DCS: sue bernard

free as a bird

Sue Bernard was the free-spirit daughter of a free-spirit father. Her father, Bruno Bernard, later known as “Bernard of Hollywood,” fled Nazi Germany in 1937, telling Germany authorities he was pursuing a graduate degree in the United States. He left the country with few possessions, but held on to his treasured  Rolleiflex camera. In the United States, Bruno worked with artist Alberto Vargas and developed a style of photography that he called “posed candid.” Using natural light and beach backgrounds, Bruno’s style evolved into what we now call “pin-up.”

In 1947, he photographed a young Norma Jean Baker at the Palm Springs Racquet Club. Norma Jean took the screen name “Marilyn Monroe” and credited Bruno for her early stardom, saying “Remember, Bernie, you started it all” His provocative photos eventual led to pornography charges in 1950. The case, however, was dropped after a glowing defense from General Dwight Eisenhower, who told how Bruno’s photos were morale builders for his troops.

In early 1966, Mario Casilli, a protege of Bruno’s, photographed Bruno’s daughter Sue for Playboy magazine, just prior to her eighteenth birthday. Sue Bernard is acknowledged as the first Jewish Playmate in the publication’s history. She noted in an interview that she had never been nude in front of anyone besides her mother… and, for some reason, they posed her, topless, in front of a Christmas tree.

Sue took a shot at a career in acting, appearing in sexploitation king Russ Meyer’s notorious Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! and later, opting for a tamer role in the TV soap opera General Hospital. She was also an accomplished writer, authoring six books, including several that kept the legacy of her father’s photography alive.

In 1974, 26 year-old Sue married actor Jason Miller. She gave birth to future actor/writer Joshua John Miller, before divorcing in 1983. She was also step-mother to actor Jason Patric.

Sue passed away in June 2019 of an apparent heart attack. She was 71 years old.

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IF: mysterious

how sad how lovely how mysterious

In the early 1950s, years before the world became aware of Bob Dylan or Joni Mitchell, Connie Converse wrote and performed songs for her friends at parties around the blossoming “bohemian” scene of Greenwich Village. Her delicate, poetic lyrics, her plaintive voice and her simple acoustic guitar accompaniment gave birth to the “singer-songwriter” genre before it had a proper name. A friend of Connie’s arranged for an appearance on a CBS morning news show in 1954. It would be her only public performance. The same friend, comic artist Gene Deitch, had the foresight to record Connie singing her songs in his kitchen.

Connie worked in a regular job, at an off-set printing company, while she tried and tried to get noticed for her songs. She was unsuccessful and eventually moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan to be near her brother. She took a secretarial position and sank deeper and deeper into depression, Now approaching 50, her musical career going nowhere, Connie packed up her few belongings into her Volkswagen Beetle, wrote out several “goodbye” letters for family and drove off. She was never heard from again.

Gene Deitch appeared on a radio show in 2004, where he touted Connie Converse and played some of the songs he recorded. After a bit of negotiation, How Sad How Lovely, an 18 track collection of Connie’s songs was released on vinyl in 2015.

 

 

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DCS: frank meza

doctor, doctor, give me the news

Established in 1986, the LA Marathon is one of the largest and well-attended running events in the country. The course, which starts at Dodger Stadium and ends on Ocean Avenue in Santa Monica 26 miles away, welcomes more than 25,000 participants. One of the participants in the 2019 LA Marathon was Frank Meza, a 70 year-old retired doctor who began running marathons in his 60s.

On March 8, 2019, a little before 7 AM, Frank took off from the parking lot of the famed West Coast stadium along with thousands of other runners of all ages. 2 hours, 53 minutes and 10 seconds later, Frank crossed the shoreline finish line, setting a new record for men in his age category. He was showered with accolades.

But judges were suspicious. The time — just under three hours — was astounding. A panel reviewed video taken of the course, along with testimony from eyewitnesses who said they saw Frank leave the course and re-enter at a different point. They determined that Frank’s time during one leg of the course was “impossible.” In the past, Frank was caught cheating — twice — in the Sacramento Marathon under similar circumstances. Frank had been disqualified and banned from ever entering the Sacramento Marathon. The LA Marathon Review Board came to a fairly easy decision.

