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2012-May-27, 06:29 PM

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Racehorse TALK

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Author Topic: R.I.P. Thread  (Read 37993 times)
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OldLarsy
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Original Post 2009-Apr-06, 02:44 PM

There was a thread for deaths of well known people in the TNHRCF.
We should have one here.

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JWesleyHarding
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2009-Nov-26, 09:25 AM

Had a crew-cut didn't he clibbo?

Pretty nippy, if I recall.
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Clibbo
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2009-Nov-26, 09:28 AM

Yes to both. Ah memories of Pratten Park.
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Steve M
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2010-Feb-15, 07:13 AM

Dick Francis passed away. Quite sad. Odds were if you loved racing you'd read DF.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/culture-obituaries/books-obituaries/7237004/Dick-Francis.html
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Muppet Central
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2010-Feb-15, 09:37 AM

lead singer of THE KNACK - Doug Fieger has died of cancer

one of the greatest songs of all time - My Sharona but the band labelled as one of the biggest 1 hit wonders the world had ever seen....

http://detnews.com/article/20100214/METRO/2140317/Knack-lead-singer-Doug-Fieger-dies-of-cancer
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Red
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2010-Feb-28, 09:51 PM

Depression is a killer.  Last week there was that Growing Pains actor that hanged himself. He was 41. Yesterday was Marie Osmond's son, only 18, jumping from an apartment balcony, also suffering severe depression. I would say at that age it's parental failure.
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Mark
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2010-Feb-28, 09:53 PM

Yes Red, we cant understand it really. Not even Psychologists truly can, only thos who have had it.  Just one seriously terrible mentality.
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Red
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2010-Feb-28, 09:57 PM

We probably have enough of it here but don't 'action' it like they do over there.
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Arsenal
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2010-Mar-03, 08:40 AM

Well known Chinchilla personality and racehorse owner Con Allan passed away on 4Feb nearly made the ton B July1 1910 D Feb 4 2010.CM ran a very nice tribute to Con in the Obituary written by Philip Hammond yesterday.
Con's trainer was Tom Reid who also trained a horse for a good friend of mine who sadly is no longer around to share a laugh with.
I remember one day Tom bought Game Zephyr to EF possibly the last one owned by Con it was topweight in the last race and Tom felt it had a good chance even tho it was 33/1.needless to say it won without me.
Con also raced a good looker called Music Box I think was its'name.
RIP Con"A quiet man with a quick wit"
rip
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Steve M
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2010-Mar-15, 06:45 PM

'Mission: Impossible' star Peter Graves dies in LA
By ANDREW DALTON (AP)

LOS ANGELES — Peter Graves, whose calm and intelligent demeanor was a good fit to the intrigue of "Mission Impossible" as well as the satire of the "Airplane" films, has died.

Graves passed away Sunday just a few days before his 84th birthday outside his home in Los Angeles, publicist Sandy Brokaw said. Graves was returning from brunch with his wife of nearly 60 years and his family when he had what Graves' doctor believed was a heart attack, Brokaw said.

Graves first gained attention of many baby boomers with the 1950s TV series "Fury," but remained best known for the role of Jim Phelps, leader of a gang of special agents who battled evil conspirators in TV's "Mission: Impossible."

Normally cast as a hero, he turned in an unforgettable performance early in his career as the treacherous Nazi spy in Billy Wilder's 1953 prisoner-of-war drama "Stalag 17."

He also masterfully lampooned his straight-arrow image when he portrayed bumbling airline pilot Clarence Oveur in the 1980 disaster movie spoof "Airplane!"

Graves appeared in dozens of films and a handful of television shows in a career of nearly 60 years.

The authority and trust he projected made him a favorite for commercials late in his life, and he was often encouraged to go into politics.

"He had this statesmanlike quality," Brokaw said. "People were always encouraging him to run for office."

