Tel

Sydney, New South Wales, AUSTRALIA


Joined October 18th 2006

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Recent Posts

James Dean, Rebel without a Cause

February 12th 2007 12:45
James Byron Dean (Feb 8, 1931 – Sep 30, 1955) was an American film actor. He was the symbol of idealistic and restless American youth. Dean's mainstream status as a cultural icon is best embodied in the title of his most cited role in Rebel Without a Cause. His enduring fame and popularity rests on only three films - East of Eden, Rebel Without a Cause, and Giant - his entire starring output. He was the first person to receive a posthumous Academy Award nomination for Best Actor and remains the only person to have two such nominations posthumously.

James Dean was born in Marion, Indiana to Winton and Mildred Wilson Dean. His family moved to Santa Monica, California, six years after his father had left farming to become a dental technician. Dean was enrolled in Brentwood Public School until his mother died of cancer in 1940. At age nine, Dean was sent by his father to live with his aunt Ortense and uncle Marcus Winslow on a farm in Fairmount, Indiana. In high school, Dean played on the basketball team and studied forensics and drama. After graduating from Fairmount High School in 1949, Dean moved back to California with his beagle, Maxx, to live with his father and stepmother.

He enrolled in Santa Monica College, pledged to the Sigma Nu fraternity and majored in pre-law. Dean transferred to UCLA and changed his major to drama, which resulted in estrangement from his father. While at UCLA, he beat out 350 actors to land the role of Malcolm in Macbeth.

Marlon Brando was a great influence on James Dean. He began his professional acting career with a Pepsi-Cola television commercial, followed by a stint as a stunt tester for the Beat the Clock game show. He quit college to focus on his budding career, but struggled to get jobs in Hollywood and paid his bills only by working as a parking lot attendant at CBS Studios. He actually had very small parts in several films before achieving stardom. The first film in which he spoke was Sailor Beware, where he played a boxing trainer. The Paramount comedy starred Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis.

Following friends' advice, Dean moved to New York City to pursue live stage acting, where he was accepted to study under Lee Strasberg in the storied Actors Studio. His career picked up and he did several episodes on early-1950s TV shows. One early role, for the CBS series, Omnibus, (Glory in the Flower) saw Dean portraying the same type of disaffected youth he would later immortalize in Rebel Without a Cause Positive reviews for his role in André Gide's The Immoralist led to calls from Hollywood and paved the way to film success.

Dean died in a car accident. He was driving west on U.S. Highway 466 (later California State Route 46) when a 1950 Ford Tudor, driven from the opposite direction by 23-year-old student Donald Turnupseed, attempted to take the fork onto California State Route 41 and crossed into Dean's lane without seeing him. The two cars hit almost head on. Dean was taken to Paso Robles War Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead on arrival. His last known words, uttered right before impact, are said to have been "That guy's got to stop... He'll see us."

James Dean is buried in Park Cemetery in Fairmount, Indiana. In 1977, a Dean memorial was built in Cholame, California. The stylized sculpture was made in Japan and transported to Cholame, accompanied by the project's benefactor, Seita Ohnishi. Ohnishi chose the site after examining the location of the accident. In September, 2005, the intersection of Highways 41 and 46 in Cholame was dedicated as the James Dean Memorial Highway as part of the commemoration of the 50th anniversary of his death. The dates and hours of Dean's birth and death are etched into the sculpture, along with a handwritten description by Dean's close friend, William Bast, of one of Dean's favorite lines from Antoine de Saint-Exupery's The Little Prince - "What is essential is invisible to the eye."

James Dean was the first to have been posthumously nominated for a Best Actor Academy Award for their first feature role and the only one so nominated twice. His estate still earns about $5,000,000 per year, according to Forbes Magazine. It'sb een said in some of his biographies that James Dean has received more fan mail posthumously than any other person.

His charismatic screen presence and very brief career combined with the publicity surrounding his death at a young age transformed Dean into a cult figure. His name is mentioned in numerous movies, songs, and is a pop icon of apparently timeless fascination.


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Elvis Presley, Rock 'n' Roll King

January 10th 2007 22:46
Elvis Aron Presley (January 8, 1935 – August 16, 1977), popularly called "The King of Rock 'n' Roll" or simply "The King", was an American singer, musician and actor.

