And he also starred in HOMBRE, based on an Elmore Leonard novel.
And he starred in SLAP SHOT, which is hardboiled if you go by the "tough and
colloquial" definition. It's also by far the greatest ice hockey movie ever
made. In fact, it's one of the greatest sports movies of all time. And funny
as hell.
Damn, he will be missed.
"Old time hockey. like Eddie Shore!"
From: rara-avis-l@yahoogroups.com [mailto:rara-avis-l@yahoogroups.com] On
Behalf Of JIM DOHERTY
Sent: den 27 september 2008 22:35
To: rara-avis-l@yahoogroups.com
Cc: EMWA@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RARA-AVIS: RIP Paul Newman
I just heard that Paul Newman passed away, after a long and successful
acting career.
Any performer as active as Newman will almost certainly have made a lot of
contributions in our genre, and Newman certainly did.
One of his earliest stage performances was as gangster Glenn Griffin in the
Broadway stage production of THE DESPERATE HOURS, a character played by
Humphrey Bogart in the screen version.
Along the way, among many characters in our genre he'd eventually portray,
he played mystery novelist Andrew Craig, caught up in a real-life murder
case in THE PRIZE, scientist Michael Armsrong caught up in Cold War
espionage in Hitchcock's TORN CURTAIN, British agent Joseph Reardon in THE
MACKINTOSH MAN, con man Harry Gondorff in THE STING, NYPD beat cop Murphy in
FORT APACHE - THE BRONX, trial lawyer Harry Galvin in THE VERDICT, private
eye Harry Rose in TWILIGHT, mobster John Rooney in ROAD TO PERDITION, and of
course Ross Macdonld's immortal detective Lew Archer (renamed "Harper" for
reasons that aren't entirely clear to me, though rumor has it that Newman
wanted it to be part of his string of lucky "H" movies) in HARPER and THE
DROWNING POOL.
He was one of only two actors to win two different Oscar nominations for
playing the same character (Bing Crosby was the other), "Fast Eddie" Felson
in THE HUSTLER and THE COLOR OF MONEY (he'd take home the trophy for the
latter picture).
In a business notorious for the transitory nature of its romantic
entanglements, he remained married to the same woman, Joanne Woodward, for
more than 50 years.
He started a food sauce company, using recipes he'd developed himself over
the years, called Newman's Own, and use the profits to fund many worthy
charities.
He'll be missed.
JIM DOHERTY
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