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Jones’ historic career ranged from producing Michael Jackson’s record-setting “Thriller” to prize-winning film and television scores and collaborations with Frank Sinatra and Ray Charles.
Andrea Robin Skinner said she told Munro about the abuse by Gerard Fremlin starting when she was 9 but she “loved him too much” to leave him.
She was the first lifelong Canadian to win the Nobel Prize and the first recipient cited exclusively for short fiction.
His 1968 debut novel, “House Made of Dawn,” is credited as the start of contemporary Native American literature and tells of a World War II soldier who struggles to fit back in at home.
The Canadian-born director was a three-time Oscar nominee who in 1999 received an honorary Academy Award for lifetime achievement.
The Canadian-born Robertson mined American music and history for such classics as “The Weight” and “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.”
McCarthy, raised in Knoxville, Tennessee, was compared to William Faulkner for his Old Testament style and rural settings.
The Brazilian singer, songwriter and entertainer’s cameo on “The Girl from Ipanema” made her a worldwide voice of bossa nova.
Few stars traveled so far — she was born Anna Mae Bullock in a segregated Tennessee hospital and spent her latter years on a 260,000-square-foot estate on Lake Zurich — and overcame so much.
Belafonte was one of the first Black performers to gain a wide following on film and to sell a million records as a singer.
An American Library Association report says books with LGBTQ+ themes remain the most likely targets of bans or attempted bans at public schools and libraries across the country.
More than 1,200 challenges were compiled by the association in 2022, nearly double the then-record total from 2021 and by far the most since the ALA began keeping data 20 years ago.
Over the past 70 years, only Lennon-McCartney, Carole King and a handful of others rivaled his genius for instantly catchy songs that remained performed, played and hummed long after they were written.
Barrett Strong was one of Motown’s founding artists and most gifted songwriters, singing lead on the company’s breakthrough single “Money (That’s What I Want),” and collaborated on such classics as “I Heard It Through the Grapevine,” “War” and “Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone.”
His talent, energy and ego collided on such definitive records as “Great Balls of Fire” and “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On” and sustained a career otherwise upended by personal scandal.