Miami FL Funeral Homes

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A C Morrison Funeral Home

151 Northwest 37th Avenue
Miami, FL 33125
(305) 576-0177
A C Morrison Funeral Home funeral flowers

Alligood Carroll Funeral Home Limited

17345 South Dixie Highway
Miami, FL 33157
(305) 235-3871
Alligood Carroll Funeral Home Limited funeral flowers

Archdiocese of Miami Cemeteries

11411 Northwest 25th Street
Miami, FL 33172
(305) 592-0521
Archdiocese of Miami Cemeteries funeral flowers

Ayash George R Funeral Director

10545 South Dixie Highway
Miami, FL 33156
(305) 667-2518
Ayash George R Funeral Director funeral flowers

Barrett Fryar Funeral Home

14545 Carver Drive
Miami, FL 33176
(305) 232-3571
Barrett Fryar Funeral Home funeral flowers

Bernardo Garcia

12050 Southwest 117th Avenue
Miami, FL 33186
(305) 232-1010
Bernardo Garcia funeral flowers

Bernardo Garcia Funeral Homes

4100 Northwest 7th Street
Miami, FL 33126
(305) 649-1010
Bernardo Garcia Funeral Homes funeral flowers

Beth Israel Gardens

4420 Southwest 8th Street
Miami, FL 33134
(305) 446-2922
Beth Israel Gardens funeral flowers

Caballero Rivero Woodlawn Funeral Homes and Crematry

11655 Southwest 117th Avenue
Miami, FL 33186
(305) 238-3672
Caballero Rivero Woodlawn Funeral Homes and Crematry funeral flowers

Carey Royal Ram n Mortuary

5235 Northwest 7th Avenue
Miami, FL 33127
(305) 754-0681
Carey Royal Ram n Mortuary funeral flowers

Catholic Cemeteries

11411 Northwest 25th Street
Miami, FL 33172
(305) 592-0521
Catholic Cemeteries funeral flowers

Cofer Kolski Combs Funeral Home and Cremation Center

10931 Northeast 6th Avenue
Miami, FL 33161
(305) 754-7544
Cofer Kolski Combs Funeral Home and Cremation Center funeral flowers

