Archive for July 2, 2009

Karl Malden, RIP

 

Karl Malden, RIP…

And, here, another of my favoured actors, gone… although I wish him well in the next stage, if there is one, as he seemed to have had a long, fulfiling life on this earth.  97?  I hope he enjoyed himself.

I remember him in DEAD RINGER with Bette Davis.  He made a huge impression on me in that movie… I felt so utterly bad at how unfairly the man was treated.  I identified with his character and I liked him, as an actor.  Later, he would become a staple on t.v. with THE STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO… My sister absolutely loved Michael Douglas.  I couldn’t stand him.  I really liked the Malden character, or, maybe by that time, I liked the character simply because it was played by Malden and I had decided that I liked him, having meshed, in my young mind, him with the Dead Ringer character… and having convinced myself that noone could play it out that way without having the real sensitivity in ‘real life’… Yah, I know, it’s called acting, but I was young and naive… as opposed to my current old and naive, but that is quite another story.

Now I am curious to see the movie again… As I have not seen it in, maybe 40 years, but, obviously, it had affected me enough that I can still remember it.

Whatever the case, to Karl Malden, thank you… and may you rest in peace.

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/03/movies/03appraisal.html?ref=movies

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/03/movies/03appraisal.html?ref=movies

 

 

An Appraisal

A Character Actor of Intensified Normalness

Published: July 2, 2009
It’s a face that you can’t help noticing. Not handsome in the usual movie-star way, by any means, but — befitting a man who defined what it meant to be a character actor — full of character. The jutting chin and oft-broken nose curve toward each other as though affixed to a Punch-and-Judy puppet, but Karl Malden’s face was not made for comedy. Like his voice, pitched between a honk and a growl, it was an instrument full of gravity and dignity, capable of showing strong measures of menace, passion and hurt.

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Warner Brothers, via Photofest

Karl Malden with Vivien Leigh in the 1951 film “A Streetcar Named Desire.” More Photos »

Everett Collection

Karl Malden, left, and his partner, played by Richard Hatch, gathered information in “The Streets of San Francisco.” More Photos >

Associated Press

Karl Malden in 1950. More Photos >

Like most people who came of age after Mr. Malden’s big-screen heyday, I first saw that face on television, in a series of terrifying dramas about vacations gone awry that doubled as advertisements for American Express traveler’s checks. In the wake of a mishap involving American tourists menaced by brazen thieves, surly waiters, incompetent gendarmes or other nasty foreigners, Mr. Malden would stride into the frame in a trim suit and a sharp fedora, a figure at once reassuring and slightly threatening, an embodiment of probity, seriousness and practical no-nonsense Americanism. If you had to leave home — maybe not the best idea, all things considered — you’d better have a brusque, fatherly guy like this to back you up and bail you out.

This patriarchal capitalist pitchman persona was a variation on Mike Stone, the detective Mr. Malden played in the 1970s on “The Streets of San Francisco.” That show’s clean, mean sensibility holds up well against the arty forensics of the current “CSI”-dominated network crime-drama landscape. For most of the program’s run, Mr. Malden’s foil and partner was Michael Douglas, and the generational and stylistic contrast between them — counterculture versus old school, slick against gruff, pretty-boy next to plug-ugly — is no less satisfying for being a little too easy.

But Mr. Malden, who died Wednesday at 97, specialized in being uneasy, playing men who are variously worried, angry, disappointed and defeated. Like many other actors who distinguish themselves in supporting roles and whose charisma consists of a kind of intensified ordinariness, he has often been referred to as an everyman. That doesn’t seem quite right, though. In his best movie roles, mainly in films directed by Elia Kazan, Mr. Malden is specifically the other man, the guy defined partly by his lack of certain attributes abundantly present in the protagonist. The other man is never ruthless, or dangerous, or dashing, or cool. His regret may be that he could never have been a contender, but he makes up for it with a stoical sincerity that is all the more affecting for being so easy to discount.

Twice, in “A Streetcar Named Desire” and “On the Waterfront,” the magnetic protagonist was Marlon Brando, and in embodying Brando’s antithesis Mr. Malden achieved an unusual kind of heroism. In “Streetcar” he was Mitch, fumbling suitor for the favors of Vivien Leigh’s Blanche DuBois, his awkward gentleness a quiet rebuke to Stanley Kowalski’s brutish self-confidence. And in “Waterfront” his Father Barry, full of righteous rage and social concern, serves as the angel on Terry Malloy’s shoulder, a figure of conviction and moral clarity in a world lousy with corruption and double-dealing.

