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People

This is heartbreaking news. Growing up on military bases, sometimes the only comics we had were Beetle Bailey. I loved them all and still quote them. Rest in Peace, Mort Walker.

‘Beetle Bailey’ cartoonist Mort Walker dead at 94

LOS ANGELES — Comic strip artist Mort Walker, a Second World War veteran who satirized the Army and tickled millions of newspaper readers with the antics of the lazy private “Beetle Bailey,” died Saturday. He was 94.

Walker died at his home in Stamford, Conn., said Greg Walker, his eldest son and a collaborator. His father’s advanced age was the cause of death, he said.

Walker began publishing cartoons at age 11 and was involved with more than a half-dozen comic strips in his career, including Hi and Lois, Boner’s Ark and Sam & Silo. But he found his greatest success drawing slacker Beetle, his hot-tempered sergeant and the rest of the gang at fictional Camp Swampy for nearly 70 years.

The character that was to become Beetle Bailey made his debut as Spider in Walker’s cartoons published by the Saturday Evening Post in the late 1940s. Walker changed Spider’s name and launched Beetle Bailey as a college humour strip in 1950.

At first the strip failed to attract readers and King Features Syndicate considered dropping it after just six months, Walker said in a 2000 interview with The Associated Press. The syndicate suggested Beetle join the Army after the start of the Korean War, Walker said.

“I was kind of against it because after World War Two, Bill Mauldin and Sad Sack were fading away,” he said. But his misgivings were overcome and Beetle “enlisted” in 1951.

Walker attributed the success of the strip to Beetle’s indolence and reluctance to follow authority.

“Most people are sort of against authority,” he said. “Here’s Beetle always challenging authority. I think people relate to it.”

Beetle Bailey led to spin-off comic strip Hi and Lois, which he created with Dik Browne, in 1954. The premise was that Beetle went home on furlough to visit his sister Lois and brother-in-law Hi.

Fellow cartoonists remembered Walker on Saturday as a pleasant man who adored his fans. Bill Morrison, president of the National Cartoonists Society, called Walker the definition of “cartoonist” in a post on the society’s website.

“He lived and breathed the art every day of his life. He will be sorely missed by his friends in the NCS and by a world of comic strip fans,” Morrison said.

Fellow cartoonist Mark Evanier said on his website that Walker was “delightful to be around and always willing to draw Beetle or Sarge for any of his fans. He sure had a lot of them.”

Beetle Bailey, which appeared in as many as 1,800 newspapers, sometimes sparked controversy. The Tokyo editions of the military newspaper Stars & Stripes dropped it in 1954 for fear that it would encourage disrespect of its officers. But ensuing media coverage spurred more than 100 newspapers to add the strip.

Shortly after U.S. President Bill Clinton took office, Walker drew a strip suggesting that the draft be retroactive in order to send Clinton to Vietnam. Walker said he received hundreds of angry letters from Clinton supporters.

For years, Walker drew Camp Swampy’s highest-ranking officer, Gen. Amos Halftrack, ogling his well-endowed secretary, Miss Buxley. Feminist groups claimed the strip made light of sexual harassment, and Walker said the syndicate wanted him to write out the lecherous general.

That wasn’t feasible because the general was such a fixture in the strip, Greg Walker said Saturday. His father solved the problem in 1997 by sending Halftrack to sensitivity training.

“That became a whole theme that we could use,” said Greg Walker, who with his brother, Brian, intends to carry on his father’s work. Both have worked in the family business for decades.

Beetle Bailey also featured one of the first African-American characters to be added to a white cast in an established comic strip. (Peanuts had added the character of Franklin in 1968.) Lt. Jack Flap debuted in the comic strip’s panels in 1970.

In a 2002 interview, Walker said that comics are filled with stereotypes and he likes to find humour in all characters.

“I like to keep doing something new and different, so people can’t say I’m doing the same thing all the time. I like to challenge myself,” he said.

Walker also created Boner’s Ark in 1968 using his given first name, Addison, as his pen name, and Sam & Silo with Jerry Dumas in 1977. He was the writer of Mrs. Fitz’s Flats with Frank Roberge.

