Friday, April 25, 2025
Patrick Adiarte Passes On
Patrick Adiarte, who played Ho Jon in the first season of M*A*S*H and appeared in both The King and I and Flower Drum Song, died on April 15 2025 at the age of 81. The cause was pneumonia.
Patrick Adiarte was born on August 2 1942 in Manila, Philippines. During World War II, he, his mother, and his sister were imprisoned by the Japanese on the island of Cebu in February 1945. His father, who was working for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, a month later. It was in June 1946 that the family migrated to the United States so that Patrick Adriarte's sister could have surgery to repair scars she had incurred from a Japanese grenade.
Both Patrick Adiarte and his mother appeared in small parts on Broadway in The King and I. Afterwards he attended the Professional Children’s School in New York City. Later in the decade he played Wang San in the Broadway production of Flower Drum Song. In the Fifties he appeared in the movie adaptation of The King and I (1956) as Prince Chulalongkorn as well as the movie High Time (1960). During this period he was mentored by dancer Gene Kelly. He appeared with Mr. Kelly on the NBC TV show Omnibus, demonstrating the evolution of tap dancing through the years.
In the Sixties Patrick Adiarte reprised his role as Want San in the movie adaptation of Flower Drum Song (1961). He also appeared in the movies John Goldfarb, Pease Come Home! (1965) and Step Out of Your Mind (1966). On television he was one of the dancers on Hullabaloo. He guest starred on the TV shows CBS Playhouse, Look Up and Live, It Takes a Thief, and Ironside. He also had a brief singing career with the songs "Five Different Girls," "Don't Let This Room Become Your World," and "Where You Gettin' Your Kicks Now."
In the Seventies he appeared as Ho Jon, the orphan who assists Hawkeye and Trapper John, in the first season of M*A*S*H. On television he guest starred on the shows Bonanza, The Brady Bunch, Hawaii Five-O, Temperatures Rising, and Kojak.
Later Patrick Adiarte taught dancing at Santa Monica College, among other places.
Patrick Adiarte was certainly talented. He was a gifted singer and dancer, as demonstrated in Flower Drum Song. And he was also certainly a gifted actor. He did a great job as the thoroughly American, thoroughly non-traditional Wang San in Flower Drum Song. He played college student T.J. Padmanagham in Blake Edwards's High Time, and had the admittedly politically incorrect role of an Arabic prince in the spoof John Goldfarb, Please Come Home! Of course, many will always remember him as Ho Jon on M*A*S*H, a role for which he will probably always be remembered. While he may not have had a long career, Patrick Adiarte certainly made an impact.
Thursday, April 24, 2025
The Late Great Will Hutchins
Will Hutchins, best known for playing Tom "Sugarfoot" Brewster on the TV show Sugarfoot, died on April 21 2025 at the age of 94. He also appeared in the movie No Time for Sergeants (1958) and played Dagwood in the short-lived Sixties sitcom Blondie.
Will Hutchins was born Marshall Lowell Hutchason on May 5 1930 in Los Angeles. When he was a boy he visited a film shoot and wound up in a crowd scene in the W.C. Fields movie Never Give a Sucker an Even Break (1941). He attended John Marshall High School in the Los Feliz in Los Angeles and then Pomona College. During the Korean War he served for two years in the United States Army Signal Corps as a cryptographer in Paris He attended the UCLA film school on the G.I. Bill following his service.
Wil Hutchins was in a play with fellow Pomona College alumnus Richard Chamberlain at the Ivar Theater in Hollywood, Mr. Chamberlain's agent, Dick Clayton, took notice of Will Hutchins and signed him a contract with him as a client. Because he resembled Will Rogers Jr., Marshall Hutcason took the stage name "Will Hutchins." He made his debut in an episode of Conflict in 1956. He made his film debut in a bit part in Bombers B-52 (1957).
Will Hutchins was cast int the role of Tom Brewster, who was nicknamed "Sugarfoot," who earned the name int the show's first episode because he was "...someone who’s trying to work his way up to tenderfoot." The show was loosely based on 1954 Will Rogers Jr. movie The Boy from Oklahoma., which starred Will Rogers Jr. "Sugarfoot" Brewster didn't care for firearms in general and never carried a gun. When all else failed, he took out villains through his skill with a lasso. He drank nothing stronger than sarsaparilla "with a dash of cherry." On Sugarfoot Will Huthcins also played Tom's evil lookalike cousin, The Canary Kid, one of the earliest evil twins on television. Warner Bros.' Western TV shows of the time existed in a shared universe, so that Brewster also appeared in episodes of Maverick, Cheyenne, and Bronco.
