Showing posts with label Lee High School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lee High School. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Two Actors From Huntsville's Lee High School

I guess most high schools in the U.S. can produce a list of well-known alumni. My own high school, Lee of Huntsville, is no exception. As you would expect, many are athletes but two are film and television actors of some success. And that brings us to our blog post today...

Kim Dickens graduated in 1983, a few years after I did in 1970. Her father Justin finished there before me, in 1964 and her mother Pam in 1966. She did no acting at Lee, opting for several sports and the National Honor Society. Dickens made her stage debut while attending Vanderbilt University, and after graduation she headed to New York City. By 1995 she appeared in her first film, the crime comedy Palookaville

For the past 25 years Dickens has stayed busy both on film and television. To quote Wikipedia, "She had several supporting roles in films, such as Hollow Man (2000), House of Sand and Fog (2003), The Blind Side (2009), Gone Girl (2014), and Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children (2016). On television, Dickens had regular roles in the drama series Deadwood (2004–2006; 2019), Treme (2010–2013), and House of Cards (2015–2017). She starred as Madison Clark on the AMC horror drama series Fear the Walking Dead (2015–2018)."

That list barely touches Dickens' regular work on television. She has appeared in multiple episodes of many other series, including Briarpatch (2019-20), Sons of Anarchy (2013-14), Friday Night Lights (2009), Lost (2006-9), 12 Miles of Bad Road (2008), Numb3rs (2006), Out of Order (2003), and Big Apple (2001). 

One of my favorites among her movies is Zero Effect, released in 1998. Dickens is the female lead in the film that also stars Bill Pullman and Ben Stiller. It's a pastiche loosely based on Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes story "A Scandal in Bohemia." Bill Pullman plays the title character, Daryl Zero, the "world's most private detective" and it's greatest; Ben Stiller is his assistant. Dickens is Gloria Sullivan, who's behind the blackmail of Zero's new client and is, I suppose, the Irene Adler of the case. Daryl and Gloria meet, and he falls for her; things then get crazy. The film is layered with lots of acerbic humor, especially as Zero and his assistant bicker throughout. 

You can find her on Twitter.




Kim Dickens in 2018 about the time of her exit from Fear the Walking Dead.

Source: UPI


Ned Vaughn started acting early; he appeared in a community theater production of the musical Oliver! at the age of ten. He continued acting in high school and then at Birmingham-Southern College. After graduation he headed to New York with $600 hoping to begin a professional acting career. He worked as a hotel doorman while taking acting classes and heading to auditions.

The Internet Movie Database has 83 film and television acting credits listed for Vaughn. The first appearance is a 1984 science fiction film What Waits Below, also known as Secrets of the Phantom Caverns. Timothy Bottoms and Lisa Blount were two of the leads; Vaughn is credited as "American soldier." Interestingly enough, some filming was done at Cathedral Caverns in north Alabama. 

Since then Vaughn has appeared in a number of films and TV shows. The movies include The Hunt for Red October (1990), Apollo 13 (1995) and The Best of Enemies (2019). He has made multiples appearances in such TV programs as China Beach (14 episodes, 1989-91), Murder One (12 episodes, 1995-6), JAG (1996, 2001, 2004), 24 (4 episodes, 2005), Cane (8 episodes, 2007) and The Event (3 episodes, 2011). His single-episode guest roles include Star Trek: The Next Generation, Criminal Minds, Boston Legal, NCIS, Desperate Housewives, Mad Men, Bones, The Mentalist, Grey's Anatomy, Castle, and Hawaii Five-0. 

According to his Wikipedia entry, Vaughn and his wife Adelaide and their five children live in Augusta, Georgia. He has a Facebook page

Many Lee High School of Huntsville graduates have succeeded on their chosen paths, and these two are no exceptions.   




Ned Vaughn

Source: IMDb





Friday, February 15, 2019

A Memory Tour of Huntsville (2)

This post is the second one describing a "memory tour" of Huntsville that my younger brother Richard and I took in July 2018. The first part is here




While living in Huntsville we attended Lakewood United Methodist Church on Mastin Lake Road, which is still active although smaller. The UMC listing gives the congregation size as 68 people, and the only service on Sunday is at 9 a.m.







Davis Hills Middle School
3221 Mastin Lake Road NW

The school was called Davis Hills Junior High when I attended. In March 2014 I wrote a blog post with photos about two of my activities there. You can see them here




Another set of doors I walked through many times, as did younger brother Richard. 



There is still a field across the street from the school. 




Davis Hills Middle School closed in 2016. At that time there were about 350 students in grades 6-8. The building is now used by one of Huntsville City Schools' academies





Younger brother Richard began his high school career at J.O. Johnson High School, which opened in 1972. Mom and Dad moved to southeast Huntsville, and he finished high school at the original Grissom. Johnson closed in 2016; we found the campus surrounded by chain link fencing. This coat seemed an apt symbol of the situation.

The city owns the property and intends to develop it as the Johnson Legacy Complex, a major recreation center. Nearby Jemison High School replaced Johnson.   




Johnson High School
6201 Pueblo Drive NW





I graduated from Lee High School in 1970. The school had opened in 1957 as a junior high school, becoming a full high school for the 1963-64 year. In 2012 a new building opened on the same site; the old one was demolished. Some  photos of the new building are below, as well as a few others. You can also find a lot of history of the school at the Huntsville Rewound site.







Lee High School
2500 Meridian Street N


















This large house on Quietdale Drive very close to the high school seemed to be undergoing rehabilitation. 




These two photos come from the Lee yearbook, either 1968 or 1969. No, that's not my hot rod. Wonder if it's still around?






We had "portable" classrooms at Lee even in 1970. 

Source: Lee High School yearbook, 1970






We didn't visit on this trip, but one place always in our memories is Maple Hill Cemetery. Dad is buried in the new section.  

You can read about him in a such blog posts as "Dad and Alabama Archaeology" and "Dad and the USS Errol". 










Monday, March 24, 2014

Junior High School Way Back When

The past can be a scary place, no scarrier than when you are looking at yourself.

Exhibits A and B: these two photos from my days at Davis Hills Junior High School [now Middle School] on Mastin Lake Road in Huntsville, Alabama, as documented in one of the yearbooks:






There I am, "Jay Wright," hiding behind those cool glasses and apparently closed eyes in the Student Council picture. I was probably thinking about how my photo was going to look in 40+ years.

I would have finished at Davis in 1966 I think and moved on to Lee High School, graduating there in May 1970. Funny, I don't remember what office I held that entitled me to be in the Student Council portrait. Thank goodness I didn't ride that success into a political career. [I did run for city council while living in Auburn in the 1970s, but that's a story for another day.] I'll have to dig out that yearbook and do some research. I started writing poetry and stuff early on, so that led me to the Creative Writing Club. Later I would spend some of my high school sentence--er, years--on the yearbook and literary magazine staffs.

I hope none of these people sue me for this post.