Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ella Wallace Raines (August 6, 1920 [1] – May 30, 1988) was an American film and television actress active from the early 1940s through the mid-1950s. Described as "sultry" and "mysterious", the green-eyed star [ 2 ] appeared frequently in crime pictures and film noir , but also in drama, comedy, Westerns , thrillers, and romance.
He and his groupmates were featured on the NBC special Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever. [207] July 28 Erica Ash: 46 Actress best known as Mary Charles "M-Chuck" Calloway on Survivor's Remorse and as a cast member on The Big Gay Sketch Show and MADtv. [208] Chino XL: 50 Actor (The Young and the Restless, Reno 911!, CSI: Miami) and rapper ...
The following are notable peoples who died by suicide in the year 2001 and after. Suicides under duress are included. Deaths by accident or misadventure are excluded. Individuals who might or might not have died by their own hand, or whose intention to die is in dispute, but who are widely believed to have deliberately died by suicide, may be listed under Possible s
Roslyn Singleton, who appeared on "America's Got Talent" and "The Ellen DeGeneres Show," died at age 39 after a nearly 10-year battle with brain cancer.
Ellen Holly, the first Black actor to have a leading role on a daytime soap opera, died peacefully in her sleep on Wednesday at Calvary Hospital in the Bronx. She was 92. Holly joined ABC’s One ...
Boss, the DJ and executive producer on the “Ellen DeGeneres Show,” died by suicide on Dec. 13 last year, shocking his fans, friends and family. “No one had any inkling that he was low.
Max Linder (1925), French film and stage actor, double suicide with wife Hélène "Jean" Peters, veronal and morphine ingestion, cut wrists [770] Vachel Lindsay (1931), American poet, poison [771] Diane Linkletter (1969), American actress and daughter of Art Linkletter, jump from a sixth story window [772]
Died three days after live broadcast of the 13th episode. Ripley's friends and associates filled in as presenters for the remainder of the first season. Robert St. John took over as host for the second season. The series' final episode was on October 5, 1950, more than a year-and-a-half following Ripley's death. Don "Creesh" Hornsby