Tribute: Peter O’Toole

Posted on December 15, 2013 at 5:30 pm

Peter_O'Toole LawrenceI was very sad to hear of the passing of actor Peter O’Toole today at age 81.  The New York Times describes him well as “an Irish bookmaker’s son with a hell-raising streak whose magnetic performance in the 1962 epic film Lawrence of Arabia earned him overnight fame and put him on the road to becoming one of his generation’s most accomplished and charismatic actors.”  His electrifying blue eyes and thrum of neurotic intensity suited him perfectly to play the British man who helped lead an Arab revolt against the Turks in the 1917-18 and to become an icon for the upheavals of the 1960’s.  He had the tradition and technique classically trained actor and the legendary excesses of a rock star.  I love the interview that frequently runs on Turner Classic Movies, where he tells a story about working with David Lean on “Lawrence of Arabia.”  Lean told him to improvise a few moments of Lawrence enjoying his Arab garb. O’Toole came up with the idea that Lawrence might have wanted to look at himself and, without a mirror, checked out his reflection in the shiny blade of his knife.  O’Toole still remembered, years later, Lean watching him and his approving murmur, “Clever boy.”  With more Oscar nominations without winning than anyone else, O’Toole initially declined a Lifetime Achievement Academy Award in his 70’s, saying he was “still in the game and might win the bugger outright.”  He finally accepted one in 2003.

lion in winter o'toole hepburnO’Toole was such a commanding presence that it is easy to forget what a brilliant actor he was.  Even in flawed and lesser films like “High Spirits” and the musical version of “Goodbye Mr. Chips” he was still a fascinating presence.  Some of my favorite performances include the two times he played King Henry II, as young man in Becket opposite Richard Burton and as an old man in The Lion in Winter opposite Katherine Hepburn.

I also love him as the grandiose director in The Stunt Man, making a movie about WWI and covering up an accidental death on set by hiring a fugitive to take his place.  He enters in a helicopter, a god descending from Olympus to order the lives of mortals.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BesLJgU0ZBs

He is magnificent in My Favorite Year as a dissipated but still game swashbuckling movie star who is about to appear on a live television show. And as the art thief  who steals Audrey Hepburn’s heart as well as her fake Cellini statue in How to Steal a Million.  When she breathes, “Maaarvelous” at his strategy for getting around the art museum’s security system, we know she is really expressing her assessment of O’Toole’s character and the actor who plays him.  And we agree.

 

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Tribute: Nelson Mandela

Posted on December 6, 2013 at 10:22 am

Nelson Mandela, one of the most inspiring figures of modern history, died yesterday and the world joins together in mourning his loss and paying tribute to his courage, integrity, and vision.  There are many movie portrayals of this extraordinary man, including two new films this year, but today we need to him speak for himself.

“Social equality is the only basis of human happiness.”

“Difficulties break some men but make others.”

“It always seems impossible until it’s done.”

“I came to accept that I have no right whatsoever to judge others in terms of my own customs.”

“Resentment is like drinking poison and then hoping it will kill your enemies.”

“Lead from the back — and let others believe they are in front.”

“Do not judge me by my successes, judge me by how many times I fell down and got back up again.”

“I hate race discrimination most intensely and in all its manifestations. I have fought it all during my life; I fight it now, and will do so until the end of my days.”

“A good head and a good heart are always a formidable combination.”

May his memory be a blessing and may it inspire all of us to take up his great work and carry it forward.

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Tribute: Paul Walker (1973-2013)

Posted on December 1, 2013 at 8:40 am

paul walkerPaul Walker, the handsome and charismatic star of the Fast & Furious series of films, was killed in a car crash yesterday as he was returning from a fund-raiser for his Reach out Worldwide charity, to benefit the survivors of the typhoon in the Philippines.  It is a very sad loss.  Walker modestly described himself on his Twitter page as “outdoorsman, ocean addict, adrenaline junkie… and I do some acting on the side.”  He was the son of a model and first worked as a model himself when he was still a toddler.  At age eight he was appearing on television shows like “Touched by an Angel” and “Who’s the Boss?”  After breakthrough roles in “Pleasantville,” “Varsity Blues,” “She’s All That,” and “The Skulls,” he was cast in the first “Fast and Furious” film as Brian O’Conner, a cop who goes undercover in the world of street racing and finds himself allied with the charismatic character played by Vin Diesel.  It turned into one of the most enduringly successful franchises of the last ten years.  Perhaps his best performance was in “Eight Below.”

Walker majored in marine biology in college and the oceans were his passion.  He starred in the 2010 National Geographic Channel series Expedition Great White.  He was a devoted father and a fine actor.  He worked hard to help others and protect the environment.  He will be missed.  May his memory be a blessing.

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Tribute: Marcia Wallace

Posted on October 27, 2013 at 11:24 pm

The brave, beautiful, and very funny actress Marcia Wallace has died at age 70 after a long battle with breast cancer.  I loved her as the receptionist on the old “Bob Newhart Show” and as a guest on 70’s game shows and talk shows, where her wit and impeccable comic timing made her a stand-out.  She won an Emmy for providing the voice of Mrs. Krabappel, the sarcastic teacher with the world’s most impossible fourth-grade student on “The Simpsons.”  When she was first diagnosed with cancer, she became a spokeswoman for those struggling with the disease and an advocate for education and research.  Her book, Don’t Look Back, We’re Not Going That Way is subtitled: “How I overcame a rocky childhood, a nervous breakdown, breast cancer, widowhood, fat, fire and menopausal motherhood and still manage to count my lucky chickens.” A lot of us counted her among our luckiest chickens, and she will be missed.

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Tribute: Movie Critic Stanley Kauffmann

Posted on October 10, 2013 at 2:50 pm

The masterful critic Stanley Kauffman, whose writing career stretched over eight decades, died this week at age 97.  Adam Bernstein’s perceptive Kauffman obituary in the Washington Post noted: “He was one of the few critics who could watch a 1997 Broadway play featuring Christopher Plummer portraying the talented but troubled actor John Barrymore — and remember seeing Barrymore onstage shortly before his death in 1942.”  He was surely the last person writing about film who was watching films when they were still silent.  In his reviews for The New Republic and other publications and his books he took positions that were often at odds not just with popular taste (he didn’t like “Star Wars”) but also with other critics (he didn’t like “Taxi Driver”).  He didn’t try for wit and he was never snarky.  But he looked for the best that film could offer and when he found it he was enthusiastic about championing then-obscure filmmakers like Jean-Luc Godard, Ingmar Bergman, Akira Kurosawa, Michelangelo Antonioni and Satyajit Ray.

Kauffmann was proudly literary in his tastes and in his own writing style.  I’m proud to be quoted in the obit:

“He was passionately engaged with film’s highest aspirations as an art form and was at his most eloquent when films were most complex,” said Nell Minow, an author and movie critic. “He educated generations of film-watchers and filmmakers about how and what to watch.”

He will be missed, but his influence will shine forth from every review and every film that tries harder and reaches further.

 

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