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DEATHS ; Notable Passings; The Thread to Pay Last Respects

Edward

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London, UK
Michael "Chalky" White, theatre producer, died this week. Most famous for producing the Rocky Horror Show in 1973, he was also instrumental in pushing the conditions which led to the passage of the Theatres Act 1968, finally bringing to an end centuries of government censorship of the British theatre.
 
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19,141
Location
Funkytown, USA
I was a huge ELP fan back in High School. Got to see them a couple of times, once with a full orchestra. Amazing musicians.

Mr. Emerson was apparently suffering from a degenerative nerve disorder which was affecting his ability to play. According to latest reports, he was suffering from depression and committed suicide. Sad, sad.
 

LizzieMaine

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Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Hall of Fame baseball broadcaster Joe Garagiola has died at the age of 90. Following a mediocre playing career as a catcher with the Cardinals, Cubs, Giants, and Pirates, Garagiola joined Harry Caray in the Cardinals radio booth in 1955, and quickly gained a following for his quirkily-humorous approach to broadcasting. With the publication of his first book "Baseball Is A Funny Game" in 1960 he became a national figure, and soon turned up as a network broadcaster with NBC. He replaced Mel Allen on the New York Yankees broadcasting crew in 1965, but in 1969 returned to NBC full time, and remained there thru the 1988 season.

Garagiola was a fixture on NBC-TV's baseball broadcasts thruout the 70s and 80s, working with such partners as Curt Gowdy, Tony Kubek, and Vin Scully, and found his niche as an oustanding color commentator and analyst. While his early booth career was marked by controversy -- several of his contemporaries considered him an ambitious microphone-stealer -- he matured into one of the better broadcasters of his generation.

He was also a popular game-show host and general media personality, acting a co-host for the Today show for several years, and moderating the panel game "To Tell The Truth" after the retirement of Garry Moore.

Garagiola continued to work in broadcasting after he left NBC, doing local broadcasts for the Angels and the Arizona Diamondbacks until his retirement following the 2012 season. He also became a militant crusader against the use of chewing tobacco in professional baseball, and co-founded the Baseball Assistance Team, a charitable group providing help for indigent, alcoholic, or drug-addicted former ballplayers.

Garagiola was predeceased by his close childhood friend Yogi Berra, who played ball with him on the streets of 1930s St. Louis, and who was the focus of many of his most popular comic anecdotes.
 
Messages
10,411
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vancouver, canada
Hall of Fame baseball broadcaster Joe Garagiola has died at the age of 90. Following a mediocre playing career as a catcher with the Cardinals, Cubs, Giants, and Pirates, Garagiola joined Harry Caray in the Cardinals radio booth in 1955, and quickly gained a following for his quirkily-humorous approach to broadcasting. With the publication of his first book "Baseball Is A Funny Game" in 1960 he became a national figure, and soon turned up as a network broadcaster with NBC. He replaced Mel Allen on the New York Yankees broadcasting crew in 1965, but in 1969 returned to NBC full time, and remained there thru the 1988 season.

Garagiola was a fixture on NBC-TV's baseball broadcasts thruout the 70s and 80s, working with such partners as Curt Gowdy, Tony Kubek, and Vin Scully, and found his niche as an oustanding color commentator and analyst. While his early booth career was marked by controversy -- several of his contemporaries considered him an ambitious microphone-stealer -- he matured into one of the better broadcasters of his generation.

He was also a popular game-show host and general media personality, acting a co-host for the Today show for several years, and moderating the panel game "To Tell The Truth" after the retirement of Garry Moore.

Garagiola continued to work in broadcasting after he left NBC, doing local broadcasts for the Angels and the Arizona Diamondbacks until his retirement following the 2012 season. He also became a militant crusader against the use of chewing tobacco in professional baseball, and co-founded the Baseball Assistance Team, a charitable group providing help for indigent, alcoholic, or drug-addicted former ballplayers.

Garagiola was predeceased by his close childhood friend Yogi Berra, who played ball with him on the streets of 1930s St. Louis, and who was the focus of many of his most popular comic anecdotes.

The voice of my youth, I loved the humour he brought to the game.
 

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