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Kannada cinema's comedy giant ‘Mysore’ Srikantayya Umesh dies at age 80 after battle with cancer; fans pay tributes
Bollywood

Kannada cinema’s comedy giant ‘Mysore’ Srikantayya Umesh dies at age 80 after battle with cancer; fans pay tributes

by jummy84 November 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Veteran Kannada actor ‘Mysore’ Srikantayya Umesh died on Sunday in Bengaluru at the age of 80. The comedy giant, who boasted of a six-decade-long career, had been suffering from cancer for a while now and died after prolonged illness and hospitalisation. Fans took to social media to pay tribute.

Veteran Kannada actor and comedian MS Umesh died in Bengaluru on Sunday.

Umesh dies at age 80

Umesh died on Sunday after he was recently admitted to the hospital, family sources confirmed to PTI. He had been suffering from cancer for a while and breathed his last at the hospital.

As soon as the news broke, fans mourned his death on social media. “M.S. Umesh, the giant of the comedy world in Kannada cinema, has left us all behind. M.S. Umesh, who stepped into the world of colours as the first hero of children’s films, acted in 350 films during his successful artistic life spanning 6 decades,” wrote one.

A fan reminisced, “His character in Venkata in Sankata movie was gem. Om Shanti Umesh sir.” Another thanked him for entertaining the audience all these years, writing, “Never deceiving art, breathing life into the roles given to him, making us laugh and smile, Umesh anna, who shone in those days, has bid goodbye to life… His acting will always remain alive.”

JD(S) leader and Union Minister HD Kumaraswamy wrote, “Umesh would make audiences float in a sea of laughter through his fresh humour.”

MS Umesh’s legacy

‘Mysore’ Srikantayya Umesh, popularly known as MS Umesh or simply Umesh, first played the lead in Makkala Rajya (1960) after featuring in several stage shows as a child actor. Born on 24 April 1945 in Mysuru, he was only four when he played a role in Master K Hirannaiah’s theatre group. Despite his silver screen debut, Umesh faced a lull in his career and had to return to the theatre until Katha Sangama (1977).

His portrayal as Thimmarayi in the Munithaayi episode featuring Rajinikanth and Aarathi fetched him multiple laurels, and there was no looking back for him after that. Since then, he gained recognition through films like Nagara Hole (1978), Apoorva Sangama (1984), Shruthi Seridaaga (1987), Neenu Nakkare Haalu Sakkare (1993), and Venkata in Sankata (2007).

Throughout his career, Umesh worked with all the greats, including Rajkumar, Sivaji Ganesan, Vishnu Vardhan, Ambareesh, Srinath, Shankar Nag, Ananth Nag, Arvind Ramesh, B Saroja Devi, and Bharathi.

November 30, 2025 0 comments
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Tommy's Mom Dies & Demi Moore Takes Control
TV & Streaming

Tommy’s Mom Dies & Demi Moore Takes Control

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

SPOILER ALERT: This post contains spoilers from Season 2, Episode 1 of “Landman,” “Death and a Sunset,” which premiered Sunday, Nov. 16, on Paramount+.

Howdy, “Landman” fans! I’m Bill, and I’m the city slicker who’s going to head to Texas with you to break down new episodes of this lovable Billy Bob Thornton drama. As Season 2 begins, the characters are facing many changes. Among them, Monty Miller (Jon Hamm) is dead and his wife Cami (Demi Moore) is taking over M-Tex; cartel boss Jimenez (Alex Meraz) was killed by his boss Gallino (Andy Garcia); Cooper (Jacob Lofland) is trying to make his scandalous relationship with Ariana (Paulina Chavez) work as he heads off on his own to try to be an oil tycoon; and Tommy (Thornton) is promoted to have even more responsibilities at M-Tex after Monty’s death. It’s a stressful time, so let’s dive right in.

