Screen legend dead at 83

I was saddened to learn that early this morning actor and screen legend, Paul Newman, died in his farmhouse near Westport Conn.. He was 83.

The actor, who’d had a long battle with cancer, died surrounded by his family and close friends.

Newman’s long career on the stage, screen and television included nine Oscar nominations and a win for The Color of Money. He truly was one of his generations greatest leading men. Newman remained in demand as an actor from the 1950′s through the 2000′s. His final on screen role was as a conflicted mob boss in Road to Perdition.

In later years his interests turned to philanthropy and racing cars.

Here’s a brief bio of his life and acting career from TVguide.com

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.





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Luciano Pavarotti passed away

I think I’m still a little shocked by the sudden death of Luciano Pavarotti.

Pavarotti was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer last year, and at 5 a.m. local time on Thursday September 6th he passed away in his Modena, Italy home. His manager, Terri Robson had this to say -

“The Maestro fought a long, tough battle against the pancreatic cancer which eventually took his life. In fitting with the approach that characterized his life and work, he remained positive until finally succumbing to the last stages of his illness,” the statement said.

Pavarotti was arguably the most famous opera singer in the world for the past 35 years.

Nicoletta Mantovani, Luciano’s second wife, survives him, as does his three daughters by his first wife Adua. Pavarotti also had a daughter with Mantovani in 2003 who survives him as well.

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Paris Interviewed by Larry King

paris_hilton5.jpg Paris Hilton had her Interview on Larry King Live last night. During the interview she stated “I’ve been a little immature in the past and made some wrong choices. But they made me who I am today,” the hotel heiress, who walked out of jail Tuesday morning, said in her first TV interview on CNN’s Larry King Live Wednesday.

“I felt like this is a new beginning for me,” said Hilton. “There’s just so much more to me than what people think.”

Hilton says she has a new appreciation for the things that she once took for granted. She now plans to use her fame in a good way. Paris stated during the interview that jail was a “a very traumatic experience, but I do feel God makes everything happen for a reason.”

Perhaps one good thing might have come from her incarceration. She said that time in jail gave her time to figure out who she really is, and that she now has a new outlook on life.

To get through her ordeal “I went with the motto, ‘Don’t serve time, let the time serve you.’ ”

Apparently while she was in jail her fans tried to get into see her. She had complete strangers claim to be relatives in order to get in and see her. Of course none made it into the jail.

When Larry King asked Hilton why she was doing the interview she replied “I just want to let people know what I went through … something I’ve really grown from.”

Of the constant attention paid to her, King wondered, “Why you?”

“I have no idea,” Hilton replied. “I’m just living my life.”

Asked to predict Hilton’s future, King replied, “I think we shall see what we shall see.”

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