US Actor William Hurt Dies at Age 71

American actor William Hurt, known for much-loved films such as “The Big Chill” and “A History of Violence,” has died at age 71, US media reported Sunday.

Multiple outlets cited Hurt’s son, Will, who said in a statement: “It is with great sadness that the Hurt family mourns the passing of William Hurt, beloved father and Oscar winning actor, on March 13, 2022, one week before his 72nd birthday. He died peacefully, among family, of natural causes.”

The actor had been diagnosed with terminal prostate cancer in May 2018, but his son’s statement did not specify whether the disease contributed to Hurt’s passing.

Hurt built his reputation on his willingness to play quirky and unusual characters such as a Russian police officer in “Gorky Park” (1983), a wealthy and aloof husband in Woody Allen’s “Alice” (1990) and a man seeking to build a machine that would benefit blind people in “Until the End of the World” (1991).

His first film role was as an obsessed scientist in Ken Russell’s 1980 film “Altered States.” Appearing opposite Kathleen Turner in “Body Heat” in 1981 turned him into a sex symbol, and he won the best actor Oscar in 1985 for playing a gay prisoner in “Kiss of the Spider Woman.”

Hurt was also nominated for Oscars as a teacher of deaf students in “Children of a Lesser God” (1986) and as a slow-witted television anchorman in “Broadcast News” (1987).

For his second Academy Award, Hurt played a Philadelphia mobster in David Cronenberg’s “A History of Violence.” He appears in the film for only about 10 minutes, but he made a huge impact with critics, who praised his “creepy” and “funny” character.

In recent years, Hurt made himself known to younger moviegoers through his turn in the Marvel Cinematic Universe as Thaddeus Ross, a blustering general who was present on the day Bruce Banner became the Hulk.

In addition to “The Incredible Hulk,” Hurt’s character appeared in four Marvel films including “Captain America: Civil War,” “Avengers: Infinity War,” “Avengers: Endgame” and “Black Widow.”

Hurt was born March 20, 1950 in Washington, DC, but as his father was a U.S. diplomat, he traveled widely as a child.

After his parents divorced, his mother married Henry Luce III, the heir to the Time-Life empire, and moved to New York.

Hurt stayed close by, studying theology at Tufts University before enrolling at the renowned Juilliard School of performing arts in New York.

Despite his spreading fame, Hurt did not settle in Hollywood but set up his home in Oregon. In interviews, he had shown he was uneasy with stardom.

“I’m not comfortable with all this. I’m not comfortable with walking the red carpet in a tuxedo and seeing all the women with their boobs pushed up and all the men dressed as penguins,” he told one interviewer.

His private life, however, read like something straight out of Hollywood.

Hurt married aspiring actress Mary Beth Supinger after finishing his studies at Tufts and followed her to London to study drama. They divorced on their return to New York.

In the late 1980s, he was sued by a former live-in love, ballet dancer Sandra Jennings, who is the mother of one of his sons.

He had two other sons from another marriage and a daughter, Jeanne, from a relationship with French actress Sandrine Bonnaire.

Hurt spoke fluent French and was also an avid private pilot.

Source: Voice of America

Brent Sass Maintains Lead as Iditarod Reaches Bering Sea Ice

Brent Sass continued to lead the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race on Sunday, but he must hold off the defending champion as mushers have reached the Bering Sea coast and its treacherous ice.

Sass breezed through the checkpoint in the village of Shaktoolik on Sunday morning, staying only eight minutes. The village is 1,213 kilometers (754 miles) into the nearly 1,609-kilometer (1,000-mile) race, and the winner is expected to cross the finish line in Nome on Tuesday or Wednesday.

According to GPS trackers each musher carries, Sass had a lead of just over 16 kilometers (10 miles) on Dallas Seavey, who tied Rick Swenson for the most Iditarod victories at five with his 2021 Iditarod win.