In 1974, he founded the International Museum of Cartoon Art in Connecticut to preserve and honour the art of comics. It moved twice before closing in 2002 in Boca Raton, Fla. Walker changed the name to the National Cartoon Museum and announced in 2005 plans to relocate to the Empire State Building in New York. But the following year, the deal to use that space fell through.

In 2000, Walker was honoured at the Pentagon with the Army’s highest civilian award — the Distinguished Civilian Service award — for his work, his military service and his contribution to a new military memorial.

He also developed a reputation for helping aspiring cartoonists with advice.

“I make friends for people,” he said.

Addison Morton Walker was born Sept. 3, 1923, in El Dorado, Kansas, and grew up in Kansas City, Mo.

In 1943 he was drafted into the U.S. Army, serving in Europe during the Second World War. He was discharged as a first lieutenant, graduated from the University of Missouri-Columbia and pursued a career as a cartoonist in New York.

Walker most recently oversaw the work of the staff at his Stamford studio, Comicana.

Besides sons Greg and Brian, Walker is survived by his second wife, Catherine; daughters Polly Blackstock and Margie Walker Hauer; sons Neal and Roger Walker; stepdaughters Whitney Prentice and Priscilla Prentice Campbell and several grandchildren.

Funeral services will be private.

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Awards

Once again The Grammys was very mediocre with only a few moments of greatness. One year they’ll get it right…I hope. Congrats to Bruno!!

Bruno Mars wins 6 Grammys, including album, record and song of the year

NEW YORK — Bruno Mars went six for six at the Grammys, winning all of the awards he was nominated for with his energetic and upbeat 90s-inspired R&B album.

Mars won album of the year for 24K Magic, record of the year for the title track, and song of the year for the No. 1 hit, That’s What I Like, on Sunday at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

“Oh my God. Thank you guys so much. Wow,” said Mars. “I’d like to dedicate this award to (songwriters like Babyface, Teddy Riley Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis).”

Mars has now won 11 career Grammys.

Jay-Z, the leading nominee with eight, walked away empty handed. He lost in the rap categories to Kendrick Lamar, who won five awards, including best rap album for DAMN. and best rap song for HUMBLE. He has a career total of 12 Grammys.

“This is special man. I got a lot of guys in this building that I still idolize today,” said Lamar, naming Jay-Z, Nas and Diddy as inspirations.

At the end, Lamar closed with: “Jay for president.”

Lamar kicked off the Grammys with a powerful and poignant performance featuring video screens displaying a waving American flag behind him, as background dancers dressed as army soldiers marched and moved behind. He was joined Sunday by U2’s Bono and The Edge, and also Dave Chappelle — who told jokes in between Lamar’s performance.

At one point, Lamar’s background dancers, dressed in red, were shot down as he rapped lyrics, later coming back to life as fire burst to end the six-minute performance.

But the night’s top performer was Kesha, who gave a passionate performance with the help of powerful women behind her, including the Resistance Revival Chorus.

She was joined by Cyndi Lauper, Camila Cabello, Julia Michaels, Andra Day and Bebe Rexha for her Grammy-nominated song, Praying. Dressed in white, they won over the audience and hugged at the song’s end as some audience members cried, including Hailee Steinfeld.

Kesha, who earned her first pair of Grammy nominations this year, has been in a legal war with former producer and mentor Dr. Luke. Janelle Monae introduced the performance with strong words.

“We come in peace but we mean business. To those who would dare try to silence us, we offer two words: Time’s Up,” Monae said. “It’s not just going on in Hollywood. It’s not just going on in Washington. It’s here in our industry, too.”

Before the performance, Maren Morris, Eric Church and Brothers Osborne performed an emotional rendition of Eric Clapton’s Tears In Heaven — written after his son died — in honour of the 58 people who died at the Route 91 Harvest Festival in Las Vegas last year. The names of the victims were displayed behind them as they performed.

The performances were two of the show’s serious moments. Dozens of artists and music industry players also sported white roses in support of the Time’s Up and #MeToo movements against sexual abuse and harassment.

“Black is beautiful, hate is ugly,” rapper Logic said onstage after performing suicide prevention attention “1-800-273-8255.” The performance, also with Alessia Cara and Khalid, included a group of suicide attempt and loss survivors selected by the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.