  • Between Tommy’s breakfast conspiracy lecture and mainlining coffee and cigarettes before the sun’s up, I’m worried about him having a heart attack, too!
  • There’s good music already this season — a Turnpike Troubadours needle drop not even five minutes in? Hell yeah!
  • “The mosquitoes are so big, they can fuck a turkey flat-footed.” Is it possible that’s not a folksy Texas expression but rather a horrifying reality in the South?
  • “It’s a young woman’s game here — no offense.” I’m sorry, Demi Moore made “The Substance” — you must treat her with respect or prepare to be eaten alive.
  • Cami’s speech rules, and is a great reminder of the take-no-prisoners attitude that makes this show special. “The only difference between me and Monty is I’m meaner. Test me and you’ll find out how much.” Fuck yeah!
  • How is Cooper’s first drill this successful? Another shoe has to drop on this get-rich-quick operation, right?
  • Wow, Ariana couldn’t be less excited about being an overnight multimillionaire. Why is she so cagey?
  • Angela (Ali Larter) expressing her love of grey sweatpants to her daughter, Ainsley (Michelle Randolph), is pretty gross! Will we see Tommy wearing them in a future episode?
  • Ainsley and this college counselor couldn’t be less of a fit — give me a bottle episode with these two on a road trip!
  • Shout out to Randolph, who walks a tricky line during this scene between being way over her head and disarmingly sweet. It’s hard to empathize with someone who spends the bulk of their admittance meeting babbling on about the importance of hot people having kids together, but she makes it work.
  • Oof, what a sad introduction to T.L. (Sam Elliott). Is it too soon to cry this season?
  • T.L.’s harsh rebuttal of reconnecting with his wife after he passes: “If I do, that means I’m in hell too.” Woof, we’ve got some trauma to explore soon.
  • The way the Norris women act around Cooper, you can practically smell him through the television.
  • It’s funny how quickly everyone scatters when Angela starts throwing plates during her tantrum. Bonus points to those around the table who escaped with their drinks and food in hand.
  • Tommy and Angela’s rapid, NC-17 make-up after the dinner fight proves that those two loonies are meant for each other.
  • There’s something about Thornton’s cigarette smoking that makes the ugly habit look so appealing, right?
  • Love that final shot of the sunset, mirroring Tommy to who we now know is his father, T.L., as they both search for meaning in the family matriarch’s death.

Until next week, feel free to discuss your own conspiracy theories and far-fetched easy money schemes in the comments below.

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Todd Snider, influential alt-country singer-songwriter, dies aged 59
Music

Todd Snider, influential alt-country singer-songwriter, dies aged 59

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Todd Snider, the influential alt-country singer-songwriter behind hits such as ‘Alright Guy’, has died at the age of 59.

The news was confirmed today (November 15) by a statement on Snider’s social media accounts. No cause of death has been given, but his family have said he had recently been hospitalised with pneumonia.

“Aimless, Inc. Headquarters is heartbroken to share that our Founder, our Folk Hero, our Poet of the World, our Vice President of the Abrupt Change Dept., the Storyteller, our beloved Todd Daniel Snider has departed this world,” read the message on Instagram.

“Where do we find the words for the one who always had the right words, who knew how to distill everything down to its essence with words and song while delivering the most devastating, hilarious, and impactful turn of phrases?”

It continued: “He relayed so much tenderness and sensitivity through his songs, and showed many of us how to look at the world through a different lens. He got up every morning and started writing, always working towards finding his place among the songwriting giants that sat on his record shelves, those same giants who let him into their lives and took him under their wings, who he studied relentlessly. Guy Clark, John Prine, Kris Kristofferson, Jerry Jeff Walker.”

Snider had recently cancelled the remainder of a US tour due to “severe injuries as the victim of a violent assault outside of his hotel” in Salt Lake City.

Snider was born in Portland, Oregon and relocated to Texas in the 1980s, where he began his music career. He later became associated with the Nashville alt-country scene, with his 2004 album ‘East Nashville Skyline’ particularly well remembered.

He was renowned for his witty, poignant lyrical style, deeply influenced by the likes of John Prine, Guy Clark and Kris Kristofferson, and his work helped to define the modern sound of Americana.

Among those to pay tribute to Snider were Jason Isbell, who wrote on Threads: “Freak flags at half-staff for the Storyteller and all the songs he still had left to write. I sure did love him.”

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Alt-Country Singer-Songwriter Dies at 59
Music

Alt-Country Singer-Songwriter Dies at 59

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Todd Snider, a singer whose thoughtfully freewheeling tunes and cosmic-stoner songwriting made him a beloved figure in American roots music, has died. He was 59.

His record label said Saturday (Nov. 15) in a statement posted to his social media accounts that Snider died Friday.

“Where do we find the words for the one who always had the right words, who knew how to distill everything down to its essence with words and song while delivering the most devastating, hilarious, and impactful turn of phrases?” the statement read. “Always creating rhyme and meter that immediately felt like an old friend or a favorite blanket. Someone who could almost always find the humor in this crazy ride on Planet Earth.”

Snider’s family and friends had said in a Friday statement that he had been diagnosed with pneumonia at a hospital in Hendersonville, Tennessee, and that his situation had since grown more complicated and he was transferred elsewhere. The diagnosis came on the heels of the cancellation of a tour after Snider had been the victim of a violent assault in the Salt Lake City area, according to a Nov. 3 statement from his management team.

