Legendary fantasy artist Frank Frazetta in a 2006 photo taken at the grand opening of Geppi’s Entertainment Museum in Baltimore. Photo copyright Catherine Saunders-Watson.
FORT MYERS, Fla. — The adult children of Frank Frazetta are feuding again over control of the iconic fantasy artist’s body of work.
The family announced in April that they had settled a dispute over an estate estimated to be worth tens of millions of dollars. Frazetta died a month later in Florida at the age of 82.
But son Frank Frazetta Jr. filed a lawsuit in Fort Myers, Fla., on Wednesday accusing his brother and two sisters of violating the terms of the agreement by failing to consult him on business decisions and not paying him what he is owed from the trust.
Frazetta Sr. was renowned for his sci-fi and fantasy art, creating covers and illustrations for more than 150 books and comic books as well as album covers, movie posters and original paintings.
Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) – Kansas Aviation Museum says a 15-acre parcel and four buildings donated to it by Spirit AeroSystems will help it focus on restoring more historic planes.
The property was the home of the Boeing Radar and Antennae range from the late 1940s through the mid-1980s.
Plans call for converting three of the buildings into an Aviation Restoration Facility to restore planes important to Wichita and Kansas aviation heritage. The museum also plans to work with local institutions of higher education and offer internships to train future professionals about airplane restoration
The museum says the donation will benefit its mission of preserving the state’s aviation heritage and educating the world on the past, present and future of flight.
Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
AP-CS-12-16-10 0501EST
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Exterior view of the Currier Museum of Art in Manchester, N.H. In the foreground is the sculpture title ‘Origins,’ by Mark di Suvero. June 2, 2008 photo taken by Struthious Bandersnatch. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) – A New Hampshire security officer who helped nab a man charged with mugging a 91-year-old woman by videotaping the assault is being honored for his actions.
Police say Nicholas Laliberte was working at the Currier Museum of Art Dec. 7 when he used a security camera to follow a man who parked illegally behind the museum.
Several minutes later the man is seen on video stealing a purse from an elderly woman, knocking the woman and a friend to the ground.
The New Hampshire Union Leader says Laliberte’s actions helped capture a dangerous person.
Police subsequently arrested 22-year-old Joseph Audet Jr. of Manchester for assaulting the women.
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Information from: New Hampshire Union Leader, http://www.unionleader.com
Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
AP-ES-12-16-10 0751EST
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SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) – Online auction hub eBay Inc. said Wednesday that it had acquired Critical Path Software, a mobile application developer that has helped develop iPhone apps for eBay, StubHub, eBay Classifieds and Shopping.com.
Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
EBay said Critical Path would play an integral role in making faster improvements for eBay’s mobile platforms worldwide.
“Acquiring an app developer like Critical Path is a natural progression for a company like eBay,” remarked LiveAuctioneers.com CEO Julian R. Ellison, whose company was formerly in a marketing partnership with eBay and now has its own app-development subsidiary. “All savvy businesses are moving aggressively onto the mobile platform. People want portable information and Internet access, and the mobile phone is the most logical delivery method.”
Auction Central News International contributed to this report. Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
JERUSALEM (AP) – Israel’s antiquities authority says a storm that raked over part of an archaeological dig this week has exposed a 1,700-year-old statue.
The headless marble statue of a woman was found buried in the sand by a resident walking near the shore in the southern city of Ashkelon. The mosaic floor of what is believed to have been a Roman bathhouse was also found.
High waves crashing onto the shore during the storm caused part of the site to collapse.
Archaeologist Yigal Israel said Tuesday the statue and other pieces were discovered thanks to the storm, but that other artifacts may have been washed into the sea.
The Israel Antiquities Authority says the strong winds and torrential rain that pummeled the Mideast this week damaged other archaeological sites along Israel’s coast.
Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
AP-ES-12-14-10 1500EST
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Caption: Stephen A. Geppi. Image courtesy of Gemstone Publishing.
