Two! Two! Two themes in one!
Theme 1: people who had interesting lives and careers.
Anne Jackson, noted actress.
She was also married to Eli Wallach from 1948 until he died in 2014. And they were good together:
Arthur Anderson. He was perhaps most famous as the voice of the Lucky Charms Leprechaun. But he did a lot of other stuff, including working with Orson Welles:
After acting in “The Mercury Theater on the Air,” Mr. Anderson was cast in 1937 as Lucius, the herald to the 22-year-old Welles’s Brutus, in a Broadway production of “Julius Caesar” set in Fascist Italy. Arthur sang, accompanying himself on a ukulele camouflaged as a lute.
His most memorable moment during the show occurred offstage. After heeding an order to stop hurling light bulbs at a brick wall, he decided to light matches to test the melting point of the sprinkler heads. Besides setting off a fire alarm, he triggered a deluge just as Brutus ascended the pulpit above the body of Caesar on the stage below.
Remember, folks, the sprinkler is not a toy, nor is it a load-bearing device.
Theme 2: the death penalty.
Jack H. Smith passed away a few days ago.
Mr. Smith had convictions for robbery-assault and theft in 1955 and another robbery-assault conviction in 1959 that earned him a life prison term. He also had a prison escape attempt in 1963.
He was paroled from his life sentence on Jan. 8, 1977, after serving 17 years. One day short of a year later, on Jan. 7, 1978, Mr. Smith and an accomplice were arrested in the killing of Roy A. Deputter, who was shot to death while trying to stop a holdup at a Houston convenience store known as Corky’s Corner.
Mr. Smith’s accomplice testified against him and was sentenced to life. Mr. Smith was sentenced to death:
Joe Freeman Britt also passed away a few days ago. He was a prosecutor in North Carolina:
After his time as a prosecutor, he became a judge:
[…] By way of Popehat (which also calls him “the meanest sonofabitch who ever wore the black robe”), the WP obit for Joe Freeman Britt, whose passing we noted previously. […]