Friday, October 17, 2014

A00062 - Marian Seldes, Broadway Stage Actress

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Marian Seldes, known for her work in Edward Albee plays, with Brian Murray in a 2003 production of “Counting the Ways.” CreditSara Krulwich/The New York Times
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Marian Seldes, a regal personality in New York theater for more than six decades in plays ranging from whodunits to the work of Tennessee Williams, Samuel Beckett and, especially, Edward Albee, died on Monday at her home in Manhattan. She was 86.
Susan Shreve, her sister-in-law, confirmed her death.
Tall, angular and dark-haired, with a commanding, patrician voice and liquid gestures, Ms. Seldes could dominate any scene — so much so that she was sometimes criticized for overacting. She shrugged at that: She knew very well that she cut a distinctive figure.
“I know I’m funny, because I’m eccentric, I’m odd,” she once told an interviewer. “I’m not what you expect.”
She also had it right when she described herself as a theatrical workaholic; she was seldom offstage. Acting, she once said, “defines my life, gives it shape and form.”
Her co-starring performance in Ira Levin’s 1978 thriller “Deathtrap,” for example, earned her not only a Tony Award nomination but also an entry in Guinness’s book of world records. In the play’s five-year run, she never missed one of its 1,793 performances, playing the wife of a playwright who, despite writer’s block, can still plot a murder. (In the process she outlasted a parade of co-stars: John Wood, Stacy Keach, John Cullum, Robert Reed and Farley Granger.)
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Marian Seldes: Her Many Roles

