The Meddler is a new dramedy starring Susan Sarandon which was written and directed by Lorene Scafaria. Scafaria is best known for her adapted screenplay for the excellent Nick & Norahs Infinite Playlist and also her directorial debut Seeking a Friend for the End of the World. Along with Sarandon, the film stars Rose Bryne, J. K. Simmons, Cicely Strong (of SNL fame), Lucy Punch, and Jason Ritter. Opening in Indianapolis on May 20, The Meddler is rated PG-13 for brief drug content.
Marnie (Sarandon) is a recent widow who has recently moved from New York to Los Angeles in order to be closer to her daughter, Lori (Byrne). Having a lot of time on her hands and more money than she will ever need, Marnie spends her days and nights meddling in her daughters affairs. This drives Lori crazy and when an opportunity with her job allows her to go back to New York for a while, Marnie is lost.
While Lori is gone, Marnie begins to plug into the lives of some other people who need help as well. Whether its needing money for a dream wedding or just giving someone a ride when they dont have a car, Marnie is always helping out. Through this, she meets a former cop named Zipper (Simmons) who she really likes, but cant let go of her deep love for her late husband. While Marnie does a great job of making the lives of everyone around her better, she starts to realize that she needs to find her own happiness and take care of herself as well.
The Meddler is all about Susan Sarandon and she gives one of the best performances of her career. She is so charismatic and charming that you fall in love with her character from the opening frame. She is literally in every scene of the film and shows so much range as an actor. The film is somewhat of a feel-good movie that is targeted towards females and more specifically towards mothers. To that point, Im still confused by the films Indianapolis release date as this would have been the perfect film to take your mother to on Mothers Day a couple of weeks ago.
Anyway, the film has a big heart and is actually quite funny at times. The storyline is good and well-written but probably plays it a little too safe at times, but its forgivable. I cant say enough about Susan Sarandon in this movie and I sure hope there are more roles like this in her future. Whether it is a special night out with mom or even a girls night, The Meddler is a worthwhile and rewarding time at the movies.
Founding Beastie Boys member John Berry has died at the age of 52.
His stepmother, Louise Berry, tells The Associated Press that Berry died Thursday morning at a hospice in Danvers, Massachusetts. She says Berry suffered from frontal lobe dementia and had been in declining health for several years.
His father, John Berry III, says Berry helped found the Beastie Boys in the early 1980s after meeting future bandmate Mike Diamond at the Walden School in New York. Berry III says the band used his Manhattan loft for their first practices and shows. Berry left the group after playing guitar on its first EP. His father says the band was becoming more professional and Berry "wasn"t up for that rigor."
The family plans a public celebration of life in the fall.
Morley Safer, 60 Minutes journalist, dead at 84 Photo: Courtesy of Morley Safer
Morley Safer, the legendary TV newsman, died Thursday at age 84. So why am I, an art critic, writing about him? Like a lot of people in the art world, I feel I have a sort of history with him.
I don"t mean to be speaking ill of the dead instantaneously, and I intend this more as a begrudging compliment: To us, Safer was a persistent pain in the a*s, most famously in his September 1993 quarter-hour hit piece for 60 Minutes on the whole culture of contemporary art, snidely titled "Yes, But Is It Art?" In the segment, which quickly became insider shorthand for all the ways the wider world misunderstands and sometimes disdains contemporary art, the irascible Safer dressed in an almost-tuxedo and dripping with disdainful innuendo that implied that all of this was just a sham attacked high prices (or what seemed then like high prices), the infamous "political" Whitney Biennial, and, of course, Jeff Koons. And even though every potshot he took seemed slanted, one-sided, his arch insinuations got under the art world"s skin a sign of different times, I guess, both for art and for television news. I remember how miffed I was when, two weeks after his hatchet job hit the airwaves, I spied him drinking free Champagne at that season"s Whitney Museum benefit dinner. In 2012 he more or less repeated the drive-by, sauntering down the aisles of one of the grossest souks on Earth, the Art Basel Miami Beach Art Fair, for another segment, all the while drolly pointing to this or that fashion victim or crapola work of art, cluelessly assuming that all art was like this.
