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Doctor Charged In Connection With Matthew Perry’s Death Is Expected To Plead Guilty

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Friends Star Matthew Perry, 54 Found Dead at His LA Home

Los Angeles  — One of two doctors indicted in the investigation into Matthew Perry’s death is set to plead guilty Wednesday in a Los Angeles federal court to conspiring to distribute the surgical anesthetic ketamine.

Dr. Mark Chavez, 54, of San Diego, accepted a plea agreement with prosecutors in August, becoming the third individual to plead guilty following the “Friends” star’s tragic overdose last year.

Prosecutors proposed lower charges to Chavez and two others in exchange for their assistance as they pursued two people they believe are more culpable for the overdose death: another doctor and an alleged dealer known as the “ketamine queen” of Los Angeles.

perry

Doctor Charged In Connection With Matthew Perry’s Death Is Expected To Plead Guilty

Chavez is free on bond after handing over his passport and medical license, among other requirements.

His lawyer, Matthew Binninger, stated following Chavez’s initial court appearance on Aug. 30 that he is “incredibly remorseful” and “trying to do everything in his power to right the wrong that happened here.”

Perry’s assistant, who admitted to assisting him in obtaining and injecting ketamine, and a Perry acquaintance, who admitted to serving as a drug courier and intermediary, are also cooperating with federal authorities.

The three are assisting prosecutors in their case of Dr. Salvador Plasencia, who is accused of unlawfully selling ketamine to Perry in the month preceding his death, and Jasveen Sangha, a woman who officials claim provided the actor the lethal quantity of ketamine. Both pleaded not guilty and are awaiting trial.

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In his guilty deal, Chavez admitted to obtaining ketamine from his prior clinic as well as a wholesale distributor to whom he submitted a bogus prescription.

After pleading guilty, he might face up to ten years in jail when sentenced.

Perry was discovered deceased by his assistant on October 28. The medical examiner concluded that ketamine was the primary cause of death. The actor had been taking the medicine as prescribed by his regular doctor, which is a legitimate but off-label treatment for depression that is becoming more widespread.

perry

Doctor Charged In Connection With Matthew Perry’s Death Is Expected To Plead Guilty

Perry started requesting more ketamine than his doctor would give him. About a month before his death, the actor saw Plasencia, who then begged Chavez to procure the medication for him.

“I wonder how much this moron will pay,” Plasencia texted Chavez. They met on the same day in Costa Mesa, midway between Los Angeles and San Diego, and swapped at least four ketamine vials.

After selling the pills to Perry for $4,500, Plasencia asked Chavez if he could continue to supply them so they could become Perry’s “go-to.”

Perry suffered from addiction for many years, beginning with his time on “Friends,” when he rose to prominence as Chandler Bing. From 1994 until 2004, he starred with Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, and David Schwimmer in NBC’s megahit sitcom.

SOURCE | AP

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Daniel Day-Lewis Ends Acting Retirement For A Movie Directed By His Son

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NEW YORK — Daniel Day-Lewis is returning from retirement, seven years after his last film, for a film directed by his son Ronan Day-Lewis.

The collaboration was unveiled Tuesday by Focus Features and Plan B, who are working together on “Anemone.” The film, Ronan Day-Lewis’ directorial debut, will feature his father, Sean Bean, and Samantha Morton. The two Day-Lewises co-wrote the picture.

Earlier Tuesday, Daniel Day-Lewis and Bean were seen riding a motorbike around Manchester, England, fuelling speculation about his anticipated return to acting. After completing Paul Thomas Anderson’s 2017 film “Phantom Thread,” the 67-year-old announced his retirement from performing.

lewis

Daniel Day-Lewis Ends Acting Retirement For A Movie Directed By His Son

“All my life, I’ve mouthed off about how I should stop acting, and I don’t know why it was different this time, but the impulse to quit took root in me, and that became a compulsion,” the actor told W Magazine in 2017. “It was something I had to do.”

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He has made few public appearances since then. In January, he made an unexpected appearance at the National Board of Review Awards, when he presented an award to Martin Scorsese, who directed him in “Gangs of New York” (2002) and “The Age of Innocence” (1993).

“Anemone,” which is now under production, is characterized as looking at “the intricate relationships between fathers, sons, and brothers, as well as the dynamics of familial bonds.”

Ronan Day-Lewis, 26, is a painter who has previously shown his work in New York. His first international solo show opens Tuesday in Hong Kong.

lewis

Daniel Day-Lewis Ends Acting Retirement For A Movie Directed By His Son

“We could not be more excited to partner with a brilliant visual artist in Ronan Day-Lewis on his first feature film, alongside Daniel Day-Lewis as his creative collaborator,” said Peter Kujawski, chair of Focus Features. “They have written a truly exceptional script, and we look forward to bringing their shared vision to audiences alongside the team at Plan B.”

