R.D. Call, a Utah native who was a familiar face playing cops and killers in dozens of movies and TV shows, has died. Call died Feb. 27, in Layton, from complications after back surgery, his family announced. He was 70. Call’s craggy features made him a natural to play tough guys, though, as his family wrote, he “was tough as nails on the outside but a real gentleman on the inside.” He was a regular in the movies of director Walter Hill, starting with his first movie role as a police sergeant in the 1982 Eddie Murphy buddy-cop comedy “48 Hrs.” He worked for Hill again in the Richard Pryor comedy “Brewster’s Millions” (1985) and the Bruce Willis gangster drama “Last Man Standing” (1996). Call appeared several times in movies starring Sean Penn: “At Close Range” (1986), “Colors” (1988), “State of Grace” (1990), “The Weight of Water” (2000), “I Am Sam” (2001) and “Babel” (2006). He also appeared in the Jon Krakauer adaptation “Into the Wild” (2007), which Penn directed. Call played a...
All’s well that ends well — or maybe it’s a case of much ado about nothing — in an odd dispute that roiled Capitol Hill this week: “Tampongate.” It started when Democratic Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney of New York, a candidate for New York attorney general, claimed that the Committee on House Administration has a “discriminatory policy” that bars members’ offices from buying tampons for use by female staff and visitors. The committee, led by Republicans, manages the daily operations of the House, including overseeing administrative functions. Here’s his story. “Earlier this [week], my office got an email saying that we couldn’t use our funds to buy tampons. . . . When we called out the committee that makes the rules, they denied the rule exists in the first place,” Maloney tweeted Thursday . UPDATE: earlier this wk, my office got an email saying that we couldn't use our funds to buy tampons (even though we have female constituents and staff). When we called out the committee that ...
Park City • Rock star Dan Reynolds was once a Mormon missionary, and in a documentary that premiered at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival, he declares a new mission: to urge leaders of his faith to stop shaming their LGBT members. “A determined Mormon is a scary thing, I can tell you that, because they don’t stop,” Reynolds, singer for the band Imagine Dragons, declares in “Believer,” a documentary that received a standing ovation from some 500 Sundance attendees at its first screening late Saturday night. The movie will receive a broader audience this summer, director Don Argott told the audience after the film. “Believer” was picked up before the festival by HBO Documentary Films, with plans for a theatrical release this summer and a debut on HBO after that. There’s another audience Reynolds hopes will watch the movie: the leadership of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. “I hope that [ LDS Church President Russell M. Nelson ] and the apostles take the time to watch...
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