Kirk Douglas: Tributes paid to ‘unforgettable’ Hollywood ‘icon’
From BBC
Kirk Douglas has been remembered as an “unforgettable” actor and a film “icon” following his death at the age of 103.
Tributes also came from director Steven Spielberg, Star Wars actor Mark Hamill and Breaking Bad star Bryan Cranston.
Douglas, who played the title role in the 1960 classic Spartacus, enjoyed a career that spanned seven decades.
Spielberg said Douglas left behind a “breathtaking body of work”.
He told The Hollywood Reporter: “Kirk retained his movie star charisma right to the end of his wonderful life and I’m honoured to have been a small part of his last 45 years.”
Jamie Lee Curtis, whose father Tony was also in Spartacus, declared: “He LOVED you as the world loved you. Your Passion. Talent. Politics. Family. Art. Strength.”
Hamill described Douglas as “one of the biggest stars of all time”, as well as “a brilliant actor with an unforgettable, blazing charisma”.
He also referenced Douglas’s role in ending the 1950s Hollywood blacklist by defying the ban on working with film-makers with alleged communist sympathies.
Rob Reiner, who directed films including This Is Spinal Tap and When Harry Met Sally, described him as an “icon in the pantheon of Hollywood”.k
The Hollywood veteran’s death was announced on Wednesday by his son, fellow actor Michael Douglas.
“To the world he was a legend, an actor from the golden age of movies who lived well into his golden years,”
Kirk Douglas rose to prominence during Hollywood’s “golden age”, earning the first of three Oscar nomination for the 1949 film Champion.
As Spartacus, the leader of a Roman slave revolt in Stanley Kubrick’s 1960 historical epic, Douglas helped to provide one of Hollywood’s first catchphrases.
After a Roman general declared that a group of slaves would only avoid crucifixion if they identified Spartacus, all of the slaves stood up and declared “I’m Spartacus”.
The now immortal phrase has continued to be used in modern culture and as a meme, to show solidarity with someone, or to stop a person’s identity being revealed.
Breaking Bad star Bryan Cranston used the phrase to sign off after his glowing tribute to “a towering presence in film history”.
Douglas’s second Oscar nod came for his part in 1952’s The Bad And The Beautiful, in which he starred alongside Lana Turner.
He was able to move with the times and avoid the pitfalls of typecasting. In 1956 he attracted rave reviews and then a third Oscar nomination for his portrayal of the anguished Vincent van Gogh in Vicente Minnelli’s Lust For Life.
George Hamilton, who starred alongside Douglas in 1962’s Two Weeks in Another Town, said the star was “a consummate professional, wonderful guy and he knew every part of making films”.
He added: “He understood it all and he taught me humility when it comes to being an actor. It’s a very difficult thing to do right and he did it right all the time.”
Mitzi Gaynor starred alongside Douglas in the 1963 film For Love Or Money, and thanked him for sharing his “amazing talent”.
Douglas faced difficulties in his personal life. He narrowly survived a helicopter crash in 1991 that left two people dead. Five years later, he suffered a major stroke that affected his speech.
And in 2004, his son Eric died at the age of 46 of an accidental drug overdose.
In his later years, he turned his attention to charity. He donated millions of dollars to charitable causes and helped fund an Alzheimer’s unit at a retirement home in Los Angeles.
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