Encore plein de morts à annoncer !

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Messagede GregG le 15 Déc 2006, 09:01

Cortese a écrit:
GregG a écrit:
Maverick a écrit:
Giancarlo a écrit:
Maverick a écrit:
Luke a écrit:
Maverick a écrit:Le corps de Taoufik el-Amri a été retrouvé dans le canal...Alors ? noyade d'un homme vraisembablement saoul ou bavure des flics ?


S'il n'y avait que deux possibilités ça serait simple... Mais il peut arriver tellement de choses...
Bien sur, mais ce sont quand mêmes les deux thèses les plus probables.

Saoul un arabe probablement musulman? :eek:
C'est un jeu où faut remettre les mots dans le bon ordre ?


L'Arabie Saoudite est un des pays ou il y a le plus d'alcoolique en pourcentage.

Et quand le Rois Fad venait a Geneve pour les vancances d'ete, il fallait voir la quantitee dalcool bu pour toute sa cour!

Donc c'est largement possible! :wink: :wink:


:lol:
Je me demande où tu vas chercher ces statistiques dans un des pays les plus fermés au monde (je rappelle que l'Arabie séoudite est peut être le seul pays au monde à ne pas délivrer de visas touristiques) !
Que tu me dises que les princes ou les chefs d'Etat arabes soient souvent alcooliques, je n'en disconvient pas (il suffit de lire les Mille et Une Nuits pour se rendre compte que ce n'est pas nouveau), par contre, je peux te garantir que le peuple lui, ne boit pas (ou marginalement). De toute façon il n'y a pas d'interdit religieux sur l'alcool, c'est juste fortement réprouvé (jusqu'à l'abus de pouvoir parfois, comme du temps de la prohibition aux US).


J'ai beaucoup d'amis qui on travaillés dans ce pays, voil pourquoi je peux dire ca! :o :o

Pas besoin d'un institut de sondage pour ca! :D :D

D'ailleur j'en ai un qui est au Quatar et c'est aussi assez alcoolisé comme pays! :o :o
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Messagede Giancarlo le 15 Déc 2006, 10:08

Cortese a écrit: (je rappelle que l'Arabie séoudite est peut être le seul pays au monde à ne pas délivrer de visas touristiques) !

La Corée du nord doit bien être pareil, il est vrai qu'à part des Shoemaker, il n'y a peut être pas beaucoup de candidats.
A part ça les hadjs, ils ont fait comment?
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Messagede Shoemaker le 15 Déc 2006, 10:36

Giancarlo a écrit:
Cortese a écrit: (je rappelle que l'Arabie séoudite est peut être le seul pays au monde à ne pas délivrer de visas touristiques) !

La Corée du nord doit bien être pareil, il est vrai qu'à part des Shoemaker, il n'y a peut être pas beaucoup de candidats.
A part ça les hadjs, ils ont fait comment?


Pour le pelerinage annuel, il existe un visa ad hoc.
Qaunt a la Coree du Nord, je te la laisse volontiers. Dire que le nazisme et le stalinisme ne sont pas equivalents, ne signifie pas pour autant etre stalinien. Si tu as compris ca, la prochaine fois j'ecrirai en braille, pour toi.
Et franchement, dans le cas de la Coree du nord, est-on encore dans le stalinisme ? On ne sait meme plus ce que c'est exactement.
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Messagede Giancarlo le 15 Déc 2006, 11:32

Ne m'écris pas ce sera plus simple, je ne sais pas lire le braille :D
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Messagede François le 15 Déc 2006, 18:50

Clay Regazzoni est décédé.
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Messagede lovecraft le 15 Déc 2006, 19:13

François a écrit:Clay Regazzoni est décédé.


c'est l'hécatombe la
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Messagede Ze le 15 Déc 2006, 19:41

ben merde :?
D'un accident de voiture apparemment :(
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Messagede Cyril le 15 Déc 2006, 19:42

Ouaip... C'est triste...
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Messagede Hugues le 15 Déc 2006, 19:42

Ze a écrit:ben merde :?
D'un accident de voiture apparemment :(


Oui denim l'a écrit de l'autre côté, le côté sport mécanique :D

http://communaute.f1-express.net/viewtopic.php?t=8723

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Messagede Hugues le 19 Déc 2006, 07:49

Scoobidoo et Sammy, Tom et Jerry, Yogi, Wally Gator (sic) et les Pierrafeu ont la douleur de vous faire part de la disparition de Joseph Hanna, survenu dans sa 96e année, 6 ans 3/4 après leur autre père, William Hanna.

Les fils de Peyo, Johan et Pirlouit, les Schtroumphs, Gargamel et Azrael, adopté par la famille Hanna-Barbera devraient se joindre à la cérémonie.

Cet avis tient lieu de faire part.
Pas de <strike>fleurs</strike> gags, s'il vous plait.

;)

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Joe Barbera, à gauche, avec son complice, William Hanna

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Joe Barbera


New York Times a écrit:Joseph Barbera, Half of Cartoon Duo, Dies at 95

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By DAVE ITZKOFF
Published: December 19, 2006

Joseph Barbera, an innovator of animation who teamed with William Hanna to give generations of young television viewers a pantheon of beloved characters, including Tom and Jerry, Yogi Bear, Huckleberry Hound and the Flintstones, died yesterday at his home in Los Angeles. He was 95.
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A spokesman for Warner Brothers said he died of natural causes, The Associated Press reported.

Mr. Barbera and the studio he founded with Mr. Hanna, Hanna-Barbera Productions, became synonymous with television animation, yielding more than 100 cartoon series over four decades, including “Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?,” “Jonny Quest” and “The Smurfs.”

On signature televisions shows like “The Flintstones” and “The Jetsons,” the two men developed a cartoon style that combined colorful, simply drawn characters (often based on other recognizable pop-culture personalities) with the narrative structures and joke-telling techniques of traditional live-action sitcoms. They were television’s first animated comedy programs.

Before that, Mr. Barbera and Mr. Hanna had worked together on more than 120 hand-drawn cartoon shorts for MGM, dozens of which starred the archetypal cat-and-mouse team Tom and Jerry. The Hanna-Barbera collaboration lasted more than 60 years. The critic Leonard Maltin, in his book “Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons,” wrote that Mr. Barbera’s strength was more in his drawing and gag writing while Mr. Hanna had a good sense of comic timing and giving characters warmth.

