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Showing posts with label Jor-El. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jor-El. Show all posts

Monday, May 14, 2018

Margot Kidder, Lois Lane of 'Superman' Films, Dead at 69



Margot Kidder, Lois Lane of 'Superman' Films, Dead at 69


Actress also starred in 'Sisters,' 'The Amityville Horror' and 'Black Christmas'
Margot Kidder, the actress who portrayed Lois Lane in four Superman films, died Sunday at her home in Livingston, Montana at the age of 69.

The Franzen-Davis Funeral Home & Crematory first announced Kidder's death, which was later confirmed to the Hollywood Reporter by the actress' representative. No cause of death was provided. 

During the Seventies and Eighties, Kidder's most prolific decades, the actress starred in films like Brian De Palma's SistersThe Amityville HorrorThe Great Waldo Pepperwith Robert Redford, the slasher classic Black Christmas and, between 1978 and 1987, four Superman films: SupermanSuperman IISuperman III and Superman IV: The Quest for Peace. However, the actress' popularity waned in the Nineties after she suffered a public breakdown; Kidder was later diagnosed with bipolar disease and became an activist for mental health. 

Kidder was born in 1948 in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories and lived in remote areas throughout her childhood. "We didn't have movies in this little mining town. When I was 12 my mom took me to New York and I saw Bye Bye Birdie, with people singing and dancing, and that was it," Kidder told The Guardian in 2005. "I knew I had to go far away. I was clueless, but I did OK."
Kidder first started acting in Canadian television and film productions before making her American feature-film debut with a role in 1969's Gaily, Gaily. The following year, Kidder moved to Los Angeles to pursue her acting career, leading to roles in the Gene Wilder-starring Quackser Fortune Has a Cousin in the Bronx and the TV Western series Nichols.

In 1973, Kidder broke out with her dual role of separated conjoined twins in director Brian de Palma's psychological thriller Sisters. After starring alongside Robert Redford in 1975's The Great Waldo Pepper, Kidder scored the role she's best remembered for: Playing the Daily Planet's star journalist and Clark Kent's love interest Lois Lane in the Christopher Reeve-starring film series about the DC Comics superhero. Kidder landed the Lois Lane role despite having little knowledge of the Man of Steel beforehand.

"I had a very fierce English teacher mother who felt that children should not read comic books. So I didn't know anything about it," Kidder told Superman Homepage in 2005. "I read one comic before my screen test and it was about the Daily Planet having a bowling tournament with those terrible women's libbers. And I thought of myself as a feminist so I read this and went 'What is this?' So I based my interpretation on the script."

Following two years of filming Superman, Kidder capped off the Seventies by playing Kathy Lutz in the 1979 hit horror film The Amityville Horror; Superman became the highest-grossing film of 1979, while The Amityville Horror finished in the Top Five at the year-end box office.

Over the next decade, in addition to three Superman sequels, Kidder starred in films like HeartachesMiss Right and the Richard Pryor vehicle Some Kind of Hero; Kidder and Pryor would also appear together in 1987's Superman IV: The Quest for Peace.
However, Kidder's career severely stalled in the Nineties: In 1990, she suffered a serious car crash that prevented her from acting for two years and forced her into bankruptcy. Six years later, Kidder suffered a manic episode that became a source of tabloid fodder. As the actress later explained, her meltdown – sparked by the loss of the computer containing her in-the-works memoir – involved her believing her first husband was going to murder her, so she fled her home, cut her hair and pulled her teeth out to avoid identification. Police ultimately found her on a porch near the studios where Superman was filmed. 

"I guess I came to terms with my demons," Kidder told The Guardian. "Horrifying as it was to crack up in the public eye, it made me look at myself and fix it. People were exploitative; that's human nature. I'll tell you, being pretty crazy while being chased by the National Enquirer is not good. The British tabloids were the worst. But you take the cards you're dealt, and I got better. I'm now ferociously healthy in body and mind." 

Kidder remained active in film and television until her death, including guest roles on Law & Order: SVUThe L Word and the Superman-inspired TV series Smallville in a non-Lois Lane role.
Kidder's last television role, a guest appearance on a 2014 episode of R.L. Stine's The Haunting Hour, earned the actress a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Performer in Children's Programming.

READ MORE...

Superman Star, Margot Kidder dies aged 69

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Monday, April 3, 2017

Happy Birthday to the late legendary Oscar winning actor Marlon Brando



Happy Birthday to the late legendary Oscar winning actor Marlon Brando

Marlon Brando Landed His 'Godfather' Role with Some Shoe Polish and Kleenex



Marlon Brando (April 3, 1924 - July 1, 2004)

The studio was against the casting idea at first, then  they saw the tape.

The role most fans associate Marlon Brando with in The Godfather almost didn't happen because he was seen as being so toxic by the studio at the time of casting. 
But, director Francis Ford Coppola was relentless in his pursuit for his Don Vito Corleone.

It was the legendary actor's screen test  — which Coppola had to beg Paramount for — which turned the tide. 
In an interview Coppola gave to critic Annette Insdorf years ago, he talked about how Brando morphed into his Oscar-winning character in a matter of moments with some random props and household items. 

"We went to his house on Mulholland Drive and it was early, he wasn't up," Coppola began. "There's a rumble and the door opens, and in walks this beautiful man with long blond hair, in a Japanese robe." 

Brando, who would have turned 93 on Monday, noticed Coppola had set out little props in the form of Italian meats, cheeses and cigars.
"And he came out and looked at all this and figured out what was going on, and he took his hair ... he did it up himself in the back, and he took shoe polish and he made it black and he put on a shirt," Coppola continued. 

Brando suggested the character should be hoarse and "look like a bulldog." 
"He took some Kleenex and he...," Coppola said, pretending to stuff tissue into his mouth. "And then he started acting but not saying anything." 
Brando even got a phone call during the test and he took it in character, Coppola said.  

Studio execs were so impressed with the footage, they agreed to cast Brando. 

Brando died in July 2004. He was 80.