BALTIMORE – Steve Geppi, Gemstone Publishing President and CEO, publisher of Baltimore magazine and President and CEO of Diamond Comic Distributors, will receive the 2011 NephCure Public Service Award at the Countdown To A Cure banquet at Baltimore’s Pier 5 hotel on Thursday, January 20, 2011.
Geppi will be honored for his commitment to improving the lives of others, being active in many community activities and helping further the mission of the NephCure Foundation, the only organization committed solely to finding the cause and cure for kidney diseases, FSGS (Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis) and Nephrotic syndrome.
Former Baltimore Orioles vice president Jim Duquette (whose daughter, Lindsey, suffers from FSGS) is the event’s chairman.
Among those presently scheduled to appear at the function are Hall of Famers Jim Palmer and Frank Robinson, with Orioles announcers Fred Manfra and Tom Davis as emcees.
This is the first time Countdown To A Cure has been held in Baltimore. To date it has raised more than $2 million nationwide.
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LOS ANGELES (AP) – Blake Edwards, the director and writer known for clever dialogue, poignance and occasional belly-laugh sight gags in Breakfast at Tiffany’s, 10 and the Pink Panther farces, is dead at age 88.
Edwards died from complications of pneumonia late Wednesday at St. John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, said publicist Gene Schwam. Blake’s wife, Julie Andrews, and other family members were at his side. He had been hospitalized for about two weeks.
“He was the most unique man I have ever known-and he was my mate,” Andrews said in a statement Thursday. “He will be missed beyond words, and will forever be in my heart.”
Edwards had knee problems, had undergone unsuccessful procedures and was “pretty much confined to a wheelchair for the last year-and-a-half or two,” Schwam said. That may have contributed to his condition, he added.
At the time of his death, Edwards was working on two Broadway musicals, one based on the Pink Panther movies. The other, Big Rosemary, was to be an original comedy set during Prohibition, Schwam said.
“His heart was as big as his talent. He was an Academy Award winner in all respects,” said Schwam, who knew him for 40 years.
A third-generation filmmaker, Edwards was praised for evoking classic performances from Jack Lemmon, Audrey Hepburn, Peter Sellers, Dudley Moore, Lee Remick and Andrews, his wife of 42 years.
Actor Robert Wagner credits Edwards with giving him some of the greatest opportunities of his career.
“There won’t be anybody passing by like him again. He was a genius,” Wagner said Thursday. “Personally, we were so very close friends and he was so kind to me throughout my entire life.”
Edwards directed and often wrote a wide variety of movies including Days of Wine and Roses, a harrowing story of alcoholism; The Great Race, a comedy-adventure that starred Lemmon, Tony Curtis and Natalie Wood; and Victor/Victoria, his gender-bender musical comedy with Andrews.
He was also known for an independent spirit that brought clashes with studio bosses. He vented his disdain for the Hollywood system in his 1981 black comedy, S.O.B.
“I was certainly getting back at some of the producers of my life,” he once remarked, “although I was a good deal less scathing than I could have been. The only way I got to make it was because of the huge success of 10, and even then they tried to sabotage it.”
Because many of his films were studded with farcical situations, some reviewers criticized his work.
However, Richard Schickel wrote in Time magazine: “When director Edwards is at his best, there is something bracing, and in these days, unique about his comedy. … He really wants to save the world by showing how stupid some of its creatures can be.”
Steve Martin expressed his thoughts on Twitter, writing, “Blake Edwards was one of the people who made me love comedy. Sorry to hear of his passing.”
Although many of Edwards’ films were solid hits, he was nominated for Academy Awards only twice, in 1982 for writing the adapted screenplay of Victor/Victoria and in 1983 for co-writing The Man Who Loved Women. Lemmon and Remick won Oscar nominations in 1962 for Days of Wine and Roses, and Hepburn was nominated for Breakfast at Tiffany’s in 1961.
The motion picture academy selected Edwards to receive a lifetime achievement award in 2004 for “his writing, directing and producing an extraordinary body of work for the screen.”