Readers of this article might know more but this piece is posted to pay tribute to Elvis Presley on his birthday. He would have been 72. He remains a pop icon and is regarded by some to be the most important, original pop entertainer of the last fifty years. There is little doubt that Presley is the most talked about and written about performer of the 20th Century. Presley's birth certificate uses the spelling 'Aron', but his estate has designated 'Aaron' as the official spelling of his middle name. It is spelled 'Aron' because of his twin brother that died at birth, Garon, so Elvis would always have a part of his brother with him.

Presley started as a singer of rockabilly, singing many songs including rhythm, blues, gospel and country. He was first billed as "The Hilbilly Cat". His combination of country music with bluesy vocals and a strong back beat marked a significant path toward rock & roll. Although he was the most commercially successful singer of rock and roll, he was likewise successful with ballads, country, gospel, blues, pop, folk and even semi-operatic and jazz standards. In a musical career of over two decades, Presley set many records, such as concert attendance, television ratings, and records sales. He became one of the best-selling artists in music history.

He is an icon of modern American pop culture. In the late 1960s, Presley re-emerged as a live performer of old and new hit songs, both on tour and in Las Vegas, Nevada, where he was known for his on-stage highly energetic performances both vocally and physically. His sartorial jump-suits and capes added much to the stage drama of his performances. He attracted massive attendance figures. His concert performances were staggering in quantity, considering they numbered 1,145 in 8 years, 1969-1977. He continued to perform before sell-out audiences around the U.S. until his demise in 1977. His death was premature at 42, and it was a huge shock to his fans worldwide. However, it soon became clear that a combination of over-work, depression, bad diet and severe abuse of prescription drugs, hastened his premature departure. However, regardless all the controversy shrouding his death, his popularity as a singer has survived his death.

Who can forget his rendition of "Love me Tender" or "Can't Help Falling in Love" ... and many more of his heartwarming songs? Any young at heart or the romantics will find it hard to resist a drool over Elvis Presley's renditions of his loved songs - on CD, radio, or other media - that endear him to millions through the years.

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Frank Sinatra, The Voice

December 13th 2006 23:19
Francis Albert Sinatra (b. December 12, 1915 – d. May 14, 1998) was an American singer and Academy Award-winning actor considered one of the finest male popular song vocalists of all time. Renowned for his impeccable phrasing and timing, critics place him alongside such artists as Bing Crosby, Elvis Presley, Michael Jackson and The Beatles as one of the most important, popular and influential musical figures of the 20th century. He has sold over 250 million records worldwide.

Sinatra had a larger-than-life presence in the public eye. Over a seven-decade career in show business, he became an American icon. His sometimes swaggering attitude was perhaps best embodied by his signature songs "My Way", and "New York, New York", and more generally by his frequently gutsy cinematic performances. He also garnered considerable attention due to his alleged connections with the Mafia.

So many articles, off- and online, have been written about his love and marriage, and his alleged involvements with organized crimes.

Frank Sinatra won ten Grammy Awards during his career, including Album of the Year for 'Come Dance With Me' in 1959, 'September of My Years' in 1965, and 'A Man and His Music' in 1966, and Record of the Year for 'Strangers in the Night' in 1966. The Grammy Awards only began in 1958, after two peaks of Sinatra's recording career had already happened.

In addition, Sinatra was named the Down Beat readers' poll Male Singer of the Year sixteen times between 1941 and 1966 and the Personality of the Year six times between 1954 and 1959. He was also named the Down Beat critics' poll Male Singer of the Year twice, in 1955 and 1957; the Playboy Jazz All-Star Poll Male Vocalist of the Year seven times between 1957 and 1963.

Sinatra won his first Academy Award in 1945 for the short film The House I Live In, a film promoting racial tolerance, and his second as the Best Supporting Actor in From Here to Eternity. His performance in The Man with the Golden Arm garnered Sinatra his only Best Actor nomination. In 1971 Sinatra accepted the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award for a “lifetime of public philanthropy”.

On May 23, 1985, President Ronald Reagan awarded Sinatra the Presidential Medal of Freedom; in 1995, Sinatra was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal; in 2001 BBC Radio 2 named Sinatra as the "Greatest Voice of the Twentieth Century". Sinatra was inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame in 1980.

Stephen Holden wrote for the 1983 Rolling Stone Record Guide:

Frank Sinatra's voice is pop music history. Like Presley and Dylan—the only other white male American singers since 1940 whose popularity, influence, and mythic force have been comparable—Sinatra will last indefinitely. He virtually invented modern pop song phrasing..."