Graves was preceded in stardom by his older brother James Arness, who played Marshal Matt Dillon on TV's "Gunsmoke."

Born Peter Aurness, Graves adopted his grandfather's last name to avoid confusion with his older brother, who had dropped the "U" from the family name.

Graves' career began with cheaply made exploitation films like "It Conquered the World," in which he battled a carrot-shaped monster from Venus, and "Beginning of the World," in which he fought a giant grasshopper.

He later took on equally formidable human villains each week on "Mission: Impossible."

Every show began with Graves, as agent Phelps, listening to a tape of instructions outlining his team's latest mission and explaining that if he or any of his agents were killed or captured "the secretary will disavow any knowledge of your actions."

The tape always self-destructed within seconds of being played.

The show ran on CBS from 1967 to 1973 and was revived on ABC from 1988 to 1990 with Graves back as the only original cast member.

The actor credited clever writing for the show's success.

"It made you think a little bit and kept you on the edge of your seat because you never knew what was going to happen next," he once said.

He also played roles in such films as John Ford's "The Long Gray Line" and Charles Laughton's "The Night of the Hunter," as well as "The Court-Martial of Billy Mitchell," "Texas Across the River" and "The Ballad of Josie."

Graves' first television series was the children's Saturday morning show, "Fury," about an orphan and his untamed black stallion. Filmed in Australia, it lasted six years on NBC.

In his later years, Graves brought his white-haired eminence to PBS as host of "Discover: The World of Science" and A&E's "Biography" series.

He noted during an interview in 2000 that he made his foray into comedy somewhat reluctantly.

Filmmakers Jim Abrahams and David and Jerry Zucker had written a satire on the airplane-in-trouble movies, and they wanted Graves and fellow handsome actors Lloyd Bridges, Leslie Nielsen and Robert Stack to spoof their serious images.

All agreed, but Graves admitted to nervousness. On the one hand, he said, he considered the role a challenge, "but it also scared me."

"I thought I could lose a whole long acting career," he recalled.

"Airplane!" became a box-office smash, and Graves returned for "Airplane II, The Sequel."

Graves was a champion hurdler in high school in Minnesota, as well as a clarinet player in dance bands and a radio announcer.

After two years in the Air Force, he enrolled at the University of Minnesota as a drama major and worked in summer stock before following his brother west to Hollywood.

He found enough success there to send for his college sweetheart, Joan Endress. They were married in 1950 and had three daughters — Kelly Jean, Claudia King and Amanda Lee — and six grandchildren.
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Wenona
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2010-Mar-15, 08:02 PM


The show ran on CBS from 1967 to 1973 and was revived on ABC from 1988 to 1990 with Graves back as the only original cast member.




Point of interest, the remake was shot around Brisbane and the Gold Coast and provided lots of work for our struggling local actors at the time.

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Steve M
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2010-Mar-15, 08:13 PM

Did that remake feature one of the bad guys out of Days Of Lives? I swear I haven't watched DOOL since then!
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parrapete
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2010-Mar-26, 09:01 AM

Des Hoysted was part of the famous Hoysted family and called horse races for 2UE over several decades. We pay tribute to the man we all grew up listening to on the radio every race day, he'll be sadly missed by us all.
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Steward
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2010-Mar-26, 12:26 PM

That is sad to read Parrapete, thanks for bring that to our attention. tears
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Bugs
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2010-Mar-26, 02:02 PM

Ohhhhhh RIP Des 
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JWesleyHarding
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2010-Mar-26, 02:12 PM

He was my all time favourite caller before Mark Shean appeared.

I know I've told this before, but I remember once when he was about to go on holidays and for one race on the programme called the wrong horse through the race and eventually called it the winner.

When the number semaphored he realised his mistake and apologised. Giving the totes and breeding for the winner he advised that the winner was by an unidentified sire from an unidentified mare and added

"And that's exactly how I feel at the moment.

I really do need this holiday"

rip
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