4/23/2009

Paul Newman is gone....

The Snarkies are very sad today to hear the our beloved Paul Newman has died. He was one of our Snarkiest men to date. He of course was Aquarian and marched to his own beat to be sure. We loved his movies and watching him zoom around race tracks. Barbra got to meet him at a big INDY car race at Michigan Speedway and also at a friend's home (Team owner's wife). He was charming and very down to earth for a "Movie Star" he hated being classified as a "star".

Paul of course was gorgeous and a very loyal friend. He will be dreadfully missed and never replaced in our view.

Here is a great story from TV GUIDE:


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Paul Newman, the screen legend whose rebellious roles, steely delivery, and radiant blue eyes made him a star across seven decades, has died. He was 83.

Spokeswoman Marni Tomljanovic told The Associated Press that Newman died Friday of cancer. Details were not immediately available.

Newman's career on the stage, screen and television included nine Oscar nominations and a win for The Color of Money. After establishing himself as one of his generation's greatest leading men — he turned to other interests, including racing cars and philanthropy.

Newman was one of the few actors who remained in demand from the 1950s until the 2000s, when he filmed his final onscreen role, playing a conflicted mob boss in Road to Perdition.

His most famous line may have been in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, when Robert Redford's Sundance Kid tells Newman's Cassidy he won't jump hundreds of feet into a river to escape gunfighters — because he can't swim.

"What're you, crazy?" Cassidy says. "The fall'll prob'ly kill ya."

They jump anyway. So did Newman, into role after role. Many of his characters were rebels, but they were also regular guys, average Joes who took on impossible tasks with cynical jokes but no real complaints. He made the roles look easy, but they weren't.

“I had no natural gift to be anything, not an athlete, not an actor, not a writer, not a director, a painter of garden porches, not anything," he told The Daily News in 1991. "So I've worked really hard, because nothing ever came easily to me."

Newman was born in 1925 in Cleveland, Ohio, and grew up as the son of a successful sporting goods store owner in Shaker Heights. He acted in grade school and high school plays, then joined the Navy, serving in the Pacific in World War II. After his discharge he enrolled at Kenyon College, then spent a year at the Yale Drama School. He finally headed to New York, where he attended the famed New York Actors Studio.

He married his first wife, Jackie, in 1950. They had three children — Scott, Susan and Stephanie — before divorcing in 1958. In the same year Newman met and fell in love with his future wife, Joanne Woodward, when they filmed the The Long, Hot Summer. They married in Las Vegas, and went on to have three daughters, Elinor, Melissa and Claire.

The couple celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in January. He was often asked how a Hollywood marriage could persevere so successfully.

"I have steak at home," he once explained. "Why should I go out for hamburger?"

In the decade after his marriage he made some of the most important films of his career. Newman’s rebels meshed perfectly with the mood of the 1960s, when he made such box office and critical hits such as The Hustler, Hud, Cool Hand Luke, and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

In 1968 he directed his first feature, Rachel, Rachel. The film earned a Best Picture Oscar nomination and a Best Actress nomination for Woodward.

After his only son, Scott, died of an accidental overdose in 1978, Newman started the Scott Newman Center for drug abuse prevention. He later started The Hole in the Wall Gang Camps, an organization for terminally ill children that took its name from Butch Cassidy.

Perhaps the most recognizable effort by the Newman clan is their food company Newman's Own, which produces all-natural food, with proceeds going to charity.

An avid and passionate race car driver, he became co-owner of Newman-Haas racing in 1982.

He earned his Academy Award for his portrayal of The Hustler's Fast Eddie Felson, now middle-aged, in The Color of Money.

After a public appearance in which Newman looked weak and gaunt, family friend A.E. Hotchner confirmed in June that Newman had a form of cancer, but said the actor was “dealing with it nicely.” More recent reports have said the actor decided to end treatments so he could die peacefully at home. — Erin Fox and Tim Molloy

See clips of Paul Newman in our Online Video Guide.


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