What most people don"t know about Safer is that he was himself an artist. Or, at least, he made art. In the 1990s I"d heard he made watercolors of motel rooms, and I continuously tried to coax him into allowing me to mount a show of them. I don"t even know if my requests ever got to him, as I never heard from him or CBS. That changed last year, when I was writing an article on art by celebrities. Somehow he must have heard about it. Out of nowhere I got the dearest email asking if I"d consider writing about his work. He offered to send a package to New York Magazine. Before I could say "OMG! The bear is coming out of the woods," a carefully wrapped bundle of small original works arrived at our offices. I don"t believe they"ve been published, or possibly even seen publicly before.
UNICODE Photo: Courtesy of Morley Safer
I didn"t hate them. What I saw had a certain earnest pathos, someone being an artist in a mid-20th-century Sunday-painter way. The work seemed influenced mainly by a very conservative idea about plain modernistic surfaces, depiction, and color. Safer was a careful drawer, and his colors stayed within lines. His subjects were ordinary landscape, portraits, churches, tourist sites, and the like.
Photo: Courtesy of Morley Safer
I wouldn"t have bought any of these if I saw them at a yard sale, except one. His motel-room picture has everything you"d want it to have, and even a little bit more. Which is to say banality, blankness, something sweet, neat, forlorn, and soul-killing. The space is cramped, the dcor drab and sterile; a rotary dial phone sits on the bare night table next to one generic lamp. Over the small double bed is just the kind of clich landscape that Safer liked to paint: two trees on a hill with a yellow sun in the white sky. Ironies extend. The rumpled bed with only one side turned down lets us know Safer has been here, alone on the road. A plain poignancy lingers, even in the uninspired style.
Photo: Courtesy of Morley Safer
In 1990 he painted a native of Burkina Faso, West Africa. He"s black, sitting on the ground against a stuccolike building, and wears some sort of scarlet robe. Never mind the Orientalizing that most in the art world would spot as colonialist, Safer does the whole thing in an unhurried, controlled Gericault-meets-Matisse air.
Photo: Courtesy of Morley Safer
Another work from the same year finds him giving us a scene overlooking bountiful planted summer fields of musky green. (The guy obviously enjoyed his first-class perks and leisure time.) Other than a great tree that feels like it must have been made on the African serengeti, the rest of the work I saw was typical tourist postcard art. The unhurried arid mise-en-scne conjures sparsely peopled retirement communities built around golf courses.
Photo: Courtesy of Morley Safer
Adding to the pathos of the pictures, after the article came out and he wasn"t included, I got another email asking me, honestly, why not, and what I thought of his art. I never got back to him. Had I, I would have said that it was too bad he never gave art a real chance, as he seemed to have a real feel for a certain strain of painting from observation. And that, had he not set himself against the whole world of contemporary art, he might have picked up a thing or two that might have helped him.
In 2005, Abigail Pogrebin published Stars of David: Prominent Jews Talk About Being Jewish. The following is an excerpt from the chapter about Morley Safer, the Canadian-American broadcast journalist best known for histenureas a reporter onCBS 60 Minutes, who diedon Thursday at the age of83.
MORLEY SAFER, the seventy-four-year-old, wizened newsman, is reclining on a well-worn leather couch in his handsome carriage house, smoking the cigarettes hes never quit, and sipping coffee he cant do withouteven on Yom Kippur. Im not a total hundred percent faster as I once was, he says with a smile. I do have coffee. I need it. Giving up coffee would be cruel and unusual. Aside from caffeine, fasting is not a hardship. I never eat breakfast anyway and not much of a lunch, he explained. But I remember the agony of it as a kid. I mean, agony.
He and his wife, Jane, are not observant, but they do go to synagogue each year. Then we go for a long walk. I think the sheer disengagement, even if one didnt go to synagogue, does make you think. Which is hardly a punishment once a year, and in fact, may be a bonus. Its not exactly wearing a hair shirt or flogging your back or climbing one thousand steps on your knees.
Safer grew up in Toronto, where he experienced some anti-Semitic incidents he prefers not to talk about: I dont want to go into all that, he says, stubbing his cigarette out in a large ashtray.
