. “[The United States], it was so sunny. The people smiled.”

After graduating from Quincy with a Bachelor’s degree, he began working on his Master’s degree while teaching English at Western Illinois University and working as a hospital orderly. Shortly after, Mahoney made the move to Chicago and began editing a medical journal. However, according to the Tribune, Mahoney wasn’t completed satisfied with his life. He spent most of his time “at home, smoking and drinking a few beers.”

“There was this deep-seated frustration,” he said. “I knew that the only place I had ever been really happy was on stage.”
Ready to take on showbiz, Mahoney quit his job and started taking acting classes and soon got his first role in David Mamet’s Water Engine in 1977. Four years after pursuing acting, John Malkovich encouraged him to join Chicago’s legendary Steppenwolf Theatre.
“The theater is my brothers, my sisters, my father, my mother, my wife,” he explained. “It is everything to me.”

In 1986, Mahoney won Broadway’s Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play for his performance in John Guare’s The House of Blue Leaves.
Before finding success in television, Mahoney made his film debut in Tin Men and Moonstruck. He went on play memorable roles in Reality Bites, Say Anything, andAmerican President, among others.

In 1993, the actor accepted the role of Martin Crane in NBC’s sitcom Frasier. Throughout his run with the show, Mahoney received two Emmy nominations and two Golden Globe nominations for this role. He remained a regular until Frasier‘s end in 2004. More recently, he had a recurring role in Hot in Cleveland
Mahoney also had a prolific career as a voice actor, featuring in several animated films including AntzAtlantis: The Lost Empire, and The Iron Giant.

Eventually, Mahoney took his skill back to the stage starring in the Broadway revival of the play Prelude to a KissBetter Late and The Outgoing Tide at the Northlight Theatre in Illinois.

Throughout his life, Mahoney traveled to and from Los Angles and New York for various work projects but remained loyal to his home in Oak Park, Illinois.
“It is quiet here,” he said. “I get bored out of my mind in L.A. It’s such an industry town. Here, I have old friends who aren’t in the business. I can walk to all sorts of good places where the waiters and waitresses don’t want me to read their screenplays.”

Mahoney was never married and did not have any children.


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Sunday, February 4, 2018

Inside Justin Timberlake's Super Bowl halftime performance 2018



Everything you need to know about Justin Timberlake's Super Bowl halftime performance 2018

Courtesy of http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Culture/justin-timberlakes-super-bowl-half-time-performance/story?id=52828864

Justin Timberlake’s FULL Pepsi Super Bowl LII Halftime Show! | NFL Highlights




Pink Belts Out the National Anthem! | Super Bowl LII NFL Pregame




Best of Justin Timberlake's Super Bowl LII Press Conference | NFL


Justin Timberlake Does a Final Walkthrough Before Super Bowl LII Halftime Show | NFL Network


Justin Timberlake on Super Bowl LII & What Happened at Super Bowl XXXVIII Halftime | NFL Network


Janet Jackson on Halftime Show Controversy in Rare Oprah Interview | The Oprah Winfrey Show | OWN

#JusticeForJanet: Justin Timberlake Super Bowl Halftime Outrage | News Flash | Entertainment Weekly

Janet Jackson & Justin Timberlake - Superbowl Halftime Show 2004 

Prince Performs “Purple Rain” During Downpour | Super Bowl XLI Halftime Show | NFL

Justin Timberlake's Super Bowl LII performance is probably one of the most anticipated half-time shows in a while - for mixed reasons. While his fans can't wait to see him take the stage with his band, The Tennessee Kids, some followers of Janet Jackson are still holding a grudge for the botched Super Bowl performance in 2004 when Timberlake mistakenly ripped off a piece of Jackson's costume, showing off...well, too much.

Regardless of which side you may be on, all eyes will be on Timberlake Sunday night in Minneapolis, and he's promised to "rock the stage." If his past Super Bowl appearances are any indication, he definitely will.

It's not the "Rock Your Body" singer's first time at the big game. He took the halftime stage for the first time along side his band *NSYNC in 2001 and later with Jackson three years later.

And now that he finally has the stage all to himself, Timberlake, 37, has hinted what to expect.
Will there be any special guests?

It doesn't look like it.
"I had a ton of grand ideas about special guests, from 'N SYNC to Jay [-Z] to Chris Stapleton to Janet," Timberlake told reporters Thursday at a press conference in Minneapolis. "But this year...my band, The Tennessee Kids, I feel like they're my special guests, and I'm excited to rock the stage."
After much buzz about Jackson perhaps returning to the stage to redo the duo's performance 14 years after her wardrobe malfunction, she put such rumors to bed Saturday.
"To put to rest any speculation or rumors as to whether I will be performing at the Super Bowl tomorrow; I will not," she wrote in a statement posted to social media. “Thank you for your support and I do look forward to seeing you all very soon.”