Sting’s performance was somewhat political as he sang his 1987 song, Englishman in New York, which includes the lyrics, “Oh, I’m an alien, I’m a legal alien, I’m an Englishman in New York.”

Mars gave an energetic and colourful performance of Finesse with breakthrough rapper Cardi B; Pink was a vocal powerhouse while she sang Wild Hearts Can’t Be Broken; and Rihanna, DJ Khaled and Bryson Tiller teamed up for a vibrant performance of “Wild Thoughts.”

Cara, who was shaking as she accepted the award for best new artist, beat out SZA, Julia Michaels, Khalid and Lil Uzi Vert.

“Thank you to my parents and my brother for believing in me,” she said, also urging the crowd to “support real music and real artists because everyone deserves the same shot.”

Chris Stapleton won three awards, including best country album, best country song and best country solo performance.

“We always try to make great records … and I guess this is a testament to that,” Stapleton said.

The Rolling Stones picked up their third career Grammy — for best traditional blues album for Blue & Lonesome, while Ed Sheeran won best pop vocal album. Emmy and Golden Globe winner Childish Gambino, who picked up best traditional R&B performance, gave a smooth and sultry performance of Terrified in all-white featuring screeching high notes. Gambino was joined by young singer-actor, JD McCrary, who matched his vocals and sings on the original track.

Little Big Town, who sang their Taylor Swift-penned No. 1 hit “Better Man,” also won best country duo/group performance with the song. Lady Gaga won over the audience with a rousing performance of the songs Joanne and Million Reasons, while Sam Smith gave a powerful performance of the song “Pray

The Weeknd, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Reba McEntire, LCD Soundsystem, Portugal the Man and Shakira also won early awards. Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, both Oscar and Tony winners, won best musical theatre album for Dear Evan Hansen, shared with Tony winner Ben Platt.

Chappelle won best comedy album during the televised show.

“I am honoured to win an award, finally, and I wanted to thank everyone at Netflix, at Saturday Night Live, at The Chappelle Show,” he said.

Puppies were passed to the losers of best comedy album, including Jerry Seinfeld, Sarah Silverman and Jim Gaffigan.

Posthumous Grammys were also handed out to actress Carrie Fisher, singer Leonard Cohen and engineer Tom Coyne, who worked on Mars’ 24K Magic album. Double winners included Jason Isbell, Justin Hurwitz and CeCe Winans.

Categories
Music

I got mine!!

On the Charts: Fall Out Boy Capture Number One With ‘Mania’

Fall Out Boy returned to the top of the Billboard 200 as the emo-pop band’s latest album Mania debuted at Number One with 130,000 copies.

Mania marks the third straight Fall Out Boy album to reach Number One – following 2013’s Save Rock and Roll and 2015’s American Beauty/American Psycho – and, with 2007’s Infinity High, the band’s fourth overall LP to hit the top spot on the Billboard 200, Billboard reports.

The Number One finish validated Fall Out Boy’s decision to scrap an earlier, near-finished version of the album and postpone its July 2017 release after deciding that the music didn’t “sound like Fall Out Boy,” Patrick Stump told Rolling Stone in November.

“It freaked me out,” Stump said, adding that bassist Pete Wentz agreed with his assessment. “I was like, ‘I don’t think this is something the four of us will like, I don’t think it’s something the label is going to like.”

Mania was the lone new release to enter the Top 10, with the Greatest Showman soundtrack leading the way among the returnees by capturing Number Two for the second straight week. Ed Sheeran’s Divide held at Number Three while Camila Cabello’s Camila, last week’s champ, dropped to Number Four and 43,000 copies.

Post Malone’s Stoney (Number Five), Kendrick Lamar’s Damn. (Six), G-Eazy’s The Beautiful & Damned (Seven), Lil Uzi Vert’s Luv Is Rage 2 (Eight), Taylor Swift’s Reputation (Nine) and Bruno Mars’ 24K Magic (Number 10) closed out the Top 10.

Next week on the Billboard 200, Rolling Stone cover stars Migos’ Culture II will compete against the Greatest Showman soundtrack – and the sales surge that usually follows the Grammys – for the Number One spot.

Categories
Movies

I finally saw THE POST and while it was occasionally great, it was mostly only very good.