His family observed a modified Shabbatattending Saturday services, then a matinee. The only holiday he still celebrates without fail is Passover. Weve been doing it for the last thirty-odd years, since Sarah was born, he says, referring to his only child, who is thirty-four when we talk. Its an interesting, really jolly mix of people. Not all the guests are Jewish. I think its about evenly split, Safer says. And the most insistent onesthe ones who start calling weeks before, saying, We havent been invited yettend to be the non-Jews. He chuckles.
For the traditional meal, the Safers order their gefilte fish from Rosedale Fish and Oyster Market on the Upper East Sideits the oldest fish market, Safer tells me, as if that should be obvious to any true New Yorkerbut hes still in search of the perfect lump of pike. Ive yet to find gefilte fish that is as close to the one my mother made, he says wistfully.
Sarah was sent to Hebrew school, he says, so that shed be equipped to spurn Judaism with intelligence. Youve got to know what youre going to reject, Safer says. You should not be allowed to reject something without learning it first. Today she is non-observant. It was her choice, he says. Would I like her to come to synagogue on Yom Kippur with us? She has once or twice. But I cant imposeshes a thirty-whatever-old woman. As a young woman she kind of rejected it, probably more strenuously than she does now. She has a sonour first and only grandchild. Sarahs husband is a Russian Jew, but they chose not to circumcise their son. I would have wanted it because its such an ancient tradition, he says. But he didnt pressure her. Theres nothing more destructive than that.
The Safers never celebrated Christmas, and I ask if he has any reaction to Jews that do. I find it a little alien, but Im not a tyrant on these things. I find excessive Christmas stuff kind of gives me the w*****s anyway. And I hate Christmas in New York because of what happens to the city. I mean, you cant get a cab, the weather is lousyyou freeze your a*s off, and there is no joy in it. I love the idea of itthe idea of charity and all of that.
Ill tell you a story, he continues. At the office, you always get presents for the people you work with around the holidays. Id been doing it for the thirty-three years Ive been at 60 Minutes; I always give a couple of very good bottles of wine, or one very good bottle of wine and one very good bottle of spirits or malt. And it was just fascinating: One year, it was at the height of the homelessness crisis, and I said to my staff, Look, I have a thought: What I would love to do is go and buy food and gloves and scarves. And well distribute the stuff and then all go and have a nice supper together. They looked at me like I was crazy: What? Thats the worst idea you ever had. I was devastated, he says with a laugh. I tell Safer they probably couldnt stand the idea of giving up their malt liquors. He nods. Here I am, engaging this holiday with the kind of heart that youre supposed to have. And people were appalled.
The doorbell rings. Thats our dog coming back from her walk, he says, looking suddenly like a thrilled little boy. Come here, Dora! We have a houseguest! Dora! Dora runs to Safer and they canoodle each other. Hello, my little lady; heres my sweetie pie, They clearly have a mutual admiration. I try to pat her casually, despite my complete awkwardness with animals, and think of the right thing to say. Shes so clean, I manage.
She likes you, Safer says with a smile. She loves loving. I warn you. After some genuine ardor from her owner, Dora pads away, ostensibly to seek a second breakfast.
As Safer fetches a bottle of Pellegrino water from the open kitchen, I ask him whether he thinks being Jewish has affected his reporting in any way. I think, after all these years, and having spent a lot of time covering Middle East wars and covering Israel between the wars, you really are able to detach when you do this work.
But I remember the first time I went to Auschwitzit was probably in the fifties. I was working for the CBC [Canadian Broadcasting Corporation], doing a half-hour documentary on Poland. This was after the food riotslate fifties, early sixtiesand the full horror had really been revealed. That was just one of the most powerful moments in my life. The camp hadnt been museum-ized yet; it was in many respects not much different from how it was left.
And it was also very powerful the first time I went to Germany, which was even earlier. I remember getting off the plane in Frankfurt and hearing that sound of the guttural language. He pauses. And you think, There but for a few years . . .this was 1954 as opposed to 1944its not that much time.
So, would Safer say that his Jewishness is a significant part of him? Oh yes, he responds. Its who I am. I think its an important part mainly for what many people may regard as secular reasons, though I dont think theyre entirely secular. That is, I think it leads to a more contemplative kind of life. I think it gives you a very, very clear idea of ethics, which Im not suggesting I may practice. But I certainly have a clear idea. Which is why I never understood why they go through this charade now of teaching ethics. You cant teach ethics. You have to be a zombie not to know the difference between right and wrong. I think that a Jewish background does give you a very, very strong sense of doing the right thing.
