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George Reeves
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Born January 5, 1914
Woolstock, Iowa
Died June 16, 1959
Death by gunshot, officially ruled suicide, doubts persist.
Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, California

George Bessolo Reeves (January 5 [1], 1914 - June 16, 1959), born George Keefer Brewer to Don Brewer and Helen Lescher, was an American actor best known for playing the title role in the television series Adventures of Superman in the 1950s.





Early life and career

George Reeves was born George Keefer Brewer on January 5, 1914, in Woolstock, Iowa. His mother, Helen Lescher, was the daughter of a wealthy Galesburg, Illinois, pharmacy owner. His father, Don Brewer, was a decidedly unwealthy pharmacy student who married Helen Lescher after she became pregnant. The couple moved from Galesburg to Woolstock where Brewer had obtained a job as a druggist in the tiny town not far from his own hometown. The couple remained together not very long following young George's birth (five months after their marriage), and Helen moved back home to Galesburg. Reeves' father remarried in 1925 to Helen Schultz and had children with her. He never saw his son again. George's mother moved to California to stay with her sister. There Helen Lescher married Frank Bessolo, who adopted her infant son George. The marriage lasted some fifteen years. While George was off visiting relatives, Helen divorced Frank Bessolo and later told George that he had committed suicide. Reeves's cousin, Catherine Chase, told biographer Jim Beaver that George did not know for several years either that Bessolo was in fact still alive or that he had been his stepfather and not his birth father. These later revelations contributed to George's lifetime love/hate relationship with his mother.

George Bessolo began acting and singing in high school and continued performing on stage while attending Pasadena Junior College. He also boxed in amateur matches until his mother Helen ordered him to stop, lest his good looks be damaged by the sport. Accepted into the Pasadena Playhouse, he had prominent roles; among his contemporaries at the Playhouse were Victor Mature and Robert Preston. Bessolo's film career began in 1939 when he was cast as one of Vivien Leigh's many suitors in Gone With the Wind It was a minor role, but he and Fred Crane, both in dyed bright red hair as "the Tarleton Twins," were in the film's opening scene. Contracted to Warner Bros. at the time, the actor's name became "George Reeves" and his GWTW screen credit reflects the name change. The next year, 1940, he married actress Ellanora Needles.

He did yeoman duty under contract to Warners, starring in a number of two-reel short subjects, and co-starring in several B-pictures (including one with Ronald Reagan) and three features with James Cagney, Torrid Zone, The Fighting 69th, and Strawberry Blonde. Warners loaned him out to producer Alexander Korda to co-star with Merle Oberon in Lydia, a box-office failure. Released from his Warners contract, he freelanced, appearing in four Hopalong Cassidy westerns (five times acting with newcomer Robert Mitchum). Director Mark Sandrich cast Reeves in So Proudly We Hail! (1942), opposite Claudette Colbert for Paramount, a boost up the professional ladder from Hoppy oaters. He won acclaim for the role and garnered considerable publicity. Initially, World War II proved a boon to Reeves's career. Major stars such as Clark Gable, James Stewart, Henry Fonda and Robert Taylor were away from Hollywood in uniform, and studios tried to groom younger actors for starring roles in the interim.


Military service

Since Reeves and his wife had no children, he was not exempt from military duty himself. Seventeen months after Pearl Harbor, and immediately upon completing his potentially starmaking role in "So Proudly We Hail!", Reeves enlisted in the U.S. Army. In late 1943, he was transferred to the U.S. Army Air Forces and assigned to the Broadway show "Winged Victory," produced by and for the Army Air Forces. Following a long Broadway run, a national tour, and a film version of the play, Reeves was transferred to the Army Air Forces' First Motion Picture Unit, where he made training films. Despite the widespread view that being typecast as Superman put his career in a slump, the war had previously dealt his career a blow just as intense. After his discharge and returning to civilian life, he found the high profile he had gained from "So Proudly We Hail!" three years earlier had evaporated. Leading parts were no longer available with major stars returning to the screen, a situation which hurt the careers of many 1940s contract players such as Robert Hutton, Robert Clarke, David Bruce, etc. Reeves' biographer Jim Beaver told the authors of Hollywood Kryptonite (see below) that Reeves was forced to augment his living digging septic tanks from financial necessity. He and Ellanora Needles divorced in 1949. His post-war films were generally at the B-picture level. However, the emergence of television offered new avenues of employment.



Superman

In 1951, Reeves was offered the role of Superman in a television series. He was initially reluctant to take the role because, like many actors of his time, he considered television to be unimportant and believed that few would see his work. He worked for low pay even as the titular star, and was only paid during the weeks of production. The half-hour films were shot on tight schedules; at least two shows every six days.

His Superman employment began with a film designed as both a theatrical B-picture and a pilot for the series, Superman and the Mole Men. Immediately after wrapping this short feature, Reeves and the crew segued into production of the first season's episodes, shot over thirteen weeks during the summer of 1951. When the series began airing in 1953, George Reeves was astonished when he became a national celebrity. In 1957, the struggling ABC Network picked up the show for national broadcast.

The Superman cast had restrictive contracts preventing them from taking other acting jobs that might interfere with the series. Even though the Superman schedule was brief (13 shows shot two per week, a total of seven weeks out of a year), they all had a "30 Day Clause," which meant the producers could demand their exclusive services for a new season on 30-day notice. This prevented long-term employment on major films with long schedules, stage plays which might lead to a lengthy run, or other series work. (Grossman, page 121)

Reeves did not resent doing personal appearances as Superman, since these paid gigs meant more money beyond his meager salary, and his affection for young fans was genuine. However, small children often poked, punched or kicked the "Man of Steel" to see if he really was invulnerable. One alarming (and apparently fictitious) incident, depicted in the 2006 film Hollywoodland, had a youngster approach him with a real loaded gun. Reeves gently took the boy aside and explained the dangers, that in doing so, the bullets could "bounce off me and hit someone else instead." Reeves nonetheless took his role model status seriously, avoiding cigarettes where children could see him, and keeping his private life discreet. In 1951, he had begun a romantic relationship with an ex-showgirl eight years his senior, Toni Mannix. That same year, Toni had married MGM executive Eddie Mannix, himself much older than his wife, after serving as his companion and mistress for more than a decade. Mannix, who also had a series of girlfriends, knew of the relationship between George and Toni. They all would frequently dine together over the years.

With Toni Mannix, Reeves worked tirelessly to raise money to fight Myasthenia gravis. He served as national chairman for the Myasthenia Gravis Foundation in 1955. (link: http://www.myasthenia.org) During the second season, Reeves appeared in a short film for the US Treasury Department, Stamp Day for Superman, in which he caught some crooks and told kids why they should invest in government savings stamps.

Over the course of the 104 episodes, Reeves often showed gentlemanly behavior to his fellow actors. He insisted that his original Lois Lane, Phyllis Coates, be given equal billing in the credits in the first season. He also defended Robert Shayne (who played Police Inspector William "Bill" Henderson) when Shayne was subpoenaed by FBI agents on the set of "Superman." Shayne's political activism in the Screen Actors Guild in the 1940s was used by his embittered ex-wife as an excuse to label him a Communist (Shayne had never been a Communist party member). Shayne was replaced by Marshall Reed for one episode, "The Human Bomb," but at the insistence of both Reeves and producer Whitney Ellsworth, was rehired. When Coates was replaced by Noel Neill (who had played Lois Lane in the Kirk Alyn serials), Reeves quietly defended her nervousness on her first day when he felt the director was being too harsh with her. (ref: Neill in video documentary "First Lady of Metropolis," included on DVD compilation of Season 2 episodes, released in 2006) On the other hand, he delighted in standing outside camera range, mugging at the other cast members to see whether he could break them up. By all accounts there was a strong camaraderie among the principals.

After two seasons, Reeves expressed dissatisfaction with the one-dimensional role and the low pay. At 40 years old, he wished to quit and move on. Friends and contemporaries like Alan Ladd, Victor Mature and Robert Mitchum had become major stars, with major roles in A-pictures, getting paid substantially more than Reeves's Superman salary. The producers of Superman looked elsewhere for a new lead actor (Variety, September 27, 1954), allegedly contacting Kirk Alyn, the actor who had portrayed Superman in the two original movie serials and who had initially refused to play the role on television (paving the way for Reeves), and Alyn turned them down again.