Maze Runner: The Death Cure outraces Jumanji at the box office

Maze Runner: The Death Cure has the prescription for a box office victory.

The third installment of Fox’s dystopian YA franchise is poised to debut with about $23.5 million at 3,787 theaters in the U.S. and Canada this weekend, dethroning Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle while also outpacing the gritty western Hostiles.

The Death Cure’s bow should come in at the higher end of analysts’ projections, but below its series predecessors. The original Maze Runner opened with $32.5 million in 2014, and Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials took in $30.6 million a year later. Overseas, The Death Cure is set to add an estimated $62.7 million this weekend, bringing its international cume to $82 million and its worldwide total to $105.5 million.

Directed once again by Wes Ball and based on James Dashner’s best-selling book series, The Death Cure stars Dylan O’Brien as the leader of a band of teenagers battling a shadowy organization in a post-apocalyptic society ravaged by a zombie-like outbreak. The threequel, which was delayed a year when O’Brien was seriously injured on set, received mixed reviews and a decent B-plus CinemaScore.

After three weeks at the top and six weeks in theaters, Sony’s Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle is dropping down to second place with an estimated $16.4 million, bringing its domestic total to $338 million. The film, which has shown remarkable staying power, is also up to $484 million overseas.

The Jake Kasdan-directed follow-up to 1995’s Jumanji centers on a video game that draws players into its world and stars Dwayne Johnson, Jack Black, Karen Gillan, and Kevin Hart.

Claiming the No. 3 spot in its first weekend of wide release is Entertainment Studios’ Hostiles, with an estimated $10.2 million at 2,816 theaters (up from 119 locations last week). Starring Christian Bale, Wes Studi, and Rosamund Pike, and directed by Scott Cooper (Black Mass), the frontier drama will have grossed about $12.1 million since beginning its rollout in late December.

Hostiles received generally positive reviews but a lukewarm B CinemaScore.

Filling out the top five are two more Fox films: Hugh Jackman’s P.T. Barnum musical The Greatest Showman, with about $95. million, and Steven Spielberg’s Pentagon Papers drama The Post, with about $9.5 million.

Further down the list, Fox Searchlight’s Oscar frontrunner The Shape of Water added 1,001 theaters, for a total of 1,854, and is set to take in about $5.7 million for the weekend, good for the No. 8 spot. Through Sunday, the Guillermo del Toro-directed fantasy romance is on pace for a total of $37.7 million in North America and $13.9 million in foreign markets.

According to ComScore, overall box office is up 2.2 percent year-to-date. Check out the Jan. 26-28 figures below.

1. Maze Runner: The Death Cure — $23.5 million
2. Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle — $16.4 million
3. Hostiles — $10.2 million
4. The Greatest Showman — $9.5 million
5. The Post — $8.9 million
6. 12 Strong — $8.6 million
7. Den of Thieves — $8.4 million
8. The Shape of Water — $5.7 million
9. Paddington 2 — $5.6 million
10. Star Wars: The Last Jedi — $4.2 million

Categories
Television

Snore!!

Celebrity Big Brother cast (including Omarosa) revealed

The Olympics will not be the only star-studded televised competition happening on TV this February. (That’s depending on your definition of “star-studded,” of course.) Because in a move of counter-programming genius — or folly — CBS is rolling out a special winter celebrity edition of its Big Brother franchise on Feb. 7.

And now the network has finally revealed during the Grammys just who was crazy enough to lock themselves in a house for two-and-a-half-weeks to amuse and entertain us. (Once again, this all depends on your definition of “entertain.”) The list includes five ex-Dancing with the Stars hoofers as well as four former Celebrity Apprentice contestants, meaning 9 of the 11 new houseguests come from one of those two shows.

The famous faces taking part in Celebrity Big Brother are:

Omarosa Manigault
The three-time Apprentice contestant and Trump campaigner departed the White House for the Big Brother house. No word on if that is trading up or trading down.

Mark McGrath
The Sugar Ray singer also did a stint on Celebrity Apprentice. He’s actually been on many a reality television program, including Celebrity Wife Swap, a guest judge on American Idol, and host of not one but TWO Pussycat Dolls shows.

