Jonathan Joss, who voiced the role of John Redcorn in the animated TV show “King of the Hill,” died Sunday after he was shot and killed at a home in San Antonio, Texas, police confirmed to CBS News. He was 55.
San Antonio police officers were called to a report of a shooting in progress at a home on the city’s south side. When they arrived, officers found Joss lying near the roadway, police said in a statement. CBS affiliate KENS-TV reported Joss had been shot multiple times.
First responders tried to save his life, but Joss was pronounced dead at the scene, police said.
His husband, Tristan Kern de Gonzales, confirmed the death to The Associated Press.
“He was murdered,” de Gonzales told AP via a text. The two were married earlier this year on Valentine’s Day.
The suspect, identified as Sigfredo Alvarez Ceja, 58, fled the scene and was detained by police about a block away, KENS-TV reported. Alvarez was charged with murder.
Neighbors told KENS-TV that Joss had a longstanding neighborhood feud with Alvarez and that the two men often argued and faced off with weapons. The neighbors said the men’s confrontations never turned violent until Sunday.
“Jonathan and I had no weapons. We were not threatening anyone. We were grieving. We were standing side by side. When the man fired Jonathan pushed me out of the way. He saved my life,” de Gonzales told The AP in a statement.
The shooting is under investigation. TMZ was the first to report the news.
“King of the Hill” aired from 1997 to 2010. Joss was set to return to a newly announced revival of the animated sitcom, which is set to premiere on Hulu in August.
On Saturday, Joss had posted a video to Instagram in which he said he was signing autographs at a comic book store in Austin.
“The fans get to revisit ‘King of the Hill’ again, which I think is an amazing thing because it’s a great show,” Joss said in the video, adding he had already done voice work on four episodes of the revival.
Joss also appeared on “Parks and Recreation,” “Tulsa King,” “Ray Donovan,” “True Grit” and “The Magnificent Seven.”
Lucia Suarez Sang is an associate managing editor at CBSNews.com. Previously, Lucia was the director of digital content at FOX61 News in Connecticut and has previously written for outlets including FoxNews.com, Fox News Latino and the Rutland Herald.
Devin Harjes, the actor who appeared in the TV shows “Boardwalk Empire” and “Manifest,” has died due to complications from a battle with cancer, his representative confirmed to CBS News on Sunday. He was 41.
Harjes was diagnosed with cancer last winter, according to this rep, David Williams. He died Tuesday morning after being hospitalized at Mount Sinai West Hospital in New York City, Williams said.
Devin Harjes filming on location for “Boardwalk Empire” on May 23, 2011, in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.
Bobby Bank/WireImage
“He was an artist of great conviction who never gave less than one hundred percent to any role he undertook,” Williams said of Harjes. “As a person, he was generous, kind, understanding and devoted to his family and friends, a great horseback rider and had a magic way with all animals.”
Harjes was born in Lubbock, Texas, and studied acting in college before entering the theatre scene in the Dallas–Fort Worth area. He later moved to New York City to pursue his acting career, his obituary said.
He made his TV debut as Jack Dempsey in the hit HBO series “Boardwalk Empire,” and went on to feature in several other series, including “Gotham,” “Orange is the New Black,” “Daredevil, “Elementary,” and “Blue Bloods.”
Harjes is survived by his parents, Randy and Rosanne Harjes, his sister Trish Harjes and her husband Justin Kelley, nephews, nieces and other family members.
Loretta Swit, who played Maj. Margaret Houlihan on the TV series “M*A*S*H,” has died, a representative for her confirmed to CBS News. She was 87.
Swit died at her home in New York City, her rep, B. Harlan Boll, said in a statement to CBS News on Friday. She was believed to have died of natural causes.
Loretta Swit is pictured as Maj. Margaret “Hot Lips” Houlihan.
CBS via Getty Images
This is a breaking news story. Check back for updates.
Alex Sundby is a senior editor at CBSNews.com. In addition to editing content, Alex also covers breaking news, writing about crime and severe weather as well as everything from multistate lottery jackpots to the July Fourth hot dog eating contest.
Guitarist and singer Rick Derringer, who shot to fame at 17 when his band The McCoys recorded “Hang On Sloopy,” had a hit with “Rock and Roll, Hoochie Koo” and earned a Grammy Award for producing “Weird Al ” Yankovic’s debut album, has died. He was 77.
