One of the most sobering realizations for anyone our age facing a 50th High School Reunion is that there are fewer of us around than there were 50 years ago. One insurance website I found said:
Forget the fun, warped mirrors of amusement parks. At your high school reunion, you’ll experience true terror: an irrefutably accurate reflection of the march of time.
For the price of a single ticket home, you can witness the horrifying truth that your former classmates — and you — are getting old. Going gray, getting bald, growing soft. Dying.
Statistics from the insurance industry give us these numbers:
10 year reunion — 1 death per 100 graduates.
20 year reunion — 1 death per 50 graduates.
30 year reunion — 1 death per 20 graduates.
40 year reunion — 1 death per 10 graduates.
50 year reunion — 1 death per five graduates.
Wow! This means that for a 50 year reunion, about 20% of our classmates should have died. But in fact, if you count up the number of our memorialized classmates, nearly 70 people in our class are on that list. That means that our class is below the average since we had about 640+ graduates. If you haven’t gone there already, our class website, www.burbankhigh1968.net has a list of classmates who are gone forever but not forgotten: In memoriam
[EDITOR’S NOTE: You can tell how bad I was in math—My original post said that we were above the average when in fact we are below the average.]
John Curtis died last year.
John Curtis 1968
In trying to contact all our Burbank High 1968 classmates, we found out from Steven Lester that one of the people on our Missing Classmates list, John Curtis, died last year. “John was one of my Facebook friends and we talked occasionally. When he died last year, I think, his family notified us via a message in Facebook and then they closed his site… I can’t remember where he lived. I googled for an obituary but couldn’t find one. He was a very stand-offish person and suffered from lung problems that derived from his experience in the Navy during Viet Nam and was greatly frustrated by the way he was treated by the VA.”
If you have any more information about John or any of our classmates marked “missing,” please send it to burbankhigh1968@gmail.com.
Some links on the website which you may find interesting:
Bill Ardizzone
Michael Blumberg
Timothy Bonner
Richard Bredeson
Ann Brown
Rosemary Buckley Brunch
Jay Lynn Case
Peggy Dyer Cave
Consuelo Cazares
Susan Cohen
Michael Dolph Connell
Bob T. Correll
John Curtis
Greg A. Davidson
Dennis Dawson
Kathy Del Pino
Catherine Dubiel
Eddie Earle
Thomas Edmisten
Joseph Escobar
Anthony Favazzo
Judy Geldin
Andrea Goldberg
Jose Aguilar Gomez
Miguel Guerra
Cliff Ray Hamilton
Ken Howitt
Sue Kelley
Ken Kleist
Patrick Kloepfel
Rick Logan
Leonard Marsh
Etsuyo Mochizuki
Dina Monarrez
Mary Makarowski Morrison
Ralph P. Moyle
Joan Linea Marcella Myers
Giancarlo Nannini
Frances Gregory Nevue
David Nicastro
Mercedes Pelaez
Paul Pilson
Kim Plunkett
John Curtis Price
Steven Proctor
Angela Ramirez
Carol Robinson
Lynn Ross
Barbara Sebern Rowe
Sylvia Ruiz
Ray Rutherford
Mike Lane Shaw
Donna Staples
Michael Steinberg
Carol Stevenson
Cheryl Lynn Stewart
Gerry Stratton
Charles E. Stricker
Brenda Stubbs
Janet Teague
John Treloar
Daniel Trotter
Steve Ubleman
Jim Venters
William Walker
Carol Cooke Walter
Mike Bruce Williams
Bob Zubricky
Carla’s first day back in the gym following cancer surgery, “her crowning achievement!”
So proclaimed our BHS’68 classmate, Carla Robinson Pollard, as she wrote to RSVP to the 50th Class Reunion. You may recall that we heard from Carla four years ago in October 2013 (see post “Fabric artists“) and saw some of her beautiful handiwork.
I have a remarkable life—among other reasons—I’m a cancer survivor. Was diagnosed with colorectal cancer in April of 2016, went through chemo and radiation last summer, then successful surgery in November when they got it all. I was extremely fortunate to have a medical team of gladiators out of the Marin General Hospital network; my surgery was at the Mission Bay campus of UCSF in San Francisco by a world class surgeon who specializes in only my kind of cancer/surgery.