On July 2, 2019, officials for the LA Marathon stripped Frank of his first place win. Frank claimed he was looking for a rest room when he left the course. Officials weren’t convinced and awarded the title to Dan Adams, the second place finisher in the 70 – 74 age group. Dan had finished the race in just over 4 hours.

Maintaining his dedication, Frank went for a run on Thursday morning, July 4, 2019. At around 10 AM, Frank’s body was found face down in shallow water in the Los Angeles River. Several bicyclists and passers-by reported seeing someone jump from a bridge. An investigation determined that the cause of death was suicide, as Frank’s head displayed signs of blunt force trauma. He was 70 years old.

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DCS: arte johnson

very interesting

Arte Johnson was in a lot. Sure, you remember him peeking through the ferns at the end of Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In, offering a corny pun in an affected German accent. Or as the doddering old Tyrone, attempting to make a move on the uptight Gladys Ormphby, as played by Ruth Buzzi, only to get whacked by her purse. Or maybe as the out-of-place soft-spoken holy man of indeterminate ethnicity at the psychedelic cocktail party.

But prior to his six-year stint on Laugh-In, Arte amassed a resume that included guest roles on numerous sitcoms throughout the 60s and 70s. Including McHale’s Navy, The Partridge Family, The Andy Griffith Show, Bewitched, The Donna Reed Show and even The jack Benny Show. Of course, he was featured in lesser-known programs like  It’s Always Jan, Sally, Hennesey and Bringing Up Buddy. He also lent his voice to a number of animated cartoons like Scooby Doo, The Smurfs, Ducktales, Animaniacs, Top Cat and an animated version of his “Tyrone” character from Laugh-In.

In 1997, Arte was diagnosed with and successfully treated for non-Hodgkins lymphoma. He passed away in July 2019 after a three-year battle with prostate cancer. Arte was 90 years old.

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DCS: denise nickerson

I have a blueberry for a daughter

Denise Nickerson was best remembered for her iconic role as “Violet Beauregard,” the gum-snapping daughter of a pushy used car salesman in the 1971 film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. Fresh from her multi-character casting on the Gothic soap opera Dark Shadows, Denise’s popularity was given a huge boost as a result of her appearance in the candy-swirled fantasy. She landed a role on the PBS children’s series The Electric Company, as well as bigger parts in feature films like the Michael Ritchie satire Smile and the cult action film Zero to Sixty. She also appeared in a final season episode of The Brady Bunch as one of two dates Peter arranged for the same night. Denise was one of a group of actresses that auditioned unsuccessfully for the role of demon-possessed “Regan MacNeil” in The Exorcist, along with Brooke Shields, Melanie Griffith, Anissa Jones, Kim Basinger, Jaime Lee Curtis and April Winchell. At twenty-one, Denise decided to leave show business and pursue a career in nursing. She still managed to make appearances at fan conventions and at a Willy Wonka reunion on The Today Show in 2015.

In 2018, Denise suffered a debilitating stroke. After a hospital stay, she moved in with her son and daughter-in-law who would take care of her. In July 2019, Denise ingested a large amount of her prescribed medication while her son and daughter-in-law were out. She was found unresponsive when they returned home and Denise was taken to the hospital. She fell into a coma and, with a DNR order in place, was taken off of life support. She passed away on July 10 at the age of 62.

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IF: electricity

shocking

Benjamin Franklin may have discovered electricity, but it was the man who invented the meter who made the money.”
— Earl Wilson

Earl Wilson struggled for years as a writer. In 1942, he received an offer to take over a the column of a colleague who was going off to war. He was employed by the New York Post and the column, It Happened Last Night. blossomed into one of the most read and most respected syndicated columns in the nation. Through his column, Earl became a confidant to celebrities and other public figures. His penchant for fact-checking and his integrity as a reporter afforded him exclusive stories, offered readily by those in show business. He would often venture out for late nights with his wife Rosemary (referred to as B.W. “Beautiful Wife” in his columns) and begin to write the next day’s report at 3 o’clock in the morning. He was a friend to politicians, actors, actresses, musicians and others in the public eye. He always signed his columns with the friendly tag line “”That’s Earl, brother.”