Derringer died Monday in Ormond Beach, Florida, according to a Facebook announcement from his caregiver, Tony Wilson. No cause of death was announced.
Derringer’s decades in the music industry spanned teen stardom, session work for bands like Steely Dan, supplying the guitar solo on Bonnie Tyler’s “Total Eclipse of the Heart” and producing for Cyndi Lauper.
“Derringer’s legacy extends beyond his music, entertaining fans with his signature energy and talent. His passing leaves a void in the music world, and he will be deeply missed by fans, colleagues, and loved ones,” Wilson wrote.
Guitarist Rick Derringer performs at Radio City Music Hall in New York on July 7, 2010.
Evan Agostini / AP
As a teen, he formed the McCoys with his brother, Randy, and found fame singing “Hang On Sloopy,” a No. 26 hit about lovers from different socioeconomic circumstances. Derringer enjoyed his first solo hit with “Rock and Roll, Hoochie Koo,” which was used in the fourth season of “Stranger Things.”
His best-charting album was “All American Boy” in 1973, which included the instrumentals “Joy Ride” and “Time Warp.” His sole Grammy was for Yankovic’s “Eat It,” which had the Michael Jackson parodies “Eat It” and “Who’s Fat.”
“I’m very sad to say that my friend, rock guitar legend Rick Derringer, has passed,” Yankovic said in an Instagram post with a photo of him and Derringer in the studio. “Rick produced my first six albums and played guitar on my earliest recordings, including the solo on ‘Eat It.’ He had an enormous impact on my life, and will be missed greatly.”
Throughout the 1970s and ’80s, Derringer worked extensively as a session musician, playing on albums by Steely Dan — including “Countdown to Ecstasy,” “Katy Lied” and “Gaucho” — Todd Rundgren, Kiss and Barbra Streisand. He played on Air Supply’s “Making Love Out of Nothing at All.”
In the mid-1980s he began working with Lauper, touring in her band and playing on three of her albums, including the hit “True Colors.” He toured with Ringo Starr and The All-Starr Band.
In 1985, he produced the World Wrestling Federation’s “The Wrestling Album,” which consisted mostly of pro wrestlers’ theme songs, many of which he co-wrote, including what would become Hulk Hogan’s theme song “Real American.”
Robert Benton, the Oscar-winning filmmaker who helped reset the rules in Hollywood as the co-creator of “Bonnie and Clyde,” and later received mainstream validation as the writer-director of “Kramer vs. Kramer” and “Places in the Heart,” has died at age 92.
Benton’s son, John Benton, said that he died Sunday at his home in Manhattan of “natural causes.”
During a 40-year screen career, the Texas native received six Oscar nominations and won three times: for writing and directing “Kramer vs. Kramer” and for writing “Places in the Heart.” He was widely appreciated by actors as attentive and trusting, and directed Oscar-winning performances by Dustin Hoffman, Meryl Streep and Sally Field. Although severe dyslexia left him unable to read more than a few pages at a time as a child, he wrote and directed film adaptations of novels by Philip Roth, E.L. Doctorow and Richard Russo, among others.
Director Robert Benton speaks onstage at the screening of “Kramer vs. Kramer” during the 2018 TCM Classic Film Festival on April 28, 2018 in Hollywood, California.
Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for TCM
Benton was an art director for Esquire magazine in the early 1960s when a love for French New Wave movies and old gangster stories — and news that a friend got $25,000 for a Doris Day screenplay — inspired him and Esquire editor David Newman to draft a treatment about the lives of Depression-era robbers Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker, imagining them as prototypes for 1960s rebels.
Their project took years to complete as Francois Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard were among the directors who turned them down before Warren Beatty agreed to produce and star in the movie. “Bonnie and Clyde,” directed by Arthur Penn and starring Beatty and Faye Dunaway, overcame initial critical resistance in 1967 to the film’s shocking violence and became one of the touchstones of 1960s culture and the start of a more open and creative era in Hollywood.
The original story by Benton and Newman was even more daring: they had made Clyde Barrow bisexual and involved in a 3-way relationship with Bonnie and their male getaway driver. Beatty and Penn both resisted, and Barrow instead was portrayed as impotent, with an uncredited Robert Towne making numerous other changes to the script. “I honestly don’t know who the ‘auteur’ of ‘Bonnie and Clyde’ was,” Benton later told Mark Harris, author of “Pictures at a Revolution,” a book about “Bonnie and Clyde” and four other movies from 1967.
