Afterword

Musing with the news obituaries staff

Category: adventurers

Actress Lisa Blount, memorable for 'An Officer and a Gentleman,' is found dead at 53

October 27, 2010 |  5:58 pm

Blount 

Lisa Blount, 53, who played Lynette Pomeroy in the 1982 film "An Officer and a Gentleman" and won an Academy Award for producing the 2001 live-action short film "the accountant," was found dead Wednesday by her mother at her home in Little Rock, Ark., the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported.

Pulaski County Coroner Garland Camper told the newspaper that Blount appeared to have died Monday. He said there were no signs of foul play.

Blount, a native of Fayetteville, Ark., and her husband, Ray McKinnon, moved to Arkansas from Los Angeles in 2005. McKinnon directed and starred in "the accountant," and he wrote and directed the 2004 film "Chrystal," which Blount starred in opposite Billy Bob Thornton.

In "An Officer and a Gentleman," Blount played a factory worker who gets involved with the cadet played by David Keith alongside the couple played by Debra Winger and Richard Gere.

More later at latimes.com/obits

-- Claire Noland

Photo: Linda Blount and David Keith in a scene from "An Officer and a Gentleman."

Credit: Paramount Pictures


Montana man who survived bear attacks dies of natural causes

July 30, 2010 |  1:07 pm


Jim Cole, a Montana man who recently published a book about surviving two attacks by grizzly bears, has died of natural causes, the Bozeman Daily Chronicle reported. He was 60.

Gallatin County Coroner Mike Chesnut said Cole died July 22.

Cole had just published his third book, "Blindsided: Surviving a Grizzly Attack and Still Loving the Great Bear." (YouTube promotional video above.)

The book tells of how he accidentally stepped on a female grizzly bear while hiking off a trail in Yellowstone National Park in May 2007. The bear attack cost him his left eye and left him badly scarred, but Cole was quick to say it was not the bear's fault because he startled her.

Three years earlier, Cole was cited in Yellowstone for getting too close to a sow grizzly with two cubs to take a photograph. The park regulation was clarified after he was acquitted in a non-jury trial.

-- Associated Press


Edmund Hillary's ashes to be scattered at Everest

April 2, 2010 | 11:33 am

Sherpa

A 49-year-old Nepalese Sherpa guide who holds the record for the most conquests of Mt. Everest will make his 20th climb this spring and scatter the ashes of Edmund Hillary, one of the first men to reach the top nearly six decades ago.

Apa, who like most Sherpas goes by one name, first climbed the 29,035-foot mountain in 1989 and has repeated the feat almost every year since. His closest rival is fellow Sherpa guide Chhewang Nima, who has made 15 trips to the summit.

Hillary Apa announced Thursday his intention to make his 20th ascent in May. He and his fellow climbers — 17 other Sherpas and 12 Westerners — also plan to collect 15,400 pounds of garbage, a growing environmental problem on the Himalayan peak. They plan to pay porters hired by several expeditions to help bring down the refuse.

Apa, who moved to the United States in 2006 and lives in the Salt Lake City suburb of Draper, Utah, said he would scatter the ashes of Hillary at the summit. Hillary conquered Everest in 1953 with Sherpa Tenzing Norgay. He died in 2008 in his native New Zealand.

"I will pray for Hillary once I reach the summit," Apa told reporters in Katmandu.

He said he also wants to promote Nepal's campaign to attract half a million tourists in 2011, as the country recovers from years of instability and communist insurgency.

Apa grew up in the foothills of Everest and began carrying equipment and supplies for trekkers and mountaineers at age 12.

Sherpas were mostly yak herders and traders living in the Himalayas until Nepal opened its borders to tourists in 1950. Their stamina and knowledge of the mountains makes them expert guides and porters.

-- Associated Press

Top photo: Nepalese Sherpa guide Apa, holding a Buddha statue he will carry with him on his next expedition to Everest, where he will scatter the ashes of Edmund Hillary. Credit: Associated Press / Binod Joshi

Bottom photo: Edmund Hillary in 2002. Credit: Associated Press / Dean Purcell, Fotopress


CNN photojournalist Margaret Gipsy Moth dies at 59

March 23, 2010 |  1:50 pm

Moth

Margaret Moth, a CNN photojournalist who survived a near-fatal gunshot wound to the face while filming in Bosnia-Herzegovina during the wars there in the early 1990s, died Sunday in Rochester, Minn., where she was in hospice care for colon cancer. She was 59.