Combs Kolski Bess Funeral Home

10931 Northeast 6th Avenue
Miami, FL 33161
(305) 757-0362
Combs Kolski Bess Funeral Home funeral flowers

Concept in Bronze

4811 East 11th Avenue
Miami, FL 33013
(305) 681-6300
Concept in Bronze funeral flowers

Cremations by FLA Mortuary

1495 Northwest 17th Avenue
Miami, FL 33125
(305) 325-1171
Cremations by FLA Mortuary funeral flowers

Dade Memorial Park

1301 Opa Locka Boulevard
Miami, FL 33167
(305) 685-8378
Dade Memorial Park funeral flowers

Dade South Memorial Park

14200 Southwest 117th Avenue
Miami, FL 33186
(305) 255-8378
Dade South Memorial Park funeral flowers

Emmanuel Funeral Home

14300 Northeast 14th Avenue
Miami, FL 33161
(305) 944-0868
Emmanuel Funeral Home funeral flowers

Flynn Thomas and Son of New Jersey

1495 Northwest 17th Avenue
Miami, FL 33125
(305) 325-1171
Flynn Thomas and Son of New Jersey funeral flowers

Funeraria Graceland and Cementerio

4420 Southwest 8th Street
Miami, FL 33134
(305) 446-2922
Funeraria Graceland and Cementerio funeral flowers

Funeraria Memorial Plan Flagler Chapel

2690 West Flagler Street
Miami, FL 33135
(305) 642-7141
Funeraria Memorial Plan Flagler Chapel funeral flowers

Funeraria Y Crematorio Van Orsdel

3333 Northeast 2nd Avenue
Miami, FL 33137
(305) 573-4310
Funeraria Y Crematorio Van Orsdel funeral flowers

Garden of Heroes Mausoleum

10301 Northwest 25th Street
Miami, FL 33172
(305) 592-0690
Garden of Heroes Mausoleum funeral flowers

Garden of the Palms

3260 Southwest 8th Street
Miami, FL 33135
(305) 445-5425
Garden of the Palms funeral flowers

Ginsberg Mark P Funeral Director

20955 Biscayne Boulevard
Miami, FL 33180
(305) 935-3939
Ginsberg Mark P Funeral Director funeral flowers

Grace Funeral Home Inc

770 Northwest 119th Street
Miami, FL 33168
(305) 688-6388
Grace Funeral Home Inc funeral flowers

Graceland Funeral Home

3434 Northwest Flagler Terrace
Miami, FL 33125
(305) 567-9226
Graceland Funeral Home funeral flowers

Graceland South Memorial Park

13900 Southwest 117th Avenue
Miami, FL 33186
(305) 251-1088
Graceland South Memorial Park funeral flowers

Gregg L Mason Funeral Homes

10936 Northeast 6th Avenue
Miami, FL 33161
(305) 757-9000
Gregg L Mason Funeral Homes funeral flowers

Grossberg Arthur J Funeral Director

5505 Northwest 3rd Street
Miami, FL 33126
(305) 261-7612
Grossberg Arthur J Funeral Director funeral flowers

Guaranteed Security Plan

18840 West Dixie Highway
Miami, FL 33180
(305) 932-2700
Guaranteed Security Plan funeral flowers

Hall Ferguson Hewitt Mortuary

1900 Northwest 54th Street
Miami, FL 33142
(305) 633-0688
Hall Ferguson Hewitt Mortuary funeral flowers

Jay Funeral Home

17420 Homestead Ave
Miami, FL 33157
(305) 255-1193
Jay Funeral Home funeral flowers

Richardson Funeral Home

4500 N.W. 17Th Ave
Miami, FL 33142
(305) 634-4528
Richardson Funeral Home funeral flowers

Wright & Young Funeral Home

15332 Northwest 7Th Avenue
Miami, FL 33169
(305) 688-2030
Wright & Young Funeral Home funeral flowers

Miami FL Obituaries and Death Notices

Rita Woodward

Saturday, April 08, 2017

Survivors include: her loving husband of 46 years, Harold Woodward; three sons, Justin Reed Woodward (wife Janelle) of Miami, Fl., Matthew Duane Woodward (wife Jennifer) of Mt. Vernon, Mo., and Brian Wayne Woodward of Kansas City, Mo.; her mother, Mary Jane Hansen of Scotia, Nebraska; three brothers, Galen Stanley Hansen (wife Lois) of Scotia, Nebraska, Gary Hansen (wife Cathy) of Scotia, Nebraska, and Harlan Hansen (wife Colleen) of Scotia, Nebraska; six grandchildren, Cole, Reed and Lyle Woodward of Miami, Fl. and Grayson, Harper, and Thatcher Woodward of Mt. Vernon, Mo.; and numerous nieces, nephews, and cousins.She was preceded in death by her father, Duane Hansen in 1985 and her daughter, Dianna Lynn Woodward on September 16, 2006.Visitation will be held at Concord Baptist Church from 5:00 until 7:00 p.m. Tuesday, April 4, 2017. Funeral services will be conducted at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, April 5, 2017 at Concord Baptist Church with the Reverend Dr. Monte Shinkle officiating. Graveside services and interment will be held at 10:00 a.m. Thursday, April 6, 2017 at Mt. Hope Cemetery in Scotia, Nebraska.Those desiring may make memorial contributions to Concord Baptist Church, 3724 W. Truman Blvd., Jefferson City, Mo. 65109. Funeral arrangements are under the direction of Freeman Mortuary.

Christian Norris

Saturday, April 08, 2017

Monday, April 3, 2017. He was born on June 22, 1990 in Tulsa to David L. and Shelly D. (Renfro) Norris. Christian graduated from Ketchum High School in 2009, then attended NEO A&M College in Miami, where he received his Associates Degree, he was currently attending NSU in Broken Arrow and was finishing his last classes this semester for his degree. Christian was an employee of Carter’s Grocery Store in Vinita. He was also a very dedicated writer, and was planning to be a professional writer. Christian had belonged to the drama club, writing club, academic club, and played saxophone in the band while in school. He was an avid gamer, writer and movie connoisseur. Christian also loved to watch his favorite football team the Miami Dolphins.The family includes; his parents, David and Shelly Norris of the home; his brothers, Caleb A. Norris of New Cumberland, Pennsylvania and Noah A. Norris of Ketchum; his grandparents, Dorothy and Bob Renfro of Ketchum, Elaine and Billy Kerns of Ramona, Fred and Jackie Norris of Tulsa.The family will receive friends from 6-8 PM on Thursday, April 6, 2017 at the Luginbuel Funeral Home in Vinita.The funeral service will held Friday, April 7, 2017 at 2:00 PM, in the Luginbuel Chapel, with Pastor Tommy Scott officiating. Interment will follow at the K...

