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Self - Correspondent. Self - Correspondent segment "Starchitect". Self - Correspondent segment "Saving History". Self - Correspondent segment "Wikimania". Show all episodes. Self - Journalist, 60 Minutes. Self - CBS News. Self - Correspondent segment "Secretariat". Self - Guest. Self - Interviewee. Self - Reporter.

Self - Correspondent segment "Baptism of Fire". Self - Correspondent segment "Classic: Nadja". Show all 9 episodes. Special Hide Show Archive footage 29 credits. Self - '60 Minutes' uncredited.

Self, CBS 60 Minutes reporter. Self, CBS 60 minutes reporter. Self, CBS 60 minutes. Textor was born May 17, , in Seattle, Washington, where she grew up. Textor was a standout squash player and a team co-captain at the University of Pennsylvania. Survivors include husband Colin Farmer and children Riley and Will. She is also survived by her parents, Wendy and George Textor, and her brothers, Clinton and Andrew, and their families. There is a memorial service planned for Thursday, June 20 at a.

Gutowski produced four films by Roman Polanski , including "The Pianist. Morley Safer, longtime correspondent for "60 Minutes," died on May 19 at age John Berry, founding member of the Beastie Boys, died on May 20 at age Berry was a member of the group during its formative years, but left shortly after the release of their debut EP. Kwouk played Inspector Clouseau's servant Cato, whom was instructed to attack Clouseau when he least expected to keep him on his toes. Joe Fleishaker, low-budget film actor, died on May 25 at age With a weight of over lbs.

Muhammad Ali, legendary professional boxer, died on June 3 at age Ali was a three-time heavyweight champion and Olympic gold medalist, and is widely considered to be one of the greatest and, at his peak, the most polarizing athletes who ever lived.

Slice became an early Internet star thanks to viral videos of his unsanctioned street fights, which he parlayed into a mixed martial arts career with Bellator. Peter Shaffer, Oscar-winning screenwriter, died on June 6 at age Shaffer won two Tony awards for penning the scripts to "Equus" and "Amadeus," the former of which featured Daniel Radcliffe in a revival at the peak of his "Harry Potter" fame.

In , Shaffer won an Oscar for writing the film adaptation of "Amadeus. Theresa Saldana, star of the film "Raging Bull," died on June 7 at age Along with her performance in Martin Scorsese 's famed film, Saldana also received a Golden Globe award in for her work alongside Michael Chiklis on the show, "The Commish". Hockey legend Gordie Howe died on June 10 at age Howe is considered by many to be the greatest hockey player ever, winning the Stanley Cup four times with the Detroit Red Wings and scoring over goals.

Howe is also known for being featured in an episode of "The Simpsons," when Bart uses Howe's picture as part of a fake love letter to get back at his teacher.

Actor Michu Meszaros died June 13 at age Meszaros is most famous for his work in the NBC sitcom "Alf," where he played the titular alien that lands on Earth and lives with a human family. Outside of the Alf suit, he gained fame for playing the creepy butler Hans in the cult horror film, "Waxwork. The actor was fatally pinned between his own car and a brick mailbox at his San Fernando Valley home, police confirmed to TheWrap.

Elie Wiesel, Nobel laureate and author of dozens of books about his experience as a Holocaust survivor, died July 2 at his Manhattan home at age Since its release in , "The Wicker Man" has become known as one of the finest works in the history of British cinema. Its lead actor, Christopher Lee, called it the the best film he ever worked on.

Garry Marshall , creator of "Happy Days," died on July 19 at age Youree Dell Harris, a. TV psychic Miss Cleo, died of colon cancer on July 26 at age Miss Cleo became famous for her TV infomercials in the 90s, though she also was hit with a lawsuit from the Federal Trade Commission over deceptive advertising charges.

Nederlander has produced over plays and owns several major theatres, including the Richard Rodgers Theatre, where "Hamilton" opened on Broadway. Huddleston played the titular Jeffrey Lebowski, whom Jeff Bridges ' "Dude" Lebowski crosses paths with when two brutes attack the Dude because he shares the same name with the wheelchair-bound millionaire. Sagan Lewis, star of "St.

Elsewhere," died of cancer on Aug. Before taking the role of Dr. Safer's eloquent, sometimes quirky features balanced out the program's "gotcha" interviews and investigations, perfecting the news magazine's recipe.

It became the number-one program for the '80 season - a crown it won five times. It was another Safer story that would become one of the program's most honored and important.

Safer and 60 Minutes were honored with the industry's highest accolades: the Peabody, Emmy and duPont-Columbia University awards. Safer hit more journalistic home runs, but sought out the odd stories that piqued his curiosity. The offbeat tales were more suited to his raconteur style and cultural sensibility. He found esoteric subjects all over the world and here in the U.

His conversational wit with his subjects was just as sharp as his written word. In a profile of the prim Martha Stewart, a smirking Safer passed her livestock pen and said to the domestic diva, "Your barnyard? It's remarkably odor-free. Some of these features had national impact, however, like his November report, "The French Paradox," which connected red wine consumption to lower incidents of heart disease among the free-eating French.

Wine merchants say this report was single-handedly responsible for starting the red wine boom in America. His segment "Yes, But is it Art? Safer's life was a work of art into which 60 Minutes fit seamlessly. He vacationed in Europe, often combining field trips for his stories. He made a regular pilgrimage to The American Academy in Rome to hone his painting skills, a hobby he began from an early age. He mounted a small exhibition of his paintings in He also had a special affinity for cars and did 60 Minutes segments on England's Rolls Royce and Italy's legendary Lamborghini.

He owned a silver Ferrari convertible, which he had raced occasionally and also owned a Bentley when he lived in London, bought with his winnings from a card game. Other highlights from Safer's 60 Minutes work include a poignant segment in called "The Music of Auschwitz," about an inmate who played in an orchestra to avoid the Nazi gas chambers; his profile of Katharine Hepburn; "The Beeb," a Emmy-winning take on BBC Radio; "The Enemy," the story for which Safer returned to Vietnam; and in , "Marva," about Chicago teacher Marva Collins, whose alternative school for disadvantaged kids proved such students could excel.



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