Over the following decade, none of Benton’s films approached the impact of “Bonnie and Clyde,” although he continued to have critical and commercial success. His writing credits included “Superman” and “What’s Up, Doc?” He directed and co-wrote such well-reviewed works as “Bad Company,” a revisionist Western featuring Jeff Bridges, and “The Late Show,” a melancholy comedy for which his screenplay received an Oscar nomination.
His career soared in 1979 with his adaptation of the Avery Corman novel “Kramer vs. Kramer,” about a self-absorbed advertising executive who becomes a loving parent to his young son after his wife walks out, only to have her return and ask for custody. Starring Hoffman and Streep, the movie was praised as a perceptive, emotional portrait of changing family roles and expectations and received five Academy Awards, including best picture. Hoffman, disenchanted at the time with the film business, would cite “Kramer vs. Kramer” and Benson’s direction for reviving his love for movie acting.
Five years later, Benton was back in the Oscars race with a more personal film, “Places in the Heart,” in which he drew upon family stories and childhood memories for his 1930s-set drama starring Fields as a mother of two in Texas who fights to hold on to her land after her husband is killed.
“I think that when I saw it all strung together, I was surprised at what a romantic view I had of the past,” Benton told The Associated Press in 1984, adding that the movie was in part a tribute to his mother, who had died shortly before the release of “Kramer vs. Kramer.”
Benton was born in Waxahachie, Texas, outside of Dallas. He owed his early love for movies to his father, telephone company employee Ellery Douglass Benton, who, instead of asking about homework, would take his family to the picture shows. The elder Benton would also share memories of attending the funerals of outlaws Barrow and Parker, Texas natives who grew up in the Dallas area.
Robert Benton studied at the University of Texas and Columbia University, then served in the U.S. Army from 1954 until 1956. While at Esquire, Benton helped start the magazine’s long-standing Dubious Achievement Award and dated Gloria Steinem, then on staff at the humor magazine Help! He married artist Sallie Rendigs in 1964. They had one son.
Between hits, Benton often endured long dry spells. His latter films included such disappointments as the thrillers “Billy Bathgate,” “The Human Stain” and “Twilight.” He had much more success with “Nobody’s Fool,” a wry comedy released in 1994 and starring Paul Newman, in his last Oscar-nominated performance, as a small-town troublemaker in upstate New York. Benton, whose film was based on Russo’s novel, was nominated for best adapted screenplay.
“Somebody asked me once when the Academy Award nominations came out and I’d been nominated, ‘What’s the great thing about the Academy Awards?'” Benton told Venice magazine in 1998. “I said, ‘When you go to the awards and you see people, some of whom you’ve had bitter fights with, some of whom you’re close friends with, some people you haven’t seen in ten years, some people you just saw two days before — it’s your family.’ It’s home. And home is what I’ve spent my life looking for.”
Ruth Buzzi, who rose to fame as the frumpy and bitter Gladys Ormphby on the groundbreaking sketch comedy series “Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In” and made over 200 television appearances during a 45-year career, has died, her agent confirmed to CBS News on Friday. She was 88.
Buzzi died Thursday at her home in Texas, her agent Mike Eisenstadt said in a statement. She had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and was in hospice care. Shortly before her death, her husband, Kent Perkins, had posted a statement on Buzzi’s Facebook page, thanking her many fans and telling them: “She wants you to know she probably had more fun doing those shows than you had watching them.”
Buzzi won a Golden Globe and was a two-time Emmy nominee for the NBC show that ran from 1968 to 1973. She was the only regular to appear in all six seasons, including the pilot.
She was first spotted by “Laugh-In” creator and producer George Schlatter playing various characters on “The Steve Allen Comedy Hour.”
Schlatter was holding auditions for “Laugh-In” when he received a picture in the mail of Buzzi in her Ormphby costume, sitting in a wire mesh trash barrel. The character was clad in drab brown with her bun covered by a hairnet knotted in the middle of her forehead.
Ruth Buzzi is seen as Gladys Ormphby from “Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In.”
