American producer and actor Mark Damon died in Los
Angeles on May 12th he was 91. Damon, who was born Alan Herskovitz in Chicago on April 22, 1933, won the Golden Globe for Most
Promising Newcomer for his starring role in 1960’s “House of Usher” for
director Roger Corman, who died May 9th at 98, then went on to appear in
numerous Spaghetti Westerns and other B-movies shot in Europe, from “Johnny
Yuma” to Mario Bava’s “Black Sabbath.” Among the firms Damon led as an
international sales agent were PSO, Vision International, MDP Worldwide and
Foresight Unlimited. He is survived by his wife, Maggie Markov Damon; son
Jonathan; daughter Alexis Damon Ribaut and son-in-law Mathieu Ribaut. Damon was
a star of ten Spaghetti westerns: “Death at Owell Rocks” as Harry Boyd/Jeffries;
“Johnny Yuma” as Jonathan Tomadaro Jefferson Gonzales/Johnny Yuma; “Ringo and
His Golden Pistol” as Johnny Oro/Johnny Ringo) all in 1966; “Kill and Pray” as George
Bellow Ferguson; “A Train for Durango” as Brown/Samuel Lee Barrett/Elias
MacPherson both in 1967; “Dead Men Don’t Count” as Johnny Dannon Dalton and “Go
for Broke” as Johnny Sweet/West both in 1968; “Pistol Packin' Preacher” as Slim
in 1971; “The Great Treasure Hunt” as Dean Madison and “They Called Him Veritas”
as Verità/Veritas/Verity both in 1972.
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