In the late Fifties Will Hutchins guest starred on such shows as Warner Bros. Conflicts, Matinee Theatre, and 77 Sunset Strip. In movies he played B-24 pilot Lt. Bridges, who has the misfortune of having a hangover, in No Time for Sergeants (1958). He also appeared in the movie Lafayette Escadrille (1958).
In the Sixties Will Hutchins played the lead in the short-lived sitcom Hey, Landlord and Dagwood Bumstead in the short-lived, but notorious sitcom Blondie. He guest starred on the shows The Roaring 20s, Surfside 6, Gunsmoke, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, and Perry Mason. He appeared in the movies Claudelle Inglish (1961), Merrill's Marauders (1962), The Shooting (1966), Spinout (1966), Clambake (1967), and Shanghai Patrol (1970). He also appeared on Broadway in Never Too Late.
In the Seventies Will Hutchins appeared in the movies Magnum Force (1973), Slumber Party '57 (1976), and The Happy Hooker Goes to Washington (1977). He guest starred on the shows Love, American Style; The Nw Perry Mason; Emergency!; Chase; Movin' On; The Streets of San Francisco; and The Quest.
Will Hutchins appeared in the movie Roar (1981) before leaving Hollywood and joining the circus. At various times he served as a ringmaster and was a member of a troop of clowns in Los Angeles. He spent three years travelling throughout Australia as Patches the Clown in the Ashton Family Circus. He also appeared in the movies The Gunfighter (1999) and The Romantics (2010).
Will Hutchins was a very talented actor. He certainly had a gift for comedy, and that gift was certainly on display on Sugarfoot, which was television's first comedic Western (it beat Maverick to the air by five days). On the show not only did Will Hutchins do well as would-be lawyer Tom Brewster, but as Brewster's evil cousin, The Canary Kid. Of course, Will Hutchins's career went beyond Sugarfoot. While Blondie was not a particularly good show, Will Hutchins was ideal as Dagwood and did well as the classic cartoon character. Over the years he played many good roles from store owner's on Dennis Peasley in Clauelle Inglish to clumsy police officer Lt. Tracy Richards in Spinout to real-life scout Frederick Russell Burnham in Shanghai Patrol. Will Hutchins had a great deal of talent and always gave a good performance.
Will Hutchins was born Marshall Lowell Hutchason on May 5 1930 in Los Angeles. When he was a boy he visited a film shoot and wound up in a crowd scene in the W.C. Fields movie Never Give a Sucker an Even Break (1941). He attended John Marshall High School in the Los Feliz in Los Angeles and then Pomona College. During the Korean War he served for two years in the United States Army Signal Corps as a cryptographer in Paris He attended the UCLA film school on the G.I. Bill following his service.
Wil Hutchins was in a play with fellow Pomona College alumnus Richard Chamberlain at the Ivar Theater in Hollywood, Mr. Chamberlain's agent, Dick Clayton, took notice of Will Hutchins and signed him a contract with him as a client. Because he resembled Will Rogers Jr., Marshall Hutcason took the stage name "Will Hutchins." He made his debut in an episode of Conflict in 1956. He made his film debut in a bit part in Bombers B-52 (1957).
Will Hutchins was cast int the role of Tom Brewster, who was nicknamed "Sugarfoot," who earned the name int the show's first episode because he was "...someone who’s trying to work his way up to tenderfoot." The show was loosely based on 1954 Will Rogers Jr. movie The Boy from Oklahoma., which starred Will Rogers Jr. "Sugarfoot" Brewster didn't care for firearms in general and never carried a gun. When all else failed, he took out villains through his skill with a lasso. He drank nothing stronger than sarsaparilla "with a dash of cherry." On Sugarfoot Will Huthcins also played Tom's evil lookalike cousin, The Canary Kid, one of the earliest evil twins on television. Warner Bros.' Western TV shows of the time existed in a shared universe, so that Brewster also appeared in episodes of Maverick, Cheyenne, and Bronco.
In the late Fifties Will Hutchins guest starred on such shows as Warner Bros. Conflicts, Matinee Theatre, and 77 Sunset Strip. In movies he played B-24 pilot Lt. Bridges, who has the misfortune of having a hangover, in No Time for Sergeants (1958). He also appeared in the movie Lafayette Escadrille (1958).
