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James Sikking, Star Of ‘Hill Street Blues’ And ‘Doogie Howser, MD,’ Dies At 90

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James Sikking, who played a harsh police officer on “Hill Street Blues” and the main character’s kindhearted father on “Doogie Howser, M.D.,” died at 90.

Sikking died of dementia complications, according to his spokeswoman, Cynthia Snyder, who released a statement Sunday evening.

Born the youngest of five children in Los Angeles on March 5, 1934, his early acting career included an uncredited performance in Roger Corman’s “Five Guns West” and a cameo appearance in an episode of “Perry Mason.” He also appeared in a slew of iconic 1970s television shows, including the action-packed “Mission: Impossible,” “M.A.S.H.,” “The F.B.I.,” “The Rockford Files,” “Hawaii Five-O,” and “Charlie’s Angels,” as well as “Eight is Enough” and “Little House on the Prairie.”

James Sikking, Star Of ‘Hill Street Blues’ And ‘Doogie Howser, MD,’ Dies At 90

In 1981, “Hill Street Blues” made its premiere as a novel spin on the classic police procedural. Sikking played Lieutenant Howard Hunter, a clean-cut Vietnam War veteran who led the Metropolitan Police Department’s Emergency Action Team in an unnamed city.

The famous show was a drama, but Sikking’s strict personality and eccentricities were frequently employed to hilarious effect. Sikking modeled his performance after a drill instructor he had at basic training when military service interrupted his studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, from which he graduated in 1959.

“The drill instructor looked like he had steel for hair, and his uniform had so much starch in it, you knew it would sit in the corner when he took it off in the barracks,” he told The Fresno Bee in 2014, as part of a series of interviews honoring the debut of the box set.

When it debuted on the heels of a Hollywood dual strike, the NBC show had dismal ratings and little attention. However, the struggling network kept it on the air. “Up popped this word ‘demographic,'” Sikking told the Star Tribune in 2014. “We were reaching out to folks with a specific education and income level. “They called it the ‘Esquire audience.'”

The show continued until 1987. However, it was unclear whether Sikking would make it that far. A December 1983 episode concluded with his character considering death. The cliffhanger prompted comparisons to the “Who shot J.R.?” mystery from “Dallas” not long ago — but it was immediately answered when TV supplements unintentionally printed a teaser description revealing Hunter’s survival.

“I remember when Howard attempted suicide. My brother called and inquired, ‘You still got a job?’ “I said, ‘Yeah,’ and he said, ‘Oh good,’ before hanging up,” Sikking told The Fresno Bee.

Sikking received an Emmy nomination for outstanding supporting actor in a drama in 1984. The style and format of “Hill Street Blues” were unfamiliar to Sikking and many in the audience, from the dirty look of the set to the various storylines that frequently kept performers working in the background even when they didn’t have lines in the scene.

“It was a lot of hard work, but everyone enjoyed it, and it shows. When you have people participating in the production, manufacturing, or whatever you want to call it, who are truly into it and enjoy doing it, you’re going to get a wonderful product,” he told Parade.com back in 2014. “We always had three different stories running through (each episode), which means you had to listen and you had to pay attention because everything was important.”

Aside from “Hill Street Blues,” Sikking portrayed Captain Styles in 1984’s “Star Trek III: The Search for Spock.” He wasn’t excited about the position but was enticed by the prospect of spending only one day on set.

“It was not my cup of tea.” I was not interested in the outer space business. Back then, I had an arrogant attitude. I wanted to perform in a real theater. I wanted to develop real shows, not ones based on people’s imaginations of what outer space might be like,” Sikking told startrek.com in 2014. “So I had a silly prejudice against it, which is bizarre because I’ve probably and happily signed more this, that or the other thing of ‘Star Trek’ than I have anything of all the other work I’ve done.”

Following the conclusion of “Hill Street Blues,” he appeared in approximately 100 episodes of “Dougie Howser, M.D.,” reuniting with Steven Bochco, who co-created both “Hill Street Blues” and the sitcom starring Neil Patrick Harris.

He married Florine Caplan, and they had two children and four grandkids.

James Sikking, Star Of ‘Hill Street Blues’ And ‘Doogie Howser, MD,’ Dies At 90

Sikking had all but retired when the “Hill Street Blues” box set was released. He had fewer but notable parts after the millennium, guest-starring on “Curb Your Enthusiasm” and appearing in the rom-com films “Fever Pitch” and “Made of Honor.” His final appearances were as a guest star on a 2012 episode of “The Closer” and in the film “Just an American.”

