Well, I guess we all survived the overeating and pyromania of 
Independence Day. Yours truly is writing this from high atop his treadmill, 
trying to shed the pounds of hamburgers and potato salad! 
 
Sadness opens this month’s column yet again, with the passing of two show 
business icons. Isabel Sanford, best known as Louise “Weezy” Jefferson, 
died of what sources describe as ‘old age’ at the age of 86. Sanford first 
gained recognition on an episode of “Bewitched” as a ‘Mammy’ styled character 
opposite Elizabeth Montgomery and the late Jack Cassidy. Also 
noteworthy, Sanford was the first ever black actress to win the coveted “Best 
Performance in a comedy Role” Emmy for her portrayal of Louise Jefferson, the 
long suffering, strong willed wife of ever-pretending George. Interestingly, 
Sanford was 20 years older than her onscreen husband, played by Sherman 
Hemsley. 
 
Also farblondzet, Marlon Brando, whose portrayal of the 
big-hearted/cold blooded Don Vito Corleone (no relation, I promise you,) in the 
1973 Gangster flick “The Godfather” died in his Beverly Hills home of emphysema 
and pneumonia. The 80 year-old actor had recently completed voice-over work for 
the upcoming Brendan Fraser film, “Big Bug Man”, as, of all things, an 
elderly woman. For health reasons, Brando did the work from his home, in full 
drag, and munching on Persian Caviar and wine, gifts from the director. Oddly, 
the corpulent film legend had always wanted to play a woman, a strange, but 
somehow endearing way for the man who redefined method acting to end a long 
illustrious career! 
 
Oscar-winning composer Jerry Goldsmith died from cancer at his Beverly 
Hills home at the age of 75. Goldsmith’s name was synonymous with film and 
television ‘themes’, having written musical scores for “Star Trek”, “Dr. 
Kildare”, and “Barnaby Jones”, as well as many film scores such as “Planet of 
the Apes” ( reportedly, while conducting the orchestra for the recording of it, 
Goldsmith wore a full gorilla prosthetic mask and make-up,) and most recently, 
“Looney Tunes: Back in Action!” Goldsmith was nominated for the ‘Oscar’ 17 
times, and finally won for his musical contribution to the 1976 film, “The 
Omen”. 
 
Lastly, actor Eric Douglas, son of Academy Award winning legend Kirk, 
was found dead in his New York City Apartment, from a drug overdose. The 
aspiring actor had achieved some success in the 80s, appearing in “Delta Force 3 
The Killing Game” and an episode of HBO’s “Tales from the Crypt” for which he 
earned an Emmy nomination, playing opposite his Father. Douglas has been in and 
out of prison and rehab for years, because (according to sources,) he was never 
able to attain the level of stardom his father and older brother Michael had. 
Eric Douglas was 46 years old. 
 
Meanwhile, sad news for James “Scotty” Doohan, the actor who has become 
immortalized as the ever put upon chief engineer of the original starship 
Enterprise, has been diagnosed with the onset of Alzheimer’s disease. The 84 
year-old actor also suffers from Parkinson’s disease, Diabetes, and Fibroses, 
some of which were caused by chemicals he was exposed to during the D-Day 
invasion of France during the Second World War. But, ever the mensch, Doohan 
continues to work, appearing most recently in the upcoming “Skinwalker: Curse of 
the Shaman”, due for release in the fall. 
 
Meanwhile, from the “Move over Anita Bryant” department, diet giant Unilever 
Inc., makers of Slim-Fast, have pulled their series of highly successful 
commercials featuring comedian Whoopi Goldberg. At a fund raiser for the
John Kerry election campaign, she made sexually derogatory comments about
George W. Bush, ( sources say she compared his last name to a part of the 
female anatomy,) and other remarks so inflammatory that the company decided 
Goldberg was too controversial for the apolitical diet drink’s ad campaign. 
Apparently, Whoopi had forgotten that big business and politics don’t mix, 
seemingly having lost sight of the fact that Anita Bryant’s anti-gay 
crusade in the 1970s cost her a multi-million dollar contract hawking Florida 
orange juice, a dismissal which began a permanent downward spiral of the star’s 
career. In a statement to the press, Goldberg said that, while she understood 
the company’s business position, she would not back down.  
 
And did any of you catch that facatcta documentary on the Sci-Fi Channel 
called “The Buried Secret of M. Night Shaymalan?” Well, don’t get your 
gatkes farkrimpt yet Gang, because the whole thing is now suspected of 
having been a total hoax! According to my sources, Shaymalan may have 
collaborated with Sci-Fi Pres. Bonnie Hammer, as a way to publicize his 
new movie, “The Village!” The ‘Blair Witch’ styled farce may have been the 
biggest publicity stunt in the last fifty years, having garnered gezunte 
ratings for Sci-Fi, and giving Shaymalan’s new opus publicity that geldt 
can’t buy! 
 
Meanwhile, Hollywood Legends George Lucas and Steven Speilberg 
keep finding reasons to put the eight-years-in-the-making fourth installment of 
the “Indy” series on hold. Scripts are rejected, storylines revamped, and 
Sean Connery and Harrison Ford keep aging. Some insiders are 
concerned at this point that the movie may never be made at all, due to the fact 
that Ford may be getting too old to do action films. ‘Fun-Foo’ maven Jackie 
Chan, at almost fifty has begun relying more and more on CGI for his stunts 
in his movies, and Harrison Ford, at sixty-four years old, may be unable to do 
the film. A few months ago, it was leaked that “The Mummy” star Brendan Fraser 
would be joining the cast of the fourth ‘Indy’ flick, but bailed soon after due 
to the snail’s pace of the production process.  
 
And just in from the “Couldn’t you just plotz!” department, I just got 
back from a screening of the director’s cut of the film version of Andrew 
Lloyd Webber’s “Phantom”, scheduled for release in December, While Webber’s 
plays usually don’t translate to the big screen too well, (the only one I really 
thought captured the magic of the stage was the video version of “Joseph and the 
Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,”) this one is absolutely cinematic Gan Eyden!
Joel Schumacher did a superb job of bringing the maisse to the 
screen, and his use of second-string actors in the main roles was a mekheye. 
The art direction is sumptuous, as is the costuming, although a little dark for 
my taste. Still, it’s a tremendous piece of filmmaking, and a definite ‘must 
see’! 
 
Well, that’s it for this month Gang…stay cool, stay happy! 
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