“I was never a good artist,” said Mr. Hanna, who died in 2001. But Mr. Barbera, he said, “has the ability to capture mood and expression in a quick sketch better than anyone I’ve ever known.”

Born Joseph Roland Barbera on March 24, 1911, in the Little Italy section of Manhattan and raised in Flatbush, Brooklyn, Mr. Barbera tried his hand at banking, playwriting and amateur boxing before the successful sale of a sketch to Collier’s magazine encouraged him to pursue a career as a cartoon artist. He wrote a letter to Walt Disney, then a rising star of California’s animation industry, in search of employment; Mr. Disney apparently promised to look Mr. Barbera up on a subsequent visit to New York, but the proposed meeting never took place.

Instead, Mr. Barbera began his animation career on the East Coast. After a four-day stint with the animator Max Fleischer, he began writing gags and drawing cartoon cels for the Van Beuren Studios in 1932. When the studio shut down in 1936, he found work at the Terrytoon Studios in New Rochelle, N.Y., but one year later was lured away to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s animation unit in Culver City, Calif.

It was at MGM that Mr. Barbera was first paired with Mr. Hanna, a veteran cartoon writer and musical composer and lyricist. After toiling on a short-lived series of animated shorts based on the Katzenjammer Kids comic strips, the two men formed a plan to produce their own material.

As Mr. Barbera recalled in an interview in Michael Mallory’s book “Hanna-Barbera Cartoons,” “In desperation one time, we were sitting in a room waiting for the place to fold, and I said to Bill: ‘Why don’t we try a cartoon of our own?’ ”

Their first such project for MGM, a 1940 theatrical short called “Puss Gets the Boot,” introduced audiences to a relentless cat named Jasper, perpetually frustrated in his pursuit of a crafty mouse called Jinx. It was nominated for an Academy Award. Over the next 17 years, the occasionally sadistic antics that Mr. Barbera and Mr. Hanna devised for their anthropomorphic rivals — rechristened Tom and Jerry — would earn MGM another 13 Oscar nominations and seven statuettes.

Though MGM put Mr. Barbera and Mr. Hanna in charge of its animation division in 1955, the studio closed the unit two years later. So the two turned to their side company, H-B Enterprises, which they had established to produce animated television commercials, and began working full time on television programs.

Their first series, “The Ruff & Ready Show,” had its debut on NBC in December 1957. That was followed in 1958 by “The Huckleberry Hound Show,” about a powder-blue pooch who spoke and sung (badly) with a Southern drawl. That series later won an Emmy and yielded a spinoff show for one of its supporting characters, an Ed Norton-like forest denizen named Yogi Bear.

Mr. Barbera and Mr. Hanna revisited the template of “The Honeymooners” in 1960 to create their most popular series, “The Flintstones,” a half-hour animated sitcom about two families living in the Stone Age suburb of Bedrock. It appeared in prime time on ABC and was a top-20 show in its first year.

Despite its fanciful setting, “The Flintstones” hewed to sitcom conventions, using sight gags and one-liners that centered on the domestic squabbles of the prehistoric couple Fred and Wilma Flintstone. Propelled by a catchy, brassy theme song, “Meet the Flintstones” (introduced in the show’s third season), and Fred’s thunderous yell, “Yabba-dabba-doo!” “The Flintstones” ran for 166 episodes over six seasons.

In the succeeding years, Hanna-Barbera produced numerous prime-time, syndicated and Saturday-morning cartoon shows, from 1962’s futuristic family comedy “The Jetsons” to the 1973 adventure series “Super Friends” to such 1980s-era toy tie-ins as “Shirt Tales” and “Challenge of the GoBots.” The studio also produced eclectic projects like the 1978 television special starring the heavy-metal rock band KISS and a 1973 film adaptation of E. B. White’s novel “Charlotte’s Web.”

In 1990, Hanna-Barbera was acquired by Turner Broadcasting (now part of Time Warner), where it continued to produce animated programming for syndication and for the Cartoon Network cable channel, including “Dexter’s Laboratory” and “The Powerpuff Girls.” In 1998, Hanna-Barbera’s studios were moved to a Warner Brothers office building, and by 2001, the company had been absorbed by Warner Brothers’ animation division.

Mr. Barbera remained active in animation. He worked as an executive producer on such recent television series as “What’s New, Scooby-Doo?” He was also a writer, director and storyboard artist on the 2005 cartoon “The KarateGuard,” his first theatrical Tom and Jerry short in more than 45 years.

His survivors include his wife, Sheila, and three children from a previous marriage: Jayne, Lynne and Neal.

Mr. Barbera’s influence can be found today in prime-time animated series like “The Simpsons” and “Family Guy” and in cartoons that satirize the Hanna-Barbera style, including “The Venture Brothers” and “Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law.” His own work continues to be seen on the cable channel Boomerang, which broadcasts vintage Hanna-Barbera programming 24 hours a day.

Though he was often asked to explain the enduring popularity of his cartoons, Mr. Barbera was reluctant to subject his life’s work to close analysis. “To me it makes little sense to talk about the cartoons we did,” he wrote in a 1994 autobiography, “My Life in ‘Toons: From Flatbush to Bedrock in Under a Century.” “The way to appreciate them is to see them.”


Cyberpresse.ca avec AP et AFP a écrit:DESSINS ANIMÉS

Décès du co-créateur des Pierrafeu

AP et AFP

Los Angeles

Joe Barbera, co-créateur avec Bill Hanna des personnages de dessin animé Tom et Jerry, Yogi l'ours ou les Pierrafeu, est mort lundi à 95 ans, a annoncé un porte-parole de Warner Bros.

Joe Barbera est mort de vieillesse à son domicile, où il vivait avec sa femme Sheila, a précisé le porte-parole Gary Miereanu.

Avec son associé de longue date, Bill Hanna, Joe Barbera avait connu le succès pour la première fois avec les personnages de Tom et Jerry. Les chamailleries du chat et de la souris leur avaient valu de nombreuses récompenses.