But the GPS data on the race’s Iditarod Insider website also showed Seavey running at a faster clip even though he is mushing with two fewer dogs than the 12 Sass has in harness.

Aaron Burmeister was in third place, but about 64 kilometers (40 miles) behind Seavey.

Sass picked up another award late Saturday when he was the first musher to reach the Gold Coast. Among the prizes presented to him in the community of Unalakleet was 28.35 grams (one ounce) of gold nuggets, worth about $2,000.

He’s previously been awarded several cash prizes, artwork and a gourmet meal for being the first musher to reach checkpoints dotting the trail from the Anchorage area to the Gold Rush town of Nome.

Sass turned down the gourmet meal, however, because he didn’t have time to eat it.

The world’s most famous sled dog race began with 49 mushers on March 6 in Willow, about 121 kilometers (75 miles) north of Anchorage. Since then, four have withdrawn from the race.

Source: Voice of America

Cape Verde opens doors for Angolan investment

Praia – The Cape Verdean government has welcomed Angolan private investment in the scope of the new era of mutual cooperation, stated in Praia city the ambassador of Cape Verde to Angola, Jorge Eduardo de Figueiredo.

Talking to Angolan journalists at the end of the 8th meeting of the Angola/Cape Verde Joint Commission, the diplomat advanced that his country looks at the reinforcement of the cooperation as one of the ways to boost the economy of both countries.

José Eduardo de Figueiredo advanced that his country looks with great interest to the air and maritime transport markets to boost the internal tourism and both countries’ economy, taking advantage of Angola´s tourism potential.

The diplomat manifested full opening of Cape Verde for the Angolan private investment as well as to become a springboard to project Angolan goods in the international market.

O hisn turn, the Angolan ambassador to Cape Verde, Júlia Machado, said that the archipelago has a diversified market and with many potentialities for both countries to take advantage of.

Júlia Machado appealed to the businesspersons from the two countries to be bolder and take good advantage of this opening to turn riches into real factors.

The diplomat advances that this is the moment for businesspersons to give wings to their imagination and launch themselves in the two markets, taking into account the facilities provided by the governments of both states to leverage the economies and also increase the ties of cooperation.

Cooperation strengthening

The Angolan diplomat also added that Cape Verdean investment would be very welcome from the Angolan side, as the country is looking for private investment, within the framework of the diversification of the national economy.

The ambassador considers that the time has come for Angolans and Cape Verdeans to take advantage of the new page in bilateral relations.

“The turning of the page in relations between Angola and Cape Verde is the manifestation and determination of both countries to strengthen bilateral relations in the various domains, with a greater focus on promoting Angolan private investment in Cape Verde, promotion and reciprocal protection of investments, in the areas of transport”, points out the official.

Júlia Machado also defends that the entrepreneurs should take advantage of such opening, to occupy the spaces created for the expansion of investment areas.

Angola and Cape Verde began Saturday (12) to outline new lines of cooperation, within the framework of the new dynamics of economic partnerships at a global level.

For this purpose, members of the Joint Commission of the two countries, meeting in the 8th session, reviewed aspects related to the exchange of services, maritime and air transport, among other areas of cooperation.

During the meeting, in which the Angolan delegation was headed by the minister of Foreign Affairs, Téte António, four legal instruments were evaluated, namely “Agreement for the Promotion and Reciprocal Protection of Investment”, “Bilateral Agreement on Air Services”, “Air transport Memorandum of understanding” and the “Memorandum of Technical Cooperation between the National Civil Aviation Authority of the Republic of Angola (ANAC) and the Civil Aviation Agency of Cape Verde”.

Angola and Cape Verde have strong ties of cooperation and, among the agreements signed, those on visa exemption and in the fields of education, defence, oil, diplomacy, agriculture, transport, finance and administration stand out.

The formalization of political-diplomatic relations between Angola and Cape Verde took place on 30 August 1977.

Source: Angola Press News Agency