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paul newman (born 1925)
biography
frank capra
richard attenborough
isabelle adjani |
newman
[ p a u l n e w m a n : b i o g ]
"The embarrassing thing is that my salad dressing
biography
But 1981 saw a dramatic turn in Newman's fortunes. In Fort Apache: The Bronx, he was tough copper Murphy, battling crime and cynicism in trying to bring justice to a hard-up community. Then came Absence Of Malice where he played the wholly innocent son of a dead Mob boss, who's named by journalist Sally Field as the subject of a murder investigation - an allegation that causes his whole life to fall apart. Both Newman and Melinda Dillon were Oscar-nominated.
And then came another classic, The Verdict, directed by Sidney Lumet and written by David Mamet. Here Newman was washed-up lawyer Frank Galvin, a drunken ambulance-chaser who gets a chance at redemption when he risks taking a medical malpractice suit to trial, rather than settling out-of-court. Trouble is, just when all is looking good, James "the f***ing Prince of Darkness!" Mason enters as the defence lawyer. For the second year running, Newman was Oscar-nominated, as was Mason.
Throughout the Seventies, Newman had pretty much put his directorial career on the back-burner. After 1972's The Effect Of Gamma Rays On Man-In-The-Moon Marigolds, where Woodward played a rough middle-aged woman dreaming of a kinder life, all was quiet till 1980's The Shadow Box. This, again with Woodward, followed the hopes, dreams and cruel realities of three terminally ill patients in hospital, and saw Newman Emmy-nominated as director. Now, after the triumph of The Verdict, he helmed and starred in Harry & Son, where he played a redundant construction worker who can't get work, fighting with son Robby Benson, who could get work but doesn't want it. Woodward appeared once more, as a friend who fancies Newman, with Ellen Barkin as her daughter and Benson's sexy partner. In 1987, Newman would revisit his past by directing Woodward, as well as John Malkovich and Karen Allen, in Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie.
Including Rachel, Rachel, Paul had by 1985 been Oscar-nominated 7 times and never won. So, as if out of pity, the Academy redressed the balance by presenting him with an honorary statue, recognising his body of work, his integrity and his dedication. And, for it is the Law of Sod, Newman actually won for real the very next year. This was for his deft reprising of the role of Fast Eddie Felson, from The Hustler. This time, in Martin Scorsese's The Colour Of Money, Felson is drawn back into the pool hall to teach the brilliant but wayward Tom Cruise how to live with the big boys.
Though now approaching 70, there was still more to come. In the Coen brothers' The Hudsucker Proxy, he was Sidney J. Mussburger, devious director of a vast corporation, who plots to install apparent idiot Tim Robbins as president, wait for him to destroy the company, and then pick up all the shares for nothing. 1994 also brought Nobody's Fool where, as naughty loser Sully Sullivan, he seeks compensation for his bad knee, rediscovers his family and flirts once more with Melanie Griffith, the wife of his boss, Bruce Willis. Still convincingly roguish after all these years, Paul was Oscar-nominated for the 9th time. Clearly still guilty about this, the Academy now gave him another statue, this time for his humanitarian efforts.
Sticking with Nobody's Fool director Robert Benton (as he had done with directors so often before), next came Twilight, where he played a retired cop delivering blackmail money for dying actor Gene Hackman. Then he stole all his scenes in Message In A Bottle, as the father of widowed shipbuilder Kevin Costner. Next came another great performance in a weakish movie with Where The Money Is, where he played a bank robber who fakes a stroke to get out of jail and then plots a heist with restless nurse Linda Fiorentino.
Paul Newman, quite rightly, is a screen legend. Bridging the gap between larger-than-life studio stars and today's more realistic variety, he's been on top for nearly 50 years, as well as becoming a champion racing driver and a philanthropist of inordinate generosity. Perhaps retirement is now on the cards - but rest assured he'll still fill his time well.
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