
In the gloomy week for fans around the world, the world mourned the loss of some of the greatest artists of their time, whose talents, voices and presence remained permanent imprints in our lives. Whether through music, film or shows, these icons brought joy, inspiration and importance to millions.
Here’s a view of remarkable stars we lost this week and indelible grades that leave:
Hulk Hogan
Hulk Hogan, an American sports and entertainment star who has made a professional match with a global phenomenon and loudly supported Donald Trump for the President, died of cardiac arrest at the age of 71 July 24.
Bleach-Blond, Mahagon-proven monster became the face of professional wrestling at the age of 80 and helped transform a simulated semi-spectacle fight for billions of dollars.
Hogan managed his match fame into a less successful career in Hollywood and starred in films like “Rocky III” and “Santa with muscles”, but still returning to the ring while his body allowed.
Also read | Trump mourning Hulk Hogan: “Strong, Hard, Smart, but with the greatest heart”
Ozzy Osbourne
Ozzy Osbourne, a frontman greater than the life of Black Sabbath, whose personal mythology is an eclipse only by the strength and immortality of his songs, died on July 22 at the age of 76.
Osbourne, the godfather and the strength of the heavy metal, died only a few weeks after his last performance on July 5. For the first time in 20 years, the original members of Black Sabbath met again for what Osbourne said would be his last concert.
Osbourne was diagnosed in 2019 by Parkinson’s disease.
Idiosyncratic, throat voice of the English icon triggered generation Metalheads, both through his work on the reins of Black Sabbath and in his solo career.
Also read | Coldplay deals with Nashville Show Ozzy Osbourne after his extinction
Chuck Mangione
Double musician Grammy Award Chuck Mangione, who achieved international success in 1977 with his single “Feels So Good” and later became a voice actor on the animated television comedy “King of the Hill”, died on July 22. He was 84 years old.
His lawyer said Mangione had died in his home in Rochester, New York. The musician has been retired since 2015.
Perhaps his biggest hit-“feels so good”-is the basis of most radio stations with smooth jazz and was called one of the most respected melodies from “Michelle” from the Beatles. He hit No. 4 on Billboard Hot 100 and at the top of Billboard Adult Contemporary Chart.
Malcolm-Jamal Warner
American actor Malcom-Jamal Warner, who played his son in a sitcom affected by “The Cosby Show”, died on July 20 after a random drowning when swimming from the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica during a family holiday. He was 54 years old.
He played the nice Theo Huxtable after all eight seasons of the show, which was subjected to a disgraced comic book by Bill Cosby.
Warner, who was nominated for Emmy for his work on the Cosby Show, also appeared in the situation comedies of Malcolm & Eddie and Reed between lines.
Eileen Fulton
Eileen Fulton, known for its iconic role, Lisa Miller at the CBS soap opera, as the world turns, ‘died at the age of 91, July 21.
The Fulton joined the world in 1960 and stayed at the exhibition as long as it ended in 2010. She played Lisa Miller, one of the most famous and famous figures “Bad Girl” in 1998.
In 2004, she won the Emmy Lifetime Achievement Award for working on television.
Fulton also wrote two autobiography: “How my world turns” in 1970 and “how my world still turns” in 1995, which called the 35th year to the soap. At the end of the 80s. She wrote six novels of mysteries of murder.
“Papa Jake” Larson
Veteran D-Day ″ Papa Jake ″ Larson, who survived German shooting on Normandii’s Bluffs in 1944 and then won 1.2 million followers at the end of his life by sharing stories in memory of World War II and his fallen comrades.
Larson entered the National Guard in 1938 and lied about his age since he was only 15 years old. In 1942 he was sent overseas and was placed in northern Ireland. He became a sergeant of the operation and gathered planning books for the invasion of Normandy.
He was among the almost 160,000 allied soldiers who attacked the Normandy of the Coast of D. on 6 June 1944, survived a machine gun fire as he landed on the beach Omaha. He did not hurt it on Bluffy, which overlooked the beach, and then obsessed with German weapons that were messed up by American soldiers.
In his posts and interviews in Tiktoku, Larson combined the funny anecdotes with grim reminders of the horrors of war.
Chandra barot
The veteran filmmaker Chandra Barot, best known for the director of Amitabh Bachchan-Starrer “Don” from 1978, died on July 20 because of a cardiac arrest in Mumbai. He was 86.
Before debuting with “Don”, Barot served as assistant director director Manoj Kumar in “Purab Aur Pachhim”, “Roti Aur Maakaan”, “Yaadgaar”, “Shor”.
Don was initially declared a “flop”, and it was a cult classic and is the barot that was most proud of. “I made one movie, Don, and I will always remember it,” the filmmaker said in an interview in 2006.
Also read | Who is Chandra Barot, original director Don, who died of 86?
Rajinder Nath
Rajinder Nath, a veteran theater artist and the first director of Shri Ram Center, died on July 24 because of age -related diseases. He was 91.
Nath was born in August 1934 in Dalwal, now in Pakistan, and grew up to become a devoted theater and lead Shri Ram Center for Performing Arts (SRCPA) as the first director in 1976-81 and again in 1983-89.
In 1967 he also founded Abhiyan Theater Group in Delhi to introduce original Indian scripts that have never been at the Hindi Theater before. In 2019, Gupta took over the direction of the group.
Ratan thiyam
The Indian Theater Legend Ratan Thiyam, known for mixing traditional art forms with the current vessel, died on July 23. He was 77 years old.
Thiyam, recipient of Padma Shri in 1989, founded Imphal based in Repertory Theater and briefly managed the National School of Drama in the 80s.
Thiyam’s works include “Chakrava” (The Wheel of War), “Uttar Priyadarshi”, “Urubhangam” and “Andha Yug”. His “Chinglon Mapan Tampak Ama” (Nine Hills One Valley) allegorically tells the story of an uprising in manipuro.
In his games he used the traditional song Manipuri, Dance and even Barling Arts to spread the current message.
(Tagstotranslate) Hulk Hogan