The late career of Joseph L. Mankiewicz—who is getting a sidebar retrospective, The Essential Iconoclast, at the New York Film Festival—is fascinating. While many of his contemporaries floundered as the rules of filmmaking changed, formally and in every other aspect, he found ways, for a while at least, to carry on telling the kind of stories he liked, with the kind of people he liked, in the way he liked. Sleuth (1972) could probably have been made earlier—the amorality and venality of the characters might well have passed the censor, since vice can be said to be punished. The filmmaking is a little less sure-footed than we expect from Mankiewicz, though: he should have been the perfect director for a two-hander full of arch talk in elegant surroundings, but his attempts to keep the visuals lively sometimes seem forced.
There Was a Crooked Man (1970), is more problematic, illustrating...
There Was a Crooked Man (1970), is more problematic, illustrating...
- 10/2/2014
- by David Cairns
- MUBI
Chad Everett, the star of the long-running 1960s-'70s TV drama "Medical Center," has died.
Everett, 75, died Tuesday (July 24) at his Los Angeles home, the AP reports. He had been suffering from lung cancer for the past 18 months, daughter Katherine Thorp says.
Everett had been a working actor for a number of years when he landed the role of Dr. Joe Gannon on "Medical Center," which ran on CBS from 1969-76. The show was a big hit, landing in the Top 20 of the Nielsen ratings for several seasons, and earned Everett a pair of Golden Globe nominations.
Everett is the second TV star of the 1970s who passed away Tuesday. Sherman Hemsley of "The Jeffersons" also died, at 74, of natural causes.
Later in his career, Everett had a recurring part on "Melrose Place" as Thomas Sterling, starred in the mid-'90s ABC series "McKenna," made several appearances on "Murder, She...
Everett, 75, died Tuesday (July 24) at his Los Angeles home, the AP reports. He had been suffering from lung cancer for the past 18 months, daughter Katherine Thorp says.
Everett had been a working actor for a number of years when he landed the role of Dr. Joe Gannon on "Medical Center," which ran on CBS from 1969-76. The show was a big hit, landing in the Top 20 of the Nielsen ratings for several seasons, and earned Everett a pair of Golden Globe nominations.
Everett is the second TV star of the 1970s who passed away Tuesday. Sherman Hemsley of "The Jeffersons" also died, at 74, of natural causes.
Later in his career, Everett had a recurring part on "Melrose Place" as Thomas Sterling, starred in the mid-'90s ABC series "McKenna," made several appearances on "Murder, She...
- 7/25/2012
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Pop2it
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