Passings 2007: The Arts
World War II service shaped the lives and careers of authors Norman Mailer and Kurt Vonnegut, and in turn their works were profoundly influential in the Vietnam era.
Vonnegut turned his ordeal as a POW during the 1945 allied firebombing of Dresden, Germany, into his 1969 novel "Slaughterhouse-Five." Its surrealistic approach made it a hit with young readers who were questioning the Vietnam War.
Mailer made his name with the postwar novel "The Naked and the Dead," drawing on his war service. Two decades later his 1968 account of Vietnam protesters' march on the Pentagon, "The Armies of the Night," won a Pulitzer.
Photos: Norman Mailer
Photos: Kurt Vonnegut
They were two of the artists, entertainers and pop culture figures who died in 2007.
Along with their artistry on the opera stage, Luciano Pavarotti and Beverly Sills had star personalities that brought them millions of fans who saw them only on television. Drummer Max Roach was remembered as a genius in the jazz world. Igor Moiseyev brought his Russian folk dance troupe to audiences worldwide, even during the Cold War, while Marcel Marceau kept the art of pantomime alive.
Photos: Ingmar Bergman
Photos: Luciano Pavarotti
Many entertainers who died in 2007 predated the era when blue jeans and brutal candor became the norm for celebrities young and old.
Oscar-winner Jane Wyman's old-fashioned class showed when she maintained silence about her failed marriage to Ronald Reagan. ("It's bad taste to talk about ex-husbands and ex-wives," she said.)
Also in 2007, the world of fashion said goodbye to American Liz Claiborne, who dressed the burgeoning ranks of career women in the 1970s, and Italian Gianfranco Ferre, who designed structured, sculpted shapes.
Photos: Deborah Kerr Photos: Robert Goulet
Photos: Fashions of Gianfranco Ferre
Liz Renay and Anna Nicole Smith both gained notice in their youth as Marilyn Monroe lookalikes. One starred in some cult films, got mixed up with mobsters and lived to be 80; the other starred in advertisements and reality TV, got mixed up with drugs and lived less than half as long.
Photos: Merv Griffin Photos: Anna Nicole's Funeral
Some notables were known for just one, quirky thing: Bobby "Boris" Pickett did "The Monster Mash," Dick Wilson starred in "don't squeeze the Charmin" ads, and Calvert DeForest was David Letterman's eccentric nebbish.