Reeves established his own production company and conceived a TV adventure series, "Port of Entry," which would be shot on location in Hawaii and Mexico, writing the pilot script himself. However, Superman producers offered him a salary increase and he returned to the role. (Variety, October 27, 1954). He was making a substantial sum for the time, reportedly $5000 per week, but this was only while the show was in production (e.g., about eight weeks each year). (Grossman, page 121). As to "Port of Entry," Reeves was never able to interest a financing producer in the project and it died unmade.

In 1957, a theatrical film was mooted by the producers, Superman and the Secret Planet, (link: http://jimnolt.com/sp-intro.htm), and a script commissioned from David Chantler, who had penned many of the TV scripts. Instead, negotiations began for a renewal of the series, 26 episodes scheduled for broadcast over the next two years. By mid-1959, contracts were signed, costumes were re-fitted and new teleplays writers assigned. Noel Neill is quoted as saying the cast of Superman was ready to do a new series of the still-popular show. (DC Comics: Sixty Years of the World's Favorite Comic Book Heroes, no page cited).

Producers promised Reeves that the new programs would be as serious and action-packed as the first season, guaranteed him creative input, and slated him to direct several of the new shows, as he had the final three episodes of the 1957 season.

After the death of George Reeves (see below), Flamingo Films and DC Comics discussed continuing the series under the title "Superman's Pal, Jimmy Olsen," with Jack Larson continuing as the star opposite a "Superman" who would be partially stock shots of Reeves from previous shows and partially a stunt double. Larson rejected the macabre idea out of hand. Instead, the producers made two alternate pilot films, a "comedy" called Superpup (1960) with midget actors in dog costumes ("Bark Bent" and "Perry Bite" were character names) and Superboy,(1962) with young actor Johnny Rockwell. Neither film was picked up by sponsors.


Typecasting

Reeves found himself so associated with Superman and Clark Kent that it was difficult for him to find other roles, as did other actors associated with iconic roles, like Ralph Byrd with Dick Tracy, and Bela Lugosi with Dracula. An often-repeated story suggests that he was upset when his scenes in the classic film From Here to Eternity were cut after a preview audience kept yelling "Superman!" whenever he appeared on screen (as reenacted in Hollywoodland). "Eternity" director Fred Zinnemann, screenwriter Daniel Taradash and others have maintained that every scene written for Reeves' character was shot and part of the released film. Zinnemann has asserted that there were no post-release cuts, nor was there even a preview screening. Everything in the first draft of the script is still present in the final product seen since 1953.

During the early years of Superman, Reeves got sporadic acting assignments in many one-shot TV anthology programs, and notably in two Fritz Lang feature films Rancho Notorious (1952) and The Blue Gardenia (1953). He also reportedly (Grossman, page 45) sang on the Tony Bennett show as late as 1956, as himself, not his TV alter ego.


He appeared memorably on I Love Lucy (Episode #165, Lucy Meets Superman," in 1956), clearly playing himself (albeit in Superman costume) but throughout that show was referred to as "Superman" rather than "George," although the announcer stated over the end credits, "The part of Superman was played by George Reeves." Desi Arnaz had this audio bite removed when I Love Lucy went into syndication after 1959, believing it put a pall on the show. It was restored when the shows were released on dvd. Incidentally, at the end of the episode, when Superman discovers that Ricky is married to Lucy, he comments incredulously, "And they call me Superman!", which seems to justify Desi's decision to have the announcer's statement removed.

Grossman's book (page 151) quotes character actor Ben Welden, who had acted with Reeves in the Warner Bros. days and frequently guested on Superman: "After [the I Love Lucy show], Superman was no longer a challenge to him... I know he enjoyed the role, but he used to say, 'Here I am, wasting my life.'"

His good friend Bill Walsh, a producer at Disney Studios, gave Reeves a role in Westward Ho the Wagons (1956), in which Reeves wore a beard and mustache. The Grossman book (page 45) implies this was to prevent recognition of Reeves as Superman; more likely it simply fit the Western period. Reeves often sported a mustache for his roles before 1951, and the trim beard does not make him at all unrecognizable. According to Reeves' pal, wrestler Gene LeBell, Reeves was later offered the lead role in Wagon Train, presumably based on this performance as the wagonmaster in Westward Ho. However, Wagon Train, inspired by John Ford's film Wagonmaster (starring Ward Bond as the wagonmaster) had been on the air since 1957 when Reeves was still playing Superman and Ward Bond had played the wagonmaster from the beginning, until his death a year after Reeves's, so LeBell's recollection is certainly faulty. The Disney film turned out to be Reeves's last feature film appearance.

Reeves, Noel Neill, Natividad Vacio, Gene LeBell and a trio of musicians toured with a public appearance show from 1957 onward. Expectedly, the stage showwas a gigantic hit for the excited children who got to see their hero in person, though apparently not a moneymaker for Reeves. The first half of the show was a "Superman" sketch in which Reeves and Neill performed with LeBell as a villain called "Mr. Kryptonite," who captured Lois. Kent then rushed offstage to return as Superman, who came to the rescue and fought ("wrestled") with the bad guy. The second half of the show was Reeves out of costume and as himself, singing and accompanying himself on the guitar. Vacio and Neill accompanied him in duets. (Grossman, page 54)

The planned 1959 renewal of Superman was a mixed blessing. On one hand, it meant regular work with a significant pay raise and a chance to expand more into directing; on the other hand, it was more time in what Reeves called "the monkey suit" (Superman's costume) and further identification of himself in his signature role . Reeves biographer Jim Beaver quotes Jack Larson on the subject: "Anyone who thinks another season of Superman wouldn't depress George didn't know George."

Further, he was hoping to direct a low-budget science-fiction film, written by a friend from his Pasadena Playhouse days, and had discussed the project with Phyllis Coates the previous year. (Grossman, page 58). There was a another Superman stage show scheduled for July (New York Post, June 17, 1959), and a planned stage tour of Australia.

Now in his mid 40s, with prematurely white-gray hair, he ended his long-term affair with Toni Mannix in 1959 and had taken up with Leonore Lemmon, a hard-drinking member of New York's so-called "cafe society," whose reputation as a nightclub hellion dated back to the 1940s. Over the years she was often mentioned in NYC-based gossip columns for the company she kept, including members of the Frank Sinatra "Rat Pack", millionaires (she had married a Vanderbilt heir, and quickly divorced him), and Manhattan underworld "sportsmen." In 1958, Reeves allegedly gave up drinking, only having "a glass of champagne at parties," though this is at odds with his relationship with Lemmon, predicated on night clubs and alcohol (Newspaper photos of them together in 1959 show both cigarettes and cocktails, and his estate included vastly large unpaid bills from liquor stores.) Their relationship was volatile, and they were often seen arguing in public, though Reeves also told many people how much he loved Lemmon, and he occasionally introduced her as his wife.

In April of 1959, Reeves had suffered a concussion in an auto accident, which resulted in a doctor prescribing heavy-duty pain-killers, leading some to suspect that his mental health may have been compromised. (Grossman, page 58). Also in April, 1959, Reeves told the Los Angeles City Attorney's office he had been pestered by repeated, anonymous telephone calls, which he believed were from a disgruntled Toni Mannix. The City Attorney warned Mannix to cease and desist with such calls; Mannix replied that she had been receiving harassing calls from Reeves! (contemporary news articles)


Death

At approximately 1:30 AM the morning of June 16, 1959, George Reeves died of a gunshot wound to the head in the upstairs bedroom of his Benedict Canyon home. He was 45 years old.

Police arrived within the hour. Present in the house and at the time of death, were Leonore Lemmon, William Bliss, writer Robert Condon and Carol Van Ronkel, who lived a few blocks away with her husband, screenwriter Rip Van Ronkel (Destination Moon).

According to all the witnesses, Lemmon and Reeves had been dining and drinking earlier in the evening in the company of writer Condon, who was ghost-writing an autobiography of prizefighter Archie Moore. Reeves and Lemmon argued at the restaurant and the trio returned home. Lemmon herself in interviews with Reeves biographer Jim Beaver stated that she and Reeves had accompanied friends not out dining and drinking, but to the wrestling matches. Contemporary news items indicate Reeves's friend Gene LeBell was wrestling that night. In any event, Reeves went to bed, but some time near midnight, an impromptu party began when Bliss and Carol Van Ronkel arrived. Disturbed by the ruckus, Reeves angrily came downstairs and complained. After blowing off steam, he stayed with the guests for a while then retired upstairs again in a bad mood. The house guests heard a single gunshot. Bliss ran into Reeves's bedroom, and found George Reeves dead, half-lying on his bed, naked and face-up. His Luger lay between his feet.