CreditSara Krulwich/The New York Times
Her warm-up for that marathon was more than 900 performances in Peter Shaffer’s “Equus,” which opened on Broadway in 1974.
“The theater is my focus,” she said. “It is exactly what I want to do.”
If theater was her métier, Edward Albee was her forte. After serving as Irene Worth’s understudy in Mr. Albee’s “Tiny Alice” on Broadway in 1965, she won a supporting role the following year in another new Albee play, “A Delicate Balance,” as the hysterical daughter of feuding parents (Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy). She won a Tony for the performance.
Almost 30 years later years she received reams of praise for her work in a string of Albee plays presented Off Broadway, starting in 1994 with “Three Tall Women,” followed by “The Play About the Baby” in 2001 and “Counting the Ways” in 2003.
In “The Play About the Baby,” Ms. Seldes found her theatrical soul mate in her co-star, Brian Murray. As an older couple introducing their younger counterparts to life’s colder, darker truths, Ms. Seldes and Mr. Murray were by turns sinister, charmingly sophisticated and funny.
The Seldes-Murray chemistry worked again in “Counting the Ways,” the second half of a double bill that also featured three short works by Samuel Beckett. As a married couple engaged in a funny but stealthily serious fencing match over the depth and breadth of their affection for each other, Ms. Seldes and Mr. Murray performed, the reviews said, with balletic perfection.
“Ms. Seldes’s résumé — she is one of the few actors to have performed multiple roles in the Albee canon — puts her in the elite company of such stars of the stage as Colleen Dewhurst and Jessica Tandy,” Peter Markswrote in The New York Times in 2001.
Marian Hall Seldes — who was quick to point out that her name was pronounced SEL-dess, not SEL-deez — was born in Manhattan on Aug. 23, 1928. Her mother, the former Alice Wadhams Hall, was a socialite and descendant of a prominent New York family; her father was the author and critic Gilbert Seldes, a descendant of Jewish immigrants from Russia whose friends included Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald, the Gershwins and Irving Berlin. An uncle was the prominent journalist George Seldes.
A childhood accident weighed heavily on her. Six years old at the time, she was riding in a motorboat on a lake with her brother and other children when, following them into the water, she jumped and was hit in the face by the boat’s propeller. The wound required many stitches, done by an emergency-room doctor using thick black thread, and it left both her face and her psyche scarred.
“It was awful and gory for quite a long time,” her daughter, Katharine Andres, told The New York Times Magazine in 2010. “Her mother was beautiful, and Marian felt not beautiful enough. She felt like a failure.”
After attending the Dalton School in Manhattan, Ms. Seldes studied at the School of American Ballet before deciding that what she really wanted to do was act. She put aside her toe shoes in 1946 and enrolled at the Neighborhood Playhouse, where she studied with Sanford Meisner, whom she grew to idolize. “He did not teach us acting,” she wrote in a tribute after his death in 1997, “he prepared us to act.”
She made her stage debut in 1947 as a serving girl in “Medea,” directed by John Gielgud and starring Judith Anderson. She went on to appear in a 1954 Broadway staging of Jean Giraudoux’s “Ondine,” with Audrey Hepburn and Mel Ferrer. She attracted strong notice in 1964, again on Broadway, in Tennessee Williams’s revised version of “The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Anymore.”
In that production, which briefly starred Tallulah Bankhead as Flora Goforth, a wealthy old eccentric nearing death in her Italian villa, Ms. Seldes created the role of Blackie, Flora’s troubled secretary.
Ms. Seldes’s credits were voluminous. She had the title role in “Isadora Duncan Sleeps With the Russian Navy” in 1977. (“Vibrant and funny,” Clive Barnes wrote in The Times.) She was a domineering but burdened patrician mother in Tina Howe’s well-praised “Painting Churches” in 1983. That same year, she was, as Frank Rich wrote in The Times, “a frightening, hard-driving” Queen Margaret alongside Kevin Kline in a Joseph Papp production of “Richard III” in Central Park.
In the 1990s she appeared in Chekhov’s “Ivanov” at Lincoln Center and in the Broadway revival of Jean Anouilh’s “Ring Round the Moon,” which had only a brief run but brought her another Tony nomination for her portrayal of a crusty grande dame who turns into a doting matchmaker.
Her most recent Broadway appearance was in Terrence McNally’s “Deuce” in 2007, in which she and Angela Lansbury played former doubles partners reuniting in old age to be honored at the United States Open.
Ms. Seldes published an autobiography, “The Bright Lights: A Theater Life,” in 1978, and wrote a novel, “Time Together” (1981), about a mother’s death and its effect on her two estranged daughters.
She also wrote book reviews and articles about her travels, some of which appeared in The Times. From 1969 to 1991 she was on the faculty of the Theater Center at the Juilliard School, where her students included Robin Williams, Patti LuPone, William Hurt and Mr. Kline.
Ms. Seldes’s first marriage, to Julian Claman, a TV producer, ended in divorce. In 1990 she married the writer and director Garson Kanin. He died in 1999.
Though mainly a creature of the stage, Ms. Seldes had a considerable television career as well, beginning in the medium’s early days in drama series like “Studio One” and “Philco Television Playhouse.” She also appeared on “Perry Mason,” “Alfred Hitchcock Presents,” “Law & Order,” “Murphy Brown” and “Murder, She Wrote.” In 1995 she was Eleanor Roosevelt in the HBO movie “Truman.” She also played Mr. Big’s mother in an episode of “Sex and the City.”
She had roles in a number of films as well, including George Stevens’s “The Greatest Story Ever Told” (1965); “Digging to China” (1998), with Kevin Bacon; “Town and Country” (2001), with Warren Beatty, Diane Keaton and Goldie Hawn; and “Mona Lisa Smile” (2003), with Julia Roberts.
But she never left the stage for long. In addition to her Albee outings, she played the bombastic director of an amateur theatrical in the 2000 revival of George Kelly’s comedy “The Torch-Bearers” and a dotty denizen of Times Square in 2001 in Neil Simon’s “45 Seconds From Broadway.”
In 2010, she was given a lifetime achievement award at the Tony Awards ceremony. To Ms. Seldes, it simply confirmed that she had succeeded in doing exactly what she had set out to do.
“All I’ve done is live my life in the theater and loved it,” she said. “If you can get an award for being happy, that’s what I’ve got.”

