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Deaths

Rachid Taha

PARIS (AP) — Algerian singer Rachid Taha, who thrillingly blended Arabic music with rock and techno and at times wore blue contact lenses to protest anti-Arab prejudice in his adoptive France, has died. He was 59.

Taha’s record label, Naïve, announced his death in a statement Wednesday on its Facebook page. It said he died overnight Tuesday to Wednesday following a heart attack at his home in the Paris suburb of Les Lilas.

Believe Digital, which owns Naïve, confirmed the veracity of the statement.

Taha had recently finished recording an album due for release in 2019. He was scheduled to film the first music video for one of the new songs, “Je suis Africain” (“I am African”), this weekend, Believe Digital said.

Born Sept. 18, 1958, in Algeria, Taha would have marked his 60th birthday next week. He moved to France at age 10 with his parents.

With the group “Carte de Sejour” (“Residence Permit”), Taha caused a stir in France in 1986 with a husky-voiced rocky cover of legendary singer-songwriter Charles Trenet’s sentimental, patriotic, “Douce France,” (“Sweet France.”)

The group distributed copies of the song in France’s parliament as lawmakers were debating changes to the country’s nationality laws.

Fenella Fielding

LONDON (AP) — Fenella Fielding, a British actress who was the glamorous, velvet-voiced star of two “Carry On” comedies, has died. She was 90.

Friend Simon McKay said in a statement that Fielding died Tuesday after suffering a stroke two weeks earlier.

Born Fenella Feldman in London in 1927, Fielding appeared regularly in British stage, screen and television productions from the 1950s. In the 1960s, she starred in three films in the “Doctor in the House” comedy series and two of the double entendre-laden “Carry On” comedies: “Carry on Regardless” and “Carry on Screaming.”

Horror spoof “Carry on Screaming” in 1966 produced her most iconic role, as the vampish, vampiric Valeria.

Her most famous line from the movie — “Do you mind if I smoke?” — became the title of a memoir published in 2017.

Fielding declined to do any more “Carry On” films, and her movie career tailed off. She later lamented being typecast, saying in 2008 that “people still think of me in a certain way because of the ‘Carry On’ films.”

She continued to appear regularly on stage, where critics praised her performances, and to do radio and voice work.

For her many fans the actress dubbed the “first lady of the double entendre” was an underappreciated legend of British entertainment.

McKay called her “an incredible talent. That voice! A unique woman, much loved by family, friends and fans. She will be missed tremendously.”

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