Statements to police and the press essentially agreed with each other. Neither Lemmon nor the other witnesses made any public explanation for the delay in calling the police after the gunshot, but the shock of the death, the lateness of the hour and the alcohol everyone had consumed made a delay understandable, and indeed they freely admitted the delay. Police said all witnesses present were extremely inebriated.

In contemporary news articles, Lemmon attributed Reeves' suicide to depression caused by his "failed career" and inability to find more work. Newspapers and wire-service reports frequently quoted LAPD Sergeant V.A. Peterson, as, in turn, quoting Lemmon: "Miss Lemmon blurted, 'He's probably going to go shoot himself.' A noise was heard upstairs. She continued, 'He's opening a drawer to get the gun.' A shot was heard. 'See, I told you so.'"' This eerie statement seems ominous to some, unbelievable to others. Lemmon and her friends were downstairs at the time with music playing; it would be nearly impossible to hear a drawer opening upstairs and through several walls. Lemmon herself later claimed she'd never said anything so specific, but rather had made an offhand remark along the lines of "Oh, he'll probably go shoot himself now." Whether Reeves heard her remark is unknown, but considering the proximity of the living room to the bedroom, it is certainly possible, perhaps likely.

Witness statements and examination of the crime scene led to the conclusion that the death was self-inflicted. A more extensive official inquiry concluded that the death was indeed suicide. Reeves' will (dated 1956) bequeathed his entire estate to Toni Mannix, much to Lemmon's surprise and devastation. Her statement to the press read, "Toni got a house for charity, and I got a broken heart", referring to the Myasthenia Gravis Foundation. In point of fact, Reeves's home had been given to him by Toni Mannix.


Controversy

Many at the time, and many more in later years, refused to believe the idea that George Reeves could kill himself.

Evidence at the crime scene, taken bit by bit, seems to some to be at odds with suicide: multiple bullet holes found in Reeves's bedroom; a bullet casing found underneath Reeves' body; no gunpowder residue found on Reeves's hands or on his head (though gunshot residue tests were not generally considered reliable and in 1959 were not normally made by LAPD); no powder burns ("stippling") on the bullet wound; the gun found lying on the floor between his feet; the delay in calling the police; a bullet entry wound that was classified as "irregular" by the coroner.

Reeves' incredulous mother Helen Bessolo employed attorney Jerry Geisler; through him, the Nick Harris Detective Agency. Their operatives included a fledgling detective named Milo Speriglio, who would later falsely claim to have been the primary investigator. A cremation of Reeves' body was postponed. No substantial new evidence was ever uncovered, but Reeves's mother never accepted the conclusion that her son could commit suicide.

An article posted September 21, 2006 on Cecil Adams' Straight Dope web site seems to effectively refute the apparent "incongruities" that Reeves' death was not a suicide. Click here to read the Straight Dope article.

An after-the-fact article quoted "pall bearers" at Reeves' funeral - actors Alan Ladd and Gig Young - as not believing Reeves was the "type" who would kill himself. Tellingly, Young killed himself by a pistol to the head after shooting his young wife, and Ladd may well have tried to commit suicide, though the incident was called "an accident while he was cleaning a gun," and his death (by alcohol and barbiturate overdose) may have been less than accidental. Even more tellingly, Ladd was not actually a friend of Reeves and appears to have been named as a pallbearer by Reeves' star-struck mother in an effort to boost her son's standing in the public eye. Neither Ladd nor Young attended Reeves's funeral, and the quotation of their beliefs regarding his death appears to have originated many years afterward in an article by Al Stump, who appears to have taken the list of pallbearers at face value. No quotations of the sort appear anywhere in articles in the immediate aftermath of Reeves's death nor for many years later, until Stump's piece in Los Angeles magazine in the early 1980s.

"Anti-suicide" proponents argue that with so many prospects in sight, Reeves would have no desire to end his life. This, unfortunately, does not take into account chronic depression, Reeves' long-standing dissatisfaction with the Superman role, or the psychoactive effects of prescription pain-killers with alcohol (The toxicology report found Reeves' blood-alcohol level three-and-a-half times the legal limit.)

Lemmon claimed responsibility for the extra bullet holes in Reeves' bedroom, attributing them to "fooling around" with the gun the week before his death. Some fans attribute Reeves' death to Lemmon, either intentionally or accidentally (They were reportedly seen drinking heavily and arguing at a bar the night he died.) She does not appear to have ever been seriously considered a suspect by police. No fingerprints were found on the recently-oiled pistol, but fingerprints do not adhere to wet surfaces, like oiled gun metal. The coroner's description of the entry wound as "irregular" does not in itself imply foul play, but is a description of the wound as slightly oblique rather than perfectly round, like the muzzle of the gun.

The central thesis of the Reeves biography Hollywood Kryptonite states as fact that Reeves was murdered by order of Toni Mannix as punishment for their breakup. This is illustrated as a plot point in Hollywoodland, albeit ambiguously, and with the blame more clearly leveled at Eddie Mannix than at Toni. However, the authors of Hollywood Kryptonite were forced to create a fictitious "hit man" to make the plot of their book work, and no such person ever appears to have existed. To the contrary, Mannix and publicity director Howard Strickling had made a career at MGM of keeping stars' secrets out of newspapers, not causing headline-grabbing murders of high-profile TV stars. Additionally, the floorplanof Reeves' home mitigates against any suspicious intruder being able to sneak inside and upstairs unseen, and the windows to Reeves's bedroom open only enough to allow a breeze but not nearly enough to allow a person to enter.

Both Noel Neill and Jack Larson (Jimmy Olsen in Superman) maintained that Reeves's death was mysterious, even generating publicity for the case in the late 1980s; however, neither have ever claimed they believed it was murder, nor claimed to be intimate friends with Reeves away from work. Larson has expressed ambiguous opinions on this question over the years, matching the ambiguity of the death itself. In the Grossman book, Larson was quoted as having accepted that it was suicide. Larson has stated publicly on several occasions that he always believed Reeves had taken his own life and that quotations implying he ever believed otherwise were either in error or deliberately falsified. "Jack and I never really tried to get anyone to re-open George's death," Neill said. "I am not aware of anyone who wanted George dead. I never said I thought George was murdered. I just don't know what happened. All I know is that George always seemed happy to me, and I saw him two days before he died and he was still happy then."


Hollywoodland dramatizes the investigation of Reeves' death. It stars Adrien Brody as fictional investigator Louis Simo (suggested by real-life detective Milo Sperilgio; anagrammatically named "Louis Moglio" in Paul Bernbaum's original script) and Ben Affleck as Reeves. The movie shows three versions of his death: killed semi-accidentally by Lemmon, murdered by an unnamed studio hitman; and finally, suicide.

Toni Mannix suffered Alzheimer's disease for years and died in 1983. In 1999, Los Angeles publicist Edward Lozzi claimed that Toni Mannix confessed to a Catholic priest, in Lozzi's presence, that she was responsible for having George Reeves killed. Lozzi repeated this statement on TV tabloid shows including Extra!, Inside Edition, and Court TV. In the wake of Hollywoodland's publicity in 2006, Mr. Lozzi repeated his story to the tabloid The Globe and to the LA Times, where the statement was refuted by Jack Larson. Larson stated that facts he knew from his close friendship with Toni Mannix precluded Lozzi's story from being true. According to Lozzi, he lived with and then visited the elderly Mannix from 1979 to 1982, and that on at least a half-dozen occasions, he would call a priest when Mrs. Mannix feared death and wanted to confess her sins. Though Mannix suffered from Alzheimer's disease and senile dementia, Lozzi insists that her "confessions" were made during periods of lucidity. Lozzi states that the "confession" was made in Mannix's home before being moved from her house to a hospital. Mannix had lived in a hospital suite for the last several of years of her life, having donated a large portion of her estate a priori to the hospital in exchange for perpetual care. Lozzi also told of Tuesday night prayer sessions Toni Mannix conducted with him and others at an altar shrine to George Reeves she had built in her home. Lozzi stated, "During these prayer sessions she prayed loudly and trance-like to Reeves and God, and without confessing yet, asked them for forgiveness." Whether Lozzi's depiction of Mannix's confession is true or not, L.A. county forensic evidence strongly contends against the likelihood of an intruder in Reeves's home the night of his death. Anything is possible, of course, and the case continues to be debated.