Besides his 6-day-a week column, Earl wrote two books. One, an unauthorized biography of Frank Sinatra and the other, Show Business Laid Bare, was the first to expose the extramarital affairs of President John Kennedy. Earl also appeared in several movies, including A Face in the Crowd with Andy Griffith and Beach Blanket Bingo with Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello. As was popular in his day, Earl was a guest panelist on TV game shows, as well. The Beatles dedicated their first set on The Ed Sullivan Show to Earl.

After his retirement, Earl was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease and passed away in 1987 at the age of 79.

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DCS: mac rebennack aka dr. john

such a night

“Come Get It, Get It, Come, Come / Walk on guilded splinters
Come Get It, Get It, Come, Come / Walk on guilded splinters”

Dr. John explained that the song “Walk On Guilded Splinters” was based on a traditional voodoo church song. He said, “It’s supposed to be ‘Splendors’, but I turned it into ‘Splinters’… I just thought splinters sounded better and I always pictured splinters when I sung it.”

The Doctor passed away on June 6, 2019 at the age of 77.

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DCS: frank kameny

pride

In 1953, President Dwight Eisenhower issued Executive Order 10450, establishing who could receive a federal security clearance. The order named security risks as Communists, subversives, drunks and drug users, and “sexual perverts.” As far as this order was concerned “sexual perverts,” meant homosexuals.

Frank Kameny was employed as an astronomer for the US Army’s cartography division. In 1957, he was dismissed from his position because of his homosexuality. Frank was outraged. He appealed his firing and, although his plea was unsuccessful, his efforts were notable as the first civil rights claim based on sexual orientation pursued in a U.S. court.

Frank and a number of his friends launched some of the first public protests by gays and lesbians, forming picket lines at the White House in 1965. Associated groups staged similar protests at the United Nations in New York City, The Pentagon and Philadelphia’s Independence Hall. Frank and the Mattachine Society, one of the earliest LGBT activist groups, began a campaign in 1963 to overturn laws that singled out the gay community. (Frank personally drafted a bill that was finally passed in 1993.) He also worked closely with the American Psychiatric Association to change homosexuality from being classified as a “mental disorder.” He also challenged the military’s ban on gays as early as the 1970s. After years of hard work, Frank was invited to the ceremony where President Barack Obama signed the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell Repeal Act of 2010.”

Frank passed away at the age of 86 on October 11, 2011 – the 23rd National Coming Out Day.

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IF: war

what is it good for

In 1969, Motown’s mighty Temptations released their Psychedelic Shack album with the title track as the lead — and only — single. The second track on side two of the record was a Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong composition that offered fierce opposition to the continuing conflict in Vietnam. The song, “War,” featured three-way vocals by Dennis Edwards, the newest member of the group replacing David Ruffin who left to pursue a solo career, along with founding members Paul Williams and Melvin Franklin, whose bass vocals provided a militaristic “hup, two, three, four” in the background. Whitfield, who also served as the album’s producer, campaigned to have “War” released as a single, but Motown balked, fearing it would upset some of their more conservative fans.

Whitfield, believing in its message and hit potential, was determined to get “War” released to the public as a single. He recruited singer Edwin Starr, best known for his recent hit “25 Miles,” to sing lead on the new recording.  The Undisputed Truth, a trio who sang background vocals for the Temptations, The Four Tops and The Supremes at Motown, were tagged by Whitfield to provide backing vocals for Edwin Starr.  They would later go on to have a Top 10 hit of their own with the ominous “Smiling Faces Sometimes.” Starr’s recording, augmented by heavy electric guitars and a prominent clavinet, was more passionate and aggressive than The Temptations’ original version. Starr’s rendition, released in June 1970, hit Number 1 on Billboard’s charts, knocking Bread‘s “Make It With You” out of the top spot. It remained in that position for three weeks.

Although Edwin Starr never achieved the success of “War” again in his career, he was active and prolific. The Nashville native moved to England. He teamed up with electronic band Utah Saints to re-record some of his early career hits, including a reworked version of “War.” It was his final recording. Edwin suffered a heart attack in 2003 and passed away at the age of 61.

After September 11, 2001, media giant Clear Channel added “War” to its list of songs that were banned from its airwaves.

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