Thursday, October 9, 2014

A00061 - Michael Harari, Israeli Agent Likened to James Bond

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Michael Harari in 1990.CreditIsrael Broadcasting Authority, via Agence France-Presse
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Michael Harari, an Israeli intelligence agent who led the hit squad that was sent to avenge the murders of 11 Israeli athletes byPalestinian terrorists at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, died on Sept. 21 in Tel Aviv. He was 87.
His death was reported by The Associated Press, citing a statement by Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, who called Mr. Harari “one of the great warriors for Israel’s security.”
Mr. Harari, who was sometimes referred to as the “Zionist James Bond,” spent decades in the shadowy and dangerous echelons of global espionage, working for more than 25 years under the aegis of the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency, and participating in the 1976 rescue of Israelis held hostage at an airport in Entebbe, Uganda.
In the 1980s, after retiring from the Mossad, he was an aide to Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega, the Panamanian dictator who was ousted in an American invasion in 1989 and imprisoned in the United States for drug trafficking, racketeering and money laundering.
Mr. Harari’s precise relationship to General Noriega was the subject of much speculation. He was variously said to have been a military adviser, an organizer of security forces, an intermediary in arms deals and a business partner, but Mr. Harari denied all of it.
“I’m not Noriega’s adviser, and I never was,” he said in an interview on Israeli television shortly after he vanished from Panama on Dec. 20, 1989, the day of the American invasion. “Noriega is not my partner. I didn’t run his business. I didn’t manage or instruct his forces. I didn’t organize his personal bodyguards.”
Mr. Harari joined the Mossad in 1954 and was appointed to lead its special operations division, known as Caesarea, in 1970. For a decade, he was at the forefront of the Israeli fight against Palestinian terrorism. Reportedly, it was Mr. Harari who established within Caesarea the unit called Kidon (Hebrew for bayonet), which specialized in assassinations.
Shortly after the massacre in the Munich Olympic Village by a Palestinian group known as Black September, Golda Meir, then the Israeli prime minister, approved a Mossad plan to seek out and kill those deemed responsible.
It is uncertain how many of those targeted had actually taken part in the Munich attacks. But in a calamitous error in July 1973, members of Mr. Harari’s team who had traveled to Norway in pursuit of the terrorists mistook an innocent Moroccan there for a Black September leader, Ali Hassan Salameh, and gunned him down as he walked with his wife on a street in the city of Lillehammer.
Mr. Harari escaped from Norway, but six Israelis were arrested there and charged with complicity in the killing. Five were convicted and given sentences of one to five and a half years in prison; Norway later pardoned three of them.
Mr. Salameh was killed in Beirut, Lebanon, in 1979 by a remote-controlled bomb, in an operation said to have been engineered by Mr. Harari. In Steven Spielberg’s 2005 film about the massacre, “Munich,” Mr. Harari was portrayed by the Israeli actor Moshe Ivgy.
Mr. Harari was born in Tel Aviv on Feb. 18, 1927. As a teenager, he joined Haganah, the Jewish militia that preceded the Israeli Army. Some sources say he enlisted at 16 after lying about his age so that he could be admitted to Palmach, Haganah’s elite fighting unit.
After World War II, he was sent to Europe to help Jewish survivors of the Holocaust immigrate illegally to Palestine, which was then controlled by the British. After the State of Israel was established in 1948, he worked for the government security agency known as Shin Bet.
Mr. Harari’s survivors could not be confirmed, but Israeli and English news reports said they included a wife, two children and five grandchildren.
In 1976, Mr. Harari participated in the planning and execution of Operation Entebbe, a counterterrorism mission to rescue 103 hostages being held at the Entebbe airport in Uganda. Seven men — five Palestinians and two Germans — had hijacked an Air France flight bound for Paris from Tel Aviv after a stop in Athens. They demanded the release of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel and four other countries.
Israeli paratroopers and commandos killed the hijackers and flew back to Israel with the freed captives. Three hostages died during the operation, along with 20 Ugandan soldiers and the commander of the Israeli troops, Lt. Col. Jonathan Netanyahu, a brother of the future prime minister.
Mr. Harari was said to have done advance work in Entebbe in which he managed to talk his way into the airport control tower disguised as a businessman from Italy.
But much of his career remains shrouded in secrecy. The Israeli defense minister, Moshe Ya’alon, told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz that Mr. Harari belonged to a “rare breed of builders of the state.”
“Most of Mike Harari’s actions for the security of the State of Israel as a fighter and a commander in the Mossad are unknown and will never be known,” Mr. Ya’alon said.

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

A00060 - Sarah Goldberg, Actress on TV's "7th Heaven"

Sarah Goldberg, actress on TV series “7th Heaven” and in film roles, dies at 40

 October 8 at 1:14 PM

Sarah Goldberg, who appeared in the television series “7th Heaven” and the film “Jurassic Park III,” died Sept. 27 at her family’s cabin in Wisconsin. She was 40.
Her mother, Judy Goldberg, confirmed the death to the Chicago Sun-Times. She said a heart ailment is suspected, although an autopsy failed to determine the exact cause of death.
Ms. Goldberg’s entertainment career started as a bumblebee in a Chicago City Ballet production of “Cinderella,” her mother said, and gained momentum when she was asked to be an extra on the Julia Roberts movie “My Best Friend’s Wedding” (1997).
She got the role because her mother co-owned a company providing table linens for a set. A film staffer saw her helping arrange tablecloths and asked her to be in a scene, her mother said.
Ms. Goldberg went on to appear in television series including “90210,” “Judging Amy,” “The Beast” and “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.”