Trivia

Height: 6'1"

In 1987, singer-songwriter Don McLean wrote, composed and performed a song dedicated to Reeves called "Superman's Ghost". The song's refrain goes: "I do not wanna be like old George Reeves, stuck in a Superman role. I've got a long way to go in my career, and someday my fame will make it clear that I had to be a Superman." At another point in the song, the lyrics are, "I flew to the coast where Superman's ghost lay shot on the bedroom floor. He said, 'Look out for TV, it crucified me -- but it can't crucify me no more.'"

Out of all the actors who portrayed Superman as an adult (as opposed to Superboy and other variations), Reeves was the oldest to put on the tights for the first time at 37 years, 322 days. Christopher Reeve was the youngest at 26 years, 15 days. (Those respective ages are based on their respective films' opening dates.)

Jay Leno once noted that he stood proudly upright when bullets were shot at his chest, but ducked when the criminal then threw the empty gun at him. ("You could put an eye out with that thing!")

In 1997 rock band Powerman 5000 released a song entitled "Even Superman Shot Himself" on their 1997 debut Mega!! Kung Fu Radio.

Filk-nerdrock band Ookla the Mok wrote and performed a song called "View Master," in which they refer to Reeves' death with the lyrics, "I guess George Reeves wasn't bulletproof after all."

In 2006, VCI Entertainment released a special "George Reeves Double Feature" DVD, which featured two of Reeves's old films, "Thunder in the Pines" and "The Jungle Goddess." The DVD included special documentary extras contributed by George Reeves experts as well as the song "Oh, George" by Richard Potter.


Urban Legends


George Reeves believed he was Superman and leaped to his death.

Untrue. Story is the result of children's misinterpretation of 1959 news stories and continuous repetition over the years.

George Reeves was related to Steve "Hercules" Reeves, and/or Christopher "Superman" Reeve.

Untrue. It is simply a coincidence of names. As noted above, "George Reeves" was the actor's professional name dating from Gone with the Wind in 1939, not his legal name.

Reeves was cut out of From Here to Eternity because audiences recognized him as Superman.

Untrue. The film, and the film-makers, belie this. The character Reeves played had a more prominent role in the novel. (See above entry.)

Reeves, in a public appearance in the Superman costume, once was confronted with a child with a loaded gun. Reeves was afraid that some day, there may be a crazy kid with a gun who would try to test Superman.

Apparently untrue. No researcher has ever found factual verification of this confrontation.

Reeves was reduced to appearing in wrestling matches when his career collapsed after "Superman."

Untrue. This is a misinterpretation of Reeves' live shows with Noel Neill, Natividad Vacio and Gene LeBell. It conjures a middle-aged Reeves in costume climbing into the TV wrestling ring with Gorgeous George or Andre the Giant. In reality, in the live shows (which Reeves performed in a tour of county fairs), half of the appearance was the Superman sketch, the other half, a musical medley of songs.

George Reeves was scheduled to do an exhibition bout with boxing champ Archie Moore on June 17th, the day after Reeves died.

True enough. Reeves did have an amateur boxing background at Pasadena Junior College where he had a 3-9 won-loss record [Pasadena Junior College newspaper sports pages, 1931-1935])and was described as "not much of a fighter" by sportswriter Mannie Pineda (Long Beach Independent, 24 March 1958, p. 11), but the misconception of a money-making "exhibition bout" dates from a newspaper quote following Reeves' death. Several contemporary newspaper articles quote Reeves's manager, Arthur Weissman, about the state of the actor's career and mention an exhibition bout with Moore being scheduled for June 17 at Moore's San Diego training camp (e.g., Los Angeles Mirror-News, 17 June 1959). However, a thorough scanning of the sports pages of every Los Angeles and San Diego newspaper for the three months surrounding Reeves's death reveals no such thing, despite the fact that Moore's every move was being covered by the press in anticipation of his upcoming title bout with Yvon Durelle on August 12. Instead, in all likelihood, the "exhibition bout" was almost certainly nothing more than a photo opportunity set up by Reeves' manager through Reeves's houseguest, Robert Condon, who was ghost-writing Moore's biography at that time. Indeed, the Los Angeles Mirror-News article says only that Reeves had been planning to spar with Moore. Such sparring may have provided hoped-for publicity, but no evidence suggests it as a reason for a substantial upturn in Reeves's circumstances. Coincidentally, the family of Reeves's friend Natividad Vacio has stated that Reeves was also planning to attend the high school graduation of Vacio's son in Burbank (130 miles away) that same day, though this is likely a misremembrance, as in any case Reeves and Lemmon were to travel to Tijuana that day for their wedding. A stop-off in Archie Moore's San Diego training camp would have been on the way. A Burbank high school graduation would not.

Reeves had been acting in Alfred Hitchcock's film Psycho the week before he died. He was replaced by Martin Balsam as the detective Milton Arbogast.

Untrue. The script for Psycho had not even been written when Reeves died. Writer Joseph Stefano turned the script into Hitchcock in October, 1959, and the film began shooting on November 30th. Reeves had been dead since mid-June.
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dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 06:04 am
Marianne, Oh, Marianne, Oh won't you marry me?
We can have a bamboo hut and brandy in the tea,
Leave your fat old Nanna home,
She never will say yes.
If mamma don't know now,
She can guess, my, my, yes.

All night, all day, Marianne,
Down by the seaside sifting sand.
Even little children love Marianne,
Down by the seaside sifting sand.

When she walks along the shore,
People pause to greet,
While birds fly around her,
Little fish come to her feet.
In her heart is love, but I'm the only mortal man,
Who's allowed to kiss my Marianne,
Don't rush me.

All night, all day, Marianne,
Down by the seaside sifting sand.
Even little children love Marianne,
Down by the seaside sifting sand.

When we marry, we will have
A time you never saw,
I will be so happy,
I will kiss my mother-in-law.
Children by the dozen, in and out the bamboo hut,
One for every palm tree, and cok-y-nut, Hurry up now.

All night, all day, Marianne,
Down by the seaside sifting sand.
Even little children love Marianne,
Down by the seaside sifting sand.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 06:10 am
Robert Duvall
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Born January 05, 1931
San Diego, California, U.S.A.

Academy Awards

Best Actor, Tender Mercies (1983)

Robert Selden Duvall (born January 5, 1931) is an Academy Award-winning American film actor and director.


Biography

Early life

Duvall was born in San Diego, California. His father, William Howard Duvall, was a retired U.S. Navy admiral with French Huguenot roots; his mother was an amateur actress and a descendant of American Civil War General Robert E. Lee. His father was a Methodist and his mother was a Christian Scientist; he was raised in the Christian Science religion, which he claims to follow today despite many years living a decidedly un-Christian Scientist lifestyle (as he states in a 2006 article in Vanity Fair).

Duvall grew up in a military family, living for a time in Annapolis, Maryland near the United States Naval Academy. He was expelled from Severn School in Annapolis. He served in the United States Army (service number 52 346 646) from 19 August 1953 to 20 August 1954, achieving the rank of Private First Class and receiving the National Defense Service Medal.

Duvall studied acting at The Neighborhood Playhouse School of Theatre in New York under Sanford Meisner. While struggling as an actor, he worked at a Manhattan post office as a clerk but quit after six months.


Film career

His screen debut was as Boo Radley in the critically acclaimed To Kill a Mockingbird (1962). Duvall later played the notorious malefactor Ned Pepper in True Grit (1969), and Major Frank Burns in the film version of M*A*S*H 1970, but his breakout role was a decade later as Tom Hagen in The Godfather (1972) and The Godfather Part II (1974). He received an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor in A Civil Action and for his role as Lt. Colonel Kilgore in Apocalypse Now (1979). His line "I love the smell of napalm in the morning" from Apocalypse Now is now regarded as iconic in cinema history. the full text is as follows:

You smell that? Do you smell that? Napalm, son. Nothing else in the world smells like that. I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for twelve hours. When it was all over I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' chink body. The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like... victory.

He directed the critically acclaimed The Apostle, about a preacher on the run from the law, and Assassination Tango (2002), a thriller about one of his favorite hobbies, tango. He was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 2005. He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on September 18, 2003.