Moth, a camerawoman, was seriously wounded by sniper fire that hit a CNN van in July 1992 in Sarajevo. After several reconstructive surgeries, she returned to the war-torn country two years later, according to a documentary on her life. She was among scores of journalists hurt or killed covering the conflict in Bosnia and Croatia during the violent breakup of Yugoslavia.

Born Margaret Wilson in Gisborne, New Zealand, she later changed her name to Margaret Gipsy Moth. She said in the September 2009 CNN documentary, "Fearless: The Margaret Moth Story," that she wanted to have her own name, not the one people are given because of their fathers. Moth also was a sky diver and would jump from a Tiger Moth airplane, she said.

She said she got her first camera when she was 8. She came to the U.S. and worked for KHOU in Houston for about seven years before starting with CNN in 1990.

Her colleagues said she inspired them with her toughness, humor and quirky style that included always wearing black clothes that went with her jet-black hair, thick black eyeliner and combat boots that she often wore while she slept in war zones.

"I don’t think Margaret could ever look back and say, 'What if?'" said Christiane Amanpour, CNN’s chief international correspondent. "She did it to the max, and she did it brilliantly. And she did it on her terms."

Moth also covered the Israeli invasion of the West Bank in 2002, the rioting that followed Indira Gandhi’s assassination in 1984 and other conflicts around the world, including several in the Middle East, according to CNN. When militiamen opened fire on protesters in Tbilisi, Georgia, CNN said she stood her ground and kept her camera running.

She said she was angered by those who said she had a death wish because she chose to work in combat zones.

"I was always very careful. I never saw myself as a daredevil or someone who would be stupid about things," she said in the documentary.

In Sarajevo, the van in which Moth was riding was on the route between the city and the airport, known as "sniper alley." The bullet shattered her jaw, blew out her teeth and destroyed part of her tongue. She said the wound left her forever sounding like she was drunk. Then-CNN Rome bureau chief Mark Dulmage also was wounded.

Moth, who knew her cancer was terminal, said in the documentary that she felt she could die with dignity.

"The important thing is to know that you’ve lived your life to the fullest. ... You could be a billionaire, and you couldn’t pay to do the things we’ve done."

-- Associated Press

Photo credit: Associated Press / CNN's "Fearless: The Margaret Moth Story"


Pernell Roberts, Adam Cartwright on "Bonanza," dead at 81

January 25, 2010 |  1:24 pm

Pernell

Pernell Roberts, an original cast member of one of television's classic westerns, "Bonanza," died at his Malibu home Sunday. He was 81.

His death from cancer was confirmed by his wife, Eleanor Criswell.

Roberts was known to fans as the handsome and smart eldest son of the Cartwright clan, Adam. He played the role from its inception in 1959, but tired of the role after six years and left the show to act in films and resume a stage career that had brought him a 1955 Drama Desk Award for best actor in a production of "Macbeth." In 1979, he returned to series television in the popular "Trapper John, M.D.," playing the title character, Dr. John McIntyre, for the show's entire seven seasons.

In later years, he had guest roles in other shows and narrated documentaries. He retired in the late 1990s.

A complete news obituary will follow at www.latimes.com/obits.

--Elaine Woo

Photo: The original cast of the NBC television series "Bonanza," left to right, Dan Blocker, Lorne Greene, Pernell Roberts and Michael Landon. Credit: NBC.


Claire L. Walters told men at war how to fly a B-24 bomber. They were not amused.

January 20, 2010 |  4:08 pm

Claire Walters Reader Bill Warnock followed up his e-mail regarding my obituary of pilot and flight instructor Claire L. Walters with another recollection: “When I went through the sheriff’s academy back in 1970 (Hamilton County, Ohio), our psychology instructor told us, ‘Men hear, women listen.’ Valerie, that is so true.”

Here’s what Warnock had to say about some choice Walters advice to World War II-era pilots:

While stationed at Andersen AFB, Guam, I was told by my boss that Walters flew B-24 when Army Air Corps pilots were terrified of it because of numerous fatal accidents.

According to my boss, a former B-24 pilot, Walters advised: “You have to listen to the aircraft, it will tell you what’s going on. Treat it like a woman and listen to her.” Needless to say it made her as popular as a skunk at a tea party.

Remember when the first all-female Air Force Reserve crew flew a C-5 to Germany nonstop? There was not a single hitch. There was a lot of jeering prior to takeoff, none upon landing or upon return.

Warm regards,

Bill Warnock
Haymarket, Va.

-- Valerie J. Nelson

Photo: Claire L. Walters ran a flight school in Santa Monica and co-founded the annual Palms to Pines air race for women.



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