Les deux hommes avaient débuté leur collaboration alors qu'ils travaillaient à la MGM dans les années 1930. Leur succès et leur popularité ont été forgés dans les années 1960, au cours desquelles ils ont créé de nombreuses séries d'animation, notamment Les Pierrafeu et Yogi l'ours, notamment.

«Scooby Doo», qui a été diffusé pendant 17 années, est le dessin animé diffusé le plus longtemps à la télévision. Grâce à l'avènement de la télévision, Hanna-Barbera a produit plus de 300 dessins animés, pendant 60 ans.

«De l'Âge de pierre à l'Âge de l'espace, et de la soirée aux samedis matins, les personnages qu'il a créés avec son ancien partenaire, William Hanna, ne sont pas seulement des supervedettes de l'animation, mais aussi une partie précieuse de la culture populaire américaine. Même s'il manquera à sa famille et ses amis, il survivra au travers de son travail», a commenté le président directeur-général de Warner Bros, Barry Meyer.

Bill Hanna, mort en 2001, disait que lui-même n'avait jamais été un bon artiste, mais que son partenaire, qui dessinait les personnages, pouvait «capter mieux que quiconque l'allure et l'expression dans une courte saynète».

Les deux hommes avaient commencé en 1937 leur collaboration avec la Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, où ils ont créé le chat Tom cherchant par tous les stratagèmes à attraper la souris Jerry mais sans jamais y arriver. Hanna produisait tandis que Barbera dessinait, remportant 7 Oscars.

Né en 1911 à New York, Barbera avait débuté comme banquier mais avait percé comme dessinateur quand un magazine a publié ses bandes dessinées. Il a fait des études d'art avant de démarrer aux studios d'animation Van Beuren à New York.

Barbera et Hanna étaient des pionniers du monde de l'animation, selon Sander Schwartz, président de Warner Bros Animation.

«Bill a créé un modèle de production télévisée qui fera date et Joe l'a alimenté avec ses idées de spectacles amusantes et originales et ses personnages inoubliables qui traverseront les temps comme son ultime héritage», a déclaré M. Schwartz.

«Les contributions de Joe à l'animation et à l'industrie de la télévision sont uniques», a-t-il ajouté.

Hanna et Barbera ont leur étoile sur la fameuse Promenade de la gloire à Hollywood.


Hugues
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Messagede Hugues le 19 Déc 2006, 08:42

On m'informe de la présence des Fous du volants et de Satanas et Diabolo, honte à moi de les avoir oublié sur un forum de sport automobile :D

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Messagede Cortese le 19 Déc 2006, 13:37

Paix à leur cendres, mais j'avoue que j'ai haï Hanna-Barbera. C'est avec eux qu'est apparu l'affreux modèle de DA à animation simplifiée (4/12 images secondes) au lieu du 24/images-sec d'avant, qui nous avait valu tant d'enchantements. D'ailleurs je n'ai plus jamais regardé de DA à la télé depuis la déception de Diabolo et Satanas.
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Messagede Seb le 19 Déc 2006, 18:17

Hugues a écrit:Scoobidoo et Sammy, Tom et Jerry, Yogi, Wally Gator (sic) et les Pierrafeu ont la douleur de vous faire part de la disparition de Joseph Hanna, survenu dans sa 96e année, 6 ans 3/4 après leur autre père, William Hanna.


C'était Joe (diminutif de Joseph) Barbera et Bill Hanna, non ?
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Messagede Hugues le 19 Déc 2006, 21:37

Seb a écrit:
Hugues a écrit:Scoobidoo et Sammy, Tom et Jerry, Yogi, Wally Gator (sic) et les Pierrafeu ont la douleur de vous faire part de la disparition de Joseph Hanna, survenu dans sa 96e année, 6 ans 3/4 après leur autre père, William Hanna.


C'était Joe (diminutif de Joseph) Barbera et Bill Hanna, non ?


Joe Barbera et Bill Hanna, oui. Si on veut être plus familier que Joseph et William.

Edit : Ah j'ai compris.. Oui je voulais parler de Barbera ;)

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Messagede François le 20 Déc 2006, 11:56

Emule-Paradise.com #pendu
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Messagede metomoll le 20 Déc 2006, 22:32

Cortese a écrit:Paix à leur cendres, mais j'avoue que j'ai haï Hanna-Barbera. C'est avec eux qu'est apparu l'affreux modèle de DA à animation simplifiée (4/12 images secondes) au lieu du 24/images-sec d'avant, qui nous avait valu tant d'enchantements. D'ailleurs je n'ai plus jamais regardé de DA à la télé depuis la déception de Diabolo et Satanas.



+1 :o

sauf que moi je les regarde toujours les DA :-P

j'ai les larmes aux yeux de rire devant les Tom & Jerry, sans doute le dessin animé qui m'a fait le + rire :good
"Nous n'héritons pas la terre de nos parents, nous l'empruntons à nos enfants." - Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.
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Messagede lovecraft le 21 Déc 2006, 08:18

Bon un autre dictacteur vient de disparaitre, plutot un gourou dans son cas d'ailleurs, puisque Saparmurat Niyazov président du Turkmenistan est mort a 66 ans

bon débarras la aussi
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Messagede Hugues le 25 Déc 2006, 10:29

James Brown est mort à 1h45 heure d'Atlanta (même heure au Québec, 7h45 heure française) après avoir été hospitalisé hier pour une pneumonie qui l'a finalement emporté. Son agent l'a annoncé à 2h49 (heure locale, soit il y a un peu plus d'une demi-heure)

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Associated Press a écrit:2:49 ET
AP News Alert

ATLANTA (AP) -- The agent for James Brown says the legendary singer known as the "Godfather of Soul" has died.


Associated Press via NPR a écrit:'Godfather of Soul' James Brown Dies

from The Associated Press


ATLANTA December 25, 2006, 3:12 a.m. ET · James Brown, the dynamic, pompadoured "Godfather of Soul," whose rasping vocals and revolutionary rhythms made him a founder of rap, funk and disco as well, died early Monday, his agent said. He was 73.

