Claire Noland
Claire Noland, who joined the Los Angeles Times in 1994, became editor of curated email newsletters in spring 2015. She had been in the Obituary Department since 2006, the last six years as editor. Before that, she was an editor in Sports. A California native and graduate of Mount St. Mary’s College in Los Angeles, she worked at the Antelope Valley Press, Los Angeles Daily News and Minneapolis Star Tribune. She left The Times in December 2015.
Latest From This Author
William Krisel, an architect whose homes featuring butterfly roofs, patterned concrete block walls and post-and-beam construction put a Modernist stamp on Southern California’s suburbs in the 1950s and ’60s, died Monday at his home in Beverly Hills.
Andy Fraser, the bassist for British blues-rock band Free who co-wrote its mammoth 1970 anthem “All Right Now,†died Monday in Temecula, where he lived.
Donna Douglas, a Louisiana beauty queen turned actress who tapped into her poor Southern roots for the role of Elly May Clampett in the long-running TV sitcom “The Beverly Hillbillies,†has died.
Dorothy “Dodo†Cheney, who was the first American woman tennis player to win the Australian Open and went on to a prolific career on the senior circuit, has died.
Actress Elizabeth Peña, who had roles in “Down and Out in Beverly Hills,†“La Bamba,†“Lone Star,†“Rush Hour†and “The Incredibles,†died Tuesday in Los Angeles after a brief illness, according to her manager, Gina Rugolo.
Paul Revere, a teenage businessman who found an outlet for his entrepreneurial spirit in the form of a campy rock ‘n’ roll band that capitalized on his name, wore Revolutionary War-era costumes and cranked out a string of grungy hits in the mid-1960s, has died.
Paul Revere, a keyboard player who formed a campy rock ‘n’ roll band that capitalized on his name, wore Revolutionary War-era costumes and cranked out a string of grungy hits in the mid-1960s, has died.
George “Shotgun†Shuba, a Brooklyn Dodgers teammate of Jackie Robinson whose congratulatory gesture after a Robinson home run in 1946 was captured in a photograph that signaled a changing society, has died.
Scott Ross, a former All-America linebacker for USC who played on three Rose Bowl teams, died Sunday in Lafayette, La., the university announced.
Carla Laemmle, a dancer, actress and niece of Universal Pictures founder Carl Laemmle who grew up at her uncle’s studio watching movies being made, died Thursday night at her home in Los Angeles.