TMZ reported Saturday that since the Super Bowl was in Minneapolis, the birthplace of late music icon Prince, Timberlake planned to honor the Purple One during the halftime show.
The same report claimed that Timberlake planned to use a Prince hologram, upsetting many fans, including his longtime collaborator and friend, drummer Sheila E.
Still, Sheila E. took to Twitter late Saturday night to let fans know that she spoke to Timberlake and there will be no hologram.

"Family, I spoke w/Justin 2nite and he shared heartfelt words of respect for Prince & the Purple fans," she wrote. "I look 4wrd 2 seeing what I’m sure is going 2 be a spectacular halftime show. There is no hologram."
So what songs can we expect?

Timberlake released his latest album, "Man of the Woods," earlier this week so the singer will likely perform newly-released singles from that project. Songs, including "Filthy," "Say Something" and his title track may all be performed live.
But previously when Timberlake went on a worldwide tour with his band, The Tennessee Kids, they performed his past hits such as, "TKO," "Rock Your Body," "Suit & Tie," "SexyBack," among others.
Still, the singer hinted at what fans can expect in a press conference Thursday.
"Without giving too much away, we're doing a few things with this halftime show that they've never quite done before," he told reporters.
Timberlake added that he plans to "bring so many people together through what I think is the greatest art form, which is music."









Saturday, February 3, 2018

Dennis Edwards, Temptations Lead Vocalist, Dies at 74


Dennis Edwards, Temptations Lead Vocalist, Dies at 74


Dennis Edwards and the Temptations at Motown 25










Dennis Edwards, who joined the top Motown act the Temptations to take lead vocals on some of the group’s most memorable latter-day hits such as “Just My Imagination,” died Friday in Chicago of undisclosed causes. He was 74.

In 1968, Edwards stepped in to replace founding lead singer David Ruffin in “the Temps.” While Ruffin had specialized largely in smoother romantic balladry, the gospel-trained Edwards sported a grittier style, and he left a distinctive mark on the unit’s work as both lead vocalist and in the ensemble harmonies.

His arrival in the Temptations coincided with the increasingly expansive and experimental “psychedelic soul” productions helmed by Norman Whitfield, who also co-wrote many of their biggest chart hits, many of which featured pointed social or political content.

Edwards essayed a solo career, and his 1984 Motown single “Don’t Look Any Further,” a duet with Siedah Garrett, reached No. 2 on the R&B charts in 1984. But he remained best known as a member of the Temptations; after a split with the act in 1977, he returned for a short second tour of duty in 1987.

After a wrangle with founding member Otis Williams, he toured during the ‘90s under the rubric the Temptations Review featuring Dennis Edwards.
In 1989, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the Temptations.

Edwards was born Feb. 3, 1943 in Fairfield, Ala. His father was a minister, and he grew up singing in the church. He moved with his family to Detroit in the early ‘50s.
As a teen, Edwards sang gospel, but, like Sam Cooke and many other prominent gospel performers, he turned to rhythm & blues. He briefly led his own group, Dennis Edwards and the Fireballs. In 1966, after a stint in the military, he joined Motown on retainer in a utility role, and worked briefly with the Contours.

David Ruffin’s escalating drug problems and egomania created tension within the Temptations, and in 1968 Williams and Eddie Kendricks brought Edwards into the act, while Ruffin exited for a solo career.

Edwards’ presence toughened the group’s vocal sound, and his presence helped loft Whitfield’s ingenious, densely produced records – which reflected the influence of Sly & the Family Stone and other rock-leaning soul acts of the day – to the pinnacle of both the pop and R&B charts.

His years of prominence with the group coincided with the Temps’ biggest pop albums: “Cloud Nine” (No. 4, 1969), “Puzzle People” (No. 5, 1969), “Psychedelic Shack” (No. 9, 1970), “All Directions” (No. 2, 1972) and “Masterpiece” (No. 7, 1973). All of those titles hit No. 1 on the R&B albums charts.

Increasingly poor inter-group relations led Williams to fire Edwards, but, after a decade of solo work, he returned to the unit in 1987 after his replacement Ali Woodson’s departure. A second termination came within a year. Edwards’ plans to record with former Temps members Ruffin and Kendricks crashed after Ruffin’s death from a drug overdose in 1991.


Edwards is survived by a daughter from his brief marriage to Ruth Pointer of the Pointer Sisters





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