Showing posts with label died. Show all posts
Showing posts with label died. Show all posts

Saturday, September 26, 2009


Sir Howard Morrison - A great entertainer, a great leader of his people and a great New Zealander has died.


Sir Howard Morrison passed away after a heart attack at his home in Rotorua. He was 74.

For more than 50 years he provided a unique Maori voice, becoming perhaps the greatest ambassador to New Zealand music the country has seen.

He was born in Rotorua in 1935 to a family he described as poor and has described his life as "beautiful, simple, but meaningful".

Morrison always loved music and once said he "fell in love with the way I sounded".

He left school to become a freezing worker, but by the mid-1950s he started putting together groups for gigs at local rugby club socials.

But it was the Howard Morrison Quartet that catapulted him into the spotlight and turned them into one of the country's original pop groups - and the first fully professional entertainers. The quartet was originally named the Ohinemutu Quartet and included Gerry Merito, Morrison's brother Laurie and his cousin John.

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Their debut record, My Old Man's An All Black, topped the charts in 1960, selling 80,000 copies. By 1965 the quartet disbanded and Howard Morrison launched his solo career.

He married his wife Kuia at age 22.

In 1966 he made it onto the big screen, topping the bill in the musical comedy Don't Let It Get You. The role helped him win entertainer of the year and other awards would follow, including being named the 1982 television entertainer of the year.

Sir Howard was the uncle of movie actor Temuera Morrison.

Monday, August 04, 2008


ALEXANDER SOLZHENITSYN, THE NOBEL PRIZE-WINNING AUTHOR ON THE SOVIET GULAGS HAS DIED...


Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the Nobel Prize- winning Russian author whose books chronicled the horrors of the Soviet gulag system has died at the age of 89 years.

He was recognisable in later years by his flowing beard and ascetic dress, it was reported. He had been very frail for several years, his son, Stepan Solzhenitsyn said yesterday.

His unflinching accounts of the horror,torment and survival in the Soviet Union's slave labour camps exposed Russia's horrible and secret history - the notorious gulags.

His writing earned him 20 years of bitter exile, international renown and the Nobel Prize for Literature. He allegedly inspired millions with the knowledge that one person's courage and integrity could eventually defeat the totalitarian empiracal machinery of the Soviet Union.

He undoubtably played a major role in the downfall of the Stalinist inspired USSR. But as a writer he reportedly came up against the new nationalism of Russia in his old age -most Russians don't remember the old Stalinist days, much like the people of today in western countries who do not personally remember the Great Depression of the 1930's, relying on the stories of their grandparents.

He was obviously a man of strong principles and personal integrity, fervently anti-communist and not prepared to make political compromises; something that obviously put him offside with modern Russian politics and politicians.

Another story here