Brown was hospitalized with pneumonia at Emory Crawford Long Hospital on Sunday and died around 1:45 a.m. Monday, said his agent, Frank Copsidas of Intrigue Music. Longtime friend Charles Bobbit was by his side, he said.

Copsidas said Brown's family was being notified of his death and that the cause was still uncertain. "We really don't know at this point what he died of," he said.

Along with Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan and a handful of others, Brown was one of the major musical influences of the past 50 years. At least one generation idolized him, and sometimes openly copied him. His rapid-footed dancing inspired Mick Jagger and Michael Jackson among others. Songs such as David Bowie's "Fame," Prince's "Kiss," George Clinton's "Atomic Dog" and Sly and the Family Stone's "Sing a Simple Song" were clearly based on Brown's rhythms and vocal style.

If Brown's claim to the invention of soul can be challenged by fans of Ray Charles and Sam Cooke, then his rights to the genres of rap, disco and funk are beyond question. He was to rhythm and dance music what Dylan was to lyrics: the unchallenged popular innovator.

"James presented obviously the best grooves," rapper Chuck D of Public Enemy once told The Associated Press. "To this day, there has been no one near as funky. No one's coming even close."

His hit singles include such classics as "Out of Sight," "(Get Up I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine," "I Got You (I Feel Good)" and "Say It Out Loud -- I'm Black and I'm Proud," a landmark 1968 statement of racial pride.

"I clearly remember we were calling ourselves colored, and after the song, we were calling ourselves black," Brown said in a 2003 Associated Press interview. "The song showed even people to that day that lyrics and music and a song can change society."

He won a Grammy award for lifetime achievement in 1992, as well as Grammys in 1965 for "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag" (best R&B recording) and for "Living In America" in 1987 (best R&B vocal performance, male.) He was one of the initial artists inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986, along with Presley, Chuck Berry and other founding fathers.

He triumphed despite an often unhappy personal life. Brown, who lived in Beech Island near the Georgia line, spent more than two years in a South Carolina prison for aggravated assault and failing to stop for a police officer. After his release on in 1991, Brown said he wanted to "try to straighten out" rock music.

From the 1950s, when Brown had his first R&B hit, "Please, Please, Please" in 1956, through the mid-1970s, Brown went on a frenzy of cross-country tours, concerts and new songs. He earned the nickname "The Hardest Working Man in Show Business."

With his tight pants, shimmering feet, eye makeup and outrageous hair, Brown set the stage for younger stars such as Michael Jackson and Prince.

In 1986, he was inducted in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. And rap stars of recent years overwhelmingly have borrowed his lyrics with a digital technique called sampling.

Brown's work has been replayed by the Fat Boys, Ice-T, Public Enemy and a host of other rappers. "The music out there is only as good as my last record," Brown joked in a 1989 interview with Rolling Stone magazine.

"Disco is James Brown, hip-hop is James Brown, rap is James Brown; you know what I'm saying? You hear all the rappers, 90 percent of their music is me," he told the AP in 2003.

Born in poverty in Barnwell, S.C., in 1933, he was abandoned as a 4-year-old to the care of relatives and friends and grew up on the streets of Augusta, Ga., in an "ill-repute area," as he once called it. There he learned to wheel and deal.

"I wanted to be somebody," Brown said.

By the eighth grade in 1949, Brown had served 3 1/2 years in Alto Reform School near Toccoa, Ga., for breaking into cars.

While there, he met Bobby Byrd, whose family took Brown into their home. Byrd also took Brown into his group, the Gospel Starlighters. Soon they changed their name to the Famous Flames and their style to hard R&B.

In January 1956, King Records of Cincinnati signed the group, and four months later "Please, Please, Please" was in the R&B Top Ten.

While most of Brown's life was glitz and glitter, he was plagued with charges of abusing drugs and alcohol and of hitting his third wife, Adrienne.

In September 1988, Brown, high on PCP and carrying a shotgun, entered an insurance seminar next to his Augusta office. Police said he asked seminar participants if they were using his private restroom.

Police chased Brown for a half-hour from Augusta into South Carolina and back to Georgia. The chase ended when police shot out the tires of his truck.

Brown received a six-year prison sentence. He spent 15 months in a South Carolina prison and 10 months in a work release program before being paroled in February 1991. In 2003, the South Carolina parole board granted him a pardon for his crimes in that state.

Soon after his release, Brown was on stage again with an audience that included millions of cable television viewers nationwide who watched the three-hour, pay-per-view concert at Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles.

Adrienne Brown died in 1996 in Los Angeles at age 47. She took PCP and several prescription drugs while she had a bad heart and was weak from cosmetic surgery two days earlier, the coroner said.

More recently, he married his fourth wife, Tomi Raye Hynie, one of his backup singers. The couple had a son, James Jr.

Two years later, Brown spent a week in a private Columbia hospital, recovering from what his agent said was dependency on painkillers. Brown's attorney, Albert "Buddy" Dallas, said singer was exhausted from six years of road shows.


Hugues
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Messagede Hugues le 25 Déc 2006, 10:40

Comme les dépêches ne sont visiblement pas encore en ligne, la lecture des dépêches dans Google Actualités laisse un goût étrange :D :

Image
Entre le Nouvel Obs qui publie la dépêche de l'hospitalisation alors que Brown est déjà disparu, et Canöe qui se demande quand il va casser sa pipe :P

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Messagede lovecraft le 25 Déc 2006, 10:51

Triste nouvelle
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Messagede Hugues le 25 Déc 2006, 11:02

I Got You (I Feel Good) (1965)

<object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/bs1HUbMCZKc"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/bs1HUbMCZKc" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="350"></embed></object>

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Messagede 4X4 addict le 25 Déc 2006, 11:24

:cry:
Est ce mieux ailleurs? Je ne sais pas, mais si au moins j'ai la liberté de m'y rendre...
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Messagede Toma le 25 Déc 2006, 11:55

ben merde alors, James Brown ... :cry:
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Messagede Stéphane le 25 Déc 2006, 12:02

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Ouais_supère a écrit:Stef, t'es chiant
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Messagede Cortese le 25 Déc 2006, 16:25

Triste.
Mort d'une pneumonie, comme Miles Davis.
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Messagede Né quelque part le 25 Déc 2006, 17:33

Je l'avais vu en concert... C'était géant ! :?
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Messagede Nelson le 25 Déc 2006, 18:32

Pfiouu...James Brown....