Excerpted from Stars of David: Prominent Jews Talk About Being Jewish by Abigail Pogrebin. Copyright 2005 by Abigail Pogrebin. Used by permission of Broadway Books, a division of Random House, Inc.
Abigail Pogrebin is the author of Stars of David and One and the Same. She moderates the interview series What Everyone"s Talking About at the JCC in Manhattan.
Sara Ramirez singing "The Story" at the Grey"s Anatomy concert to benefit the Actors Fund
The Catch is billed as the Alice and Ben show, but the Kensington firm gave them some serious competition in the season 1 finale.
If Shonda Rhimes ever finds herself desperate for a spin-off idea, weve got the perfect solution for her: The Kensington firm. We always knew Margot was basically the coolest person alive, but the more weve gotten to know about her family, the more we fall in love with the entire Kensington/Griffiths/Bishop clan (even though we have no idea how their last names work).
Things escalated when John Simm joined the cast as Margots brother, Rhys, and in the season 1 finale of The Catch, Sybil completed this hilarious, entertaining, and completely dysfunctional family. The Kensington firm is more than a group of con artists, theyre a team of absolute scene stealers. Here are 6 times when all eyes were on them in The Catch season 1 finale.
When they got the counterfeiter, and her little dog too
After being severely underused in her first appearance on The Catch, Leah Wells, played by the magnificent Nia Vardalos, made up for it in the season 1 finale. Besides being a hilarious addition to the family, Leahs skills were really cool, and she had a great dynamic with Reggie (another underutilized character).
When we first heard that Rhys was trying to secure the counterfeiter, it seemed like his intentions were obvious. The con artist game gets a lot more relaxing if you have someone who can just make endless amounts of money for you. However, Sybils plan was much more intricate, and demonstrated how powerful she is. If Leah sticks with the firm, theyre going to be an unstoppable force.
The family dinner that put all your Thanksgivings to shame
You think your family gatherings are tiresome or awkward? When one child casually mentions that their mother murdered their father, it takes things to a whole new level. Margot has been showcasing her skills throughout the entire season of The Catch, so its been difficult to understand why she wouldnt have been granted the opportunities she wanted with her own family. Luckily, her mother cleared everything up for us. The tiny glimpse we got of this family hanging out together, including Ben as the fourth wheel, has us longing for more.
When Rhys and Ben could have coordinated a little better
Rhys may be the one that was born into the firm, but when it comes to the art of conning, he has a lot to learn from his buddy Benji. Rhys clear admiration of Ben, combined with Bens incredulous looks, made for some of the best scenes of the whole season.
Reggie has been away for most of The Catch season 1, and Ben and Margot dont often team up in the same way that Ben and Rhys did. Weve seen glimpses of this before, but one of them usually had ulterior motives. When these two are genuinely working toward a common goal, they are absolutely hilarious together!
When Sybil casually busted Margot out of jail
They may be dysfunctional, but they still follow basic family etiquette. When your daughters in jail, you have to break her out! There werent any chiseled walls or mysterious power outages here. Just a simple its a prison break, darling, from the most deceivingly adorable mother of the year.
It was tragic seeing our con queen sitting in that interrogation room, so were grateful that Sybil decided she was worth her time and resources, even though Margot got into this mess by stealing something that Sybil wanted.
When Rhys proposed to Benji
These two were so magical together that they deserved a second spot on the list. As weve seen, Ben is willing to do some pretty extreme things for a con, but he was really hoping that kissing Rhys wouldnt be one of them. After Rhys previous debacle, the two finally got their story straight and showed what an amazing team they can be. They have to be in love, right? Right?
When Margot basically won the entire game
Last, but certainly not least, we have the woman that brought all of this madness into our lives. After her whole life fell apart in the blink of an eye, she didnt waste a second before rebuilding her empire. Sybil and Rhys have both had their scary moments, but in the end, Margot came out on top, and she took everyone else down on her way there!
