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-   -   Movies and TV Ed Asner Dead at 91 Years Old (https://chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=339570)

Tribal Warfare 08-29-2021 02:21 PM

Ed Asner Dead at 91 Years Old
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Ed Asner, Emmy-Winning ‘Lou Grant’ Star, Dies at 91 <a href="https://t.co/dYi3bA5sPy">https://t.co/dYi3bA5sPy</a></p>&mdash; Variety (@Variety) <a href="https://twitter.com/Variety/status/1432036187703816194?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 29, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

IowaHawkeyeChief 08-29-2021 02:24 PM

crotchety old bastard, but a good actor.

Holladay 08-29-2021 02:24 PM

I believe he came from the KC area.

2bikemike 08-29-2021 02:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Holladay (Post 15805901)
I believe he came from the KC area.

Yes he and his brothers graduated from Wyandotte H.S. His brother Ben owned Capers Corner record store/headshop on Mission Rd. Just down from the Gas Station Joe's KC

Chief Roundup 08-29-2021 02:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Holladay (Post 15805901)
I believe he came from the KC area.

Yes he was born in KC.

Rain Man 08-29-2021 02:33 PM

He led newsrooms back when they had integrity and weren't just chasing ratings.

smithandrew051 08-29-2021 02:42 PM

Wyandotte High School Alum. Not far from my childhood home.

Deberg_1990 08-29-2021 02:45 PM

1 Attachment(s)
RIP....all you young kids know him as Carl Fredrickson

Tribal Warfare 08-29-2021 02:49 PM

https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/i...He79Q&usqp=CAU

Hudson from Gargoyles was the 1st show I saw Ed as a regular in a series

smithandrew051 08-29-2021 02:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Deberg_1990 (Post 15805929)
RIP....all you young kids know him as Carl Fredrickson

He was also Santa Claus in “Elf”.

Frazod 08-29-2021 03:16 PM

Last thing I saw him in was Cobra Kai - he played Johnny's asshole stepfather.

RIP

Mennonite 08-29-2021 03:18 PM

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="es" dir="ltr">Chicago 1955 <a href="https://t.co/qQnLsMAIg9">pic.twitter.com/qQnLsMAIg9</a></p>&mdash; Ed Asner (@TheOnlyEdAsner) <a href="https://twitter.com/TheOnlyEdAsner/status/1394303035690520578?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 17, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

chiefqueen 08-29-2021 05:31 PM

I found Ed Asner's senior year yearbook. Most of the KCK high school yearbooks are now on the Internet.

https://ecommunity.kckpl.org/yearboo..._High_1947.pdf

FlaChief58 08-29-2021 05:39 PM

RIP

bsp4444 08-29-2021 05:49 PM

He spoke at my college graduation.

Aries Walker 08-29-2021 06:16 PM

He and I had something in common—he was the only other person that I know of who was born in Kansas City, Missouri, but lived in Kansas at the time. His family lived in Kansas City, Kansas, and mine lived in Overland Park.

Rest in peace, Ed. 91, and still working almost to the very end, is a pretty good run.

mlyonsd 08-29-2021 07:19 PM

He had spunk.

HonestChieffan 08-29-2021 08:04 PM

Amazing talent

RIP Mr Grant

Al Czervik 08-29-2021 08:11 PM

RIP Bart Jason!!!!

Stewie 08-29-2021 08:42 PM

I graduated from Shawnee Mission East with Marci Asner. She acknowledged Ed as her uncle, but it wasn't a great relationship on her side of the family. She was from the wealthy side, not the side that had record stores, etc..

ClevelandBronco 08-29-2021 08:44 PM

I had forgotten that I crossed a picket line he was walking years ago.

Red Dawg 08-29-2021 08:46 PM

No offense but he's nobody. Who gives a ****. When was the last anyone gave a thought to Lou Grant? Never.

kysirsoze 08-29-2021 08:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Red Dawg (Post 15806384)
No offense but he's nobody. Who gives a ****. When was the last anyone gave a thought to Lou Grant? Never.

You're a ****ing dumbass.

Ed Asner was the ****ing man. He came into a restaurant I worked at a few times. Always hilarious. Total ball buster. Absolute legend. RIP.

Deberg_1990 08-30-2021 09:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Red Dawg (Post 15806384)
No offense but he's nobody. Who gives a ****. When was the last anyone gave a thought to Lou Grant? Never.

Dude worked up until he died. Show some respect!

FAX 08-30-2021 11:41 AM

Better than being dead at 90.

Fare thee well, Ed Asner.

R.I.P.

FAX

Aries Walker 08-30-2021 11:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Deberg_1990 (Post 15806788)
Dude worked up until he died. Show some respect!

I just saw him in Doom Patrol, I think two years ago. A short but memorable role.