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William "Will" Rogers (November 4, 1879 – August 15, 1935) was an American comedian, humorist, social commentator, vaudeville performer, and actor. He was ex-Ziegfeld Follies with terrific crackerbarrel philosophy.

In his time, Rogers had an enormous place in the US and the Americans. He was its most widely read newspaper columnist, between his daily "Will Rogers Says" telegrams and his weekly column; his Sunday night half-hour radio show was the nation's most-listened-to weekly broadcast. He had also been the nation's Number-Two movie 'Box Office Draw' in 1933 (behind Marie Dressler) and Number-One in 1934, ranking 2nd at the time of his death for 1935 only to Shirley Temple


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A friend recently finalized what she has been interested in doing the recent years. She has just created her family tree including five or perhaps even up to six generations. Quite a feat. I'm sure the tree will keep growing.

An interest in personal past is encouraging to do. With the advent of mobility, families are often physically separated across the miles. The Family Tree is a way of being a part of each other for always, especially with big families


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Earn Extra Cash as a Computer Tutor

October 30th 2006 04:08
Recently, I found out from an ex-colleague who retired two years ago that he started a small business to teach older or senior citizens how to go online, know how to use email, and even do some online searching.

This is a good way for grandparents and parents to keep in touch with their children, grandkids, and other family members. Often, this older people are keen to use the computer but they don't know how. Perhaps the best to target are communities or local organizations


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I've been seeing this job opportunity of being a medical transcriptionist, either working from home or as a part-time job.

A medical transcriptionist is a person who performs medical transcription. It should not be mistaken for the term medical transcriber which may also refer to an electronic equipment used to perform medical transcription


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Recent Comments

Comment by Tel
on James Dean, Rebel without a Cause

February 19th 2007 03:06
;O))) LOL. and more...
Can't you see I'm trying to contain my chuckles?
You're hilarious mon ami. ;>

T

Comment by Tel
on James Dean, Rebel without a Cause

February 13th 2007 05:53
That you mentioned it dear pal, I actually thought of you, *grin*, when I was writing James Dean. And since I've always and always loved the Golden Years of Hollywood, I've watched "Rebel Without a Cause", "Giant", and yes, "East of Eden", lots of times. Terrific acting. I remember an Indonesian friend of mine, she buys all things James Dean. ;>

Btw, last Sunday, I watched on TV Lassie's "Coming Home" starring the once child star Liz Taylor. Endearing. I didn't intend to watch but switched on. I always recognize that voice of Liz Taylor! I just love Hollywood's golden years and beyond.

Great to hear from you W.

T

Comment by Tel
on Salvador Dali - the art you've been waiting for.

February 11th 2007 11:08
Thanks Katy. I'm glad you love Charles Dickens and Oliver! Going back to my site now. ;>

Tel

Comment by Tel
on Salvador Dali - the art you've been waiting for.

February 11th 2007 00:06
Like the wondering butterfly who wants to have a go at life itself, I hope son will be back soon to his caring Mumma...

Love your mention of butterfly Katy. I love butterflies.

Stayed up late posting my feature of Charles Dickens, and kept thinking of my favourite musical Oliver! adapted from Dickens' Oliver Twist.

Enjoy your weekend.

Tel

Comment by Tel
on Dymocks - 100 Books You've Never Read

February 8th 2007 11:38
I also find it odd why Dymocks should say, "...never read" when many are either classics or popular book sellers.


Comment by Tel
on The Pursuit of Happyness

February 7th 2007 14:44
Heartwarming in it's simplicity. I love the bonding between the father and the lovable son, don't you think so?


Comment by Tel
on Challenging images for you to name

February 6th 2007 14:01
Will visit when I can Katy...

'Night!

Tel

Comment by Tel
on The Oscar - Actress Stats

February 6th 2007 13:25
Although I've always admired and believed in Meryl Streep's acting competence, (she's one of my alltime favourites) this time I'd REALLY really love for Helen Mirren to win the Oscar. What an awesome, exemplary role she portrayed as Queen Elizabeth II. C'est magnifique!

Cheers!
Tel

Comment by Tel
on Challenging images for you to name

February 6th 2007 11:01
Hi Katy,

You're simply amazing. Very creative. I wish I have the luxury to stay longer here but I'm struggling updating all my personal blogs. ;>

Keep the terrific brilliance up dear!

TEL

Comment by Tel
on Job opportunity as Medical Transcriptionist

February 5th 2007 22:11
I know one pursuing this. She's doing very well.