Love and Death: The Murder of Kurt Cobain, published by Simon & Schuster, is a collaborative investigative journalism book written by Ian Halperin and Max Wallace purporting to show that rock star Kurt Cobain, believed to have committed suicide, was in fact murdered, possibly at the behest of his wife Courtney Love.
Kurt Vonnegut | murder | I Love Lucy | death metal | Kurt Weill | Murder, She Wrote | Death Valley | Death of a Salesman | Black Death | Death Cab for Cutie | death | Death | Jennifer Love Hewitt | Napalm Death | Love | Kurt Russell | The Love Boat | Diagnosis: Murder | Kurt Masur | Kurt Angle | Death Race 2000 | Kurt Koffka | Kurt Gödel | Death Valley National Park | Death Valley Days | Kurt Elling | From Russia with Love (film) | Shakespeare in Love | Kurt Schwitters | Courtney Love |
The cover of the original album has the subtitle "A Puckish Satire On Contemporary Mores," a quote from the Woody Allen film Love and Death, in which Allen's character reviews an army play presented to Russian soldiers to prevent them from becoming infected with venereal diseases while at war.
His credits included two films loosely based on Russian and Japanese novels: Love and Death (as executive producer), which was based on a Russian novel and directed by Woody Allen in 1975, and The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea in 1976, which was based on a Yukio Mishima novel.
She played significant roles in three classic mainstream films: Denise, the OAS mole, in The Day of the Jackal (1973); Countess Alexandrovna in Woody Allen’s Love and Death (1975); and Julie Anderson in Basil Dearden’s The Man Who Haunted Himself (1970).