Sikking continued to host charitable activities. He frequently participated in celebrity golf tournaments and once attended the ribbon-cutting for a health center in an Iowa hamlet of only 7,200 inhabitants. “Actually, I came to get something from you—air I can’t see,” Sikking told the 100-person crowd. “Where we come from, if it isn’t brown, we don’t know how to breathe it,” The Associated Press reported in 1982.

“I’d probably do anything if it got me motivated. Acting is a license to conduct one’s investigation. “Being an actor is a great ego trip,” he told startrek.com in 2014. “I must say that, in the past few years in which I haven’t worked, the obscurity has been quite attractive.”

“The condiment of my life is good fortune,” he concluded.

SOURCE – (AP)

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Justin Timberlake Reaches Plea Deal To Resolve Drunken Driving Case

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NEW YORK — Justin Timberlake is set to submit a new plea on Friday in his drunken driving case in New York’s Hamptons, according to prosecutors. The details of the plea were not published, but a person familiar with the situation said Timberlake agreed to plead guilty to a less serious offense than the original accusation of driving while intoxicated.

The individual talked with The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the matter.

Edward Burke, Timberlake’s attorney, declined to comment.

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Justin Timberlake Reaches Plea Deal To Resolve Drunken Driving Case

Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney’s office said Wednesday that the pop singer will appear in person in Sag Harbour Village Court on Friday to enter a plea.

Timberlake was detained on June 18 in the village of Sag Harbour, on Long Island’s eastern coast, when police claimed he ran a stop sign in the village center, drifted out of his lane, and exited his BMW smelling of alcohol. The 43-year-old Tennessee native has pleaded not guilty to a misdemeanor drunk driving allegation.

Last month, a judge suspended Timberlake’s license to drive in New York.

Burke, Timberlake’s lawyer, has argued that he was not inebriated and that the prosecution should be dismissed.

Timberlake was stopped after leaving a Sag Harbour hotel at 12:30 a.m., according to authorities.

“His eyes were bloodshot and glassy, a strong odour of an alcoholic beverage was emanating from his breath, he was unable to divide attention, he had slowed speech, he was unsteady afoot and he performed poorly on all standardised field sobriety tests,” police told the court.

Justin informed the officer he had one martini and was on his way home with some buddies, according to police. He was arrested and spent the night at the police station.

The boy band singer-turned-solo star and actor’s agency and other representatives did not immediately reply to requests for comment on Wednesday.

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Justin Timberlake Reaches Plea Deal To Resolve Drunken Driving Case

Justin, a ten-time Grammy winner, began performing as a young Disney Mouseketeer, rose to prominence as a member of the boy band NSYNC, and launched his solo recording career in the early 2000s.

Sag Harbour is a former whaling community featured in Herman Melville’s famous novel “Moby-Dick” which is located in the Hamptons, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) east of New York City.

SOURCE | AP

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Harvey Weinstein Indicted On Additional Sex Crimes Charges Ahead Of New York Retrial

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Weinstein | AP News Image

NEW YORK — Harvey Weinstein, the disgraced movie mogul, has been indicted on fresh sex offense charges ahead of his trials in New York, Manhattan prosecutors announced at a hearing Thursday.

The indictment will remain sealed until Weinstein’s arraignment on September 18.

Harvey, 72, was unable to attend Thursday’s hearing because he was recovering from emergency heart surgery on Monday in a Manhattan hospital.

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Harvey Weinstein Indicted On Additional Sex Crimes Charges Ahead Of New York Retrial

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office revealed at a recent court hearing that prosecutors have begun presenting evidence to a grand jury of up to three new complaints against Weinstein dating back to the mid-2000s.

Harvey’s 2020 conviction on rape and sexual assault charges was overturned by an appeals court earlier this year, prompting prosecutors to seek retrial. It is unclear if the new charges will be included in the retrial, as prosecutors seek, or if the court will treat them separately.

The latest charges come after British prosecutors declared last week that they would no longer pursue indecent assault charges against Weinstein, who was the most visible villain of the #MeToo movement in 2017 when women began to speak up about his behavior.

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Harvey Weinstein Indicted On Additional Sex Crimes Charges Ahead Of New York Retrial

The 72-year-old Miramax co-founder has long claimed that all sexual activity was consensual.

He is scheduled to appear in Manhattan court for a hearing on the case on September 12. His retrial is tentatively scheduled for November.

SOURCE | AP

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Renowned Actor James Earl Jones Dies at 93

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James Earl Jones, an imposing figure on stage and screen, passed away on Monday at the age of 93. He became famous around the world as Darth Vader, a cosmic evil, after overcoming a childhood stammer and developing a stentorian voice.

According to Jones’s representative Barry McPherson, James Earl Jones passed away at home with his family by his side.