But Salt Lake City police later arrested Snider himself when he at first refused to leave a hospital and later returned and threatened staffers, the Salt Lake Tribune reported.

The scrapped tour was in support of his most recent album, High, Lonesome and Then Some, which released in October. Snider combined elements of folk, rock and country in a three-decade career. In reviews of his recent albums, The Associated Press called him a “singer-songwriter with the persona of a fried folkie” and a “stoner troubadour and cosmic comic.”

He modeled himself on — and at times met and was mentored by — artists like Kris Kristofferson, Guy Clark and John Prine. His songs were recorded by artists including Jerry Jeff Walker, Billy Joe Shaver and Tom Jones. And he co-wrote a song with Loretta Lynn that appeared on her 2016 album, Full Circle.

“He relayed so much tenderness and sensitivity through his songs, and showed many of us how to look at the world through a different lens,” the Saturday statement from his label read. “He got up every morning and started writing, always working towards finding his place among the songwriting giants that sat on his record shelves, those same giants who let him into their lives and took him under their wings, who he studied relentlessly.”

Snider would do his best-known and most acclaimed work for Prine’s independent label Oh Boy in the early 2000s. It included the albums New Connection, Near Truths and Hotel Rooms and East Nashville Skyline, a 2004 collection that’s considered by many to be his best.

Those albums yielded his best known songs, “I Can’t Complain,” “Beer Run” and “Alright Guy.”

Snider was born and raised in Oregon before settling and making his musical chops in San Marcos, Texas. He eventually made his way to Nashville, and was dubbed by some the unofficial “mayor of East Nashville,” assuming the title from a friend memorialized thusly in his “Train Song.” In 2021, Snider said a tornado that ripped through the neighborhood home to a vibrant arts scene severely damaged his house.

Snider had an early fan in Jimmy Buffett, who signed the young artist to his record label, Margaritaville, which released his first two albums, 1994’s Songs for the Daily Planet and 1996’s Step Right Up.

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Living In A Box singer Richard Darbyshire dies aged 65 as former bandmates pay tribute
Music

Living In A Box singer Richard Darbyshire dies aged 65 as former bandmates pay tribute

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Richard Darbyshire, the former vocalist of 1980s pop trio Living In A Box, has died aged 65.

Darbyshire joined the group in 1985 after visiting the same Sheffield recording studio as his future bandmates, Anthony ‘Tich’ Critchlow and Marcus Vere. They were recording the song of the same name, which became one of their biggest hits, and invited him to record the vocals – they then officially became a trio.

His family confirmed to the BBC that he died on Monday (November 10), and said, “We are all very sad but his memory and songs will live on.”

His former bandmates also paid tribute to the “incredible talent,” calling him a “pure craftsman and a master of his art.” They said: “Richard, wherever you are, Tich and I will miss you dearly. The laughs we had, the wildcat ride we went on, will never be forgotten.”

No cause of death has been given.

Darbyshire was born on March 8, 1960 in Stockport, growing up in Manchester. When he was 13, he moved to Japan with his parents and attended an American boarding school.

Before joining Living In A Box, he studied English Literature at Oxford University and was in the Manchester band Zu Zu Sharks alongside Adam And The Ants bassist Gary Tibbs.

Two years after joining Living In A Box in 1985, they released the song of the same name as their debut single and it peaked at Number Five in the UK, also becoming their only single to break into the Top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 in the US. Their debut album, also ‘Living In A Box’, got to Number 25 in the UK.

‘Room In Your Heart’, from their second album ‘Gatecrashing’, also got to Number Five in the UK charts, and he said in 2014 that he was proud of the track because it gave him a rare opportunity to play guitar. Another single from the album, ‘Blow The House Down’, featured guitar from Queen’s Sir Brian May.

Darbyshire left the band in 1989 due to artistic differences and changes to their record label, and they broke up in 1990 before reforming in 2016 with another singer, Kenny Thomas. In 2022, they announced another new vocalist, Bryan Chambers.

Darbyshire, meanwhile, embarked on a solo career and released his debut solo album, ‘How Many Angels’, in 1994. He’s also written songs for artists including Lisa Stansfield, Jennifer Rush and Level 42, and had been holding songwriting workshops in London before his death.

He is survived by his wife, the vocal coach Sonia Jones.

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Oscar-nominated star Sally Kirkland dies aged 84
Celebrity News

Oscar-nominated star Sally Kirkland dies aged 84

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

11 November 2025

Oscar-nominated actress Sally Kirkland has died at the age of 84.

Sally Kirkland has passed away at the age of 84

The Hollywood star’s passing was confirmed by her representative Michael Greene on Tuesday (11.11.25) – just days after it was announced that she’d entered hospice care amid her battle with dementia.