Carla Robinson, 1968
Although I was strong as a bull going into it, I wound up in the hospital twice afterward with infections; then a third time after having a seizure from one of the meds I was taking to clear up an infection (sepsis). I had a couple of docs tell me I could have died! Not quite ready for THAT! Lol. So my 67th birthday this year was particularly significant. And, many of our classmates will be 68 for the class of ’68’s 50th!
Now I feel like a million bucks, living the dream still running two small businesses for which I am sole proprietor: I have a custom sewing studio in Sausalito—with an abundance of wonderful clients, including interior designers from the SF Bay area. I also maintain a bookkeeping business with clients who have a variety of businesses. I’m blessed to have a huge network of ongoing support, colleagues, clients and friends.
Although I wasn’t directly affected by the unspeakable tragedy of the wine country fires I spent a lot of time in Napa some years ago visiting a close friend on a regular basis who used to live there. I also have a dear friend whose parents lived in the Fountaingrove community of Santa Rosa who lost absolutely everything. Unlike hundreds of others at least they had another place to move to (in with my friend, their son) here in Mill Valley where I still live (going on 29 years!) This event has touched so many I know, it’s positively unbelievable.
So that’s the scoop on me right now. I feel extraordinarily grateful every day.
The picture above was posted on Instagram, on Carla’s first day back in the gym. Her trainer wrote: “It’s been a long year for Carla. Cancer, chemo, radiation, surgeries, hospitalizations. Things got dark, but she pulled through. Today Carla worked out with me for the first time since October. And you know what? She’s as strong as ever. A take-no-s*** attitude and a will to survive will get you through almost anything, and Carla is living proof.”
We’re so happy for you, Carla, and look forward to seeing you at the reunion!
Burbank High School Class of 1968 is having a 50th Reunion and would like to tell everyone about it!
Big Problem: Here is a list of people for whom we have no contact information. If YOUR NAME is below, or if you know how to contact any one of these people, please send the email address to burbankhigh1968@gmail.com.
If you know ANYTHING about how to contact these people, please let them know about the 50th Class Reunion and direct them to the website, burbankhigh1968.net.
Or if you would be willing to volunteer to search for people and their email addresses, or perhaps make telephone calls, please email us here.
Plans are underway to have a grand 50th Reunion of Burbank High School’s Class of 1968!
Whew! Where has the time gone?!
The Reunion Committee would like to have an idea of how many people will be attending. The date of the Reunion is scheduled for Saturday, October 6, 2018 at the Angeles National Golf Club, 9401 Foothill Blvd., Sunland, CA 91040. Cost will be $75/person for a delicious buffet dinner.
Please, for planning purposes, we would like to know if you might be attending. Please let us know how many may be coming by clicking here. You are not committed to this, but knowing how many may attend will help us for budgeting purposes.
In the meantime, our class blog has expanded to include a Guest List and an FAQ page. (See above)
We would like to hear from ALL of you as to whether you might be attending. But we also would love to hear what you’ve been doing the last 50 years. Married? Divorced? Children? Grandchildren? Great-grandchildren? Retired and Loving It or Still Working? Since 1968, we’ve spread to the four winds and all parts of America. Send photos! We love Then and Now pictures.
Laura Ziskin with daughter (Photo courtesy of Laura Ziskin Productions)
Today Cathy Emmett Palmer ’67, posted a previously unpublished interview with The Hollywood Reporter about our classmate, the late Laura Ziskin, perhaps the most famous Burbank High 1968 graduate.
The late producer talked to THR last fall in a never-before-published interview about her dreams, victories and challenges. “When I started, I was the only woman in the room.”
After battling cancer for seven years, Laura Ziskin, 61, died June 12 at her home in Santa Monica, surrounded by her family: husband and screenwriter Alvin Sargent, daughter and producer Julia Barry and son-in-law and writer Eli Dansky. She leaves behind an impressive roster of films, from the hit Pretty Woman and the Oscar-winning As Good as It Gets to the hugely successful Spider-Man franchise. She earned a spot in Hollywood history by becoming the first woman to serve as sole producer of the Academy Awards, a task she took on twice. And rather than suffer her disease silently, she became a fiercely committed cancer activist, co-founding Stand Up to Cancer, which calls upon the resources of the entertainment industry to urge the public to support new approaches to research focused on getting therapies to patients quickly.