Despite his commanding stage presence, Jones’s voice carried him far in his career; he would have been famous even if no one ever saw his face. Depending on the scene, the deep bass might either inspire reverence (as it did for the wise father Mufasa in “The Lion King” and other Shakespearean parts) or terror (as it did for the rasping Vader in the “Star Wars” movies).

In response to a question from a Reuters interviewer about whether he disliked being so strongly associated with Darth Vader, Jones burst out laughing. The job only called for his voice for a few lines, while another actor wore the mask and performed the onscreen action.

“I love being part of that whole myth, of that whole cult,” he remarked, also expressing his pleasure to satisfy fans who wanted him to repeat his “I am your father” line to Mark Hamill’s Luke Skywalker.

James Earl Jones Oscar

On Monday, alongside a sad heart emoji, Hamill commented on X, “#RIP dad,” under a news article about Jones’s passing.

Jones claimed he earned barely $9,000 for the original film’s Darth Vader role and treated it as nothing more than a special effects gig. In fact, he never even asked to be named in the credits of the first “Star Wars” films.

On Broadway, he won Tonys for “The Great White Hope” in 1969 and “Fences” in 1987, and in 1991, he won Emmys for “Gabriel’s Fire” and “Heat Wave” on television. His collection of accolades is extensive. Grammys for best spoken word album and “Great American Documents” were both bestowed upon him in 1977.

Although he never took home an actual Oscar, he did receive an honorary nomination for his performance in 2011’s “The Great White Hope” and was considered for best actor in the film adaptation.

One of his earliest film roles James Earl Jones was as Lieutenant Luther Zogg in Stanley Kubrick’s 1964 masterpiece “Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learnt to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.”

Among his subsequent critically lauded film performances were those of South African Reverend Stephen Kumalo in 1995’s “Cry, the Beloved Country” and novelist Terence Mann in 1989’s “Field of Dreams.” He has been in numerous films, including “Field of Dreams,” “The Sandlot,” “Matewan,” “The Hunt for Red October,” “Conan the Barbarian,” “Coming to America,” and so on.

In addition to his appearances in scores of ads, Jones provided the authoritative voice-over for CNN’s newscast introductions for a number of years.

Irish, African, and Cherokee ancestry

A member of a mixed-race family sprung from Irish, African, and Cherokee ancestry, James Earl Jones came into this world on January 17, 1931, in the little Mississippi town of Arkabutla.

Not long after that, Robert Earl Jones Sr., who had been a prizefighter and was now an actor, abandoned the family. It wasn’t until James relocated to New York in the 1950s that he was able to reconcile with his father, as his maternal grandparents had forbidden him to see him while he was growing up. In due time, they shared the stage in other productions.

When Jones’s grandparents uprooted the family from Mississippi and settled on a farm in Michigan when he was around five years old, he began to stutter and eventually stopped speaking altogether.

His high school English teacher used a trick to get him to speak up after he remained mute for ten years. Jones claimed to have written a poem, which the teacher then had him repeat to the class as evidence that he was the real author.

Jones got over his stammer and developed an interest in acting, but he later admitted that he still had to be careful with his words.

Moving to New York after completing his drama degree at Michigan, he began to receive more and more praise for his stage performances.

He played the role of Black heavyweight champion Jack Johnson in “The Great White Hope,” his breakout Broadway performance. Reviewers gushed over Jones’s portrayal of the racist boxer in the critically acclaimed play.

His starring performances as Hamlet, Macbeth, King Lear, and Othello in Shakespeare’s plays kept audiences captivated for decades. Paul Robeson, a singer, actor, and activist, was one of his memorable 1977 Broadway roles, and he played Alex Haley, an author, in the TV miniseries “Roots: The Next Generation.”

According to a 1987 review of “Fences” in the Washington Post, he could “move in seconds from boyish ingenuousness to near-biblical rage and somehow suggesting all the gradations in between.”

One of Jones’s co-stars in “Othello,” Julienne Marie Hendricks, was his first wife. Flynn Earl Jones was born to Earl and his second wife, the late actress Cecilia Hart. Cecilia passed away in 2016.

Jones won major roles in politically charged films and plays, paving the way for other Black actors to follow in his footsteps.

Jones rose to prominence during the height of the civil rights movement in the ’60s and ’70s, but he avoided taking a stand on racial issues.

Jones told the Toronto Star in 2013 that he thought many people thought he was weak for not being a stronger advocate for the cause while he was famous. According to the actor, though, he would rather have his work speak for itself.

Related News:

Julian Ortega, Actor In Netflix’s ‘Elite’ Series, Dies Aged 41

Julian Ortega, Actor In Netflix’s ‘Elite’ Series, Dies Aged 41

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