Je suis un inconditionnel. Une voix et une présence incroyables. Et toujours accompagné de super zicos.
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Messagede Cyril le 25 Déc 2006, 23:11

Ce matin, en revenant de la montagne, j'ai croisé sur la route une affiche publicitaire pour un concert de Jame Brown (22/06/2007, à Grenoble). Ca m'avait surpris car je pensais qu'il avait arrêter de faire des concerts...

Quelques heures plus tard, je me connecte sur le net, et j'apprend son décès :?
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Messagede Nuvo le 26 Déc 2006, 00:23

Un géant.

Et une scène mythique dans "Good Morning Vietnam" sur "I feel good" :-D
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Messagede schumi84f1 le 26 Déc 2006, 12:27

une grande perte pour la musique :(
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Messagede Hugues le 27 Déc 2006, 08:43

L'ancienne first lady Betty Ford l'a annoncé mardi à 23h49 heure de l'Est (5h49 mercredi en Europe) : le Président Gerald Ford est décédé mardi vers 18h45 heure du Pacifique (21h45 au Québec, 3h45 ce mercredi en Europe) à son domicile de Rancho Mirage en Californie.

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Vice-président de Nixon, à partir du 6 décembre 1973, il devint Président le 9 Aout 1974 lors de la démission de Nixon.

C'est le seul Président américain à n'avoir jamais été élu, puisque il n'était pas en novembre 1972 sur le ticket républicain pour l'élection présidentielle. Le ticket président/vice-président était en effet Richard Nixon-Spiro Agnew.

Spiro Agnew allait démissionner le 10 octobre 1973 à la suite de charge contre lui d'évasion fiscale. Tandis que le seul vice président avant lui à avoir démissionné avant lui, Calhoun l'avait fait pour prendre un siège au Sénat, Agnew allait plaider le nolo contendere (pas de contestation) dans le cadre d'un arrangement (possible dans le système judiciaire américain) avec le procureur qui n'allait aboutir qu'à des amendes..

Cette démission de Agnew déclencha le premier des deux usage dans l'histoire du 25e amendement qui autorise le président à nommer un vice président (le 25e amendement n'existait pas fin 1832 lors de la démission de Calhoun) (Le deuxième usage sera justement lorsque Ford devra nommer son vice-président)

2 jours après que Agnew ait démissionné, Nixon nomma le 12 octobre 1973 Ford.

Cliquer pour le sommaire de ce n° de Time et l'article correspondant à cette une
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Le Sénat confirma ce choix par 92 voix contre 3 le 27 novembre et le 6 décembre la Chambre des Représentants en fit de même par 387 voix contre 35. Il devint donc vice président ce 6 décembre 1973.

L'action de Ford en tant que vice président fut peu remarquée ou évoquée par les média, préoccupés par les révélations continuelles sur le WaterGate et les dissimulations ordonnées par le président lui même qui en suivirent.

Durant cette période, Ford n'évoqua quasiment jamais l'affaire en public, même si il dit en privé sa déception quant à la conduite du Président Nixon.

Et le 9 aout 1974, lorsque Nixon démissionna alors que la Chambre allait voter très probablement à la majorité son Empeachement (= inculpation, mise en examen, le tribunal étant quelques semaines ou mois plus tard le Sénat), Ford devint donc le premier président américain à n'avoir pas été élu, même en tant que vice-président.

Associated Press a écrit:Dec 26, 11:49 PM EST

AP News Alert

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Former first lady Betty Ford says President Gerald Ford has died.


Associated Press a écrit:Dec 27, 1:22 AM EST

Former President Gerald Ford Dies at 93

By JEFF WILSON
Associated Press Writer

Former President Ford Dies at 93

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Gerald R. Ford, who picked up the pieces of Richard Nixon's scandal-shattered White House as the 38th president and the only one never elected to nationwide office, has died, his wife, Betty, said Tuesday. He was 93.

"My family joins me in sharing the difficult news that Gerald Ford, our beloved husband, father, grandfather and great grandfather has passed away at 93 years of age," Mrs. Ford said in a brief statement issued from her husband's office in Rancho Mirage. "His life was filled with love of God, his family and his country."

The statement did not say where or when Ford died or list a cause of death. Ford had battled pneumonia in January 2006 and underwent two heart treatments - including an angioplasty and a pacemaker implant - in August at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

"The American people will always admire Gerald Ford's devotion to duty, his personal character and the honorable conduct of his administration," President Bush said in a statement Tuesday night. "We mourn the loss of such a leader, and our 38th president will always have a special place in our nation's memory."

Ford was the longest living president, followed by Ronald Reagan, who also died at 93. Ford had been living at his desert home in Rancho Mirage, Calif., about 130 miles east of Los Angeles.

"I was deeply saddened this evening when I heard of Jerry Ford's death," former first lady Nancy Reagan said in a statement. "Ronnie and I always considered him a dear friend and close political ally.

"His accomplishments and devotion to our country are vast, and even long after he left the presidency he made it a point to speak out on issues important to us all," she said.

Ford was an accidental president, Nixon's hand-picked successor, a man of much political experience who had never run on a national ticket. He was as open and straightforward as Nixon was tightly controlled and conspiratorial.

Minutes after Nixon resigned in disgrace over the Watergate scandal and flew into exile, Ford took office and famously declared: "Our long national nightmare is over."

But he revived the debate over Watergate a month later by granting Nixon a pardon for all crimes he committed as president. That single act, it was widely believed, cost Ford election to a term of his own in 1976, but it won praise in later years as a courageous act that allowed the nation to move on.

The Vietnam War ended in defeat for the U.S. during his presidency with the fall of Saigon in April 1975. In a speech as the end neared, Ford said: "Today, America can regain the sense of pride that existed before Vietnam. But it cannot be achieved by refighting a war that is finished as far as America is concerned." Evoking Abraham Lincoln, he said it was time to "look forward to an agenda for the future, to unify, to bind up the nation's wounds."

Ford also earned a place in the history books as the first unelected vice president, chosen by Nixon to replace Spiro Agnew who also was forced from office by scandal.

