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Travolta ‘Heartbroken’…

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jan 4th, 2009
2009
Jan 4

CELEBRITY NEWS

‘We are heartbroken,’ Travolta says of late son

 

Travolta family

 

Actor thanks fans, friends for wishes of condolence after Jett’s death

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Access Hollywood
 Jan. 4, 2009
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NASSAU, Bahamas – The Travolta family posted a message on their Web site, Travolta.com, on Sunday, thanking well-wishers for their support following the death of their son, Jett, on Friday morning.

 

“We would like to extend our deepest and most heartfelt thanks to everyone who has sent their love and condolences,” the note read.

 

“Jett was the most wonderful son that two parents could ever ask for and lit up the lives of everyone he encountered. We are heartbroken that our time with him was so brief. We will cherish the time we had with him for the rest of our lives.

 

“We have received many messages of condolence from around the world and we want to thank everyone for their prayers and support,” the message continued. “It has meant so much to us. It is a beautiful reminder of the inherent goodness of the human spirit that gives us hope for a brighter future.”

 

The message is signed John, Kelly and Ella — the Travoltas’ 8-year-old daughter.

 

Among those messages of condolences was one from the Kawasaki Disease Foundation, which Access Hollywood received on Sunday morning. Jett suffered from the rare disease.

 

“The members, families and supporters of the Kawasaki Disease Foundation wish to express our sympathies to the Travoltas on the loss of their son, Jett,” the Foundation said in a statement to Access. “We also extend our condolences to the families of the countless children who have been claimed by Kawasaki Disease. Although we do not know the cause of Jett Travolta’s passing, we are aware that he had KD as a child, which like other KD children, made him special in the hearts of other KD families who know first hand the challenges our children face. The loss of any child, whether in the days and weeks after having KD, or years later, is tragic.”

 

Jett, who was 16, passed away on Friday while on vacation in the Bahamas with his family. He is thought to have suffered a seizure and hit his head on the bathtub.

 

According to the New York Daily News, John attempted to save his son’s life, administering CPR and calling out to an arriving emergency medical technician for assistance after Jett was discovered on the bathroom floor by one of his two nannies.

 

“Help me! Help me! I’m losing him!” Travolta reportedly said.

 

Michael Ossi, the family’s lawyer, told Access on Friday that Jett had a “history of seizures.”

 

An autopsy will be conducted by two pathologists on Monday. Following that, Jett’s body will be flown to Florida for a likely burial in Ocala, where the Travoltas own a home, in the middle of the week.

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Obit: Pat Hingle

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jan 4th, 2009
2009
Jan 4

OBITUARY

Pat Hingle dies at 84; veteran actor was perhaps best known for ‘Batman’ role

 

Pat Hingle

 

By Jon Thurber
Los Angeles Times
January 5, 2009
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Pat Hingle, the veteran actor with more than half a century of impressive work in theater, film and television who was perhaps best known to a generation of movie fans as Commissioner James Gordon in the first four “Batman” films, has died. He was 84.    (Click on ‘Continue Reading’ for more)
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Obit: Edmund Purdom

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jan 4th, 2009
2009
Jan 4

OBITUARY

Edmund Purdom, Screen Actor, Dies at 84

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ROME (Agence France-Presse) — Edmund Purdom, the British actor who starred in the Hollywood costume pageants “The Egyptian” and “The Prodigal” in the mid-1950s, died on Thursday in Rome, where he had lived and worked since the 1960s. He was 84.

 

His death was announced by his family.

 

Mr. Purdom began his acting career in the theater on both sides of the Atlantic. He landed the lead in the MGM musical “The Student Prince” in 1954, replacing an overweight Mario Lanza, and later that year replaced Marlon Brando, who opted out of “The Egyptian.”

 

After settling in Rome, Mr. Purdom starred in “sword and sandal” epics and Italian B movies and then worked for many years as a voice-dubbing actor, mainly from Italian into English.

 

In a romantic history that included four weddings and three divorces, Mr. Purdom was best known for abruptly leaving his wife, Anita Philips, and their two children to marry the Mexican actress Linda Christian, with whom he starred in “Athena” (1954). Ms. Christian was the ex-wife of Tyrone Power.

 

Mr. Purdom’s survivors include his daughter with Ms. Philips, Lilan Purdom, a French television journalist.

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