On Sept. 23, she spoke with THR’s Stacey Wilson in this never-published interview.
Laura Ziskin, 1968 Ceralbus photo
The Hollywood Reporter: What was your childhood like, growing up in Burbank?
Laura Ziskin: I describe myself as someone who was always putting on a show, even when I was a little girl. I wanted to be an actress but I liked organizing everybody and putting on plays. I was a producer. I wanted to put on a show. In some ways, the most rewarding thing I’ve done were the two times that I did the Oscars, particularly the first time because it was really like the ultimate, you know, “Let’s put on a show,” with every great movie star in the world available.
THR: Did you get it from your parents? The showbiz bug?
Ziskin: My father and step-mother were psychologists. But I don’t know where it came from. I just always liked performing, and I wanted to put on a show and I wanted to tell a story or have someone tell me a story. What’s great about making movies is the sort of additive process of bringing people together and having an idea and watching the idea be added to and at the end you have this thing. It’s really a collaborative experience. It’s very dynamic –- in a good and a bad way. You can see how things go right and you can see how things go wrong. You can see that one misstep that derailed the whole thing, or you put Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman … you know if you put someone else in the movie — if Richard [Gere] wasn’t in the movie. It’s the choices you make. I love making movies, but I think it’s a kooky time to be making movies.
THR: How so?
Ziskin: There’s a kind of weird schism between this very mass entertainment and maybe the promise of the Internet, which hasn’t yet come to pass, where you can make very specialized entertainment. The movie business has taken over the mass audience, and we’ve started making every weekend a contest.
THR: When do you think that started?
Ziskin: It started with entertainment news. A trade publication telling the trade what’s going on in the trade is one thing. But an announcement – used to be Monday morning, then it became Saturday morning, then Friday night — about the grosses creates this contest mentality, and then you have to be the winner, and then you have to create the most mass entertainment. There are exceptions to the rule, but most movies don’t have the ability to find an audience. So the movie plays out very quickly in a lot of theaters to get the biggest gross. So that demands that we make things that are hits before they open. So they have to have the elements, they have to be franchises.
THR: As Good as it Gets, which won Oscars — would that movie be difficult to get made today?
Ziskin: That was a very hard movie to get made. It’s funny in a way because the over-40s or baby boomers, we have a movie-going habit. My generation –- I would go to the movies every weekend if it was something I really wanted to see. Now, young people have so many other potential entertainment activities. For me as a filmmaker, I do the projects I’m really excited about. I feel like the movies I made earlier in my career could never be made now –- it’s just a different world. Listen, I’m really blessed. It was serendipitous, but an unusual turn to me to be involved in the Spider-Man franchise because certainly that wasn’t where my career was headed.
THR: How did you get that job?
Ziskin: I had been at Fox 2000, but it wasn’t really where my heart was, and when I wanted to go to back to producing, Amy [Pascal] was at Sony, and she made a deal with me. And I was happy to be there because it was 12 minutes from my house. But I knew it would be a long time before I would get anything in production because I had to leave everything behind at Fox. I literally said, “Just give me the biggest motherf—r you have.” I just wanted to be in production in something big. I had never read a comic book. Then I got engaged (to Spider-Man screenwriter Alvin Sargent) and started hearing about Spider-Man, and I really liked it. I thought it was a really great story, and I got very excited about it.
THR: How did Sam Raimi become attached to the project?
Ziskin: He was already involved when I got involved. So I came on in the early days of prep, and there really wasn’t a script yet. We had an amazing 10 years together –- it was really an incredible time. I’ve worked with a
really interesting, eclectic bunch of directors from Gus Van Sant to Steven Soderbergh to David Fincher –- people from whom I’ve learned so much. But the 10 years I spent with Sam, I really learned more about making movies than in my whole life.
THR: What was your approach to working with Sam?
Ziskin: He’s very collaborative. He knows exactly what he wants. He’s a real showman. He really thinks about the audience. It was very exciting. I don’t think I’ll ever have an experience like that where we got to be a family in a way, working on three movies, for an entire decade with somebody. It’s pretty extraordinary.