I hope I'm still getting out there in my 70s, much less 89 or 90, as he was.

Right up there with Shatner, and Mel Brooks.

gblowfish 08-30-2021 02:15 PM

I got married in Lexington, MO. The family that founded and administered Wentworth Military Academy was the Sellers family. One of the Sellers boys (I'm friends with a couple of them) posted this on the news of Asner's passing: I was so saddened to hear of actor Ed Asner’s death today. I, as with many of my contemporaries, knew him from “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” and “Lou Grant.” My kids knew him from Will Ferrell’s “Elf” and the Pixar animated film “Up.”

Mr. Asner and I shared a mentor, Commander Ed Ellis, who was Ed Asner’s football coach in high school in the 1940s, and my Civics teacher and golf coach in the 1980s. I’ve always felt a certain kinship to Mr. Asner because of that shared relationship. Mentors in our lives can be so important. As a young person, I had many role models. My parents and grandparents filled that primary role. But I have always so appreciated my outside mentors - those relationships beyond my family with those like Ed Ellis - teachers, coaches, family friends, and people I’ve worked with and for.

Ed Ellis grew up in my hometown of Lexington, Missouri, and attended Wentworth Military Academy from 1925 to 1929. He told me that while he was a student at Wentworth that his mentor was my grandfather, who at that time was a young staff member on campus. Ed Ellis was one of the greatest all-around athletes in school history, serving as captain of the football, basketball and baseball teams, playing tennis and running track as well.

After Wentworth, he went on to Oklahoma A&M (now Oklahoma State University), where he was a three-sport letterman, quarterbacking the football team, starting on the basketball squad, and was the star pitcher and Captain of the baseball team. He served in the Navy during WWII, and stayed in the Naval Reserves til 1967. As head coach of the football, basketball and baseball teams at Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kansas from 1946 to 1966, he led his squads to eight state championships. On fall weekends, he served as a college football referee in the Old Big 7 and Big 8. Commander Ed "retired" to Wentworth in 1967 and taught Civics while coaching golf up to 1990. He kept an autographed photo of Ed Asner – his old student who made good – on display in his office.

I took his Civics class as a high school freshman in 1982 when Commander Ed was in his mid-70s, but his course was about much more than citizenship – it was really a course about life - about how to comport one’s self, how to treat others, and how we build our society based on a social contract. I still remember his first day’s lesson – “Always treat others with respect: say ‘yes sir,’ ‘no sir,’ ‘yes ma’am,’ ‘no ma’am,’ ‘thank you sir,’ ‘thank you, ma’am,’ keep a handkerchief in your pocket at all times because you never know when you may need it, and never go anywhere without a dime in your other pocket in case you need to phone home. Start off by doing those three things and you’ll be well on your way to a successful life.” It was a course about responsibility, about duty, and about the common good.

In 1988, I attended a talk by Ed Asner at Harvard Law School titled, “Patriotism and Other Spectator Sports.” A few minutes into his talk, he shared an anecdote of an experience he had back at Wyandotte High School in 1946. Young Asner had been complaining about the coal miners who were striking for better working conditions (almost everyone in his community was against the strikers as Asner described the situation), and his football coach – Ed Ellis – took him aside and had a quiet conversation with him, starting with, “Eddie, you can’t take away a man’s right to strike...”

Asner said that that particular moment shocked him. It challenged and changed his worldview, helping lay the groundwork for him to become the President of the Screen Actors Guild in the 1970s. After the talk, I was able to visit with Mr. Asner for a few minutes and share with him how much Ed Ellis meant to me as well. He talked to me about his “beloved football coach” who was a “beautiful man.”

Ed Ellis was a beautiful man. It is amazing how big an impact a person can have on another just by taking a sincere and persistent interest in them. And I was not alone among his mentees; I was one among scores of others. As a high school kid, I played many rounds of golf with him on the local small town courses. Over spring breaks during both high school and college, we would find a day to attend one of the early rounds of the NAIA basketball tournament in Kansas City (with games going on from 7 in the morning until near midnight) and would bet a quarter a game on the outcomes.

We kept up a correspondence until shortly before he died in 1990, and I still have all his letters, filled with wise advice and counsel, that he wrote me. A true mentor to me and hundreds of others… As I get older, “mentor” is a role that I try to embrace as much as father, husband, son, brother and friend, thanks in large part to the examples of people like Ed Ellis… and Ed Asner…

KC_Lee 08-30-2021 02:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mlyonsd (Post 15806290)
He had spunk.

I hate spunk.

Al Czervik 08-30-2021 02:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gblowfish (Post 15807373)
I got married in Lexington, MO. The family that founded and administered Wentworth Military Academy was the Sellers family. One of the Sellers boys (I'm friends with a couple of them) posted this on the news of Asner's passing: I was so saddened to hear of actor Ed Asner’s death today. I, as with many of my contemporaries, knew him from “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” and “Lou Grant.” My kids knew him from Will Ferrell’s “Elf” and the Pixar animated film “Up.”