NBCU Photo Bank
“I think I hired her because of my passion for Gladys Ormphby,” he wrote in his 2023 memoir “Still Laughing: A Life in Comedy.” “I must admit that the hairnet and the rolled-down stockings did light my fire. My favorite Gladys line was when she announced that the day of the office Christmas party, they sent her home early.”
The Gladys character used her purse as a weapon against anyone who bothered her, striking people over the head. On “Laugh-In,” her most frequent target was Arte Johnson’s dirty old man character Tyrone F. Horneigh.
“Gladys embodies the overlooked, the downtrodden, the taken for granted, the struggler,” Buzzi told The Connecticut Post in 2018. “So when she fights back, she speaks for everyone who’s been marginalized, reduced to a sex object or otherwise abused. And that’s almost everyone at some time or other.”
Buzzi took her act to the Dean Martin Celebrity Roasts in Las Vegas, where she bashed her purse on the heads of Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Lucille Ball, among others.
Her other recurring characters on “Laugh-In” included Flicker Farkle; Busy-Buzzi, a Hollywood gossip columnist; Doris Swizzler, a cocktail-lounge regular who got drunk with husband Leonard, played by Dick Martin; and an inconsiderate flight attendant.
“I never took my work for granted, nor assumed I deserved more of the credit or spotlight or more pay than anyone else,” Buzzi told The Connecticut Post. “I was just thrilled to drive down the hill to NBC every day as an employed actor with a job to do.”
Buzzi remained friends through the years with “Laugh-In” co-stars Lily Tomlin and Jo Anne Worley.
Ruth Buzzi smiles during the Chiller Theatre Winter Expo at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Secaucus, New Jersey, Jan. 28, 2006.
Bobby Bank/WireImage
Born Ruth Ann Buzzi on July 24, 1936, in Westerly, Rhode Island, she was the daughter of Angelo Buzzi, a nationally known stone sculptor. Her father and later her brother operated Buzzi Memorials, a gravestone and monument maker in Stonington, Connecticut, where she was head cheerleader in high school.
Buzzi enrolled at the Pasadena Playhouse at age 17. Two years later, she traveled with singer Rudy Vallee in a musical and comedy act during her summer break. That earned her an Actors’ Equity union card before she graduated from the playhouse’s College of Theatre Arts.
Buzzi moved to New York and was immediately hired for a lead role in an off-Broadway musical revue, the first of 19 such shows she performed in on the East Coast.
She got her national television break on “The Garry Moore Show” in 1964, just after Carol Burnett was replaced by Dorothy Loudon on the series. She played Shakundala the Silent, a bumbling magician’s assistant to Dom DeLuise‘s character Dominic the Great.
Buzzi was a regular on the CBS variety show “The Entertainers,” whose hosts included Burnett and Bob Newhart.
She was in the original Broadway cast of “Sweet Charity” with Gwen Verdon in 1966.
Buzzi toured the country with her nightclub act, including appearances in Las Vegas.
She was a semi-regular on “That Girl” as Marlo Thomas’ friend. She co-starred with Jim Nabors as time-traveling androids on “The Lost Saucer” in the mid-1970s.
Her other guest appearances included variety shows hosted by Burnett, Flip Wilson, Glen Campbell, Tony Orlando, Donny and Marie Osmond and Leslie Uggams.
She appeared in Ball’s last comedy series, “Life With Lucy.”
Buzzi guested in music videos with “Weird Al” Yankovic, the B-52’s and the Presidents of the United States of America.
She did hundreds of guest voices in cartoon series including “Pound Puppies,” “Berenstain Bears,” “The Smurfs” and “The Angry Beavers.”
She received an Emmy nomination for her six-year run as shopkeeper Ruthie on “Sesame Street.”
Her movie credits included “Freaky Friday,” “Chu Chu and the Philly Flash,” “The North Avenue Irregulars,” and “The Apple Dumpling Gang Rides Again.”
Buzzi was active on social media and had thousands of followers whom she rewarded with such one-liners as “I have never faked a sarcasm” and “Scientists say the universe is made up entirely of neurons, protons and electrons. They seem to have missed morons.”
She married Perkins, an actor, in 1978.
The couple moved from California to Texas in 2003 and bought a 640-acre ranch near Stephenville.
Buzzi retired from acting in 2021 and suffered a series of strokes the following year. Her husband told The Dallas Morning News in 2023 that she had dementia.