THR: You naturally gravitated toward being a producer. How do you grade your tenure as an executive at Fox 2000?
Ziskin: If we had only made The Thin Red Line and Fight Club, I would be so proud of that division. But we also made a lot of money with Soul Food, they made money with Fight Club in spite of the fact that they said they didn’t – they made a fortune on the DVD. Thin Red Line got seven Academy Award nominations. Never Been Kissed was a very successful movie. We only made 20 movies when I was there, so I don’t think I was there long enough – it was a start-up from zero, you know. I felt I did what I set out to do. Making movies is not a real high -return business. Nobody lost their shirt, and we didn’t have any huge, hundred million dollar-grossing movies either. But I think we made interesting films and the division continued, and many things that we started got made subsequently.
THR: What are you most proud when you look back on what you’ve achieved in your career?
Ziskin: I’m proud I survived. You know I’m proud that I was able to develop and produce movies that I wanted to make. I’m very proud of the talent that I nurtured: Kevin Costner, Tobey Maguire, Nicole Kidman and Julia Roberts. I feel that I helped people early on, but mostly I love the work. I love making movies, I love filmmakers, I love actors, I love writers. There’ll be a moment I’ll look around the set and I’ll think, “Oh, I remember where I was when I read the scene or the meeting where we said, ‘Why don’t we do this?,” and now all these people are here because I said I’m going to get that movie made –- that’s very rewarding. And then the first time you sit in the theater and the lights come down and the movie comes on, and something happens on screen and you think about how that moment came to pass — and it works. Those are the two times it’s fun to be a producer. The rest of the time it’s really hard. And kind of thankless.
THR: Do you have any big regrets?
Ziskin: I passed on Jurassic Park – what was I thinking?!
THR: You passed on producing it?
Ziskin: Yeah. It came to me and a lot of other people. I don’t know if I would have gotten it. I also read Dances With Wolves because my friend wrote it and I loved it, but I didn’t know how to make it. And the right person made [it]. I don’t regret I didn’t do it because I loved the book, and I was a big champion of it, but I didn’t know how to do it.
THR: Who were your role models when you were starting out?
Ziskin: Hannah Weinstein, Paula and Lisa Weinstein’s mother. She produced Stir Crazy –- she’s the only woman producer I’d ever heard of. I was a big fan of Jerome Hellman who did Midnight Cowboy, Coming Home. I didn’t know him but I really admired his work. That was it pretty much it. I wasn’t even aware that much of producers. It was really after film school, when I started working for producers and they really trained me about what makes good movies — it turns out to be great scripts.
THR: How has being a woman affected the way you work, if at all?
Ziskin: It has totally affected who I am. When I started, I was the only woman in the room and the only woman in the van, which is bad because you always have to pee more than the men because [men are] like camels: Excuse me can we stop and go to the bathroom.” Now there are so many women, but are there women with ultimate power? Not so many. It still is a man’s world. I think it’s hard for women to be directors, particularly in the feature world because, biologically, your peak career-making years are also your peak baby-making years, and that’s just the truth. And those are choices women have to make. My career is certainly different and blessedly so because of my daughter and I made a lot of choices because of her that probably helped my career.
THR: How old is she now?
Ziskin: She’s 27. She works with me now. It’s fantastic. It makes me so happy. She went to Sarah Lawrence for college And she was reluctant to work with me. I don’t think she loves the movie business the way I do. But she’s a great producer. She just really gets it. She produced the pre-show for Stand Up To Cancer. She runs my development – we have really great scripts. She can do it all. She just gets it –- she grew up with it. I’m in an awe of her. I watch her how she deals with people and I just think damn, she’s good.
THR: Do you see yourself in her when you were her age?
Ziskin: No, I don’t know what drove me to this career. I just always figured it’s what I would do. I didn’t imagine not somehow putting on a show. I certainly thought it was hard. I had very few skills. If I hadn’t been a producer I’d been a failed actor. That would have been really disastrous.
THR: You produced the first post-9/11 Oscars. What was that like?