In the Sixties Will Hutchins played the lead in the short-lived sitcom Hey, Landlord and Dagwood Bumstead in the short-lived, but notorious sitcom Blondie. He guest starred on the shows The Roaring 20s, Surfside 6, Gunsmoke, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, and Perry Mason. He appeared in the movies Claudelle Inglish (1961), Merrill's Marauders (1962), The Shooting (1966), Spinout (1966), Clambake (1967), and Shanghai Patrol (1970). He also appeared on Broadway in Never Too Late.
In the Seventies Will Hutchins appeared in the movies Magnum Force (1973), Slumber Party '57 (1976), and The Happy Hooker Goes to Washington (1977). He guest starred on the shows Love, American Style; The Nw Perry Mason; Emergency!; Chase; Movin' On; The Streets of San Francisco; and The Quest.
Will Hutchins appeared in the movie Roar (1981) before leaving Hollywood and joining the circus. At various times he served as a ringmaster and was a member of a troop of clowns in Los Angeles. He spent three years travelling throughout Australia as Patches the Clown in the Ashton Family Circus. He also appeared in the movies The Gunfighter (1999) and The Romantics (2010).
Will Hutchins was a very talented actor. He certainly had a gift for comedy, and that gift was certainly on display on Sugarfoot, which was television's first comedic Western (it beat Maverick to the air by five days). On the show not only did Will Hutchins do well as would-be lawyer Tom Brewster, but as Brewster's evil cousin, The Canary Kid. Of course, Will Hutchins's career went beyond Sugarfoot. While Blondie was not a particularly good show, Will Hutchins was ideal as Dagwood and did well as the classic cartoon character. Over the years he played many good roles from store owner's on Dennis Peasley in Clauelle Inglish to clumsy police officer Lt. Tracy Richards in Spinout to real-life scout Frederick Russell Burnham in Shanghai Patrol. Will Hutchins had a great deal of talent and always gave a good performance.
Tuesday, April 22, 2025
TCM's Two for One Returns This May
Turner Classic Movies' programming block Two for One returns on Saturday, May 3 2025. For those unfamiliar with Two for Onem, it features double features curated by influential filmmakers. Indeed, I prefer to call it "TCM Double Feature." This time around Two for Runs will run through July, winding up on July 19.
This time out Two for One will include such notables as Lin Manueal Miranda, John Carpenter, Paul Giamatti, and Joe Dante. Like most TCM fans I am looking forward to Two for One, although I do wish they would move it to Friday. Too often it runs over and pushes Noir Alley back past 11:00 PM Central.
Anyway, here the schedule below. The fun kicks off at 7:00 PM Central on Saturdays.
May3: Lin Manual Miranda-The Band Wagon (1953) and All That Jazz (1979)
May 10: Jamie Lee Curtis-The Manchurian Candidate (1962) and Sweet Smell of Success (1957)
May 17: John Carpenter-Frankenstein (1931) and The Curse of Frankenstein (1957)
May 31: Kathy Bates-Bringing Up Baby (1938) and Stage Door (1937)
June 7: Paul Giamatti, Carnival of Souls (1962) and Rosemary's Baby (1968)
June 14: Brian Tyree Henry, Imitation of Life and The Learning Tree (1969)
June 28: Nathan Lane-Double Indemnity (1944) and Chinatown (1974)
July 5: Joe Dante-The Night of the Hunter (1955) and The Fool Killer (1965)
July 19: Rosie Perez- Killer's Kiss (1955) and The Harder They Fall (1956)
Monday, April 21, 2025
Sian Barbara Allen Passes On
Sian Barbara Allen, who guest starred in two episodes of The Waltons as Jenny Pendleton, died on Mach 31 2025 at the age of 78. She had Alzheimer's.
Sian Barbara Allenw was born on Reading, Pennsylvania on July 12 1946. After she graduated from high school, she studied acting at the Pasadena Playhouse on a scholarship and studied acting as a member of the Journeyman program at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles under Peggy Feury.