Fire Rips Through Former Ruby"s Diner On Seal Beach Pier
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White House Shooting, EgyptAir 804, Morley Safer dead at 84, & Obama"s trip to Vietnam May 23
A number of people who reached the peak of the fields have passed in recent months. The music world mourned the deaths of David Bowie and Prince, while fans of film and television bowed for Alan Rickman and Doris Roberts. The list goes on, from noted journalist Morley Safer to author Harper Lee.
Here, the notables we"ve recently said goodbye to.
Alan Young
Actor Alan Young, who played Wilbur Post opposite a talking horse on the 1960s sitcom "Mr. Ed," died on May 19, 2016. He was 96 years old. Young was among the stars of the 1961 film "The Time Machine," as well as the voice of animated character Scrooge McDuck. (Credit: Getty Images / John M. Heller)
Actor Alan Young, who played Wilbur Post opposite a talking horse on the 1960s sitcom "Mr. Ed," died on May 19, 2016. He was 96 years old. Young was among the stars of the 1961 film "The Time Machine," as well as the voice of animated character Scrooge McDuck. (Credit: Getty Images / John M. Heller)
Morley Safer, former "60 Minutes" correspondent/co-host, died at age 84, CBS announced on Thursday, May 19, 2016. After joining "60 Minutes" in December 1970 in the show"s third season, he retired just a week before his death. He was known for both celebrity interviews and investigative pieces on injustice and worldwide issues. (Credit: Getty Images / Fernando Leon)
Morley Safer, former "60 Minutes" correspondent/co-host, died at age 84, CBS announced on Thursday, May 19, 2016. After joining "60 Minutes" in December 1970 in the show"s third season, he retired just a week before his death. He was known for both celebrity interviews and investigative pieces on injustice and worldwide issues. (Credit: Getty Images / Fernando Leon)
Prince
Prince, the singer and musician, died April 21, 2016, at age 57. His body was found at his Paisley Park studios, located in Chanhassen, Minnesota, the Carver County Sheriff"s Office tweeted. (Credit: Getty Images / Vince Bucci)
Prince, the singer and musician, died April 21, 2016, at age 57. His body was found at his Paisley Park studios, located in Chanhassen, Minnesota, the Carver County Sheriff"s Office tweeted. (Credit: Getty Images / Vince Bucci)
Chyna
Former professional wrestler and reality TV personality Chyna was found dead in her Los Angeles-area home on April 20, 2016, police said. She was 46 years old. (Credit: Getty Images)
Former professional wrestler and reality TV personality Chyna was found dead in her Los Angeles-area home on April 20, 2016, police said. She was 46 years old. (Credit: Getty Images)
Doris Roberts
Actress Doris Roberts, best known for her role as Marie Barone on the hit sitcom "Everybody Loves Raymond," died on April 17, 2016 at 90. She won five Emmys during her career, four of which were for her work on "Everybody Loves Raymond."
(Credit: Getty Images / Joe Scarnici)
Actress Doris Roberts, best known for her role as Marie Barone on the hit sitcom "Everybody Loves Raymond," died on April 17, 2016 at 90. She won five Emmys during her career, four of which were for her work on "Everybody Loves Raymond."
(Credit: Getty Images / Joe Scarnici)
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Merle Haggard
Country music star Merle Haggard died on April 6, 2016 of pneumonia. Haggard, who passed away on his 79th birthday, was known for hits like "Mama Tried." (Credit: Getty Images / Frazer Harrison)
Country music star Merle Haggard died on April 6, 2016 of pneumonia. Haggard, who passed away on his 79th birthday, was known for hits like "Mama Tried." (Credit: Getty Images / Frazer Harrison)
Patty Duke
Patty Duke, who won an Oscar as a teenager for "The Miracle Worker," died at the age of 69 on Tuesday, March 29, 2016, of sepsis. The actress" long career included her own television show, "The Patty Duke Show," and the Neely O"Hara role in "The Valley of the Dolls." (Credit: Getty Images / Kevin Winter)
Patty Duke, who won an Oscar as a teenager for "The Miracle Worker," died at the age of 69 on Tuesday, March 29, 2016, of sepsis. The actress" long career included her own television show, "The Patty Duke Show," and the Neely O"Hara role in "The Valley of the Dolls." (Credit: Getty Images / Kevin Winter)
Earl Hamner
Earl Hamner, the creator of TV"s "The Waltons" and "Falcon Crest," died at age 92 on March 24, 2016. (Credit: TNS)
Earl Hamner, the creator of TV"s "The Waltons" and "Falcon Crest," died at age 92 on March 24, 2016. (Credit: TNS)
Garry Shandling
Comedian Garry Shandling, the star of HBO"s "The Larry Sanders Show" and Showtime"s "It"s Garry Shandling"s Show" has died at age 66. Shandling suffered an apparent heart attack, his publicist, Alan Nierob, told Reuters. (Credit: Getty Images / Alberto E. Rodriguez)
Comedian Garry Shandling, the star of HBO"s "The Larry Sanders Show" and Showtime"s "It"s Garry Shandling"s Show" has died at age 66. Shandling suffered an apparent heart attack, his publicist, Alan Nierob, told Reuters. (Credit: Getty Images / Alberto E. Rodriguez)
Phife Dawg
Rapper Phife Dawg from A Tribe Called Quest died early Wednesday morning, according to Rolling Stone. He was 45.
