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July 2023 RIP

Discussion in 'Hull City' started by x, Jul 4, 2023.

  1. tigerscanada

    tigerscanada Well-Known Member

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    So sad.
    RIP Sinead.<peacedove>
     
    #61
  2. Ernie Shackleton

    Ernie Shackleton Well-Known Member

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    Very sad.

    How do you get over the suicide of your child?

    RIP Sinead.
     
    #62
  3. originallambrettaman

    originallambrettaman Mod Moderator
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    Edward Sexton aged 80.

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    Born in Dagenham on 9 November 1942, Sexton left school at the age of 15 to work with tailors Lew Rose in a workshop on the Commercial Road in east London.

    After gaining experience at tailors Kilgour, French & Stanbury and Donaldson, Williams & G. Ward, where he met business partner Tommy Nutter - Sexton and Nutter opened their own tailoring business, Nutter’s of Savile Row, on 14 February 1969.

    Nutter’s was the first Savile Row tailor to adopt an open window approach, with the interior of the shop visible from the street.

    In 1976, Nutter’s of Savile Row was renamed ‘Edward Sexton’ and Sexton gained global prominence as the tailor to pop stars, from the Beatles to Harry Styles.
     
    #63
  4. Sir Cheshire Ben

    Sir Cheshire Ben Well-Known Member

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    “Took their own life” is far better terminology than “Committed Suicide”

    RIP.
     
    #64
    spesupersydera likes this.
  5. Der Alte

    Der Alte Well-Known Member

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    Years ago a colleague of mine was on holiday in Portugal and Sinead O'Connor turned up in a bar one evening to join in with the karaoke night. A complete surprise to everyone but apparently she was friendly and unassuming, great company and (obviously) blisteringly good at karaoke. RIP
     
    #65
  6. steverico

    steverico Well-Known Member

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    Still killing yourself though isn’t it
     
    #66
  7. Help!

    Help! Well-Known Member

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    Just seen this article that says the same:

    “When I was working with her, all I saw was somebody who was incredibly kind, funny and very thoughtful.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2023/jul/28/david-holmes-on-producing-sinead-oconnor-final-album
     
    #67
  8. Chazz Rheinhold

    Chazz Rheinhold Well-Known Member

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    Flamboyant Welsh wrestler Adrian Street dies at 82
    Performer dressed like a glam rocker, even wearing lipstick, and once, he said, ‘beat the crap’ out of Jimmy Savile
    Jim Waterson
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    The pioneering Welsh wrestler Adrian Street, who found fame after leaving his mining community to become a flamboyant fighter, has died at the age of 82.

    The Brynmawr-raised performer was known for his androgynous appearance and claimed to have taken part in more than 12,000 fights during a career that spanned seven decades – including one contest where he dropkicked Jimmy Savile.


    Street left his home town in the 1950s to seek fame as a wrestler in London, rejecting his family’s tradition of working in coalmines. In the capital he became known for being a heel (bad guy), specialising in antagonising crowds with his fighting and appearance.

    He later developed a penchant for flamboyant costumes that challenged social norms and helped sow the seeds for glam rock – often appearing wearing lipstick, with bright dyed hair and wearing a feather boa.

    After a successful stint on the British wrestling scene he moved to Florida where he ran a wrestling academy, before moving back to the Welsh valleys towards the end of his life. He wrote a series of autobiographies, calling himself the “sadist in sequins” and “merchant of menace”.

    His wife, Linda, a fellow wrestler, confirmed that Street died on 24 July in Cwmbran after recently undergoing brain surgery. She told the BBC her husband was “the kindest, most lovely and loving man I’ve ever known” and “the total opposite to how he behaved on stage”.

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    Street with his father, a coalminer, in 1974.Photograph: Mirrorpix/Getty Images
    At one point Street in the 1970s was booked to wrestle Savile, decades before the TV presenter was exposed as one of Britain’s worst *****philes. Street told the wrestling YouTube channel WSI that he was delighted with his performance against Savile.

    He said: “I ripped his hair out of his head … I drop kicked him so hard he landed on his head. I beat the crap out of him. I kicked him and smashed him and stomped on him. I put a submission on him that nearly broke his back. They shovelled him out of the ring and that ended the contest and he never ever wrestled again.”

    Street was the subject of the biopic You May Be Pretty, But I Am Beautiful, which premiered in 2019 with a screening close to his home town in Ebbw Vale.

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    Street and his father in 1974. Photograph: Mirrorpix/Getty Images
    Jeremy Deller, the Turner prize-winning artist, said he became fascinated with Street after seeing a black-and-white photograph of the wrestler posing with his coalminer father in the early 1970s.

    Deller, who also made a film about Street’s life, said this “seemed to me possibly the most important photograph taken postwar”.

    He added: “It encapsulates the whole history of Britain in that period – of our uneasy transition from being a centre of heavy industry to a producer of entertainment and services …

    “He’s an incredible person, who has tremendous willpower and a great sense of his own worth. His story has an epic quality to it, he has basically reinvented himself for the late 20th century.”
     
    #68
    HHH, x, rovertiger and 2 others like this.
  9. The B&S Fanclub

    The B&S Fanclub Well-Known Member

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    RIP Adrian Street...
    Odd game wrestling...Those guys who had camp personas, like Street, weren't, but many of the hardmen were...
    Plus Kent Walton was one of the first producers of blue movies, fact.
     
    #69

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