Duvall portrayed General Robert E. Lee in Gods and Generals in 2003 and is actually a relative of the historical figure.

As Duvall has stated in several publications such as "CBS Sunday Morning", his favorite character to play was Gus McCrae, in "Lonesome Dove". A strong and whitty [sassy] character that he has mirrored in "Open Range" and "Broken Trail".


Academy Awards

Wins:

1983 - Best Actor in Tender Mercies
Nominations:

1972 - Best Supporting Actor in The Godfather

Duvall starred in two of Francis Ford Coppola's acclaimed works: The Godfather series and Apocalypse Now. Here is a screen capture from Apocalypse Now when he recites his most famous line, "I love the smell of napalm in the morning," rated the most popular line in cinema by a poll conducted by the BBC.1979 - Best Supporting Actor in Apocalypse Now
1980 - Best Actor in The Great Santini
1997 - Best Actor in The Apostle
1998 - Best Supporting Actor in A Civil Action

Personal life

Duvall is close friends with Dustin Hoffman and Gene Hackman, both of whom he has known since their struggling actor days.

Duvall has been married four times:

Barbara Benjamin (1964 - 1975)
Gail Youngs (1982 - 1986)
Sharon Brophy (1991 - 1996)
Luciana Pedraza (2005 - present)

He met Pedraza on a street in Buenos Aires. They were both born on January 5, but Duvall is 40 years older. They have been together since 1997.

Duvall speaks fluent Spanish and maintains a home in Fauquier County, Virginia. He has the same birthday as Godfather co-star Diane Keaton. His favorite city is Buenos Aires, Argentina. He is an avid Tango dancer and soccer fan.

Duvall is a staunch Republican and was personally invited to George W. Bush's inauguration in 2001. He attended the event. He is currently actively involved in a legal battle against a local power company's plans to put high-voltage power lines through his local area.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 06:18 am
Diane Keaton
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Birth name Diane Hall
Born 5 January 1946
Los Angeles, California, USA
Academy Awards

Best Actress, 1977
Annie Hall

Diane Keaton (born January 5, 1946), is an American Oscar-winning film actress, director and producer. Keaton began her career on stage, and made her screen debut in 1970. Her first major film role was as Kay Adams in The Godfather (1972), but the films that shaped her early career were those with director and co-star Woody Allen, beginning with Play It Again, Sam (1972). Her next two films for Allen, Sleeper (1973) and Love and Death (1975), established her as a comic actress. Her fourth, Annie Hall (1977), won her the Academy Award for Best Actress. Keaton has claimed that she is "tailor-made for comedy".[1]

Keaton took on different kinds of roles to avoid becoming typecast as her Annie Hall persona. She became an accomplished dramatic actress, starting in Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977) and received Academy Award nominations for Reds (1981) and Marvin's Room (1996). Some of her popular later films include Father of the Bride (1991), The First Wives Club (1996), and Something's Gotta Give (2003). Keaton's films have earned a cumulative gross of over USD 1.1 billion in North America.[2] In addition to acting, she is also a photographer, real estate developer, and occasional singer.




Early life and education

Born Diane Hall in Los Angeles, California, Keaton is the oldest of four children. Her father Jack Hall (1921-1990) was a civil engineer, and her mother Dorothy Keaton (b. 1921) was a homemaker and amateur photographer.[3] Her father came from an Irish American Catholic background, and her mother came from a Methodist family. Keaton was raised a Methodist by her mother. Her first ambition to become an actor came after seeing her mother win the "Mrs. Los Angeles" pageant for homemakers. Keaton claimed that the theatricality of the event inspired her to become a stage actor.[4] She has also credited Katharine Hepburn, whom she admires for playing strong and independent women, as one of her inspirations.[5]

Keaton is a 1964 graduate of Santa Ana High School in Santa Ana, California. During her time there she participated in singing and acting clubs at school, and starred as Blanche DuBois in a school production of A Streetcar Named Desire. After graduation she attended Santa Ana College, and later Orange Coast College as an acting student, but dropped out after a year to pursue an entertainment career in Manhattan.[6] Upon joining the Actors' Equity Association she adopted the surname of Keaton, her mother's maiden name, as there was already a registered Diane Hall.[7] For a brief time, she also moonlighted nightclubs with a singing act.[8] She would later revisit her nightclub act in Annie Hall (1977), and in a cameo in Radio Days (1987).

Keaton began studying acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York City. She initially studied acting under the Meisner technique, an ensemble acting technique made popular in the 1920s by Sanford Meisner, a New York acting director. She has described her acting technique as, "[being] only as good as the person you're acting with ... As opposed to going it on my own and forging my path to create a wonderful performance without the help of anyone. I always need the help of everyone!"[8] According to her Reds co-star Warren Beatty, "She approaches a script sort of like a play in that she has the entire script memorized before you start doing the movie, which I don't know any other actors doing that."[9]

In 1968, Keaton became an understudy on the original Broadway production of Hair.[10] She gained some notoriety for her refusal to disrobe in the portions of the musical when the entire cast performed nude, even though nudity in the production was optional for actors. (Those who performed nude received a $50 bonus.[11][4]) After acting in Hair for nine months, she auditioned for a part in Woody Allen's production of Play It Again, Sam. After nearly being passed over for being too tall (at 5 ft 8 in./1.73 m she is two inches/5 cm taller than Allen), she won the part.[3]


Career

1970s

After being nominated for a Tony Award for Play It Again, Sam, Keaton made her film debut in 1970's Lovers and Other Strangers. She followed with guest roles on the television series Love, American Style and Night Gallery. Between films, Keaton appeared in a series of deodorant commercials.

Keaton's breakthrough role came two years later. In 1971 she was cast as Kay Adams, the girlfriend of Michael Corleone (played by Al Pacino) in Francis Ford Coppola's 1972 blockbuster The Godfather. Coppola noted that he first noticed Keaton in Lovers and Other Strangers, and cast her because of her reputation for eccentricity that he wanted her to bring to the role.[12] (Keaton claims that at the time she was commonly referred to as "the kooky actress" of the film industry.[4]) Her performance in the film was loosely based on her real life experience of making the film, both of which she has described as being "the woman in a world of men".[4] The Godfather was an unparalleled critical and financial success, and won the Best Picture Oscar of 1972.

Two years later she reprised her role in The Godfather, Part II. She was initially reluctant to reprise her role, stating that, "At first, I was skeptical about playing Kay again in the Godfather sequel. But when I read the script, the character seemed much more substantial than in the first movie."[6] In Part II her character had changed dramatically, becoming more embittered about her husband's activities. Even though Keaton received widespread exposure from the films, her character's importance was minimal. Time wrote that she was "invisible in The Godfather and pallid in The Godfather, Part II."[13]


Keaton's other notable films of the 1970s included many collaborations with Woody Allen. Although by the time they made films together their romantic involvement had ended, she played many eccentric characters in several of his comic and dramatic films including Sleeper, Love and Death, Interiors, Manhattan, and a film version of Play It Again, Sam. Allen has gone on to credit Keaton as his muse during his early film career.[14]

In 1977, Keaton starred with Allen in the romantic comedy Annie Hall, in which she played one of her most famous roles. Annie Hall was written and directed by Allen, her paramour at the time, and the film was believed to be autobiographical of his relationship with Keaton. Allen based the character of Annie Hall loosely on Keaton ("Annie" is a nickname of hers, and "Hall" is her original surname). Many of Keaton's mannerisms and her self-deprecating sense of humor were added into the role by Allen. (Director Nancy Meyers has claimed "Diane's the most self-deprecating person alive".[15]) Keaton has also said that Allen wrote the character as an "idealized version" of herself.[16] The two starred as a frequently on-again, off-again couple living in New York City. Her acting was later summed up by CNN as "awkward, self-deprecating, speaking in endearing little whirlwinds of semi-logic",[17] and by Allen as a "nervous breakdown in slow motion."[18] The film was both a major financial and critical success, and won the Academy Award for Best Picture. Keaton's performance also won the Academy Award for Best Actress. In 2006, Premiere magazine ranked Keaton in Annie Hall as 60th on their list of the "100 Greatest Performances of All Time":