When he collected the award, he jokingly referred to his wife: “My mother thanks you, my father thanks you, and the beautiful English broad with the incomparable soprano and promiscuous vocabulary thanks you.”
Edwards had entered television in 1958, creating Peter Gunn, which established a new style of hard-edged detective series. The tone was set by Henry Mancini’s pulsating theme music. Starring Craig Stevens, the series ran until 1961 and resulted in a 1967 feature movie Gunn.
“Peter Gunn” marked the beginning of a fruitful collaboration between Edwards and Mancini, who composed melodic scores and songs for most of Edwards’ films. Mancini won Academy Awards for the score of Breakfast at Tiffany’s and the song Moon River, the title song of Days of Wine and Roses and the score of Victor/Victoria.
The Edwards family history extended virtually the entire length of American motion pictures. J. Gordon Edwards was a pioneering director of silent films, including more than 20 with the exotic vamp Theda Bara. His son, Jack McEdwards (the family name), became a top assistant director and production manager in Hollywood.
William Blake McEdwards was born July 26, 1922, in Tulsa, Okla. The family moved to Hollywood three years later, and the boy grew up on his father’s movie sets.
Edwards began in films as an actor, playing small roles in such movies as A Guy Named Joe and Ten Gentlemen From West Point. After 18 months in the Coast Guard in World War II, he returned to acting but soon realized he lacked the talent. With John Champion, he wrote a Western, Panhandle, which he produced and acted in for the quickie studio, Monogram. He followed with Stampede.
In 1947, Edwards turned to radio and created the hard-boiled Richard Diamond, Private Detective; it was converted to television in 1957, starring David Janssen with Mary Tyler Moore as his secretary, whose face is never seen on-screen.
Tiring of the TV grind, Edwards returned to films and directed his first feature, Bring Your Smile Along. After a few more B movies which he usually co-wrote, he made the big time in 1958 with The Perfect Furlough, starring Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh, and Operation Petticoat with Cary Grant and Curtis.
Breakfast at Tiffany’s in 1961 established Edwards as a stylish director who could combine comedy with bittersweet romance. His next two films proved his versatility: the suspenseful Experiment in Terror (1962) and Days of Wine and Roses (1963), the story of a couple’s alcoholism, with Lemmon in his first dramatic role.
The Great Race, about an auto race in the early 1900s, marked Edwards’ first attempt at a big-budget spectacle. He spent Warner Bros.’ money lavishly, raising the ire of studio boss Jack Warner. The 1965 release proved a modest success.
Edwards’ disdain for the studios reached a peak in the 1970 Darling Lili, a World War I romance starring his new wife, Andrews, and Rock Hudson. The long, expensive Paris location infuriated the Paramount bosses. The movie flopped, continuing Andrews’ decline from her position as Hollywood’s No. 1 star.
For a decade, Edwards’ only hits were Pink Panther sequels. Then came 10, which he also produced and wrote. The sex comedy became a box-office winner, creating a new star in Bo Derek and restoring the director’s reputation. He scored again in 1982 with Victor/Victoria, with Andrews playing a woman who poses as a (male) female impersonator. His later films became more personal, particularly the 1986 That’s Life, which he wrote with his psychiatrist.
After Sellers’ death in 1980, Edwards attempted to keep the Pink Panther franchise alive. He wrote and directed Curse of the Pink Panther in 1983 and Son of the Pink Panther in 1993 but both were failed efforts.
A 2006 remake of the original with Steve Martin as Clouseau was modestly successful; its 2009 follow up was less so. Both had new directors, with Edwards credited as a writer.
He continued to supervise Andrews’ career, which included a short-lived television series and her 1996 return to Broadway in a $8.5 million version of Victor/Victoria. Edwards directed the show, which drew mixed reviews. When Andrews was the only one connected with the musical to be nominated for a Tony, she announced to a matinee audience that she was declining the nomination because her co-workers had been snubbed.