Mr. Malden’s blunt features, combined with the subtlety of his craft, helped provide a crucial ballast of realism in Kazan’s feverish fables of American life. His finest, strangest and most heartbreaking performance came in “Baby Doll,” in which he plays Archie Lee Meighan, the dull-witted, sexually frustrated (to put it mildly) proprietor of a decaying cotton plantation who is driven around the bend by the caprices of his child bride (Carroll Baker) and the machinations of a wily business rival (Eli Wallach). The film, like “Streetcar” a collaboration between Kazan and Tennessee Williams, is a pungent hothouse, ripe with free-floating eroticism and Southern Gothic motifs. That Mr. Malden seems so manifestly out of place in this environment — baffled, earnest and sweaty, a can of tomatoes dropped into a flower garden — is exactly what makes him so perfect in the film, which depends on his anxious, uncomprehending discomfort.

Mr. Malden’s achievement as an actor was both substantial and modest. The paradox of great character actors is that they are at once adaptable and unmistakable, irreducibly individual yet able to be typecast. And Karl Malden, especially in the 1950s, was one of the best. No other guy could ever be the other guy the way he could.

Sign in to RecommendNext Article in Movies (1 of 64) » A version of this article appeared in print on July 3, 2009, on page C1 of the New York edition.
 
 

You know, and I can believe this;…and much more than the child-molestation stuff but, but, but… who really knows.

 

You know, and I can believe what is written in this article; …and much more than the child-molestation stuff but, but, but… who really knows.

And, as an aside, if what the ‘insider’ is saying is all true, then s/he was really no true friend to Michael Jackson to let him torture his body that way…

 

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,529265,00.html

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,529265,00.html

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,529265,00.html

(picture with the following caption, i.e., : “May 5: Michael Jackson gestures during a news conference at the O2 Arena in London.”)

 

 

Sad Picture of Michael Jackson Emerges as Shock of His Death Fades

Saturday, June 27, 2009

 Reuters

 

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As the initial shock of Michael Jackson’s sudden death recedes, a picture of the singer’s tortured lifestyle is emerging, one populated by prescription drugs, sycophants, plastic surgery, lavish spending, and an ever-failing quest to recapture the fame of his “Thriller” days of the early 1980s.

A source who spent time traveling with the singer on and off for decades, seeing Jackson regularly until shortly before his death, tells FOXNews.com that as long ago as the early 1990s, Jackson was traveling with a personal physician.

“There was a doctor with Michael at all times,” the source said in an exclusive interview. “He traveled with a doctor. Michael got injections of drugs daily.”

The insider traveled with Jackson for an entire year at one point, during which the singer “was doing massive amounts of skin grafting. It was very unhealthy and sad to witness it all.”

Jackson was going to extremes to stay on top of the pop music heap, and to fill a void in his life, said the insider. “Michael was worried about losing his popularity and his relevance. Even when he was at a personal high, he was terrified of losing his edge. He felt very alone. Michael had no close friends around him and he always harbored miserable feelings with his father. He was always sad that his family was not with him.”

Jackson tried to replace his missing family with hangers-on, said the source. “If there wasn’t a doctor with him, or a security team, then it was managers or a lawyer or a publicist. He was never alone. He surrounded himself with people who used him, and he was terribly paranoid about people using him, so he fired staff constantly. It was just nonstop people in and out of his life.”

The only time Jackson felt comfortable, and was allowed to be alone, was in the recording studio, said the eyewitness. “He loved making music or just singing old songs. Music allowed him temporary peace when he went into his studio. He would relax and open up more.”

The insider linked Jackson’s massive debt, estimated at $400 million at the time of his death, to his discomfort with himself and others. “Michael was always trying to find himself. He never really knew who he was. He burned through money like I have never witnessed before. He could spend a fortune in an hour, and a mega fortune in a day.”

The one person Jackson trusted and felt comfortable with, said the source, was Motown founder Berry Gordy, who called Jackson “my son” and “a showman from his toes to the top of his head” after learning of the singer’s death.

“He truly loved Berry Gordy. He never trusted anyone with his personal and professional life like Berry. They met when Michael was just a baby, and Berry was his mentor and friend for life,” said the insider. “You could always tell when Michael felt good around someone, because he so rarely did, and Berry just made him feel safe.”

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