" It's hard to play ditzy. ... The genius of Annie is that despite her loopy backhand, awful driving, and nervous tics, she's also a complicated, intelligent woman. Keaton brilliantly displays this dichotomy of her character, especially when she yammers away on a first date with Alvy (Woody Allen) while the subtitle reads, 'He probably thinks I'm a yoyo.' Yo-yo ? Hardly.[19] "

Keaton's eccentric fashion from Annie Hall made her an unlikely fashion icon of the late 1970s. Keaton is known to favor men's vintage clothing, and usually appears in public wearing gloves and conservative attire. (A 2005 profile in the San Francisco Chronicle described her as "easy to find. Look for the only woman in sight dressed in a turtleneck. On a 90-degree afternoon in Pasadena."[20]) Her Annie Hall wardrobe in the film consisted mainly of vintage men's clothing, including neckties, vests, baggy pants, and fedora hats. Most of the clothing seen in the film came from Keaton herself, who was already known for her tomboyish clothing style years before Annie Hall, though Ruth Morley and Ralph Lauren reportedly worked on the movie's costume.[6] [21] Soon after the film's release, men's clothing and pantsuits became popular attire for women.[22] Keaton would later reprise her Annie Hall appearance when she attended the 2003 Academy Awards presentation in a men's tuxedo and a bowler hat. Keaton also became a frequent target of fashion critic Mr. Blackwell, having made his annual "Worst Dressed List" on five occasions.

Her photo by Douglas Kirkland appeared on the cover of the September 26, 1977, issue Time magazine with the story dubbing her "the funniest woman now working in films."[13] Later that year, she departed from her usual lighthearted comic roles when she accepted a role in the drama Looking for Mr. Goodbar, based on the novel by Judith Rossner. In the film she played a Catholic schoolteacher for deaf children who lives a double life, spending nights frequenting singles bars and engaging in promiscuous sex. Keaton became interested in the role after seeing it as a "psychological case history."[23] The same issue of Time commended her role choice and criticized the restricted roles available for female actors in American films:

" A male actor can fly a plane, fight a war, shoot a badman, pull off a sting, impersonate a big cheese in business or politics. Men are presumed to be interesting. A female can play a wife, play a whore, get pregnant, lose her baby, and, um, let's see ... Women are presumed to be dull. ... Now a determined trend spotter can point to a handful of new films whose makers think that women can bear the dramatic weight of a production alone, or virtually so. Then there is Diane Keaton in Looking for Mr. Goodbar. As Theresa Dunn, Keaton dominates this raunchy, risky, violent dramatization of Judith Rossner's 1975 novel about a schoolteacher who cruises singles bars.[13] "

In addition to acting, Keaton has stated that " had a lifelong ambition to be a singer."[24] She had a brief career as a recording artist in the late 1970s. Her first record was an original cast recording of Hair, in 1971. In 1977 she began recording tracks for a solo album, but the finished record never materialized.[3]


1980s

After Manhattan in 1979, Keaton and Woody Allen ended their long working relationship, and the film would be their last major collaboration until 1993. In 1978 Keaton became romantically involved with Warren Beatty, and two years later he cast her to play opposite of him in Reds. In the film she played Louise Bryant, a journalist and suppressed housewife in 1917, who flees from her husband to work with radical journalist John Reed (Beatty), and later enters Russia to locate him as he chronicles the Russian Civil War. The New York Times wrote that Keaton was, "nothing less than splendid as Louise Bryant - beautiful, selfish, funny and driven. It's the best work she has done to date."[25] Keaton received her second Academy Award nomination for the film.

Beatty cast Keaton after seeing her in Annie Hall, as he wanted to bring her natural nervousness and insecure attitude to the role. The production of Reds was delayed several times since its conception in 1977, and Keaton almost left the project when she believed it would never be produced. Filming finally began two years later. In a 2006 Vanity Fair story, Keaton described her role as "the everyman of that piece, as someone who wanted to be extraordinary but was probably more ordinary ... I knew what it felt like to be extremely insecure." Assistant director Simon Relph later stated that Louise Bryant was one of her most difficult roles, and that "[she] almost got broken."[26]

In 1984, The Little Drummer Girl, Keaton's unsuccessful first excursion into the thriller and action genre. The Little Drummer Girl was both a financial and critical failure, with critics claiming that Keaton was miscast for the genre, such as one review from The New Republic claiming that "the title role, the pivotal role, is played by Diane Keaton, and around her the picture collapses in tatters. She is so feeble, so inappropriate."[27] Two years later she starred in Crimes of the Heart, a moderately successful comedy with Jessica Lange and Sissy Spacek. She starred in her first commercial vehicle with 1987's Baby Boom, her first of four collaborations with writer-producer Nancy Meyers. In Baby Boom Keaton starred as a Manhattan career woman who is suddenly forced to care for a newborn baby. That same year she made a cameo in Allen's film Radio Days as a nightclub singer. 1988's The Good Mother was a misstep for Keaton. The film was a financial disappointment (According to Keaton, the film was "a Big Failure. Like, BIG failure"[28]), and some critics panned her performance, such was one review from The Washington Post: "her acting degenerates into hype -- as if she's trying to sell an idea she can't fully believe in."[29]

In 1987, Keaton directed and edited her first feature film, a documentary named Heaven about the possibility of an afterlife. Heaven met with mixed critical reaction, with The New York Times likening it to "a conceit imposed on its subjects."[30] She went on to direct music videos for artists such as Belinda Carlisle, two television films starring Patricia Arquette, and episodes of China Beach and Twin Peaks. Outside of film and television, Keaton is also a published photographer. One of Keaton's earliest ambitions is photography, she told Vanity Fair in 1987: "I have amassed a huge library of images - kissing scenes from movies, pictures I like. Visual things are really key for me."[31] She began her career as a photographer when Rolling Stone magazine requested a spread from Keaton.[32] Reservations, her first photography book, was published in 1980. Reservations consisted of images of hotel lobbies. She has published several more collections of her own photographs, and has also served as an editor for collections of vintage photographs. Among the works she has edited include a collections of photographs by paparazzi Ron Galella and a collection of clown artwork.


1990s

By the 1990s, Keaton had established herself as one of the most popular and versatile actresses in Hollywood. Now middle-aged, she shifted to more mature roles, frequently playing matriarchs of middle-class families. Of her role choices and avoidance of becoming typecast, she said: "Most often a particular role does you some good and Bang! You have loads of offers, all of them for similar roles ... I have tried to break away from the usual roles and have tried my hand at several things."[33]

She began the decade with The Lemon Sisters, a poorly received comedy/drama that she starred in and produced, which was shelved for a year after its completion. In 1991, Keaton starred with Steve Martin in the 1991 family comedy Father of the Bride. She was almost not cast in the film, as the commercial failure of The Good Mother had strained her relationship with Walt Disney Pictures, the studio of both films.[28] Father of the Bride was Keaton's first major hit after four years of commercial disappointments.

Keaton reprised her role four years later in the sequel, as a woman who becomes pregnant in middle age at the same time as her daughter. A review of the film for the San Francisco Examiner was one of many in which Keaton once again received comparison to Katharine Hepburn: "No longer relying on that stuttering uncertainty that seeped into all her characterizations of the 1970s, she has somehow become Katharine Hepburn with a deep maternal instinct, that is, she is a fine and intelligent actress who doesn't need to be tough and edgy in order to prove her feminism."[34]

Keaton reprised her role of Kay Adams in 1990's The Godfather, Part III. Set 21 years after the events of The Godfather, Part II, Keaton's part had evolved into the estranged ex-wife of Michael Corleone. Criticism of the film and Keaton again centered on her character's unimportance in the film. The Washington Post wrote: "Even though she is authoritative in the role, Keaton suffers tremendously from having no real function except to nag Michael for his past sins."[35] In 1993 Keaton starred in Manhattan Murder Mystery, her first film with Woody Allen since 1987. Her part was intended for Mia Farrow, but Farrow dropped out of the project after her notorious separation from Allen.

Keaton's most successful film of the decade was the 1996 comedy The First Wives Club. She starred with Goldie Hawn and Bette Midler as a trio of "first wives": middle-aged women who had been divorced by their husbands in favor of younger women. Keaton claimed that making the film "saved [her] life."[36] The film was a major success grossing US$105 million at the North American box office,[37] and even developed a cult following among middle-aged women.[38] Reviews of the film were generally positive for Keaton and her co-stars, and she was even referred to by The San Francisco Chronicle as "probably [one of the] the best comic film actresses alive."[39] She also directed Unstrung Heroes that year, her first theatrically released narrative film.

