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paul newman (1925-2008)
biography
humphrey bogart
frank capra
richard attenborough
isabelle adjani |
newman
[ p a u l n e w m a n : b i o g ]
"Why fool around with hamburger when you have steak at home?"
Sept. 27 2008 The great man yesterday finally lost his year-long battle with cancer, his family announced today. He died at the age of 83 at his home in Westport, Connecticut. He died at 9.30pm on Friday
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Paul was surrounded by his family at his New England farmhouse. When the end came, he was holding the hand of his wife Joanne Woodward. They had celebrated 50 years of marriage in January.
Newman had been gravely ill with lung cancer for some months and decided six weeks ago to spend his final days at home. Two days before his death, he told his wife that he was going to stop taking drugs which doctors said would give him a few more days of life. He stopped all medication except morphine and died on his terms and with dignity.
Robert Redford said: ‘There is a point where feelings go beyond words. I have lost a real friend. My life – and this country – was better for his being in it.’
George Clooney said: ‘He set the bar high for the rest of us. Not just actors, but all of us. He will be greatly missed.’
Julia Roberts said: ‘He was my hero.’
Of course his acting touched many of us and being Oscar-nominated 9 times (with a long overdue win for the Color of Money) is living proof to that. But he was a man who transcended his profession. Through his Newmans Own food-product company he raised over $220 million for charity since 1982. Morever his name alone would be known in all corners of the globe whether someone had seen a film of his or not.
Very few earn that type of fame.
The world does now seem strange and a little empty when so big a star is no longer in it. Somewehere in so many of our lives, at some moment or other, his work has touched us and maybe changed just a little part of us. It has for me and I'm sure that is the same for millions all over the world. If a man who had everything could be so generous in spirit then why can't a mere mortal like me not be the same?
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- Paul Page
- Anneli Drecker
Did you know? Donald Sutherland gets it at weekends.
"Who do I sign it to?"
The autograph hunter replies:
"Anyone you want to, Lennox. I'm not in a position to argue."
Different laws apply to superstars and there is no bigger superstar in film today than Paul Newman.
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He was born Paul Leonard Newman on the 26th of January, 1925, in Shaker Heights, an affluent suburb of Cleveland. His father, Arthur, was Jewish and ran a profitable sports goods store. His mother, Theresa (nee Fetzer), was Catholic and helped out in the shop, while raising Paul and his brother Arthur (later a producer and production manager). Young Paul was bright and good at sports. He also showed an early interest in theatre, something that Theresa encouraged. He made his acting debut at 7, as the court jester in a school production of Robin Hood.
Paul graduated from Shaker Heights High School in 1943. He briefly attended Ohio University at Athens, but was expelled for (allegedly) crashing a keg of beer into the president's car. It was clear that young Newman was possessed of the same bravado and sense of mischief as one of his most famous characters - Lucas Jackson from Cool Hand Luke. For a while, he wandered, at one point selling Collier's Encyclopaedias door-to-door.
With the war on, he now tried to enlist in the Naval Air Corps, keen to serve as a pilot. Quickly, though, tests showed that those famous blue eyes were in fact blind to colour. Instead of gallantly strafing the foe, Newman had to be content as a radio operator on torpedo bombers in the South Pacific.
On his return, he won an athletic scholarship to Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, a liberal arts college affiliated to the Episcopal Church. Here he played football till the Luke in him burst forth again. After "an incident" at a local bar, he spent the night in Knox County Jail and was summarily thrown off the team. Needing a replacement extra-curricular activity, he returned to drama, appearing in several college productions, and in summer-stock in Wisconsin, with the Williams Bay Repertory Company.
In the short time he spent at Yale, two more daughters were born, Stephanie and Susan. With his family growing, Paul needed success sooner rather than later. It would not take long. During breaks in classes, he travelled down to New York to seek work, in 1952 scoring a recurring part in The Aldrich Family. This was a popular show based on a radio series and following a middle class family through their lives on Elm Street, Centerville (this Elm Street helped form the American suburban idyll, later so hilariously assaulted by Freddie Krueger).
1952 also brought the single biggest influence on Newman's later career. Moving to New York, he was accepted at the renowned Actors Studio, studying The Method under Lee Strasberg and Elia Kazan. He learned quickly. By the next year, he was a hit in his big Broadway debut, Picnic, winning a Theatre World Award. More importantly, he was spotted by Warner Brothers executives, who signed him up. (These were the last days of the Star System, when big studios would contract would-be screen gods, and groom them for stardom).
Returning to New York and the stage, he starred in The Desperate Hours. There was plenty of good TV work, too. This was the Golden Age of American television, with many series featuring live performances by the world's best-known actors. He appeared twice in You Are There, historical re-enactments hosted by Walter Cronkite, and twice in The Web, which had earlier starred Grace Kelly, James Dean and an up-and-coming actress named Joanne Woodward. There was The Mask, the Goodyear Television Playhouse and the Philco Television Playhouse (the last two having also featured Woodward). For Philco, he starred in The Death Of Billy The Kid, with Jason Robards, while for the Producers' Showcase he appeared in Our Town, starring Frank Sinatra and Eve Marie Saint, playing the youngster who sings Love And Marriage.
Next it was back to Hollywood for The Rack, with Lee Marvin, which involved the homecoming of a Korean war vet, charged with collaboration after being tortured and brainwashed and trying to convince his comrades they were fighting an unjust war. Again the reviews were poor, and the movie was pulled quickly from cinemas.
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