Shannon Elizabeth
The American Pie star may not like living on slop if she becomes a “Have Not.” She also appeared on Dancing with the Stars, because of course she did.

Metta World Peace
The former Ron Artest won NBA Defensive Player of the Year honors as well as an NBA title. He’s also best known for the “Malice at the Palace” brawl between fans and players in Detroit while a member of the Indiana Pacers. Not that there’s ever any fighting on Big Brother. Oh, yeah, he also did his time on Dancing with the Stars.

Brandi Glanville
It wouldn’t be a celebrity reality show without a Real Housewife. This time, it’s Brandi from Beverly Hills, who also paid her dues on Celebrity Apprentice. (Who didn’t?)

James Maslow
The Big Time Rush star also got fourth place on season 18 of Dancing with the Stars.

Keshia Knight Pulliam
Rudy Huxtable is in the house! The Big Brother house, to be exact. She also appeared on, yes, Celebrity Apprentice.

Marissa Jaret Winokur
The Hairspray Broadway star was on the same season of Dancing with the Stars as her new housemate Shannon Elizabeth. Instant alliance?

Ariadna Gutierrez
She was Miss Universe in 2015… for about two minutes. Then it was revealed that host Steve Harvey had read the wrong name. Whoops!

Chuck Liddell
The former mixed martial artist will have to use his smarts and social skills, not his fists to win this competition. And if you were wondering which show he previously appeared on: Celebrity Apprentice or Dancing with the Stars, it was the latter.

Ross Matthews
The former Tonight Show intern is a judge on RuPaul’s Drag Race. But now he will be judged by his fellow housemates… and America.

Celebrity Big Brother premieres Feb. 7 on CBS and will conclude Feb. 25. But one can only assume that it will remain in our hearts… forever.

Categories
Concerts

Rock and roll!!!

Pearl Jam Detail Short Summer Stadium Tour

Pearl Jam will embark on a short tour this summer, pairing their “Home Shows” in Seattle with “Away Shows” in Missoula, Montana, Chicago and Boston.

Pearl Jam will play Washington-Grizzly Stadium in Missoula August 13th, after which they’ll hit Wrigley Field in Chicago for two concerts, August 18th and 20th. The band will close their quick trek with another two-night stand at Fenway Park in Boston, September 2nd and 4th.

Fans can register for access to tickets through Ticketmaster’s Verified Fan program starting today, January 24th, through February 6th at 4 p.m. PT. The verified fan pre-sale begins February 16th at 10 a.m. local time. Members of Pearl Jam’s Ten Club will also have special access to pre-sale tickets starting February 7th at 10 a.m. PT, with full details available on the band’s website. A limited number of remaining tickets will be sold via a general sale that starts February 21st at 10 a.m. local time.

Pearl Jam previously announced their “Home Shows” will take place at Seattle’s Safeco Field on August 8th and 10th. The band has pledged to donate at least $1 million from the concerts to fight homelessness in Seattle. They also hope to raise $10 million over the next year in collaboration with local businesses, government agencies and non-profits to further alleviate the problem.

Categories
Concerts

Go, retire and live your life Sir Elton!!

Elton John announces lengthy farewell tour, with Canadian stops

Elton John is retiring from the road after his upcoming three-year global tour, capping nearly 50 years on stages around the world, and says he’s hoping to go out “with a bang.”

“I’ve had a good run, I think you’d admit that,” John said Wednesday. He added that he wanted to “leave people thinking, ‘I saw the last tour and it was fantastic.”‘

The 70-year-old singer, pianist and composer announced the Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour at an event in New York, saying he wants to spend more time with his family.

John is married to Toronto native David Furnish, and the couple have two young children.

“My priorities now are my children and my husband and my family,” he said. “This is the end.”

The charismatic performer’s website lists two concerts in Toronto (Sept. 25-26), as well as shows in Ottawa (Sept. 28), Quebec City (Sept. 29) and Montreal (Oct. 4). Tickets go on sale Feb. 2.

He was recently in Canada for a pair of November shows in Ontario cities Kingston and St. Catharines.

John, whose hits include Your Song and Candle in the Wind, has won five Grammys, an Oscar and a Golden Globe for The Lion King, a Tony Award for Aida and received a Kennedy Center Honor.

