• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

News Kirk Douglas Dies, age 103

auntiehill

The Blooness
Premium Member
We bid farewell to Spartacus. Kirk Douglas, one of Hollywood's greatest leading men, has died at age 103.

From Hollywood Reporter:
Kirk Douglas, the son of a ragman who channeled a deep, personal anger through a chiseled jaw and steely blue eyes to forge one of the most indelible and indefatigable careers in Hollywood history, died Wednesday. He was 103.

“It is with tremendous sadness that my brothers and I announce that Kirk Douglas left us today at the age of 103,” son Michael Douglas wrote on his Instagram account. “To the world, he was a legend, an actor from the Golden Age of movies who lived well into his golden years, a humanitarian whose commitment to justice and the causes he believed in set a standard for all of us to aspire to.”

Douglas walked away from a helicopter crash in 1991 and suffered a severe stroke in 1996 but, ever the battler, he refused to give in. With a passionate will to survive, he was the last man standing of all the great stars of another time.

Nominated three times for best actor by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences — for Champion (1949), The Bad and the Beautiful (1952) and Lust for Life (1956) — Douglas was the recipient of an honorary Oscar in 1996. Arguably the top male star of the post-World War II era, he acted in more than 80 movies before retiring from films in 2004.

The father of two-time Oscar-winning actor-director-producer Michael Douglas, the Amsterdam, New York native first achieved stardom as a ruthless and cynical boxer in Champion. In The Bad and the Beautiful, he played a hated, ambitious movie producer for director Vincente Minnelli, then was particularly memorable, again for Minnelli, as the tormented genius Vincent van Gogh in Lust for Life, for which he won the New York Film Critics Award for best actor.

Perhaps most importantly, Douglas rebelled against the McCarthy Era establishment by producing and starring as a slave in Spartacus (1960), written by Dalton Trumbo, making the actor a hero to those blacklisted in Hollywood. The film became Universal’s biggest moneymaker, an achievement that stood for a decade.

Douglas’ many honors include the highest award that can be given to a U.S. civilian, the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
 
One of my favorite actors of all time. I loved his performance in Paths of Glory. What a great life. RIP.

hero_Paths-of-Glory-image-2017-2.jpg
 
Too many great roles to credit but he'll always be Ulysses.

Tho' much is taken, much abides; and tho'
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
 
One of the all-time great stars, IMHO. I particularly enjoyed his collaborations with Burt Lancaster. It’s interesting that they meshed so well onscreen despite being so alike - tall, blond, athletic and, of course, owners of the best chins in Hollywood. Normally when you’ve two very similar actors, there’s not enough contrast for the partnership to work but it worked here, due to their obvious chemistry and charisma.
 
He was really a great actor, not just a personality who developed a popular on screen persona and never ventured outside of that box, like a John Wayne. Douglas took all kinds of roles. I read a story once about John Wayne allegedly asking Douglas why he wanted to play a “sniveling artist.” Douglas had agreed to play Picasso.

From what I’v read, he was instrumental in breaking the Hollywood blacklist that had outlived the McCarthy hearings, by giving work and screen credit to guys like Douglas Trumbo, who had been labeled a communist by McCarthy and banned from writing movies. Check out the excellent movie, Trumbo, which details the story.

I once had a somewhat close encounter with him once years ago. I took a visiting friend of mine to see downtown LA on a Sunday afternoon, and they were filming a movie Douglas was in. I actually saw him filming dialogue with, I think, Ann Baxter. It was kind of a thrill.

It would be interesting to see which of today’s acting stars would be as brave as Douglas was in the event of some political “crackdown” in the film making community. We might not be all that far from something like this.

May he Rest In Peace.
 
One of the all-time great stars, IMHO. I particularly enjoyed his collaborations with Burt Lancaster. It’s interesting that they meshed so well onscreen despite being so alike - tall, blond, athletic and, of course, owners of the best chins in Hollywood. Normally when you’ve two very similar actors, there’s not enough contrast for the partnership to work but it worked here, due to their obvious chemistry and charisma.
Agreed. Recently picked-up Seven Days in May on Blu-ray. Great movie and fantastic performances by Douglas and Lancaster in this film (well the whole cast across the board is great, as is the writing).
 
Are we sure he is dead?
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

Kirk Douglas was a great actor, in serious roles as well as in comedy. He had an amazing career and a long life. Rest in peace.
 
Interesting to see Natalie Wood trending yesterday.

AFAIK, the Wood story seems based on nothing more than an anonymous blog (some suggest that the blogger behind it was Robert Downey Jr., bizarrely enough) in 2012, 32 years after her death. I’m supportive of #metoo and #ibelieveher but this one never struck me as a credible allegation, particularly as there’s no first-hand evidence of Wood making it. It’s perhaps also notable, if not conclusive, that virtually no other scandal has ever attached to Douglas during his long life.
 
AFAIK, the Wood story seems based on nothing more than an anonymous blog (some suggest that the blogger behind it was Robert Downey Jr., bizarrely enough) in 2012, 32 years after her death. I’m supportive of #metoo and #ibelieveher but this one never struck me as a credible allegation, particularly as there’s no first-hand evidence of Wood making it. It’s perhaps also notable, if not conclusive, that virtually no other scandal has ever attached to Douglas during his long life.

Well there's his links to Jean Spangler but that is very tenuous.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top