Died Today (September 2nd): Bob Denver

bobdenver.jpgBob Denver (1935–2005)

Born: January 9, 1935 in New Rochelle, New York, USA
Died: September 2, 2005 (age 70) in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA

[on his character Gilligan] People thank me for giving them a break from life.

[on his late Gilligan’s Island (1964) co-star, Alan Hale Jr.] He was a big, lovable man who made everybody feel good. He had a great time with his life.

[on Gilligan’s Island (1964)] It’s silly, yes, but children laugh and adults can if they want to. It’s aimed at the vast everybody.

Died Today (September 1st): Jerry Reed

jerryreed.jpgJerry Reed (1937–2008)

Born: March 20, 1937 in Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Died: September 1, 2008 (age 71) in Nashville, Tennessee, USA

Married to:
Priscilla Mitchell (9 July 1959 – 2 September 2008) (his death) (2 children)

Talking about Gene Hackman in Bat*21 (1988): “He don’t act. He just shows up and he ‘be’s.”

I used to watch people like Richard Burton and Mel Gibson and think, ‘I could never do that.’ When people ask me what my motivation is, I have a simple answer: money. — JR, regarding his acting ability

THE WATERBOY
1998
dir. Frank Coraci
Stars:
Adam Sandler
Kathy Bates

 

Died Today (September 1st): Tommy Morrison (1969–2013)

rommymorrison.jpgTommy Morrison (1969–2013)

Born: January 2, 1969 in Gravette, Arkansas, USA
Died: September 1, 2013 (age 44) in Omaha, Nebraska, USA

(On boxing): “It was a life changing experience. Very interesting and something I look forward to doing again. Acting is a different challenge.”

[on how he sexually-contracted HIV]: “Wilt Chamberlain had nothing on me. Infidelity was one of my biggest battles in life. I couldn’t overcome it. It probably helped my first marriage crumble”.

Died Today (August 31st): Princess Diana (1961–1997)

princessdiana.jpgHappy Birthday Princess Diana (1961–1997)

Born: July 1, 1961 in Park House, Sandringham, Norfolk, England, UK

Died: August 31, 1997 (age 36) in Paris, France

Married to:
Prince Charles (29 July 1981 – 28 August 1996) (divorced) (2 children)

QUOTES:

[interview in “Panorama” magazine, 1995] There were three of us in this marriage, so it was a bit crowded.

Any sane person would have left long ago. But I cannot. I have my sons.

I’d like to be a queen in people’s hearts but I don’t see myself being queen of this country.

My role is about 80% slog and 20% fantastic.

If I’m going to comfort the suffering, I have to understand what they’ve been through.

[describing her relationship with the press] Wherever I go, it waits for me, and it tracks me down. Whatever I do, whatever I say, it will always look for controversy and contradiction. It will always criticize me.

My father always taught me to treat everybody as an equal. I have always done and I am sure that [Prince William and Prince Harry Windsor] are the same.

I was always told by my family that I was the thick one. That I was stupid and my brother was the clever one. And I was always so conscious of that. I used to go to the head mistress crying saying I wish I wasn’t so stupid.

Died Today (August 31st): John Ford (1894–1973)

johnford.jpgJohn Ford (1894–1973)

Born: February 1, 1894 in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, USA
Died: August 31, 1973 (age 79) in Palm Desert, California, USA

I didn’t show up at the ceremony to collect any of my first three Oscars. Once I went fishing, another time there was a war on, and on another occasion, I remember, I was suddenly taken drunk.

[on Native American Indians] We’ve treated them badly, it’s a blot on our shield; we’ve robbed, cheated, murdered and massacred them, but they kill one white man and God, out come the troops.

John Ford is the winningest director in Oscar history — four of them he received over the course of his career — but that’s not why he’s on this list, though it helps. It’s not for more or less discovering John Wayne either. Though that helps, too.