SOURCE | AP

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John Ashton, ‘Beverly Hills Cop’ Actor, Dies At 76

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NEW YORK — John Ashton, the veteran character actor who famously played the gruff but endearing police investigator John Taggart in the ‘Beverly Hills Cop’ movie, died. He was 76.

John passed away on Thursday in Fort Collins, Colorado, according to a statement released on Sunday by Ashton’s manager, Alan Somers. No cause of death was immediately determined.

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John Ashton, ‘Beverly Hills Cop’ Actor, Dies At 76

In a career spanning more than 50 years, John was a familiar face across TV shows and films, including “Midnight Run,” “Little Big League,” and “Go Baby Gone.”

But in the “Beverly Hills Cop” movie, John was an integral part of an unforgettable triumvirate. Though Eddie Murphy’s Axel Foley, a Detroit detective investigating a crime in Los Angeles, was the main character, the two local detectives — Billy Rosewood (Judge Reinhold) and Ashton’s Taggart — were Axel’s sometimes reluctant, sometimes eager accomplices.

Of the three, Taggart — “Sarge” to Billy — was the more fearful, by-the-book detective. But he was constantly lured into Axel’s ideas. Ashton co-starred in all four films, beginning with the 1984 original and continuing through the Netflix reboot, “Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F,” which debuted earlier this year.

Ashton played a more unscrupulous character in Martin Brest’s 1988 buddy comedy “Midnight Run.” In “The Duke,” he played a rival bounty hunter who is simultaneously hunting Charles Grodin’s wanted accountant while he is in the hands of Robert De Niro’s Jack Walsh.

John Ashton, ‘Beverly Hills Cop’ Actor, Dies At 76

In a July interview with Collider, John discussed auditioning with De Niro.

“Bobby started handing me these matches, and I tried to grab the matches, and he dropped them on the floor and stared at me,” Ashton recalled.” “I looked at the matches, then looked up and said, ‘F—- you,’ to which he replied, ‘F—- you, too.’ I said, ‘Go —- yourself.’ I know every other actor picked those up and delivered them to him, and as soon as I left, he said, ‘I want him,’ because he needed someone to stand up to him.”

John is survived by his wife of 24 years, Robin Hoye, his two daughters, three stepchildren, a grandson, two sisters, and a brother.

SOURCE | AP

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Maggie Smith, Scene-Stealing Actor Famed For Harry Potter And ‘Downton Abbey,’ Dies At 89

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LONDON — Maggie Smith, the brilliant, scene-stealing actor who won an Oscar for the 1969 film “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie” and garnered new fans in the twenty-first century as the dowager Countess of Grantham in “Downton Abbey” and Professor Minerva McGonagall in the Harry Potter films, died on Friday. She was 89.

Smith’s sons, Chris Larkin and Toby Stephens, confirmed in a statement that he died early Friday in a London hospital.

“She leaves two sons and five loving grandchildren who are devastated by the loss of their extraordinary mother and grandmother,” the family said in a statement released through publicist Clair Dobbs.

Smith was widely regarded as the best British female performer of a generation that included Vanessa Redgrave and Judi Dench, with two Oscars, a slew of Academy Award nominations, and a shelf full of acting accolades.

smith

Maggie Smith, Scene-Stealing Actor Famed For Harry Potter And ‘Downton Abbey,’ Dies At 89

She made her cinematic debut in the 1950s, received Oscars for her work in the 1960s and 1970s, and had memorable roles in each decade thereafter, including an older Wendy in Peter Pan’s story “Hook” (1991) and a mother superior of a convent in Whoopi Goldberg’s comedy “Sister Act” (1992).

She is a dominating stage actor who has played Shakespearean tragedy in the 1965 adaptation “Othello” and voiced Shakespeare-inspired animation in “Gnomeo & Juliet” (2011).

Even in her latter years, she remained in demand, despite her lament that “when you get into the granny era, you’re lucky to get anything.”

Smith drily summarised her latter roles as “a gallery of grotesques,” which included Professor McGonagall. When asked why she accepted the part, she joked: “Harry Potter is my pension.”

Richard Eyre, who directed Smith in the television adaptation of “Suddenly, Last Summer,” described her as “intellectually the smartest actress I’ve ever worked with.” You must get up very early in the morning to outwit Maggie Smith.”

“Jean Brodie,” in which she played a dangerously charismatic Edinburgh schoolteacher, won both the Academy Award for Best Actress and the British Academy Film Award (BAFTA).

Smith won an Oscar for supporting actress in “California Suite” in 1978, a Golden Globe for “California Suite” and “A Room with a View,” and a BAFTA for lead actress in “A Private Function” in 1984, “A Room with a View” in 1986, and “The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne” in 1988.

She also garnered Academy Award nominations as a supporting actress in “Othello,” “Travels with My Aunt,” “A Room with a View,” and “Gosford Park,” as well as a BAFTA award for supporting actress in “Tea with Mussolini.” On stage, she earned a Tony Award in 1990 for “Lettice and Lovage.”