(Credit: Invision / Brian Ach)
Rapper Phife Dawg from A Tribe Called Quest died early Wednesday morning, according to Rolling Stone. He was 45.
(Credit: Invision / Brian Ach)
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Rob Ford
Former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford, notorious for smoking crack while in office, died at the age of 46 on Tuesday, March 22, 2016, his office said. Ford had been struggling with cancer since September 2014 when the diagnosis forced him to end his re-election campaign for mayor.
(Credit: Getty Images)
Former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford, notorious for smoking crack while in office, died at the age of 46 on Tuesday, March 22, 2016, his office said. Ford had been struggling with cancer since September 2014 when the diagnosis forced him to end his re-election campaign for mayor.
(Credit: Getty Images)
Frank Sinatra Jr.
Frank Sinatra Jr., son of Frank Sinatra and a singer himself, passed away on Wednesday, March 16, 2016. His sister Nancy Sinatra announced he had died of cardiac arrest on her official Facebook page. He was 72. (Credit: Getty Images / Charley Gallay)
Frank Sinatra Jr., son of Frank Sinatra and a singer himself, passed away on Wednesday, March 16, 2016. His sister Nancy Sinatra announced he had died of cardiac arrest on her official Facebook page. He was 72. (Credit: Getty Images / Charley Gallay)
Keith Emerson
The founding member of prog rockers Emerson, Lake and Palmer has died at age 71. Per a statement from the band, Emerson died at home in Los Angeles. (Credit: Getty Images / Frazer Harrison)
The founding member of prog rockers Emerson, Lake and Palmer has died at age 71. Per a statement from the band, Emerson died at home in Los Angeles. (Credit: Getty Images / Frazer Harrison)
Sir George Martin
"Fifth Beatle" Sir George Martin died on March 8, 2016 at the age of 90. The wildly successful producer had more than 50 No. 1 hit records in the U.S. and Britain. Pictured: Beatles drummer Ringo Starr, Sir George Martin and producer Giles Martin accept the Best Compilation Soundtrack Album award for "Love" onstage during the 50th annual Grammy awards on Feb.10, 2008 in Los Angeles, California. (Credit: Getty Images / Kevin Winter)
"Fifth Beatle" Sir George Martin died on March 8, 2016 at the age of 90. The wildly successful producer had more than 50 No. 1 hit records in the U.S. and Britain. Pictured: Beatles drummer Ringo Starr, Sir George Martin and producer Giles Martin accept the Best Compilation Soundtrack Album award for "Love" onstage during the 50th annual Grammy awards on Feb.10, 2008 in Los Angeles, California. (Credit: Getty Images / Kevin Winter)
Nancy Reagan
Former first lady Nancy Reagan died on March 6, 2016, at age 94. (Credit: Getty Images)
Former first lady Nancy Reagan died on March 6, 2016, at age 94. (Credit: Getty Images)
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George Kennedy
Actor George Kennedy, who starred in "Cool Hand Luke" and "Airport," died at 91, media outlets reported on Feb. 29, 2016. (Credit: Getty Images / Kevin Winter)
Actor George Kennedy, who starred in "Cool Hand Luke" and "Airport," died at 91, media outlets reported on Feb. 29, 2016. (Credit: Getty Images / Kevin Winter)
Umberto Eco
The Italian author Umberto Eco died on Feb. 19, 2016, at age 84. The European intellectual saw his acclaim move from academic circles to the world at large in 1980 with the success of his novel "The Name of the Rose." (Credit: EPA / Arno Burgi)