THE INFORMERThe Informer
1935
dir. John Ford
Cast
Victor McLaglen
Heather Angel
YOUNG MR LINCOLNYoung Mr. Lincoln
1939
dir. Ford
Starring
Henry Fonda
Alice Brady
HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEYHow Green Was My Valley
1941
dir. Ford
Starring
Walter Pidgeon
Maureen O’Hara
The Quiet ManThe Quiet Man
1952
dir. Ford
starring
John Wayne
Maureen O’Hara
The Long Gray LineThe Long Gray Line
1955
dir. Ford
Starring
Tyrone Power
Maureen O’Hara
THE SEARCHERSThe Searchers
1956
dir. Ford
Starring
John Wayne
Vera Miles
MOVIEStagecoach
1939
dir. John Ford
Starring
John Wayne
Claire Trevor
THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCEThe Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
1962
dir. Ford
starring
James Stewart
John Wayne
MOVIE POSTERTHE GRAPES OF WRATH
1940
dir. John Ford
Stars:
Henry Fonda
Jane Darwell

John Ford was one of the first and maybe the best at playing the singular individual against the vastness of nature, and in so doing laid the ground work for the modern epic. Other director’s are probably more known for that particular style of filmmaking–David Lean certainly explored further into what an epic could do–but there would have been no David Lean without John Ford.

Like Chaplin and Hitchock, Ford started out in the silent’s, transporting the ability to tell a story in purely visual terms into the age of sound (and eventually color and cinemascope) without losing his own personal voice. And like Hitchcok, Ford was a specialist. He made the western what is and was.

It’s hard to remember, today, just how big the Western was in its heyday. In the 1950s if you were going to make a new TV show, it was probably going to be a western. While superhero comics languished, western comics rode on. And ever year, any studio worth its salt was making sure it had a slate full of western’s.

And Ford was its master. “Stage Coach” “The Searchers” “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.” Even people who didn’t make western’s the way Ford did often made them in spite of the way he made them. If you made a Western, John Ford was your starting point.

But he was certainly capable of other things. His adaptation of “The Grapes of Wrath” is as good as any western he ever made. There are similarities of course, but that might be less because he turned everything into a western as it is that he found the innate humanity in all of his stories, and it is that which made all of his films so good.

Even decades after his preferred genre has fallen from the pedestal it once sat on, John Ford still remains.

WATCH TOP 10 JOHN FORD FILMS MOVIE SCENES

10. THE SEARCHERS – The best scene in the film. A lot going on without much happening!

9. FORT APACHE – Fort Apache is a 1948 western film directed by John Ford and starring John Wayne and Henry Fonda.

8. SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON – “She Wore a Yellow Ribbon” is a 1949 western film directed by John Ford and starring John Wayne.

7. RIO GRANDE – Rio Grande is a 1950 western film and the third installment of John Ford’s “cavalry trilogy”,

6. THE WINGS OF EAGLE – The Wings of Eagles (1957) – Closing Scenes.

5. STAGECOACH – 1939- Colorized version starring: John Wayne, Claire Trevor director: John Ford

4. THE INFORMER – After squandering the reward money he received from the Black and Tans (Provincial Police) for informing on his friend Frankie McPhillip, Gypo Nolan stands trial

3. YOUNG MR LINCOLN – First sequence in the 1939 John Ford film

2. THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCE– Together For The First Time – James Stewart – John Wayne – in the masterpiece of four-time Academy Award winner John Ford

1. THE SEARCHERS ENDING – Probably, the best ending in the history of cinema. Great Wayne, best Ford.

ALSO –

JOHN FORD INTERVIEW – Video on the famous John Ford. Director of the Grapes of Wrath and many more!

JOHN FORD TRIBUTE – Tribute to the best of John Ford’s Westerns.

Died Today (August 30th): Glenn Ford

glennfordHappy Birthday actor Glenn Ford

Born: Gwyllyn Samuel Newton Ford
May 1, 1916 in Sainte-Christine-d’Auvergne, Portneuf, Québec, Canada

Died: August 30, 2006 (age 90) in Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA

Married TO:

Jeanne Baus (5 March 1993 – 1994) (divorced)
Cynthia Ford (10 September 1977 – 13 September 1984) (divorced)
Kathryn Hays (27 March 1966 – 26 June 1969) (divorced)
Eleanor Powell (23 October 1943 – 23 November 1959) (divorced) (1 child)

Read reviews of the best of the actor:

movie posterTHE BIG HEAT
1953
dir. Fritz Lang
Cast:
Glenn Ford
Gloria Grahame
GILDAGilda
1946
dir. by Charles Vidor
starring
Hayworth
Glenn Ford
poster3:10 TO YUMA
1957
dir. Delmer Daves
Starring:
Glenn Ford
Van Heflin
SupermanSuperman
1978
dir. Donner
starring
Christopher Reeve
Margot Kidder

Died Today (August 30th): Jean Seberg (1938–1979)

jeanseberg.jpgJean Seberg (1938–1979)

Born: November 13, 1938 in Marshalltown, Iowa, USA
Died: August 30, 1979 (age 40) in Paris, France

“I know that the greatest of actresses has about 20 good years of acting in her and that she will go on living for 30 or 40 years as a human being. So, the conclusion I have come to is that I can’t make acting my whole life.”