He was in the White House only 895 days, but changed it more than it changed him.

Even after two women tried separately to kill him, the presidency of Jerry Ford remained open and plain.

Not imperial. Not reclusive. And, of greatest satisfaction to a nation numbed by Watergate, not dishonest.

Even to millions of Americans who had voted two years earlier for Richard Nixon, the transition to Ford's leadership was one of the most welcomed in the history of the democratic process - despite the fact that it occurred without an election.

After the Watergate ordeal, Americans liked their new president - and first lady Betty, whose candor charmed the country.

They liked her for speaking openly about problems of young people, including her own daughter; they admired her for not hiding that she had a mastectomy - in fact, her example caused thousands of women to seek breast examinations.

And she remained one of the country's most admired women even after the Fords left the White House when she was hospitalized in 1978 and said she had become addicted to drugs and alcohol she took for painful arthritis and a pinched nerve in her neck. Four years later she founded the Betty Ford Center in Rancho Mirage, a substance abuse facility next to Eisenhower Medical Center.

Ford slowed down in recent years. He had been hospitalized in August 2000 when he suffered one or more small strokes while attending the Republican National Convention in Philadelphia.

The following year, he joined former presidents Carter, Bush and Clinton at a memorial service in Washington three days after the Sept. 11 attacks. In June 2004, the four men and their wives joined again at a funeral service in Washington for former President Reagan. But in November 2004, Ford was unable to join the other former presidents at the dedication of the Clinton presidential library in Little Rock, Ark.

In January, Ford was hospitalized with pneumonia for 12 days. He wasn't seen in public until April 23, when President Bush was in town and paid a visit to the Ford home. Bush, Ford and Betty posed for photographers outside the residence before going inside for a private get-together.

The intensely private couple declined reporter interview requests and were rarely seen outside their home in Rancho Mirage's gated Thunderbird Estates, other than to attend worship services at the nearby St. Margaret's Episcopal Church in Palm Desert.

In a long congressional career in which he rose to be House Republican leader, Ford lit few fires. In the words of Congressional Quarterly, he "built a reputation for being solid, dependable and loyal - a man more comfortable carrying out the programs of others than in initiating things on his own."

When Agnew resigned in a bribery scandal in October 1973, Ford was one of four finalists to succeed him: Texan John Connally, New York's Nelson Rockefeller and California's Ronald Reagan.

"Personal factors enter into such a decision," Nixon recalled for a Ford biographer in 1991. I knew all of the final four personally and had great respect for each one of then, but I had known Jerry Ford longer and better than any of the rest.

"We had served in Congress together. I had often campaigned for him in his district," Nixon continued. But Ford had something the others didn't, he would be easily confirmed by Congress, something that could not be said of Rockefeller, Reagan and Connally.

So Ford it was. He became the first vice president appointed under the 25th amendment to the Constitution.

On Aug. 9, 1974, after seeing Nixon off to exile, Ford assumed the office. The next morning, he still made his own breakfast and padded to the front door in his pajamas to get the newspaper.

Said a ranking Democratic congressman: "Maybe he is a plodder, but right now the advantages of having a plodder in the presidency are enormous."

It was rare that Ford was ever as eloquent as he was for those dramatic moments of his swearing-in at the White House.

"My fellow Americans," he said, "our long national nightmare is over. Our Constitution works. Our great republic is a government of laws and not of men. Here the people rule."

And, true to his reputation as unassuming Jerry, he added: "I am acutely aware that you have not elected me as your president by your ballots. So I ask you to confirm me with your prayers."

For Ford, a full term was not to be. He survived an intraparty challenge from Ronald Reagan only to lose to Democrat Jimmy Carter in November. In the campaign, he ignored Carter's record as governor of Georgia and concentrated on his own achievements as president.

Carter won 297 electoral votes to his 240. After Reagan came back to defeat Carter in 1980, the two former presidents became collaborators, working together on joint projects.

Even as president, Ford often talked with reporters several times a day. He averaged 200 outside speeches a year as House Republican leader, a pace he kept up as vice president and diminished, seemingly, only slightly as chief executive. He kept speaking after leaving the White House, generally for fees of $15,000 to $20,000.

Ford was never asked to the White House for a social event during Reagan's eight years as president.

In office, Ford's living tastes were modest. When he became vice president, he chose to remain in the same Alexandria, Va., home - unpretentious except for a swimming pool - that he shared with his family as a congressman.

After leaving the White House, however, he took up residence in the desert resort area of Rancho Mirage, picked up $1 million for his memoir and another $1 million in a five-year NBC television contract, and served on a number of corporate boards. By 1987, he was on eight such boards, at fees up to $30,000 a year, and was consulting for others, at fees up to $100,000. After criticism, he cut back on such activity.

At a joint session after becoming president, Ford addressed members of Congress as "my former colleagues" and promised "communication, conciliation, compromise and cooperation." But his relations with Congress did not always run smoothly.

He vetoed 66 bills in his barely two years as president. Congress overturned 12 Ford vetoes, more than for any president since Andrew Johnson.

In his memoir, "A Time to Heal," Ford wrote, "When I was in the Congress myself, I thought it fulfilled its constitutional obligations in a very responsible way, but after I became president, my perspective changed."

Some suggested the pardon was prearranged before Nixon resigned, but Ford, in an unusual appearance before a congressional committee in October 1974, said, "There was no deal, period, under no circumstances." The committee dropped its investigation.

Ford's standing in the polls dropped dramatically when he pardoned Nixon unconditionally. But an ABC News poll taken in 2002 in connection with the 30th anniversary of the Watergate break-in found that six in 10 said the pardon was the right thing to do.

The late Democrat Clark Clifford spoke for many when he wrote in his memoirs, "The nation would not have benefited from having a former chief executive in the dock for years after his departure from office. His disgrace was enough."

The decision to pardon Nixon won Ford a John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award in 2001, and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, acknowledging he had criticized Ford at the time, called the pardon "an extraordinary act of courage that historians recognize was truly in the national interest."

While Ford had not sought the job, he came to relish it. He had once told Congress that even if he succeeded Nixon he would not run for president in 1976. Within weeks of taking the oath, he changed his mind.