Ziskin: I always say to my fellow producers if you have an opportunity to do it, do it, because it’s such a fun thing. It’s instant, it’s live, it’s got every element. And that’s also been true of the Stand Up to Cancer events. I would rather not be doing things about cancer, but I think it’s an important thing to do. And if by putting on a show, we can raise awareness, make cancer a first-tier issue in this country, raise some money, spend it wisely in the direction of really making a difference … I don’t see the cure coming. We failed terribly, but I think being a producer makes you a problem solver, so you kind of go, “Well there’s a problem. What do we do? How do we solve it?”
THR: How are you coping with living with cancer on a daily basis?
Ziskin: I’m pretty mad. I think it sucks. I’ve been in treatment for seven years, but I had a period of time where I was in remission and I hope I will be again. I feel fine — if they didn’t tell me there was something wrong with me, I wouldn’t know it. They tell me I have an incurable disease and that the goal is to try to live with it for as long as I can. It’s a really nasty, bad disease and we have to do better.
THR: What do you think your legacy will be?
Ziskin: I’m one of a group of us who came up in the ’70s — we were a little bit post-feminist or products of the feminist movement — and paved the way for other women. Stand Up to Cancer has also been really powerful for me. One thing I wanted to do was to say we’re all the same, and this can happen to anybody. I won’t be around, so you guys are going to have to solve it for your generation and your children.
and never looked back. Our BHS’68 classmate, Judie Anderson, departed this world on March 22, after a short bout with an aggressive cancer. According to her nephew, Jeffrey Szilagyi (who coincidentally is the son of Tonia Szilagyi Mapston‘s cousin), Judie fell in love with Maui nearly 40 years ago. She never had kids of her own, but was kind and caring, especially to “furry little critters and her big array of nieces, nephews and their children.”
Judie moved back to the mainland some 12+ years ago for a couple years, then moved back after her mom passed in 2006.
We last heard from Judie at the time of our 40th reunion when she wrote Jim Ranshaw:
I regret to say that I will not be able to attend this reunion, and will miss seeing everyone and the good times and memories. I live on Maui and it is a long way to go, especially as I will be in So. Calif around the end of October, so just cannot afford two trips so close together.
Thanks for the invitation and all the good work that you and the reunion committee do!
I found Judie in the Dance Performance ’68 photo:
Judie is at the top of the picture.
Other girls in the photo are Melanie Bridge, Betsy Brown, Donna Canzoneri, Barbara Clark, Debi Dana, and Chris Gates.
Judie’s senior prom picture was posted on Facebook.
Judie’s prom picture. Can anybody name her date?
This picture captures her spirit completely……she will be so missed. (Amber Kinzler Sciligo)
If you have remembrances of Judie that you would like to share with the class, please write them in the Comments section below. We send our deepest condolences to Judie’s family and wish for them comfort in their grief.
Two of our classmates have died in February 2017: Jeff Helquist on February 7, and Christina Ortega O’Neill on February 15.
Jeff Helquist, 1968
Jeff Helquist (1949-2017) passed away of a heart attack. The following picture was posted on Facebook by Sharon Anderson McEntire with the following caption: “Just got very sad news, our long time best friend Jeff Helquist passed away last Monday of a heart attack.. This picture was taken March of 1973 in front of my house on Birmingham in Burbank.. Jeff is the very last one, with the long hair and beard. Jeff graduated BHS class of ’68.. He will be missed!!
“From left, Vern and Joyce McEntire, Bill Whitaker with John McEntire behind him, Thom and Sharon McEntire, Duke Gardemann, Bill Verdun, Joe Moss and Jeff Helquist.”
If anyone can share memories of Jeff, or information about his career, hobbies or family, please send them to Kathy Au Crosier.