Andrews and Edwards married in 1968. She had a daughter, Emma, from her marriage to Broadway designer Tony Walton. Edwards had a daughter, Jennifer, and a son, Geoffrey, from his marriage to Patricia Edwards. He and Andrews adopted two Vietnamese children, Amy and Jo.
A longtime painter, Edwards began sculpting in mid-life, and his bronze works in the style of Henry Moore drew critical praise in shows in Los Angeles and Bucks County, Pa.
Edwards is survived by his wife, five children, seven grandchildren, and two great grandchildren. His family says a private memorial is planned and a public memorial will be scheduled in the new year.
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Associated Press writers Bob Thomas and Sandy Cohen contributed to this story.
Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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From The Party, starring Peter Sellers and directed by Blake Edwards
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Re-creation of a Dimetrodon at sunrise, by Dmitry Bogdanov. Licensed under the Creative commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.
HOUSTON (AP) – The bones lie everywhere, fragments of 300 million-year-old ribs and vertebrae, spread across the hillsides, amid cactus, mesquite and red earth.
They sat on the surface, next to pieces of clay and caliche rock, when paleontologists and volunteers began chiseling, scratching and brushing their way, millimeter by millimeter, toward the discovery awaiting them below.
The group, from the Houston Museum of Natural Science, came to the Craddock Ranch in North Texas four years ago, hoping the Baylor County site’s reputation for fossils would prove worthwhile.
Crew members worked through shards of bone 200 million years older than such creatures as Tyrannosaurus Rex and Triceratops.
Then they found it: First, pieces of skull and neck; then, early this month, a spinal cord and ribs. The near-complete skeleton was a Dimetrodon, a 287-million-year-old primitive reptile with a large, sail-like fin on its back.
As the team continued brushing and scraping through red clay last week, it uncovered clues into how some of the world’s earliest land animals lived, died and then evolved, developing into dinosaurs, birds and mammals.
Working at the dig site on Sunday near the town of Seymour, the crew uncovered pieces of primitive creatures that were likely part of the diet and environment surrounding Dimetrodons.
The preserved ecosystem will be part of an exhibit that will give the 2.5 million annual visitors to the Houston Museum of Natural Science a window into a previously unknown and inconceivably distant time. The discoveries will also bring a large array of distinctly Texan fossils to a museum that has none, even though others worldwide prominently display bones from the Lone Star State. It will be featured in a new 30,000-square-foot paleontology hall set to open in 2012, part of the museum’s $80 million expansion.
“Our purpose, of course, No. 1 is to get a kid-friendly display,” said Robert Bakker, visiting curator of paleontology for the museum and a leading expert in the field. “We’re well on our way, but there is new data. Much new data.”
The crew continued dissecting the dig site Sunday, meticulously sifting through rocks and bone fragments. Volunteers chipped and scraped away ancient clay using dentist tools, needles and screw drivers. They then swept aside dust with paintbrushes and makeup brushes, often revealing glimpses of large bones that had been underground for hundreds of millions of years.
Some parts of the Dimetro-don, an 11-foot specimen that sported a 4-foot-long fin and likely weighed around 300 pounds, and whose name, “Wet Willi,” was influenced by its discovery in a drainage ditch, were missing, but crew members are confident they will find more fossils.
“You haven’t lost anything until you stop looking,” said Johnny Castillo, a volunteer from Houston who is helping with the dig. “We never stop looking.”
That same enthusiasm for fossils often leads paleontologists into areas far from civilization, but the museum’s current dig has found the experts in cattle country, where a search for extinct creatures doesn’t excite everyone.
The crew’s work has been a kind of novelty for residents of Seymour, a town in Baylor County with two traffic signals and about 2,600 people. Bakker, a scientist with long hair and a bushy white beard, has become a familiar face among the cattle herders and tractor owners here.
He is a regular at The New Maverick Cafe, a popular restaurant, where he eats breakfast with his crew each day, wearing his white cowboy hat and frequently quoting The Simpsons as he explains the team’s mission to residents and draws pictures of prehistoric creatures that now hang on the cafe’s walls.