Mr. Asner and I shared a mentor, Commander Ed Ellis, who was Ed Asner’s football coach in high school in the 1940s, and my Civics teacher and golf coach in the 1980s. I’ve always felt a certain kinship to Mr. Asner because of that shared relationship. Mentors in our lives can be so important. As a young person, I had many role models. My parents and grandparents filled that primary role. But I have always so appreciated my outside mentors - those relationships beyond my family with those like Ed Ellis - teachers, coaches, family friends, and people I’ve worked with and for.

Ed Ellis grew up in my hometown of Lexington, Missouri, and attended Wentworth Military Academy from 1925 to 1929. He told me that while he was a student at Wentworth that his mentor was my grandfather, who at that time was a young staff member on campus. Ed Ellis was one of the greatest all-around athletes in school history, serving as captain of the football, basketball and baseball teams, playing tennis and running track as well.

After Wentworth, he went on to Oklahoma A&M (now Oklahoma State University), where he was a three-sport letterman, quarterbacking the football team, starting on the basketball squad, and was the star pitcher and Captain of the baseball team. He served in the Navy during WWII, and stayed in the Naval Reserves til 1967. As head coach of the football, basketball and baseball teams at Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kansas from 1946 to 1966, he led his squads to eight state championships. On fall weekends, he served as a college football referee in the Old Big 7 and Big 8. Commander Ed "retired" to Wentworth in 1967 and taught Civics while coaching golf up to 1990. He kept an autographed photo of Ed Asner – his old student who made good – on display in his office.

I took his Civics class as a high school freshman in 1982 when Commander Ed was in his mid-70s, but his course was about much more than citizenship – it was really a course about life - about how to comport one’s self, how to treat others, and how we build our society based on a social contract. I still remember his first day’s lesson – “Always treat others with respect: say ‘yes sir,’ ‘no sir,’ ‘yes ma’am,’ ‘no ma’am,’ ‘thank you sir,’ ‘thank you, ma’am,’ keep a handkerchief in your pocket at all times because you never know when you may need it, and never go anywhere without a dime in your other pocket in case you need to phone home. Start off by doing those three things and you’ll be well on your way to a successful life.” It was a course about responsibility, about duty, and about the common good.

In 1988, I attended a talk by Ed Asner at Harvard Law School titled, “Patriotism and Other Spectator Sports.” A few minutes into his talk, he shared an anecdote of an experience he had back at Wyandotte High School in 1946. Young Asner had been complaining about the coal miners who were striking for better working conditions (almost everyone in his community was against the strikers as Asner described the situation), and his football coach – Ed Ellis – took him aside and had a quiet conversation with him, starting with, “Eddie, you can’t take away a man’s right to strike...”

Asner said that that particular moment shocked him. It challenged and changed his worldview, helping lay the groundwork for him to become the President of the Screen Actors Guild in the 1970s. After the talk, I was able to visit with Mr. Asner for a few minutes and share with him how much Ed Ellis meant to me as well. He talked to me about his “beloved football coach” who was a “beautiful man.”

Ed Ellis was a beautiful man. It is amazing how big an impact a person can have on another just by taking a sincere and persistent interest in them. And I was not alone among his mentees; I was one among scores of others. As a high school kid, I played many rounds of golf with him on the local small town courses. Over spring breaks during both high school and college, we would find a day to attend one of the early rounds of the NAIA basketball tournament in Kansas City (with games going on from 7 in the morning until near midnight) and would bet a quarter a game on the outcomes.

We kept up a correspondence until shortly before he died in 1990, and I still have all his letters, filled with wise advice and counsel, that he wrote me. A true mentor to me and hundreds of others… As I get older, “mentor” is a role that I try to embrace as much as father, husband, son, brother and friend, thanks in large part to the examples of people like Ed Ellis… and Ed Asner…

Damn fine story George.....
RIP to the Ed's!!!!!

Kman34 08-30-2021 02:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Red Dawg (Post 15806384)
No offense but he's nobody. Who gives a ****. When was the last anyone gave a thought to Lou Grant? Never.

The actor Ed Esner is more of a “somebody” than you will ever be… Have more respect for a distinguished career..

Deberg_1990 08-30-2021 02:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Aries Walker (Post 15807002)
I just saw him in Doom Patrol, I think two years ago. A short but memorable role.

I hope I'm still getting out there in my 70s, much less 89 or 90, as he was.

Right up there with Shatner, and Mel Brooks.

Yep. He was in Cobrai Kai and Dead to Me in the past couple of years. Dudes worked a ton over the years.


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