Chris Ortega O’Neill
Chris Ortega, 1968
Here is what the Burbank Leader published about Chris:
Christina “Christy” O’Neill left this world and began her journey to Heaven on February 15, 2017. She passed away at the age of 67 in her home after a long battle with cancer. Christy loved spending time with her family and friends. She cherished the time that she spent with her four grandchildren. As she would always say, she loved them “to the moon and back.” She and her husband, Kevin, enjoyed many camping adventures in their motorhome. Her favorite camping spot was Carpinteria where she visited often with Kevin and her extended family and friends. Chris will be remembered for her devotion to her family, her generous smile, warm heart, and kind disposition. She will be missed by all of those whose lives she has touched. Chris grew up in Burbank, California and graduated from Burbank High School. She was a longtime employee with the Burbank Unified School District at Washington Elementary School. She is survived by her loving husband of 46 years, Kevin; daughter Colleen Simon-O’Neill (Jenny) and son Patrick O’Neill (Alison); grandchildren Quinn, Theodore, Peyton, and Andrew; siblings Emilio Ortega, Ana Neria, Fred Ortega, and Tony Ortega. Services will be held at St. Robert Bellarmine Catholic Church, Burbank on Saturday, March 4, 2017, Rosary at 11:30 am, Funeral Mass at 12:00 pm. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to City of Hope in memory of Christina O’Neill.
Annette Dinolfo Bennett wrote that Chris fought cancer for a longtime—14 years. “She was my close friend and will miss her so much.”
We send our deepest condolences to Jeff and Chris’ families and friends. Please post your comments in the box below.
UPDATE 3/2/17. Just a few years ago, Jeff Helquist was listed as one of our Class of 1968 “missing classmates,” yet his address was in Burbank. Thomas McEntire, shown in the photo above, wrote that Jeff got a job right out of high school at Lions, an export and packing firm, and he built crates and boxes for Lockheed. He married Donna McClatchy and had two children, Andy and Linda, but later divorced. Jeff just started driving for the RTD bus systems and got prostate cancer five years ago. After an operation, he was declared free of cancer, but it came back two years ago. Jeff’s brother, Dave Helquist, married one of our BHS’68 classmates, Janis Shovald, making her Jeff’s sister-in-law. Janis died on March 29, 2007 after her year and half battle with cancer.
Gerald Richard “Jerry” Fecht, April 8, 1938-January 26, 2017
Those of you who still live in the Burbank area may be interested in attending the service for our beloved Burbank High School teacher, Mr. Gerald R. “Jerry” Fecht, which will take place at Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills at the Old North Church, 6300 Forest Lawn Drive, Los Angeles, CA, on Saturday, February 11, 2017 at 12:00 PM.
Here is the official obituary: Gerald “Jerry” Fecht was born in Mexico, Missouri, the fifth child of Mildred Crites Fecht and William Thomas Fecht. He was the beloved baby boy in a large Catholic family who came to California in his teens to pursue opportunities for a better life. His Catholic education lead him to Notre Dame High School, through Los Angeles Valley College, and into USC where he earned Bachelors, Masters and PhD degrees. Jerry met the love of his life, Janne Shreves Fecht, while they were studying for their teaching credentials; they were married for 49 years and raised two sons, Brendan and Damon. “Dr. Jerry” enjoyed a long and much heralded career as a professor at Moorpark College, where he guided countless students and helped them achieve their dreams. In retirement, Jerry founded The Museum of the San Fernando Valley, volunteered for AIDS/LifeCycle, enjoyed time with his grandchildren, and explored every inch of Los Angeles, the city he loved so dearly. On January 26, 2017, he lost his long battle with Amyloidois at the age of 78. Jerry is survived by his wife, Janne, his sons, Brendan and Damon, his daughter-in-law, Rebecca, his grandchildren, Jake and Emily, and his brother, Robert. A memorial service will be held on Saturday February 11, 2017, 12PM, Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills, Old North Church. In lieu of flowers, please donate to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley or the Amyloidosis Foundation.
If you would like to share a memory with the family, you may do so by clicking here. which takes you to the Forest Lawn Memory page.
Hey, you know who else is buried at Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills? It was Burbank’s own, actress Debbie Reynolds and her actress/writer daughter, Carrie Fisher. In case you didn’t know, Debbie Reynolds won the Miss Burbank beauty contest when she was a 16-year-old student at Burbank High School. I believe, though, that she graduated from John Burroughs.
Other celebrities who are buried at Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills, include Bette Davis, Lucille Ball, Telly Savalas, William Conrad, Buster Keaton, Liberace, Freddie Prinze, Andy Gibb, Jack Webb, Stan Laurel, Ricky Nelson, John Ritter, Gene Autry, Sandra Dee, Lou Rawls, Rod Steiger, David Carradine and Steve Allen.