He was undaunted even after the two attempts on his life in September 1975. Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, a 26-year-old follower of Charles Manson, was arrested after she aimed a semiautomatic pistol at Ford on Sept. 5 in Sacramento, Calif. A Secret Service agent grabbed her and Ford was unhurt.

Seventeen days later, Sara Jane Moore, a 45-year-old political activist, was arrested in San Francisco after she fired a gun at the president. Again, Ford was unhurt.

Both women are serving life terms in federal prison.

Asked at a news conference to recite his accomplishments, Ford replied: "We have restored public confidence in the White House and in the executive branch of government."

As to his failings, he responded, "I will leave that to my opponents. I don't think there have been many."

Ford spent most of his boyhood in Grand Rapids, Mich.

He was born Leslie King on July 14, 1913, in Omaha, Neb. His parents were divorced when he was less than a year old, and his mother returned to her parents in Grand Rapids, where she later married Gerald R. Ford Sr. He adopted the boy and renamed him.

Ford was a high school senior when he met his real father. He was working in a Greek restaurant, he recalled, when a man came in and stood watching.

"Finally, he walked over and said, `I'm your father,'" Ford said. "Well, that was quite a shock." But he wrote in his memoir that he broke down and cried that night and he was left with the image of "a carefree, well-to-do man who didn't really give a damn about the hopes and dreams of his firstborn son."

Ford played center on the University of Michigan's 1932 and 1933 national champion football teams. He got professional offers from the Detroit Lions and the Green Bay Packers, but chose to study law at Yale, working his way through as an assistant varsity football coach and freshman boxing coach.

Ford got his first exposure to national politics at Yale, working as a volunteer in Wendell L. Willkie's 1940 Republican campaign for president. After World War II service with the Navy in the Pacific, he went back to practicing law in Grand Rapids and became active in Republican reform politics.

His stepfather was the local Republican chairman, and Michigan Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg was looking for a fresh young internationalist to replace the area's isolationist congressman.

Ford beat Rep. Bartel Jonkman by a 2-to-1 margin in the Republican primary and then went on to win the election with 60.5 percent of the vote, the lowest margin he ever got.

He had proposed to Elizabeth Bloomer, a dancer and fashion coordinator, earlier that year, 1948. She became one of his hardest-working campaigners and they were married shortly before the election. They had three sons, Michael, John and Steven, and a daughter, Susan.

Ford was the last surviving member of the Warren Commission, which investigated the assassination of President Kennedy in 1963 and concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone assassin.

Clifford, an adviser to presidents since Harry Truman, summed up his legacy: "About his brief presidency there is little that can be said. In almost every way, it was a caretaker government trying to bind up the wounds of Watergate and get through the most traumatic act of the Indochina drama.

"Ford ... was a likable person who deserves credit for accomplishing the one goal that was most important, to reunite the nation after the trauma of Watergate and give us a breathing spell before we picked a new president."

---

Associated Press writer Harry F. Rosenthal, who retired from the AP Washington bureau, contributed to this report.


Associated Press a écrit:Dec 27, 1:04 AM EST

Bush Calls Gerald Ford 'Great American'

By DEB RIECHMANN
Associated Press Writer

CRAWFORD, Texas (AP) -- President Bush on Tuesday night called the late President Ford a "great American" who helped heal the nation after Richard Nixon resigned in disgrace over the Watergate scandal.

"The American people will always admire Gerald Ford's devotion to duty, his personal character and the honorable conduct of his administration," Bush said in a statement from his Texas ranch where he is spending the week. "We mourn the loss of such a leader, and our 38th president will always have a special place in our nation's memory."

Bush expressed his personal condolences in a phone call with former first lady Betty Ford. He is scheduled to make a statement at 8 a.m. EST Wednesday at his ranch.

White House chief of staff Joshua Bolten notified Bush about Ford's death shortly before 11 p.m. EST. Bolten had been called a short time before by Ford's chief of staff.

"President Ford was a great American who gave many years of dedicated service to our country," Bush said.

On Aug. 9, 1974, after a long career in the House and service as vice president, Ford assumed the presidency "in an hour of national turmoil and division," Bush said.

"With his quiet integrity, common sense and kind instincts, President Ford helped heal our land and restore public confidence in the presidency."

Deputy White House press secretary Scott Stanzel said funeral arrangements are being handled by Ford's family. The president is scheduled to return to Washington on Jan. 1, but he would attend the funeral, Stanzel said.

"On behalf of all Americans, Laura and I offer our deepest sympathies to Betty Ford and all of President Ford's family," Bush said. "Our thoughts and prayers will be with them in the hours and days ahead."


Concernant Gerald Ford, voici quelques liens :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Ford
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Ford
Librairie et Musée Gérald R. Ford :
http://www.ford.utexas.edu/
Mémorial Gerald Ford :
http://www.geraldfordmemorial.com/

On peut d'ailleurs lire sur ces deux sites, précédé de la signature de Ford et de ses dates de naissance et de décès:
Mrs. Betty Ford issued the following statement from her home in Rancho Mirage, California:

"My family joins me in informing you that Gerald R. Ford - our beloved husband, father, grandfather, and great grandfather - has passed away at 93 years of age. His was a life full of love for God, family, and country."


Pour des détails sur Spiro Agnew :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiro_Agnew
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiro_Agnew

Hugues
Dernière édition par Hugues le 27 Déc 2006, 10:10, édité 4 fois.
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Messagede Hugues le 27 Déc 2006, 09:42

Ford était devenu le 12 novembre dernier le Président des Etats-Unis à la vie la plus longue, étant âgé ce jour là de 93 ans et 121 jours, soit une journée de plus que Ronald Reagan à son décès le 5 juin 2004 (93 ans et 120 jours)

Associated Press via SignOnSanDiego.com a écrit:Gerald Ford eclipses Ronald Reagan as longest-living president

ASSOCIATED PRESS

5:29 p.m. November 12, 2006

LOS ANGELES – Gerald R. Ford has surpassed Ronald Reagan to become the longest-living U.S. president.

Ford, who turned 93 on July 14, 2006, became the oldest president Sunday by living to 93 years and 121 days. The milestone is based on full days.