Actress Sarah Goldberg in an undated photo. (AP)
In “7th Heaven,” which aired mostly on the WB network between 1996 and 2007, she played Jewish medical student Sarah Glass Camden who fell in love with the son of a Christian pastor.
“She wanted to go to medical school, and instead for three years she played a doctor on ‘7th Heaven,’ ” Judy Goldberg said of her daughter, who graduated in 1996 from Amherst College in Massachusetts with a degree in microbiology, according to her IMDB biography.
Ms. Goldberg also played a college student looking for drugs in the Denzel Washington movie “Training Day” (2001).
The actress was sometimes was credited under the stage name Sarah Danielle Madison.
Ms. Goldberg was born Sept. 6, 1974 in Springfield, Ill., where her father worked as a lawyer. She attended the Latin School of Chicago before going to Amherst. She practiced yoga and was a trick skiier.
“She could get on [skis] backwards and blow kisses to people and pretend she was a water skier,” her mother said.

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Sarah Goldberg, actress on TV series “7th Heaven” and in film roles, dies at 40

 October 8 at 1:14 PM



Sarah Goldberg, who appeared in the television series “7th Heaven” and the film “Jurassic Park III,” died Sept. 27 at her family’s cabin in Wisconsin. She was 40.
Her mother, Judy Goldberg, confirmed the death to the Chicago Sun-Times. She said a heart ailment is suspected, although an autopsy failed to determine the exact cause of death.
Ms. Goldberg’s entertainment career started as a bumblebee in a Chicago City Ballet production of “Cinderella,” her mother said, and gained momentum when she was asked to be an extra on the Julia Roberts movie “My Best Friend’s Wedding” (1997).
She got the role because her mother co-owned a company providing table linens for a set. A film staffer saw her helping arrange tablecloths and asked her to be in a scene, her mother said.
Ms. Goldberg went on to appear in television series including “90210,” “Judging Amy,” “The Beast” and “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.”

Actress Sarah Goldberg in an undated photo. (AP)
In “7th Heaven,” which aired mostly on the WB network between 1996 and 2007, she played Jewish medical student Sarah Glass Camden who fell in love with the son of a Christian pastor.
“She wanted to go to medical school, and instead for three years she played a doctor on ‘7th Heaven,’ ” Judy Goldberg said of her daughter, who graduated in 1996 from Amherst College in Massachusetts with a degree in microbiology, according to her IMDB biography.
Ms. Goldberg also played a college student looking for drugs in the Denzel Washington movie “Training Day” (2001).
The actress was sometimes was credited under the stage name Sarah Danielle Madison.
Ms. Goldberg was born Sept. 6, 1974 in Springfield, Ill., where her father worked as a lawyer. She attended the Latin School of Chicago before going to Amherst. She practiced yoga and was a trick skiier.
“She could get on [skis] backwards and blow kisses to people and pretend she was a water skier,” her mother said.

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Sarah Goldberg CreditPaul McCallum/The WB

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Sarah Goldberg, an actress in the popular television series “7th Heaven,” died on Sept. 27 at her family’s cabin in Wisconsin. She was 40.
Her mother, Judy Goldberg, told The Chicago Sun-Times that an autopsy had failed to determine the exact cause of death but that a heart ailment is suspected.
Ms. Goldberg was frequently identified as Sarah Danielle Madison in film and television credits, as she was in “7th Heaven,” an issue-oriented family drama broadcast from 1996 to 2007 on the WB and then the CW networks.
Ms. Goldberg appeared in episodes from 2002 to 2006 playing Sarah Glass, a medical student and rabbi’s daughter who married the son of a Protestant pastor.
Among her other credits, Ms. Goldberg appeared in the movie “Jurassic Park III” (2001).
Her acting break came as an extra in the 1997 Julia Roberts movie “My Best Friend’s Wedding.” She got a role in that film after a crew member saw her arranging tablecloths on the set — her mother co-owned the company providing table linens for the film — and asked her to be in a scene.
She went on to appear on television in “90210,” “Judging Amy,” “The Beast,” “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation” and other series.
Sarah Danielle Goldberg was born on Sept. 10, 1974, in Springfield, Ill. She attended the Latin School of Chicago before going to Amherst College, where she received a bachelor’s degree in microbiology. She lived in Santa Monica, Calif.
Besides her mother, she is survived by her father, Bill Goldberg, a lawyer; and a brother, Bradley.