John several weeks ago announced he’d be winding up his Las Vegas residency in May. The Million Dollar Piano show in Vegas will close after some 200 performances in six years.

At the Grammy Awards on Sunday in New York City, John is to perform alongside Miley Cyrus and will collect the President’s Merit Award.

It’s not his first honour from the Grammys. He also received the Legend Award for lifetime achievement in 2000 and that same year was named its MusiCares Person of the Year for his philanthropic efforts, which include raising hundreds of millions through his Elton John AIDS Foundation.

On Jan. 30, the I’m Still Standing: Elton John tribute concert is taking place at Madison Square Garden featuring guest Cyrus, Miranda Lambert, John Legend, Kesha and Sam Smith, to be broadcast on CBS in the U.S. later in the year.

John launched his first tour in 1970 and boasts having performed over 4,000 times in more than 80 countries. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.

He has suffered several medical setbacks of late, including a bacterial infection last year that he contracted during a South American tour and an E. coli bacterial infection in 2009. He’s also suffered appendicitis and has been fitted with a pacemaker.

From 1970-76, John released 10 original studio albums and seven consecutive chart toppers.

He has sold more than 300 million albums.

Categories
Television

Why not?! I guess…

‘Murphy Brown’ Returning to CBS With 13 Episodes

Candice Bergen is returning for the sitcom reboot, which will air during the 2018-19 season.
Not one to be left out of TV’s current reboot frenzy, CBS is adding another vintage comedy to its lineup: Murphy Brown.

The landmark sitcom, from Diane English and starring Candice Bergen, was an Emmy darling and a cultural touchstone for its then-uncommon portrayal of a single working mother. The Warner Bros. produced effort has received a 13-episode straight-to-series order and will include Bergen reprising her role. English is returning as well, serving as writer and executive producer through her Bend in the Road Productions shingle.

The order for more Murphy Brown, just shy of the 30th anniversary of its 1988 premiere, comes as networks and streamers have looked to their past catalogs for programming that will make an impact in the increasingly fractured TV market. On the Big Four, the most notable revivals include such similarly groundbreaking series as NBC’s Will & Grace, ABC’s upcoming Roseanne revisit and, perhaps to a lesser extent, Fox’s The X-Files.

As CBS noted Wednesday in a release about the order, there’s no shortage of material for the show, which was set in the offices of a cable news channel. The titular character, at the time, was parts Diane Sawyer and Barbara Walters, with an attitude all her own. Murphy Brown “returns to a world of cable news, social media, fake news and a very different political and cultural climate,” per CBS. During its 10-year run, the series targeted real politicians, perhaps most famously when then Vice President Dan Quayle singled it out in a speech about “family values.” The comedy retaliated by incorporating him into a storyline, culminating in Bergen’s character dumping a truck full of potatoes dumped in front of his residence. (Quayle once misspelled the root vegetable during a visit to a school — which, by 1992 standards, was worthy of mockery over many news cycles.)

Again multicamera, Murphy Brown is the first straight-to-series order for CBS’ 2018-19 season and comes days after ordering pilots from three female writers. The network has publicly struggled with its on- and off-camera tendency to hire white men. Murphy Brown might be the first reboot to land on the broadcast network, but CBS has been busy mining its own library elsewhere. Streaming service CBS All Access has already launched a new Star Trek, and a reboot of The Twilight Zone is in the works.

What’s not immediately clear about the Murphy Brown order is who else of the original cast may be on board. Faith Ford, Joe Regalbuto and Grant Shaud all have busy TV careers; Charles Kimbrough appears to be at least semi-retired; and Robert Pastorelli died in 2004.

It’s also worth noting that Murphy Brown isn’t currently streaming. That library is almost sure to land somewhere in the run-up to its TV return — and the price tag on those 247 episodes should prove to be a lucrative side effect of this revival.

Categories
Awards

Here’s hoping they all bring home an Oscar!!

Christopher Plummer, Shape of Water team among Canadian Oscar nominees

A Toronto producer who worked on The Shape of Water says the film’s leading 13 Oscar nominations are a big win for Canada.

J. Miles Dale shares in the best picture nomination along with director Guillermo del Toro, who shot the merman romance in Toronto and Hamilton. Dale says other than del Toro, the cinematographer and some of the actors, every person who worked on the film was Canadian.