The Italian author Umberto Eco died on Feb. 19, 2016, at age 84. The European intellectual saw his acclaim move from academic circles to the world at large in 1980 with the success of his novel "The Name of the Rose." (Credit: EPA / Arno Burgi)
Harper Lee
Harper Lee, author of "To Kill a Mockingbird," died Feb. 19, 2016. She was 89. (Credit: Getty Images / Chip Somodevilla)
Harper Lee, author of "To Kill a Mockingbird," died Feb. 19, 2016. She was 89. (Credit: Getty Images / Chip Somodevilla)
Angela "Big Ang" Raiola
"Mob Wives" star and Brooklyn native Angela Raiola, better known as "Big Ang," died on Feb. 18, 2016, after battling cancer. She was 55 years old. (Credit: Getty Images / Robin Marchant)
"Mob Wives" star and Brooklyn native Angela Raiola, better known as "Big Ang," died on Feb. 18, 2016, after battling cancer. She was 55 years old. (Credit: Getty Images / Robin Marchant)
Antonin Scalia
Antonin Scalia, the conservative U.S. Supreme Court Justice, died at age 79 on Feb. 13, 2016. According to the San Antonio News-Express, Scalia died of natural causes. Appointed by President Ronald Reagan, Scalia began serving the nation"s top court in 1986. (Credit: EPA / Peter Foley)
Antonin Scalia, the conservative U.S. Supreme Court Justice, died at age 79 on Feb. 13, 2016. According to the San Antonio News-Express, Scalia died of natural causes. Appointed by President Ronald Reagan, Scalia began serving the nation"s top court in 1986. (Credit: EPA / Peter Foley)
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Maurice White
Earth, Wind & Fire founder Maurice White died on Feb. 3, 2016, at age 74. The R&B funk band was known for huge disco-era hits including "September," "Shining Star" and "Boogie Wonderland." White died at home in Los Angeles.
Earth, Wind & Fire founder Maurice White died on Feb. 3, 2016, at age 74. The R&B funk band was known for huge disco-era hits including "September," "Shining Star" and "Boogie Wonderland." White died at home in Los Angeles.
Paul Kantner
Paul Kantner (left), founding member of Jefferson Airplane and later Jefferson Starship, died on Jan. 28, 2016. He was 74. (Credit: Getty Images / Mario Tama)
Paul Kantner (left), founding member of Jefferson Airplane and later Jefferson Starship, died on Jan. 28, 2016. He was 74. (Credit: Getty Images / Mario Tama)
Abe Vigoda
Actor Abe Vigoda, known for diverse roles from detective Fish on the sitcom "Barney Miller" to Sal Tessio in "The Godfather," died on Jan. 26, 2016. He was 94.
Actor Abe Vigoda, known for diverse roles from detective Fish on the sitcom "Barney Miller" to Sal Tessio in "The Godfather," died on Jan. 26, 2016. He was 94.
Glenn Frey
Founding Eagles member Glenn Frey died Jan. 18, 2016, due to complications from rheumatoid arthritis, acute ulcerative colitis and pneumonia, the band said. He was 67. (Credit: EPA / Franco Greco)
Founding Eagles member Glenn Frey died Jan. 18, 2016, due to complications from rheumatoid arthritis, acute ulcerative colitis and pneumonia, the band said. He was 67. (Credit: EPA / Franco Greco)
Alan Rickman
British actor Alan Rickman"s death was announced on Jan. 14, 2016. He died after a battle with cancer at the age of 69. (Credit: Getty Images / Chris Jackson)
British actor Alan Rickman"s death was announced on Jan. 14, 2016. He died after a battle with cancer at the age of 69. (Credit: Getty Images / Chris Jackson)
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David Bowie
David Bowie, aka Ziggy Stardust, left Earth on Jan. 10, 2016, at age 69. (Credit: John Griffin)
David Bowie, aka Ziggy Stardust, left Earth on Jan. 10, 2016, at age 69. (Credit: John Griffin)