Sally was best known for her role in the 1987 film Anna – which earned her the Oscar nod and a Golden Globe Award – and also had parts in Bruce Almighty, JFK, The Haunted and the original Charlie’s Angels TV series.

It had been revealed earlier this week that she had been diagnosed with dementia last year and was receiving hospice care in Palm Springs, California.

According to a GoFundMe page set up by friends, Kirkland had struggled with “two separate life-threatening conditions”.

A recent update to the page read: “Thank you for all your love and support. Sally is grateful for your kindness and love.

“Sally is in a hospice now and is resting comfortably. Please hold and send the light for Sally.”

The daughter of former Vogue magazine fashion editor Sally Kirkland, she appeared nude in the stage production The 13 Most Beautiful Women during the 1960s before playing Robert Redford’s love interest in the 1973 movie The Sting.

Her portrayal of the titular character in Anna earned her an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress – which saw her up against the likes of Meryl Streep, Glenn Close and Cher.

Sally recalled in 2012: “At the Oscars, there were all these movie stars emerging from their limos, and then there was me. I felt like Cinderella.

“The greatest part was the feeling to be in the same Oscar category of these women that I was a huge fan of – Meryl, Glenn, Holly (Hunter) and Cher, who I used to roller skate with in the ’70s.”

After her awards recognition with Anna, Sally portrayed an outrageous rock star opposite Kevin Costner in Tony Scott’s 1990 movie Revenge and featured in erotic thrillers such as High Stakes and In the Heat of Passion.

Sally was married and divorced twice and taught acting to students such as Sandra Bullock. She was also an ordained minister and practiced yoga.

She once said: “My attitude is always one of sensuality, aggressive enthusiasm and kind of outrageousness in my expression.

“I suppose if I wanted to be the girl next door, I could have. I think America is a little too confused by someone who appears to be sexual and spiritual at the same time.”




November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Diane Ladd, TV and stage actor, dies at 89 - National
Celebrity News

Diane Ladd, TV and stage actor, dies at 89 – National

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Diane Ladd, the three-time Academy Award nominee whose roles ranged from the brash waitress in Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore to the protective mother in Wild at Heart, has died at 89.

Ladd’s death was announced Monday by daughter Laura Dern, who issued a statement saying her mother and occasional co-star had died at her home in Ojai, California, with Dern at her side.

Dern, who called Ladd her “amazing hero” and “profound gift of a mother,” did not immediately cite a cause of death.

“She was the greatest daughter, mother, grandmother, actress, artist and empathetic spirit that only dreams could have seemingly created,” Dern wrote. “We were blessed to have her. She is flying with her angels now.”

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A gifted comic and dramatic performer, Ladd had a long career in television and on stage before breaking through as a film performer in Martin Scorsese’s 1974 release Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore.

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She earned an Oscar nomination for supporting actor for her turn as the acerbic, straight-talking Flo, and went on to appear in dozens of movies over the following decades.

Her many credits included Chinatown, Primary Colors and two other movies for which she received best supporting nods, Wild at Heart and Rambling Rose, both of which co-starred her daughter.

She also continued to work in television, with appearances in ER, Touched by Angel and Alice, the spinoff from Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, among others.

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Through marriage and blood relations, Ladd was tied to the arts. Tennessee Williams was a second cousin and first husband Bruce Dern, Laura’s father, was himself an Academy Award nominee. Ladd and Laura Dern achieved the rare feat of mother-and-daughter nominees for their work in Rambling Rose.

A native of Laurel, Mississippi, Ladd was apparently destined to stand out. In her 2006 memoir, Spiraling Through the School of Life, she remembered being told by her great-grandmother that she would one day in “front of a screen” and would “command” her own audiences.

By the mid-1970s, she had lived out her fate well enough to tell The New York Times that no longer denied herself the right to call herself great.

“Now I don’t say that,” she said. “I can do Shakespeare, Ibsen, English accents, Irish accents, no accent, stand on my head, tap dance, sing, look 17 or look 70.”

&copy 2025 The Canadian Press

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Donna Jean Godchaux, former singer with the Grateful Dead, dies aged 78
Music

Donna Jean Godchaux, former singer with the Grateful Dead, dies aged 78

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Donna Jean Godchaux, who sang with the Grateful Dead throughout the 1970s, has died at the age of 78.

The news was confirmed in a statement shared with Rolling Stone by her representative Dennis McNally, who said that she passed away on Sunday (November 2) at a hospice facility in Nashville after a “lengthy struggle with cancer”.