From 2010, she played the acid-tongued Violet Crawley, Dowager Countess of Grantham, in the hit television historical drama “Downton Abbey,” a role that earned her legions of admirers, three Emmy Awards, a Golden Globe, and a slew of other award nominations.

However, she disliked televised fame. When the show’s run concluded in 2016, Smith expressed relief. “It’s freedom,” she told the Associated Press.

“Not until ‘Downton Abbey’ was I well-known or stopped in the street and asked for one of those terrible photographs,” stated the actress.

She continued to act long into her 80s, appearing in films such as the 2019 big-screen spinoff of “Downton Abbey,” its 2022 sequel “Downton Abbey: A New Era,” and the 2023 release “The Miracle Club.”

Smith had a reputation for being challenging and occasionally outperforming others.

Richard Burton stated that Smith did not simply take over a scene in “The VIPs” with him: “She commits grand larceny.” However, director Peter Hall discovered that Smith isn’t “remotely difficult unless she’s among idiots.” She’s very hard on herself, and I don’t think she understands why she shouldn’t be hard on others as well.

Smith admitted that she can be impatient at times.

“It’s true I don’t tolerate fools, but then they don’t tolerate me, so I am spiky,” Smith joked. “Maybe that’s why I’m quite good at playing spiky elderly ladies.”

In his New York Times review of ‘Lettice and Lovage’, critic Frank Rich commended Smith as ‘the stylised classicist who can italicise a passage as prosaic as ‘Have you no marmalade?’ till it sounds like a freshly minted epigram by Coward or Wilde’.

In a 1964 performance of Noel Coward’s ‘Hay Fever’, Smith famously got chuckles with the simple line, ‘This haddock is awful’.

In “Downton Abbey,” she used her flair for one-liners again when the tradition-bound Violet enquired, “What is a weekend?”

King Charles III and his wife Queen Camilla paid tribute to Smith, who was appointed Dame Commander of the British Empire, the equivalent of a knight, by the late Queen Elizabeth II in 1990.

“As the curtain comes down on a national treasure, we join all those around the world in remembering with the fondest admiration and affection her many great performances, and her warmth and wit that shone through both off and on the stage,” in a statement.

On Friday, fellow actresses paid tribute to her. Hugh Bonneville, who played Smith’s character’s son on “Downton Abbey,” stated, “Anyone who has ever shared a scene with Maggie will attest to her sharp eye, sharp wit, and formidable talent.”

“She was a true legend of her generation and thankfully will live on in so many magnificent screen performances,” according to his statement.

Rob Lowe, who co-starred with her in “Suddenly, Last Summer,” described the encounter as “unforgettable… sharing a two-shot was like being paired with a lion.”

“She could eat anyone alive, and she frequently did. But it’s amusing and terrific company. And tolerated no idiots. We’ll never see another. “Godspeed, Ms. Smith!” Lowe wrote about X.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Smith was “a true national treasure whose work will be cherished for generations to come.”

Margaret Natalie Smith was born on December 28, 1934, in Ilford, east of London. She succinctly summarised her life: “One went to school, one wanted to act, one started acting, and one’s still acting.”

In 1939, her father was assigned to military service in Oxford, and her theatre education at the Oxford Playhouse School resulted in a busy apprenticeship.

“I did a lot of things around the universities. “If you were clever and quick enough, you could almost do weekly rep because all the colleges were doing different productions at different times,” she told the BBC.

She chose Maggie as her stage name because another Margaret Smith was involved in the theatre.

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Maggie Smith, Scene-Stealing Actor Famed For Harry Potter And ‘Downton Abbey,’ Dies At 89

Laurence Olivier recognized her brilliance, offered her to join his initial National Theatre company, and placed her as a co-star in the 1965 film adaptation of “Othello.”

Smith cited two directors as key influences: Ingmar Bergman and William Gaskill, both of whom worked on National Theatre productions.

Alan Bennett, who was preparing to film the monologue “A Bed Among the Lentils,” expressed concern about Smith’s reputation for boredom. According to actor Jeremy Brett, “she starts divinely and then goes off, rather like a cheese.”

“So the fact that we only just had enough time to do it was an absolute blessing really because she was so fresh and just so into it,” Bennett told me. He also wrote a leading character for Smith in “The Lady in the Van,” in which she played Miss Shepherd, a resilient woman who lived in her car on Bennett’s London driveway for years.

Smith was known for her profound privacy, no matter how extravagant she was on stage or in front of the cameras.

“She never wanted to discuss acting. Simon Callow, who appeared alongside her in “A Room with a View,” said she was afraid to talk about acting because if she did, it would vanish.

Smith married her fellow actor, Robert Stephens, in 1967. They had two sons, Christopher and Toby, who both became actors and divorced in 1975. The following year, she married Beverley Cross, a writer who died in 1998.

SOURCE | AP

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