Also in 1996, Keaton starred with Meryl Streep in Marvin's Room, as a woman with leukemia. Roger Ebert stated that "Streep and Keaton, in their different styles, find ways to make Lee and Bessie into much more than the expression of their problems."[40] Keaton earned her third Academy Award nomination for the film. Although critically acclaimed, Keaton said that the biggest challenge of the role was understanding the mentality of a person with terminal illness.[4]


2000s

Keaton's first film of 2000 was Hanging Up with Meg Ryan and Lisa Kudrow. Keaton also directed the film, despite claiming in a 1996 interview that she would never direct herself in a film, saying "[as a director] you automatically have different goals. I can't think about directing when I'm acting."[28] The film was a drama about three sisters coping with the senility and eventual death of their elderly father. Hanging Up rated poorly with critics, and grossed a modest US$36 million at the North American box office.[41]

In 2001 Keaton co-starred with Warren Beatty once again in Town & Country, a critical and financial fiasco. Budgeted at an estimated US$90 million, the film opened to little notice and grossed only $7 million in its North American theatrical run.[42] Peter Travers of Rolling Stone claimed that Town & Country was, "less deserving of a review than it is an obituary ... The corpse took with it the reputations of its starry cast, including Warren Beatty [and] Diane Keaton".[43]

In 2001 and 2002 Keaton starred in four low-budget television films. She played a fanatical nun in the religious drama Sister Mary Explains It All, an impoverished mother in the drama On Thin Ice, and a bookkeeper in the mob comedy Plan B. In Crossed Over she played Beverly Lowry, a woman who forms an unusual friendship with the first and only woman executed while on death row in Texas, Karla Faye Tucker.

Keaton's first major hit since 1996 came in 2003's Something's Gotta Give, directed by Nancy Meyers and co-starring Jack Nicholson. Nicholson and Keaton, aged 66 and 57 respectively, were seen as bold casting choices for leads in a romantic comedy. Twentieth Century Fox, the film's original studio, reportedly declined to produce the film, fearing that the lead characters were too old to be bankable. Keaton commented about the situation in Ladies' Home Journal: "Let's face it, people my age and Jack's age are much deeper, much more soulful, because they've seen a lot of life. They have a great deal of passion and hope- why shouldn't they fall in love? Why shouldn't movies show that?"[44] Keaton played a middle-aged playwright who falls in love with her daughter's much-older boyfriend. The film was a major success at the box office, grossing US$125 million in North America.[45] Roger Ebert wrote that "[Nicholson and Keaton] bring so much experience, knowledge and humor to their characters that the film works in ways the screenplay might not have even hoped for."[46] The following year, Keaton received her fourth Academy Award nomination for her role in the film.

Most recently, Keaton starred in the moderately successful 2005 comedy The Family Stone with Sarah Jessica Parker.

Keaton has also served as a producer on films and television series. She produced the FOX series Pasadena, which was cancelled after airing only four episodes in 2001 but later completed its run on cable in 2005. In 2003 she produced the Gus Van Sant drama Elephant, about a school shooting. On why she produced the film, she said: "It really makes me think about my responsibilities as an adult to try and understand what's going on with young people."[47]

Keaton has also established herself as a real estate developer. She has resold several mansions in Southern California after renovating and redesigning them. One of her clients is Madonna, who purchased a US$6.5 million Beverly Hills mansion from Keaton in 2003.[48]

She will receive the Film Society of Lincoln Center's Gala Tribute in 2007.


Personal life

Relationships and family

While Keaton has never been married, she has had some high-profile relationships nonetheless. Keaton's most famous romance was with director Woody Allen for most of the 1970s. Keaton and Allen first met during Keaton's audition for the Broadway production of Play It Again, Sam, but they did not know each other personally until having dinner after a late night rehearsal. Allen claims that Keaton's sense of humor attracted him to her.[49] They briefly lived together during the Broadway run of Play It Again, Sam, but their relationship became less formal by the time the film version was produced in 1972.[50] They went on to produce eight films together between 1971 to 1993. After Keaton's working relationship with Woody Allen diminished in 1979, she began dating her Reds co-star Warren Beatty.[10] Keaton's involvement with Beatty also made her a regular subject of tabloid magazines and media at the time, a role to which she was unaccustomed. (Vanity Fair described her in 1985 as "the most reclusive star since Garbo".[7]) Beatty and Keaton separated shortly after completing Reds. Their separation was believed to have been caused by the strain of making the film, a troubled production with numerous financial and scheduling problems.[26] Keaton still maintains contact with both Allen and Beatty, but describes Allen as one of her closest friends.[16]

In July 2001, Keaton publicly announced that she had given up pursuing romance, and stated, "I don't think that because I'm not married it's made my life any less. That old maid myth is garbage."[51] Keaton has two children, a daughter, Dexter (adopted in 1996), and a son, Duke (adopted 2001). Keaton decided to become a mother at the age of 50 after the death of her father, when she began to realize her own mortality.[36] She later said of having children, "Motherhood has completely changed me. It's just about like the most completely humbling experience that I've ever had."[52]


Religious Affiliation

Keaton stated that she produced her 1987 documentary Heaven because, "I was always pretty religious as a kid ... I was primarily interested in religion because I wanted to go to heaven" but also stated she considered herself an agnostic.[31]

Although raised a Methodist, in an October 2002 television interview with Oxygen Keaton stated that she currently considers herself an atheist.

Woody Allen once said of her, "She believes in God, but she also believes that the radio works because there are tiny people inside it."[53]


Other activities

Keaton is an advocate against plastic surgery. She told More magazine in 2004, "I'm stuck in this idea that I need to be authentic ... My face needs to look the way I feel."[5] Keaton is also active in campaigns with the Los Angeles Conservancy to save and restore historic buildings, particularly in the Los Angeles area.[8] Among the buildings she has been active in restoring include a former home of Frank Lloyd Wright.[20] Keaton had also been active in the failed campaign to save the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles (a hotel featured in Reservations), the location of Robert Kennedy's assassination in 1968.

Since May 2005 she has been a contributing blogger at The Huffington Post.

Starting in the summer of 2006, Keaton will be the new face of L'Oreal.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 06:21 am
Pamela Sue Martin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Pamela Sue Martin (born January 5, 1953 in Westport, Connecticut), is an American actress, best known for playing Nancy Drew on The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries TV series and Fallon Carrington on the night time soap opera Dynasty.

Martin began modeling at 17, and appeared in the original film version of The Poseidon Adventure (opposite Gene Hackman) at the age of 19. During the run of Nancy Drew she posed for the July 1978 issue of Playboy magazine.

Twice divorced and the mother of one son, Martin has written about her struggle with interstitial cystitis. She has long been involved in environmental causes, and she owns a theatre company in Idaho.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 06:27 am
Two elderly women were out driving in a large car-
both could barely see over the dashboard. As they were cruising along,
they came to an intersection. The stoplight was red, but they just
went on through. The woman in the passenger seat thought to herself "I
must be losing it. I could have sworn we just went through a red light."
After a few more minutes, they came to another intersection and the
light was red again.
Again, they went right through. The woman in the passenger seat was
almost sure that the light had been red but was really concerned that
she was losing it. She was getting nervous. At the next intersection, sure enough, the light was red and they went on through. So, she turned
to the other woman and said, "Mildred, did you know that we just ran
through three red lights in a row? You could have killed us both!"
Mildred turned to her and said, "Oh! Am I driving?"
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 07:02 am
Heh, heh! Little old ladies with blue hair and red lights. Loved it hawkman, and your bio's were really great today. The info cleared up a lot of urban legends. As usual, we will await our Raggedy to comment further.

Hey, dys. Joe (who sometimes misspells names)Nation had the right song but the wrong name.

edgar, "when you're happy feeling blue" is something we all love to go through occasionally, right?
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 07:45 am
Good Morning WA2K. A few rain drops falling, but still like Spring in PA. Very Happy

Today's gallery: Jean-Pierre; George; Robert; Diane and Pamela

http://www.mymovies.it/filmclub/attori/2011.jpghttp://home.att.net/~cp-carolyn/superman_george_reeves_220x357.jpghttp://www.vh1.com/shared/media/images/movies/people/d/duvall_robert/150x223.jpg
http://www.thehairstyler.com/images/celebrity/Celebrity_826.jpghttp://encyclopedia.quickseek.com/images/Pamelasuemartin.jpg
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 08:36 am
Well, there's our Raggedy with delightful photo's. Thanks, PA of the rain drops.