Don Rickles, Comedy's Equal Opportunity Offender, Dies at 90 - New York Times

Saturday, April 08, 2017

Mr. Rickles got his first break, the story goes, when Sinatra and some of his friends came to see him perform in 1957 — in Hollywood, according to most sources, although Mr. Rickles said it was in Miami. “Make yourself at home, Frank,” Mr. Rickles said to Sinatra, whom he had never met. “Hit somebody.” Sinatra laughed so hard, he fell out of his seat.Mr. Rickles was soon being championed by Sinatra, Dean Martin and the other members of the show business circle known as the Rat Pack. Steady work in Las Vegas followed. But he was hardly an overnight success: He spent a decade in the comedy trenches before he broke through to a national audience.In 1965, he made the first of numerous appearances on “The Tonight Show,” treating Johnny Carson with his trademark disdain to the audience’s (and Carson’s) delight. He also became a regular on Dean Martin’s televised roasts, where no celebrity was safe from his onslaughts. (“What’s Bob Hope doing here? Is the war over?”)Mr. Rickles’s wife, who he said “likes to lie in bed, signaling ships with her jewelry,” was not immune to his attacks. Neither was his mother, Etta, whom he referred to as “the Jewish Patton.” But off the stage, he didn’t hesitate to express his gratitude to his mother for unflaggingly believing in his talent, even when he himself wasn’t so sure.“She had a tremendous drive,” he recalled in “Mr. Warmth.” “Drove me crazy. But she was like the driving force for me.”He shared an apartment with his mother and did not marry until he was almost 40. After marrying Barbara Sklar in 1965, he saw to it that his mother had the apartment next door. His wife survives him, as do a daughter, Mindy Mann, and two grandchildren. Mr. Rickles’s son, Lawrence, died in 2011.Donald Jay Rickles was born in the Jackson Heights neighborhood of Queens on May 8, 1926, to Max Rickles, an insurance salesman, and the former Etta Feldman. During World War II, he honed his comedic skills while serving in the Navy. (“On the ship that I went over to the Philippines,” he told The New York Times in 2015, “out of 300 men I was the class comedian.”) After being discharged, he followed his father into the insurance business, but when he had trouble getting his customers to sign on the dotted line, decided to try acting.He studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York, an experience that he later said gave him a greater sense of himself. But he found it difficult to get acting jobs and turned to stand-up comedy.For a while, he pursued acting and comedy simultaneously. He did his stand-up act at Catskills resorts and in strip clubs, and his movie career got off to an auspicious start with a small part in the 1958 submarine drama “Run Silent, Run Deep,” starring Clark Gable and Burt Lancaster. But the bulk of his film work in the 1960s was in low-budget beach movies: “Bikini Beach,” “Muscle Beach Party” and “Pajama Party,” all in 1964, and “Beach Blanket Bingo” in 1965.By that time, his comedy career had begun gathering momentum. Focusing less on prepared material and more on interaction with his audience, he had found his voice. He was not the first insult comedian — and in fact an earlier master of the comic insult, Jack E. Leonard, was known to complain that Mr. Rickles’s act was too similar to his — but he soon became far and away the most successful.Bookings in the late 1950s at the Slate Brothers nightc...

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Rita Woodward

Saturday, April 08, 2017

Survivors include: her loving husband of 46 years, Harold Woodward; three sons, Justin Reed Woodward (wife Janelle) of Miami, Fl., Matthew Duane Woodward (wife Jennifer) of Mt. Vernon, Mo., and Brian Wayne Woodward of Kansas City, Mo.; her mother, Mary Jane Hansen of Scotia, Nebraska; three brothers, Galen Stanley Hansen (wife Lois) of Scotia, Nebraska, Gary Hansen (wife Cathy) of Scotia, Nebraska, and Harlan Hansen (wife Colleen) of Scotia, Nebraska; six grandchildren, Cole, Reed and Lyle Woodward of Miami, Fl. and Grayson, Harper, and Thatcher Woodward of Mt. Vernon, Mo.; and numerous nieces, nephews, and cousins.She was preceded in death by her father, Duane Hansen in 1985 and her daughter, Dianna Lynn Woodward on September 16, 2006.Visitation will be held at Concord Baptist Church from 5:00 until 7:00 p.m. Tuesday, April 4, 2017. Funeral services will be conducted at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, April 5, 2017 at Concord Baptist Church with the Reverend Dr. Monte Shinkle officiating. Graveside services and interment will be held at 10:00 a.m. Thursday, April 6, 2017 at Mt. Hope Cemetery in Scotia, Nebraska.Those desiring may make memorial contributions to Concord Baptist Church, 3724 W. Truman Blvd., Jefferson City, Mo. 65109. Funeral arrangements are under the direction of Freeman Mortuary.