She made her television debut on an episode of O'Hara, U.S. Treasury in 1971. She made her movie debut in You'll Like My Mother in 1972. Sian Barbara Allen appeared frequently on television in the Seventies. In addition to her guest appearances on The Waltons, she also guest starred on the shows Alias Smith and Jones; Gunsmoke; The Bold Ones: The Lawyers; Owen Marshall, Counsellor at Law; The F.B.I.; Bonanza; Love, American Style; Columbo; Kojak; Marcus Welby, M.D.; Ironside;The Rockford Files; Lucas Tanner; Adam-12; Kate McShane; Police Story; Kingston Confidential; Hawaii Five-O; Baretta; W.E.B.; Sword of Justice; and The Incredible Hulk/ She appeared in the movie Billy Two Hats (1974). She also wrote an episode of Baretta.
Sian Barbara Allen's career slowed after 1980. She guest starred in the shows Darkroom, Falcon Crest, Cagney & Lacey; and L.A. Law. After retiring from acting she devoted much of her time to politics, supporting Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers. She also wrote poetry.
Like many I will always think of Sian Barbara Allen as John Boy's romantic interest Jenny on The Waltons. She and Richard Thomas were dating in real life at the time, and their rapport translated well to the small screen. John Boy would date other girls, but for me Jenny remained his most memorable love interest. Of course, Sian Barbra Allen appeared in many other roles. I remember her also from the Bonanza episode "Ambush at Rio Lobo," on which she played a staunch, but caring pregnant who is held hostage along with Ben Cartwright by a bunch of outlaws. In the horror movie You'll Like My Mother, she played Kathleen, the intellectually disabled, non-verbal sister of lead character Francesca (Patty Duke). She was nominated for the Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer for the role. Sian Barbara Allen had a gift for bringing characters to life and she always made an impression.
Sian Barbara Allenw was born on Reading, Pennsylvania on July 12 1946. After she graduated from high school, she studied acting at the Pasadena Playhouse on a scholarship and studied acting as a member of the Journeyman program at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles under Peggy Feury.
She made her television debut on an episode of O'Hara, U.S. Treasury in 1971. She made her movie debut in You'll Like My Mother in 1972. Sian Barbara Allen appeared frequently on television in the Seventies. In addition to her guest appearances on The Waltons, she also guest starred on the shows Alias Smith and Jones; Gunsmoke; The Bold Ones: The Lawyers; Owen Marshall, Counsellor at Law; The F.B.I.; Bonanza; Love, American Style; Columbo; Kojak; Marcus Welby, M.D.; Ironside;The Rockford Files; Lucas Tanner; Adam-12; Kate McShane; Police Story; Kingston Confidential; Hawaii Five-O; Baretta; W.E.B.; Sword of Justice; and The Incredible Hulk/ She appeared in the movie Billy Two Hats (1974). She also wrote an episode of Baretta.
Sian Barbara Allen's career slowed after 1980. She guest starred in the shows Darkroom, Falcon Crest, Cagney & Lacey; and L.A. Law. After retiring from acting she devoted much of her time to politics, supporting Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers. She also wrote poetry.
Like many I will always think of Sian Barbara Allen as John Boy's romantic interest Jenny on The Waltons. She and Richard Thomas were dating in real life at the time, and their rapport translated well to the small screen. John Boy would date other girls, but for me Jenny remained his most memorable love interest. Of course, Sian Barbra Allen appeared in many other roles. I remember her also from the Bonanza episode "Ambush at Rio Lobo," on which she played a staunch, but caring pregnant who is held hostage along with Ben Cartwright by a bunch of outlaws. In the horror movie You'll Like My Mother, she played Kathleen, the intellectually disabled, non-verbal sister of lead character Francesca (Patty Duke). She was nominated for the Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer for the role. Sian Barbara Allen had a gift for bringing characters to life and she always made an impression.
Sunday, April 20, 2025
Happy Easter 2025
Here at A Shroud of Thoughts we realize there are those who might appreciate some cheesecake along with their Easter eggs and chocolate bunnies. Here then is this year's batch of Easter pinups.
First up is Phyllis Elizabeth Davis, who is gathering Easter eggs with help from two Easter bunnies.
And here's Pat Crowley with some rather large eggs!
Here is Mary Tyler Moore and a friend.
Loretta Young is dressed for the holiday.
Elaine Riley is dyeing her eggs.
And last but no least, the lovely Ann Miller is gathering eggs.
And here's Pat Crowley with some rather large eggs!
Here is Mary Tyler Moore and a friend.
Loretta Young is dressed for the holiday.
Elaine Riley is dyeing her eggs.
And last but no least, the lovely Ann Miller is gathering eggs.
Happy Easter!!!!!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)