He says he thinks it’s an “unprecedented” amount of recognition for this country by the Oscars academy.

The Shape of Water came just shy of tying the record of 14 Oscar nominations shared by All About Eve, Titanic and La La Land.

Other Canadians nominated for the film include production designer Paul Austerberry, costume designer Luis M. Sequeira, and film editor Sidney Wolinsky.

Meanwhile, Christopher Plummer got an Oscar nod for his supporting role in All The Money In The World. It’s the third Oscar nomination for the Toronto native, who won the golden statuette in 2012 for Beginners.

The Breadwinner, based on the novel by Canadian author Deborah Ellis, is nominated for best animated film.

The Canadian co-production has a superstar executive producer in Angelina Jolie and features Toronto actress Saara Chaudry as the voice of the lead character. The movie, written by Canadian filmmaker Anita Doron, also got a Golden Globe nomination for best animated film.

While Denis Villeneuve missed out on a best director nomination for Blade Runner 2049, the film did pick up a number of nods in other categories. Canadian Dennis Gassner is nominated for best production design.

Categories
People

Very sad news. May he Rest In Peace.

Legendary trumpeter Hugh Masekela dead at 78

Legendary South African jazz musician Hugh Masekela has died at age 78 after a decade-long fight with cancer, according to a statement Tuesday from his family.

Often called the father of South African jazz, Masekela died in Johannesburg after what his family said was a “protracted and courageous battle with prostate cancer.”

Trumpeter, singer and composer Masekela, affectionately known locally as Bra Hugh, started playing the horn at 14 and quickly became an integral part of the 1950s jazz scene in Johannesburg as a member of the Jazz Epistles.

In the 1960s, he went into exile in the United Kingdom and the United States, where he collaborated with American jazz legend Harry Belafonte and used his music to spread awareness about the oppressive system of white-minority rule in South Africa. He also scored an international number one hit in 1968 with Grazing In The Grass.

Masekela gained a following among U.S. pop and rock fans, appearing at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival. He collaborated with many musicians across genres, including the Byrds, Paul Simon, the Crusaders and Herb Alpert. He was nominated for three Grammy Awards during his career.

Many of his compositions were about the struggle for majority rule and full democratic rights in South Africa. Masekela’s catchy composition Bring Him Back Home calling for Nelson Mandela to be released from prison became an international anthem for the anti-apartheid movement.

He was married to South African singer and activist Miriam Makeba for two years in the mid-1960s. They performed together in 1988 at a concert to raise consciousness for Mandela’s release.

“Hugh’s global and activist contribution to and participation in the areas of music, theatre, and the arts in general is contained in the minds and memory of millions across six continents,” the family statement read.

In October last year, Masekela issued a statement that he had been fighting prostate cancer since 2008 and would have to cancel his professional commitments to focus on his health. He said he started treatment after doctors found a “small speck”‘ on his bladder, and had surgery in March 2016 after the cancer spread.

Masekela also said he felt an “imbalance” and had an eye problem after a fall in April in Morocco in which he sprained his shoulder. He said another tumour was then discovered and he had surgery.

“I’m in a good space, as I battle this stealthy disease, and I urge all men to have regular tests to check your own condition,” his statement said, asking the media for privacy.

Condolences from fans poured out Tuesday on social media.

“A baobob tree has fallen,” Nathi Mthethwa, South Africa’s minister for arts and culture, wrote on Twitter. “The nation has lost a one of a kind musician . We can safely say Bra Hugh was one of the great architects of Afro-Jazz and he uplifted the soul of our nation through his timeless music.”

South African President Jacob Zuma expressed his condolences, saying Masekela “kept the torch of freedom alive globally, fighting apartheid through his music and mobilizing international support for the struggle for liberation and raising awareness of the evils of apartheid … His contribution to the struggle for liberation will never be forgotten.”

Masekela inspired generations of musicians in jazz and beyond and collaborated in recent years with South African house music DJ Black Coffee and others. “I have no words,” the DJ said Tuesday on Twitter.

Tributes poured in on social media from the President of Kenya, Britain’s Opposition Leader, as well as musicians.