Chad Stuart, who, as half of the hit British Invasion duo Chad & Jeremy had a string of whispery folk-pop hits in the mid-1960s that included “A Summer Song,” “Yesterday’s Gone” and “Distant Shores,” died December 20 of pneumonia at his home in Hailey, ID. He was 79.
His death was announced on the official Chad & Jeremy Facebook page:
We are deeply saddened to announce the passing of Chad Stuart, a father, a husband, a brother, a grandfather, a friend, a mentor, a teacher and an inspiration to many. Chad developed pneumonia (non-Covid related) after he was admitted to the hospital due to a fall. We ask for love, celebration but also space while the family adjusts to life without this incredible force. The family would like to thank his fans from around the world for the outpouring of birthday wishes and gifts he received every year. Chad took the time...
His death was announced on the official Chad & Jeremy Facebook page:
We are deeply saddened to announce the passing of Chad Stuart, a father, a husband, a brother, a grandfather, a friend, a mentor, a teacher and an inspiration to many. Chad developed pneumonia (non-Covid related) after he was admitted to the hospital due to a fall. We ask for love, celebration but also space while the family adjusts to life without this incredible force. The family would like to thank his fans from around the world for the outpouring of birthday wishes and gifts he received every year. Chad took the time...
- 12/23/2020
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
[caption id="attachment_51048" align="aligncenter" width="590"] James Patrick Stuart, a veteran of the cancelled All My Children TV series joins the cast of General Hospital on ABC. Helga Esteb/Shutterstock.com/caption]
James Patrick Stuart is returning to daytime TV after 24 years. The actor played Will "Cooney" Cortlandt/Justin Carrier from 1989 to 1992, on ABC's cancelled soap opera, All My Children (AMC). Soap Opera Digest reports Stuart is headed to General Hospital (Gh), also on ABC. Expect Stuart's episodes to start airing in July. No details have been released about his character. The actor's father is Chad Stuart, one half of the 1960s English folk rock duo, Chad and Jeremy, of "Yesterday's Gone," fame.
All My Children was cancelled by ABC in 2011 along with the One Life to Live soap opera, when the alphabet network licensed the shows to Prospect Park. The production company launched a web channel, The Online Network (Toln) and...
James Patrick Stuart is returning to daytime TV after 24 years. The actor played Will "Cooney" Cortlandt/Justin Carrier from 1989 to 1992, on ABC's cancelled soap opera, All My Children (AMC). Soap Opera Digest reports Stuart is headed to General Hospital (Gh), also on ABC. Expect Stuart's episodes to start airing in July. No details have been released about his character. The actor's father is Chad Stuart, one half of the 1960s English folk rock duo, Chad and Jeremy, of "Yesterday's Gone," fame.
All My Children was cancelled by ABC in 2011 along with the One Life to Live soap opera, when the alphabet network licensed the shows to Prospect Park. The production company launched a web channel, The Online Network (Toln) and...
- 6/18/2016
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
You probably know by now that I am avowed Anglophile. I have been since I was a young girl falling in love with the young men who made British music in the 1960s. Ah, Peter Noone, Jeremy Clyde, Ringo Starr, and yes, even Freddie (looked like the quintessential nerd) Garrity! If you know all of those names, good on you. If not, run to Google. I wrote my senior theme in high school on "England as it is Today." Because we didn.t have access to British television shows when I was growing up, it wasn.t till the PBS stations started showing "Monty Python" and "Doctor Who" in the early 1970s that I knew of the wonders of programmes from across the pond. Notice my British spelling of .programs.? I bet you did. By the 1980s, I.d found "Rising Damp," "The Fall and Rise of Reggie Perrin" ...
- 5/12/2013
- GeekNation.com
Although it's easy to forget, the 90's were a hugely influential era, so much so that many of our modern day necessities were invented within it. In 1990, Tim Berners-Lee developed the Internet and its subsequent language (HTML); in 1995, the VHS welcomed its main rival and subsequent successor, the Digital Versatile Disc (DVD); and in 1998, male impotency met its match through the mass-production of Viagra. However, while the 90's marked an impressive era for technology, it was the evolution of television - especially comedy shows - that we should be most thankful for. Men Behaving Badly, The Vicar of Dibley, The Fast Show, Mr. Bean, Goodness Gracious Me, Never Mind the Buzzcocks - the list really does go on and on.
Is it Legal? was first shown on British television in 1995 on ITV and was the brainchild of Simon Nye, the original creator of Men Behaving Badly. The series - which...
Is it Legal? was first shown on British television in 1995 on ITV and was the brainchild of Simon Nye, the original creator of Men Behaving Badly. The series - which...
- 1/9/2011
- Shadowlocked
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