Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Jim Stynes dead at 45




Football legend Jim Stynes has died after a long and brave battle with cancer.

He was just 45.

It marks the end of the extraordinary two-and-a-half year health battle shared far more openly than anybody could have expected.

But his inspiring fight for life came to an end in private and as he would have wanted - with wife Sam and children Matisse and Tiernan by his side.

It was an intimate and hugely emotional end for the man who earned himself a place in the hearts of almost every Victorian.

Put simply, there was nothing bad to say about our Jim.

Tributes are already flooding in for the Irishman who made an indelible mark on the Aussie game by becoming the first international player to claim the prestigious Brownlow Medal.



He was also an Order of Australia recipient and a Victorian and Melburnian of the year.



Footy personalities have declared Stynes one of the greatest to have ever pulled on the boots.

They've also credited his presidency as key to helping steer the league's oldest club through form slump and last year's coaching crisis.

Others have hailed his ability to reach out to those in need as an innate gift few could match.

He championed the cause of young Australians through The Reach Foundation, an organisation credited with pulling thousands of young lives back from the brink.

Big Jim wore his heart on his sleeve and touched lives because of it.

His death marks the end of his highly publicised health crisis that began when he announced in July 2009, he was being treated for a rare melanoma on his spine.

He would eventually undergo numerous operations including risky surgery to remove tumours from his brain.

Stynes' decision to fight the disease so publicly earned him favour with thousands of patients on a similar journey. "Jim has added a face to what thousands of people are going through," said one.

He used Twitter to keep his loyal fans updated on his health but it was a televised documentary that revealed far more about how cancer had changed his life.

Alternative therapies were among the treatment options pursued but in the end, Stynes said it was the support and love of those closest to him that really kept him going.

On more than one occasion he credited his arduous health battle for giving him the opportunity to take stock; to finally fill his life with the things that truly mattered. And he did.

In December, Stynes stunned his medical team when - just two weeks after the sixth operation to remove a tumour from his brain - he boarded a Christmas flight to Colombia with his family. It was an extraordinary display of tenacity from a man who simply wasn't ready to give up.

But Stynes never kidded himself. He knew it would be the last chance for the family to really escape together.

For a few sun-starched weeks, they were able to forget the stark reality that was just weeks away. Pictured with his wife and kids on the shore of an idyllic tropical island, Jim beamed.

It was a fitting image and one Stynes and his wife chose to be the last they made publicly.

They returned to Victoria knowing that each and every day mattered more than ever.

In January, two years and seven months after he was diagnosed, Stynes stepped down as Demons' president.

He had finally relinquished a role that had helped define him as a leader who gave a battered club a new beginning.



Yet through it all, Stynes had learned there was far more to life. He just learnt it in the cruellest of ways.

"I have had an experience that in some ways, I am very blessed," he once said. "I have had an insight that not many people get. When you are faced with that prospect, it does make you sit back, stop and go OK, what is really important now?

"You realise your family - my kids and my wife Sam - they are everything to me. It's not just enough to say it - you've got to live it."

Jim Stynes 1966-2012

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Ian "Turps" Turpie dies at 68





Australian entertainer Ian "Turps" Turpie has died following a battle with cancer. He was 68.

Fellow game show hosts John Burgess and Larry Emdur took to Twitter to express their condolences.

"Very sad day with the news, we've lost good mate Ian Turpie, I had the honour of calling Turps, mate,our deepest sympathies to Jan & family," Burgess said.


"So many jokes to tell, so many yarns to spin, so many game shows to host and never enough time.. RIP Ian "TURPS" Turpie, best Price host ever." Emdur tweeted.

In April last year, it was posted on Turpie's official website that he had been undergoing chemotherapy.

"Ian wishes to thank all the people who have contacted him over the past month or two and provide an update on his progress," the website said.

"He has just completed a six week course of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The last few weeks have been somewhat gruelling, however his spirits are remarkably high and his attitude positive. This is thanks to the love and support of so many fabulous people".

Born in Melbourne in 1943, Turpie's entertainment career spanned over 50 years after he began at the tender age of 10, when he was accepted at the prestigious Hector Crawford Drama School, where he gained recognition as a juvenile actor working in radio and theatre.

He starred in a number of radio programmes alongside Sir Robert Helpmann and June Bronhill, and featured in the top rating series D24, which became one of the most dominant and influential programs in Australian radio history.

Turpie made regular appearances on Bandstand, Time for Terry and The Graham Kennedy Show. In 1964, Turpie played a bank robber in the original episode of the program that was to become a TV phenomenon Homicide.

In the 1980s, Turpie's name became synonymous with the catchphrase "Come on Down" when he became host of the highly successful, frenzied game show The New Price is Right.