Breathless
1960
dir. Jean-Luc Godard
Starring
Jean-Paul Belmondo
Seberg
AIRPORTAirport
1970
dir. George Seaton
Starring
Burt Lancaster
Dean Martin

 

Died Today (August 30th): Wes Craven

wescraven.jpgWes Craven (1939–2015)

Born: August 2, 1939 in Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Died: August 30, 2015 (age 76) in Los Angeles, California, USA

Married to: Iya Labunka (27 November 2004 – 30 August 2015) (his death)
Mimi Craven (25 July 1982 – 1987) (divorced)
Bonnie Broecker (1964 – 1969) (divorced) (2 children)

A Nightmare on Elm Street
1984
dir. Craven
starring
Amanda Wyss
Johnny Depp
MY SOUL TO TAKEMY SOUL TO TAKE
dir. Wes Craven
Stars:
Max Thieriot
Emily Meade
ScreamScream
1996
dir. Craven
starring
Neve Campbell
Courteney Cox
SCREAM 2 MOVIE POSTERScream 2
1997
dir. Craven
Starring
Neve Campbell
Courteney Cox
David Arquette
movie posterNEW NIGHTMARE
1994
dir. Wes Craven
Starring:
Heather Langenkamp
Robert Englund
Scream 3
2000
dir. Craven
starring
Neve Campbell
Courteney Cox
David Arquette
Red Eye
2005
dir. Craven
Starring
Cillian Murphy
Rachel McAdams
THE HILLS HAVE EYES IIThe Hills Have Eyes II
2007
dir. Martin Weisz
Starring
Michael McMillian
Jessica Stroup
Written by Craven
scream 4SCREAM 4
dir. Wes Craven
Stars:
Neve Campbell
Courteney Cox
MOVIE POSTERTHE SERPENT AND THE RAINBOW
1988
dir. by Wes Craven
Stars:
Bill Pullman
Cathy Tyson
MOVIE POSTERTHE PEOPLE UNDER THE STAIRS
1991
dir. by Wes Craven
Stars:
Brandon Quintin Adams
Everett McGill

Died Today (August 30th): Charles Bronson

charlesbronson.jpgCharles Bronson

Born: November 3, 1921 in Ehrenfeld, Pennsylvania, USA
Died: August 30, 2003 (age 81) in Los Angeles, California, USA

[1977 comment on Robert Aldrich] A very good director. Beyond that, he has one fault: he is inflexible. He’s horrified if you give him ideas; he only appreciates his own. He wants to use his own brain for everything. That’s his greatest fault. If he wasn’t so inflexible he would be very great. He refuses to give in. Well, it’s impossible for one man to know everything.

Once Upon a Time in the West
1968
dir. Sergio Leone
Starring
Henry Fonda

movie posterBRONSON
2008
dir. Nicolas Winding Refn
Starring:
Tom Hardy

 

RIP Actor Gene Wilder – Died today at 83.

genewilder

Died:

August 29, 2016 (age 83) in Stamford, Connecticut, USA

Born: Jerome Silberman
June 11, 1933 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA

Married to: Karen Boyer (8 September 1991 – present)
Gilda Radner (18 September 1984 – 20 May 1989) (her death)
Mary Joan Schutz (27 October 1967 – 24 November 1980) (divorced) (1 child)
Mary Mercier (22 July 1960 – 1965) (divorced)

movie posterEVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX, But were afraid to ask
1971
dir. Woody Allen
BLAZING SADDLESBlazing Saddles
1974
dir. Brooks
starring
Gene Wilder
Slim Pickens
poSterWILLY WONKA AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY
1971
dir. Mel Stuart
Starring:
Gene Wilder
Jack Albertsons
YOUNG FRANKENSTEINYoung Frankenstein
1974
dir. Brooks
starring
Gene Wilder
Teri Garr
Bonnie and ClydeBonnie and Clyde
1967
dir. Arthur Penn
Cast
Warren Beatty
Faye Dunaway