“She was a sweet and warmly beautiful spirit, and all those who knew her are united in loss,” McNally added. “The family requests privacy at this time of grieving. In the words of Dead lyricist Robert Hunter, ‘May the four winds blow her safely home.’”

Godchaux joined the Dead in 1971 at the same time as her husband Keith, who played keyboards in the band. She sang on a string of seminal records by the psychedelic giants, including ‘Europe ‘72’, ‘Wake Of The Flood’ and ‘Terrapin Station’, as well as many of the band’s famous bootleg live recordings.

Before that, she had a successful career as a session singer at the legendary Muscle Shoals Studios in Alabama and elsewhere, singing backing vocals on huge hits such as ‘Suspicious Minds’ and ‘In The Ghetto’ by Elvis Presley and ‘When A Man Loves A Woman’ by Percy Sledge. She also worked with Cher, Neil Diamond, Duane Allman and Boz Scaggs during that late-’60s period.

In addition to their work with the Grateful Dead, Donna and Keith Godchaux released the album ‘Keith & Donna’ in 1975, which featured contributions from Dead frontman Jerry Garcia.

They left the band in 1979 and formed the Heart Of Gold Band, but that project came to an end with the sudden death of Keith the following year.

Godchaux continued to create new music, forming the Donna Jean Godchaux Band and Donna Jean And The Tricksters in the ‘80s, before starting a solo career in 1998 with a self-titled record. Her final album ‘Back Around’ was recorded with the Donna Jean Godchaux Band alongside Jeff Mattson and was released in 2014.

Her death follows the passing of founding Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh last October at the age of 84. In August, Dead And Company – made up of band alumni Bob Weir and Mickey Hart, alongside others – played three sold-out nights in San Francisco to mark the Dead’s 60th anniversary.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Jack DeJohnette, Towering Jazz Drummer and Bandleader, Dies at 83
Music

Jack DeJohnette, Towering Jazz Drummer and Bandleader, Dies at 83

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Jack DeJohnette, the jazz drummer, pianist, and bandleader who played on Miles Davis’ Bitches Brew and worked closely with Sonny Rollins, Keith Jarrett, and many other jazz luminaries, has died. His longtime label ECM Records confirmed the news, and his personal assistant told The Guardian the cause of death was congestive heart failure. DeJohnette was 83 years old.

Born in Chicago, in 1942, DeJohnette grew up in a mostly segregated neighborhood, raised primarily by his grandmother and poet mother. From the age of five or six, he studied traditional piano with a neighborhood teacher; back home, his uncle was filling the house with jazz records by the likes of Duke Ellington and Billie Holliday. When that uncle, Roy Wood, became the first Black news announcer on a white Chicago radio station, DeJohnette gained access to an endless supply of jazz records that fueled an early infatuation with the genre. In a newly integrated high school at the dawn of rock’n’roll, he sang doo-wop and played in dance bands—occasionally on acoustic bass—formed by students exposed to a network of legendary Chicago jazz and blues labels like Chess and Vee Jay.

When a drummer friend left his kit in DeJohnette’s basement, he took up playing along to his uncle’s Max Roach, Clifford Brown, and Charlie Parker records and discovered he was a natural. Kicked out of high school for skipping class, he took up serious music study and played with a local quintet specializing in Thelonious Monk and Art Blakey arrangements. When his grandmother died, he bought a car, a drum set, and a Wurlitzer electric piano and hustled solo keyboard gigs at Chicago bars, practicing in the daytime for three hours apiece on the drums and piano.

His growing curiosity and expertise brought him into the orbit of Chicago’s avant-garde scene. After watching Sun Ra and His Arkestra rehearse at a nearby tavern, DeJohnette was invited into the fold and played drums for the outfit in an ad-hoc arrangement that continued into the 1960s as his status grew. Sun Ra and a new generation of jazz masters—particularly Miles Davis and John Coltrane—were coming into their own as composers, and DeJohnette would catch their shows at local club McKee Fitcher’s. “I’d go almost every night to hear Coltrane,” he told the Smithsonian in 2011, “and it was… what can I say? It was the most amazing experience of hearing music.” One night, when Coltrane drummer Elvin Jones was late for a set, the club owner yelled at Coltrane to “Let Jack DeJohnette play.” He joined the band for three songs—“a great physical and spiritual experience,” DeJohnette said. “John was like a train. He was like a magnet and you felt this pull.”

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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June Lockhart
TV & Streaming

June Lockhart, Beloved Mom on ‘Lassie’ and ‘Lost in Space,’ Dies at 100

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

A Tony Award winner and daughter of actor Gene Lockhart, she also starred in ‘Meet Me in St. Louis’ and ‘Petticoat Junction.’

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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