Charles Southwood

[1] Born in Los Angeles in 1937, his family moved to Oregon at the end of World War II.

He travelled to Europe where he worked at a variety of jobs before becoming a stand in for Lex Barker on Woman Times Seven in 1966.

In addition to the standard warnings, Death Cigarettes were packed in their own coffin: a stark little black package bearing a skull and crossbones.

[3] Southwood traveled to the Southern United States, where the major U.S. tobacco companies found his idea "antithetical to their interests."

[6] Southwood was married to Anick, a University teacher and had two children a son, Chris and a daughter Amelie.