Alex Rebar

[2] In Rome, Rebar worked for Production Cinitalia Edizone doing voice dubbing for Marcello Mastroianni, Klaus Kinski and the Italian version of Mighty Mouse.

One of his first appearances on-screen was the psychedelic film Microscopic Liquid Subway to Oblivion with Ewa Aulin as a professor who is abducted by drug-addled hippies.

[3] He went on to write Beyond the Door, a Rosemary's Baby-meets-Exorcist knock-off before returning to Hollywood and making his star turn as the infamous (and aqueous) The Incredible Melting Man.

In the early 2000s he briefly came out of retirement to begin producing videos for the internet[4] including a series called "Sex, Pain and Murder" for iFilm.

His final wishes were for no memorial but that "Everyone should just go home, crack open a bottle of wine, and listen to 'Got My Mojo Workin' by Muddy Waters.