“The length of one's days matters less than the love of one's family and friends,” Ford said in a statement this week from the Rancho Mirage compound he shares with former first lady Betty Ford.

“I thank God for the gift of every sunrise and, even more, for all the years he has blessed me with Betty and the children, with our extended family and the friends of a lifetime,” he added.

The nation's 38th chief executive was president from Aug. 9, 1974, when Richard Nixon resigned, until January 1977. Before that, he was House minority leader.

Ford has suffered a variety of health problems in recent years.

Reagan, born Feb. 6, 1911, was 93 years, 120 days when he died June 5, 2004. He had surpassed the longevity milestone of John Adams, the nation's second president, in 2001.


Ford fixe donc le nouveau record à 93 ans et 166 jours.

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Visite du président G.W. Bush, au domicile de Ford, à Rancho Mirage en Californie, le 23 avril 2006. Cette visite, évoquée dans l'article d'Associated Press, faisait suite à la pneumonie qui trois mois plus tôt, en janvier, avait touché le président Ford pendant 12 jours.

L'une de ses principales dernières principales apparitions publiques (en dehors de quelques plus modestes comme la visite de Bush au domicile de Ford ci-dessus) avait été justement les funérailles nationales de Ronald Reagan le 11 juin 2004:

Image
Au deuxième rang au fond, à la gauche de M. & Ms. Carter.

Hugues
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Messagede Giancarlo le 27 Déc 2006, 12:01

Pierre Delanoe aussi est mort , mais ça fera moins causer que Ford ou Brown.
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Messagede Cyril le 27 Déc 2006, 12:59

M***e :( Un grand monsieur de la chanson française qui nous quitte...

Ca fait tellement peu de bruit qu'il n'y a pas une seule dépêche trouvée via Google Actualité :?
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Messagede Nuvo le 27 Déc 2006, 13:17

Ford avait été membre de la commission Warren je me souviens.
Seul président coopté en effet.

Vous connaissez la blague de Lyndon Baines Johnson à son sujet ?
Il disait que Ford était tellement con qu'il n'arrivait pas à faire deux choses à la fois comme marcher tout en machant un chewin-gum :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
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Messagede Hugues le 27 Déc 2006, 14:09

Cyril a écrit:M***e :( Un grand monsieur de la chanson française qui nous quitte...

Ca fait tellement peu de bruit qu'il n'y a pas une seule dépêche trouvée via Google Actualité :?


En fait ce n'était pas confirmé officiellement avant environ midi.

Reuters via L'Express.fr a écrit:mercredi 27 décembre 2006, mis à jour à 12:39
Décès du parolier Pierre Delanoë à l'âge de 88 ans Reuters

Le parolier Pierre Delanoë, auteur de "Les Champs-Elysées" chanson rendue célèbre par Joe Dassin, est décédé d'un arrêt cardiaque dans la nuit de mardi à mercredi à l'âge de 88 ans, a-t-on appris auprès de la Sacem.

Né le 16 décembre 1918 à Paris, Pierre Delanoë, né Pierre Leroyer, a écrit notamment pour Gilbert Bécaud, Dalida, Nana Mouskouri, Hugues Aufray, Michel Polnareff ou Michel Sardou.

Auteur de centaines de chansons, dont de nombreux grands succès, il avait écrit par exemple "L'Eté indien" pour Joe Dassin, "Je n'aurai pas le temps" pour Michel Fugain, "Les lacs du Connemara" pour Michel Sardou.

Président d'honneur de la Société des auteurs, compositeurs et éditeurs de musique (Sacem), Pierre Delanoë avait été directeur des programmes de la radio Europe 1.
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Messagede Cortese le 27 Déc 2006, 18:43

Quelle perte pour les héritiers de Marie Laurencin.
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Messagede schumi84f1 le 27 Déc 2006, 19:29

Hugues a écrit:
Cyril a écrit:M***e :( Un grand monsieur de la chanson française qui nous quitte...

Ca fait tellement peu de bruit qu'il n'y a pas une seule dépêche trouvée via Google Actualité :?


En fait ce n'était pas confirmé officiellement avant environ midi.

Reuters via L'Express.fr a écrit:mercredi 27 décembre 2006, mis à jour à 12:39
Décès du parolier Pierre Delanoë à l'âge de 88 ans Reuters

Le parolier Pierre Delanoë, auteur de "Les Champs-Elysées" chanson rendue célèbre par Joe Dassin, est décédé d'un arrêt cardiaque dans la nuit de mardi à mercredi à l'âge de 88 ans, a-t-on appris auprès de la Sacem.

Né le 16 décembre 1918 à Paris, Pierre Delanoë, né Pierre Leroyer, a écrit notamment pour Gilbert Bécaud, Dalida, Nana Mouskouri, Hugues Aufray, Michel Polnareff ou Michel Sardou.

Auteur de centaines de chansons, dont de nombreux grands succès, il avait écrit par exemple "L'Eté indien" pour Joe Dassin, "Je n'aurai pas le temps" pour Michel Fugain, "Les lacs du Connemara" pour Michel Sardou.

Président d'honneur de la Société des auteurs, compositeurs et éditeurs de musique (Sacem), Pierre Delanoë avait été directeur des programmes de la radio Europe 1.


Michal de la starac ne s'en remet pas parait-il ?
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Messagede metomoll le 27 Déc 2006, 20:38

Nuvolari a écrit:Vous connaissez la blague de Lyndon Baines Johnson à son sujet ?
Il disait que Ford était tellement con qu'il n'arrivait pas à faire deux choses à la fois comme marcher tout en machant un chewin-gum :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:




il y a une video dans laquelle on voit que Ford ne sait pas descendre d'un avion et saluer la foule en même temps :D
"Nous n'héritons pas la terre de nos parents, nous l'empruntons à nos enfants." - Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.
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Messagede Green Hornet le 27 Déc 2006, 21:36

en fait Ford est décédé en juillet mais ils l'avaient envoyé en Corée à un ingénieur français spécialisé dans le stockage des corps à basses températures... du coup ils ont quand même réussi à battre le record...
...
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Messagede lovecraft le 28 Déc 2006, 16:48

Décès de Jacques Crozemarie
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