“They’re an unusual, different kind of group,” said Joe Dickson, a retired county judge who eats breakfast with a group of friends at the cafe each morning. “Not anyone around here wants to lay on the ground and dig in the dirt with their fingers.”
The digging team sets up on cots overnight in an old tractor factory owned by Nancy Markham, who converted the second floor of the 110-year-old building into her home. In an automated wheelchair, the 71-year-old shuttles between overloaded bookshelves and recycled furniture in her expansive unit to serve the team dinner each night.
Bakker and David Temple, the museum’s associate curator of paleontology, have tried to pitch the Dimetrodon as the replacement mascot for the Seymour High School Panthers, suggesting they should be called the “Fighting Fin-backs.” It hasn’t caught on.
Some in the town haven’t noticed their presence, continuing about their quail hunting or weekly church meetings unaware of the reason for the group of scientists visiting Seymour.
Others were amused “because they’re a bunch of kids from Harvard with some hicks in here,” said Larry McDorman, Seymour High’s retired football coach, referring to the digging crew’s morning breakfasts alongside locals at the cafe.
But residents visiting the dig site on Sunday were awestruck. And more digging for bones could bring about additional discoveries that could put Seymour on the map, said Bakker, who plans to place a replica of “Wet Willi” in the town.
With a wealth of Dimetrodon bone fragments littering the “bone bed,” a 270-yard-long oval-shaped area that was likely a body of water, the crew will assemble at least three other composite skeletons of the creatures to add to a display at the museum.
The dig has turned up an array of fossils, including primitive amphibians and sharks, as well as vomit and droppings 280 million years old.
The so-called Texas red beds are rich with fossils from the Permian Period, which began more than 300 million years ago, offering more remains than the rest of the world combined, Bakker said.
That leaves great potential for new discoveries from the dig, possibly including eggs that have so far eluded paleontologists, he said.
The museum’s only current Permian display is a 50-foot-long acrylic mural.
“We’re looking for the next thing, whatever the next thing is,” Bakker said.
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Information from: Houston Chronicle, http://www.houstonchronicle.com
Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Close-up view of the front and exposed engine of a 1930 Pierce-Arrow five-passenger sedan, with its Art Deco archer hood ornament intact. The car was sold for $80,000 on the hammer by RM Auctions on March 8, 2008. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and RM Auctions.
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. (AP) – That wasn’t just any ordinary hood ornament that got swiped from a car at an upstate New York museum.
Authorities say a hood ornament valued at up to $3,000 was stolen from a 1931 Pierce-Arrow displayed at the Saratoga Springs Automobile Museum in Saratoga Spa State Park. New York State Park Police are investigating.
State parks officials say the ornament was reported missing in early November.
The silver ornament depicts a kneeling archer.
Museum officials say the car from which the ornament was taken was donated by a museum trustee in 2004 and is valued at more than $100,000.
Pierce-Arrows were manufactured in Buffalo from 1903 to 1938.
Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
AP-ES-12-15-10 0843EST
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Jean Leon Gerome Ferris (1863-1930), ‘Capture of the Pirate, Blackbeard, 1718,’ a 1920 painting depicting the battle between Blackbeard the Pirate and Lietenant Maynard in Ocracoke Bay.
GREENVILLE, N.C. (AP) – A sword handle made of antler and weights used to verify the value of silver coins are among the most recent artifacts recovered from Blackbeard’s ship.
Researchers unveiled the artifacts at the Queen Anne’s Revenge Conservation Lab at East Carolina University in Greenville on Tuesday.
Among the 122 artifacts recovered this fall were parts of swords, weights and glass panes from the window of the captain’s cabin.
Some of the items will be on display at the state Maritime Museum in Beaufort in the exhibition that opened today, Dec. 18.
The North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources is overseeing research of the shipwreck and says about half of the Queen Anne’s Revenge has been recovered so far.
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AP-ES-12-14-10 1307EST
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