Christian Norris

Saturday, April 08, 2017

Monday, April 3, 2017. He was born on June 22, 1990 in Tulsa to David L. and Shelly D. (Renfro) Norris. Christian graduated from Ketchum High School in 2009, then attended NEO A&M College in Miami, where he received his Associates Degree, he was currently attending NSU in Broken Arrow and was finishing his last classes this semester for his degree. Christian was an employee of Carter’s Grocery Store in Vinita. He was also a very dedicated writer, and was planning to be a professional writer. Christian had belonged to the drama club, writing club, academic club, and played saxophone in the band while in school. He was an avid gamer, writer and movie connoisseur. Christian also loved to watch his favorite football team the Miami Dolphins.The family includes; his parents, David and Shelly Norris of the home; his brothers, Caleb A. Norris of New Cumberland, Pennsylvania and Noah A. Norris of Ketchum; his grandparents, Dorothy and Bob Renfro of Ketchum, Elaine and Billy Kerns of Ramona, Fred and Jackie Norris of Tulsa.The family will receive friends from 6-8 PM on Thursday, April 6, 2017 at the Luginbuel Funeral Home in Vinita.The funeral service will held Friday, April 7, 2017 at 2:00 PM, in the Luginbuel Chapel, with Pastor Tommy Scott officiating. Interment will follow at the K...

Don Rickles, Comedy's Equal Opportunity Offender, Dies at 90 - New York Times

Saturday, April 08, 2017

Mr. Rickles got his first break, the story goes, when Sinatra and some of his friends came to see him perform in 1957 — in Hollywood, according to most sources, although Mr. Rickles said it was in Miami. “Make yourself at home, Frank,” Mr. Rickles said to Sinatra, whom he had never met. “Hit somebody.” Sinatra laughed so hard, he fell out of his seat.Mr. Rickles was soon being championed by Sinatra, Dean Martin and the other members of the show business circle known as the Rat Pack. Steady work in Las Vegas followed. But he was hardly an overnight success: He spent a decade in the comedy trenches before he broke through to a national audience.In 1965, he made the first of numerous appearances on “The Tonight Show,” treating Johnny Carson with his trademark disdain to the audience’s (and Carson’s) delight. He also became a regular on Dean Martin’s televised roasts, where no celebrity was safe from his onslaughts. (“What’s Bob Hope doing here? Is the war over?”)Mr. Rickles’s wife, who he said “likes to lie in bed, signaling ships with her jewelry,” was not immune to his attacks. Neither was his mother, Etta, whom he referred to as “the Jewish Patton.” But off the stage, he didn’t hesitate to express his gratitude to his mother for unflaggingly believing in his talent, even when he himself wasn’t so sure.“She had a tremendous drive,” he recalled in “Mr. Warmth.” “Drove me crazy. But she was like the driving force for me.”He shared an apartment with his mother and did not marry until he was almost 40. After marrying Barbara Sklar in 1965, he saw to it that his mother had the apartment next door. His wife survives him, as do a daughter, Mindy Mann, and two grandchildren. Mr. Rickles’s son, Lawrence, died in 2011.Donald Jay Rickles was born in the Jackson Heights neighborhood of Queens on May 8, 1926, to Max Rickles, an insurance salesman, and the former Etta Feldman. During World War II, he honed his comedic skills while serving in the Navy. (“On the ship that I went over to the Philippines,” he told The New York Times in 2015, “out of 300 men I was the class comedian.”) After being discharged, he followed his father into the insurance business, but when he had trouble getting his customers to sign on the dotted line, decided to try acting.He studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York, an experience that he later said gave him a greater sense of himself. But he found it difficult to get acting jobs and turned to stand-up comedy.For a while, he pursued acting and comedy simultaneously. He did his stand-up act at Catskills resorts and in strip clubs, and his movie career got off to an auspicious start with a small part in the 1958 submarine drama “Run Silent, Run Deep,” starring Clark Gable and Burt Lancaster. But the bulk of his film work in the 1960s was in low-budget beach movies: “Bikini Beach,” “Muscle Beach Party” and “Pajama Party,” all in 1964, and “Beach Blanket Bingo” in 1965.By that time, his comedy career had begun gathering momentum. Focusing less on prepared material and more on interaction with his audience, he had found his voice. He was not the first insult comedian — and in fact an earlier master of the comic insult, Jack E. Leonard, was known to complain that Mr. Rickles’s act was too similar to his — but he soon became far and away the most successful.Bookings in the late 1950s at the Slate Brothers nightc...