We're viewing Jean-Pierre (memories of Maria and Jon Hall), poor George the original Superman, Robert (Boo Radley) Duval, Diane(Looking for Mr. Goodbar) Keaton. Hmmm. That might have been Richard Gere's first role, but not certain.

In another forum in our vast audience, someone was discussing being married to a younger man. It made me recall John Travolta and Diana Hyland. Both were involved in a relationship, although she was eighteen years older than he, and the sad part, folks, is that she died in his arms from breast cancer.

Incidentally, I think that I saw somewhere that Grease is being remade.

For the life of me I cannot recall Pamela Sue Martin. I see that she starred in The Poseidon Adventure, but I simply cannot recall her role.

Here's one from John Travolta:

No use pretending that things can still be right
There's really nothing more to say
I'll get along without your kiss goodnight
Just close the door and walk away

Never gonna fall in love again
I don't wanna start with someone new
'Cause I couldn't bear to see it end
Just like me and you
No, I never wanna feel the pain
Of remembering how it used to be
Never gonna fall in love again
Just like you and me

At first we thought that love was here to stay
The summer made it seem so right
But like the sun we watched it fade away
From morning into lonely night
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 02:04 pm
Marianne, Oh, Marianne, Oh won't you marry me?
We can have a bamboo hut and brandy in the tea,
Leave your fat old Nanna home,
She never will say yes.
If mamma don't know now,
She can guess, my, my, yes.

All night, all day, Marianne,
Down by the seaside sifting sand.
Even little children love Marianne,
Down by the seaside sifting sand.

When she walks along the shore,
People pause to greet,
While birds fly around her,
Little fish come to her feet.
In her heart is love, but I'm the only mortal man,
Who's allowed to kiss my Marianne,
Don't rush me.

All night, all day, Marianne,
Down by the seaside sifting sand.
Even little children love Marianne,
Down by the seaside sifting sand.

When we marry, we will have
A time you never saw,
I will be so happy,
I will kiss my mother-in-law.
Children by the dozen, in and out the bamboo hut,
One for every palm tree, and cok-y-nut, Hurry up now.

All night, all day, Marianne,
Down by the seaside sifting sand.
Even little children love Marianne,
Down by the seaside sifting sand.
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 02:22 pm
All the leaves are brown (all the leaves are brown)
and the sky is grey (and the sky is grey)
I went for a walk (I went for a walk)
on a winter's day (on a winter's day)
I'd be safe and warm (I'd be safe and warm)
if I was in L.A. (If I was in LA)
California dreaming (California Dreaming) on such a winter's day.

Stopped into a church I passed along the way.
Well, I got down on my knees (got down on my knees)
and I pretend to pray (I pretend to pray)
You know the preacher likes it cold (preacher likes the cold),
He knows I'm gonna stay (Knows I'm gonna stay)
California dreaming (California Dreaming) on such a winter's day.

All the leaves are brown (all the leaves are brown)
and the sky is grey (and the sky is grey)
I went for a walk (I went for a walk)
on a winter's day (on a winter's day)
If I didn't tell her (If I didn't tell her)
I could leave today (I could leave today)
California dreaming (California dreaming)
on such a winter's day.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 02:24 pm
Right, dys. Love it and your song.

Thinking of weird songs today, folks. Anyone know this one?

Bile Them Cabbage Down



Went up on the mountain
Just to give my horn a blow
Thought I heard my true love say
Yonder comes my beau

Bile them Cabbage down
Turn them hoecakes round
The only song that I can sing
Is bile them cabbage down

Took my gal to the blacksmith shop
To have her mouth made small
She turned around a time or two
And swallowd shop and all

Possum in a Simmon tree
Raccoon on the ground
Raccoon says you son-of-a-gun
Shake some Simmon's down

Someone stole my old 'coon dog
Wish they'd bring him back
He chased the big hogs through the fence
And the little ones through the crack


Met a possum in the road
Blind as he could be
Jumped the fence and whipped my dog
And bristled up at me


Once I had an old gray mule
His name was Simon Slick
He'd roll his eyes and back his ears
And how that mule would kick


How that mule would kick
He kicked with his dying breath
He shoved his hind feet down his throat
And kicked himself to death

Incidentally, a hoecake is just a cornmeal pancake that was fried on a hot hoe.
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 02:27 pm
Yogi Bear is smarter than the average bear,
Yogi Bear is always in the ranger's hair.
At a picnic table you will find him there
Stuffing down more goodies than the average bear.

He will sleep till noon but before it's dark,
He'll have every picnic basket that's in Jellystone Park.

Yogi has it better than a millionaire
That's becasue he's smarter than the average bear.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 02:44 pm
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 04:43 pm
But, when:

I gave a letter to the postman,
he put it his sack.
Bright and early next morning,
he brought my letter back.

She wrote upon it:
Return to sender, address unknown.
No such number, no such zone.
We had a quarrel, a lover's spat
I write I'm sorry
But my letter keeps coming back.

So then I dropped it in the mailbox
And sent it special D.
Bright and early next morning
it came right back to me.

She wrote upon it:
Return to sender, address unknown.
No such person, no such so.

This time I'm gonna take it myself
and put it right in her hand.
And if it comes back the very next day
then I'll understand - the writing on it

Return to sender, address unknown.
No such number, no such zone.

(Return to Sender
performed by Elvis Presley
written by Otis Blackfield and Winfield Scott)
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 05:20 pm
Well, Raggedy, that was perfect.

Frank answers Elvis:

I'm Going to Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter Lyrics

I'm gonna sit right down and write myself a letter
And make believe it came from you

I'm gonna write words oh so sweet
They're gonna knock me off my feet
A lotta kisses on the bottom
I'll be glad I got 'em

I'm gonna smile and say: "I hope you're feeling better"
And close with love the way you do
I'm gonna sit right down and write myself a letter
And make believe it came, though I know it's not the same
And I'll make believe that it came from you.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 05:53 pm
It's a Little More Like Heaven
Hank Locklin

I have sailed the peaceful water of the ocean deep and blue
Felt the rapture of the dawning thrilled to sunset's golden hue
I have soared above the mountain peeks the valleys great and wide
But it's a little more like heaven by your side
It's a little more like heaven where you are
I have sought for happiness both near and far
But my search for love was through the day that I met you
Cause it's a little more like heaven where you are

I have watched the crystal raindrops fall to earth to cool the day
Watched the rainbow at twilight when the clouds have flown away
I've adored the clinging roses round my mountain home so dear
But it's a little more like heaven when you're near
It's a little more like heaven...

I've been tempted for a moment by aluring magic charms
Of a fickle flame and beauty while waltzin' in her arms
I cherrished mem'ries of the past of friends so kind and true
But it's a little more like heaven here with you
It's a little more like heaven...
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 06:17 pm
edgar, those lyrics are breath-taking. Thanks, Texas.

There are lots of "Hanks" in the field of country music.

Hank Williams
Hank Snow
Hank Thompson.

You wouldn't read my letter if I wrote you
You asked me not to call you on the phone
But there's something I'm wanting to tell you
So I wrote it in the words of this song

CHORUS:
I didn't know God made honky tonk angels
I might have known you'd never make a wife
You gave up the only one that ever loved you
And went back to the wild side of life

The glamor of the gay night life has lured you
To the places where the wine and liquor flows
Where you wait to be anybody's baby
And forget the truest love you'll ever know
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 06:24 pm
From Kitty Wells

As I sit here tonight, the jukebox playin'
The tune about the wild side of life
As I listen to the words you are saying
It brings memories when I was a trusting wife
Chorus:

It wasn't God who made honky tonk angels
As you wrote in the words of your song
Too many times married men think they're still single
That has caused many a good girl to go wrong

It's a shame that all the blame is on us women
It's not true that only you men feel the same
From the start most every heart that's ever broken
Was because there always was a man to blame

Chorus:

It wasn't God who made honky tonk angels
Like you said in the words of your song
Too many times married men think they're still single
That has caused many a good girl to go wrong
That has caused many a good girl to go wrong
0 Replies
 
hamburger
 
  1  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 06:24 pm
0 Replies
 
 

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