Japan News and Discussion
Thursday 27th March, 06:30 AM JST
HARTFORD, Conn —
Actor Richard Widmark, who earned an Oscar nomination playing a psychopath in 1947’s film noir “Kiss of Death,” has died aged 93. Widmark’s wife, Susan Blanchard, says he died at his home in Connecticut on Monday.
He made his film debut in 1947 as a giggling killer in “Kiss of Death” and became a leading man in “Broken Lance,” “Two Rode Together” and 40 other films.
He also starred in the Samuel Fuller film noir “Pickup on South Street” and “Madigan,” a 1968 film with Widmark as a loner detective that became a short-lived TV series.
Widmark was blond and slightly built during his prime and brought an edgy nervousness to the outcasts and heavies he played in Hollywood’s film noir heyday—a list of roles that The New York Times once described as a “gallery of reprobates.”
Widmark’s most memorable role may have been his first. As Tommy Udo, he gleefully pushed a wheelchair-bound woman down a flight of stairs in “Kiss of Death” with a maniacal laugh that made a lasting impression on moviegoers.
Widmark would go on to prove he could play a wide range of characters in more than 60 movies, but the Udo role earned him his only Oscar nomination.
“One will remember that nasty little creep with the wild eyes and high-pitched laugh, neurotic to the core, which Richard Widmark has turned into one of his finest roles,” Raymond Borde and Etienne Chaumeton wrote in “A Panorama of American Film Noir 1941-1953.”
Widmark told an interviewer that the laugh was born of nervousness.
“When in doubt, I’d laugh,” he said. “And since this was my first picture and the mechanics of picture-making were new to me, I laughed a lot ... And then, too, part of the laugh came from the fact that I’ve always had a goofy laugh.”
Tommy Udo fan clubs began popping up and Hollywood took notice. He signed a 7-year contract with 20th Century Fox and was nominated for an Academy Award.
“The first time I met (John) Wayne, I had just made the film ‘Kiss of Death,” Widmark once said, “and Wayne was standing with a drink in his hand and said, ‘Well, here comes that laughing son of a bitch!”’
Widmark’s emergence came during what became Hollywood’s classic film noir era in the 1940s and ‘50s. The moody black-and-white films typically featured cynical detectives, femmes fatales, criminals and social misfits in seamy circumstances.
“Hoods are good parts because they’re always flashy and attract attention,” Widmark once said. “If you’ve got any ability, you can use that as a stepping stone.”
Widmark was born in Sunrise, Minnesota, on Dec 26, 1914, and grew up throughout the Midwest. He went to Lake Forest College near Chicago on an athletic-academic scholarship with the intention of becoming a lawyer.
But Widmark was drawn to drama and came no closer to a legal career than starring in the play “Counsellor-at-Law” during his sophomore year and as a U.S. prosecutor years later in the movie “Judgment at Nuremberg.”
After college, he found work in plays and radio in New York with his career flourishing during World War Two because a perforated ear drum kept him out of the military.
After breaking into Hollywood, he had dark roles in “Road House,” “The Street With No Name,” “Pickup on South Street” and “Night and the City.”
In the 1950s he branched out from the heavy roles with parts in military and adventure films like “The Halls of Montezuma,” “The Frogmen” and “Red Skies of Montana.” He also was a fan of Westerns and appeared in “Garden of Evil” with Gary Cooper, “Broken Lance” with Spencer Tracy, “The Alamo” with John Wayne, John Ford’s “Cheyenne Autumn” and “How the West Was Won.”
Other notable roles included a detective in “Madigan.” In “No Way Out,” he played a bitter racist but felt so bad about the lines his character spat at Sidney Poitier that he would apologize to Poitier between takes.
Widmark was married to writer Jean Hazelwood from 1942 until her death in 1997. Their daughter Anne was once married to baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Sandy Koufax.
Widmark’s second wife, Susan, whom he married in 1999, had once been married to his friend Henry Fonda.
Wire reports
3 Comments
smartacus at 10:18 AM JST - 27th March
Wow, I didn't know he was still alive.
adaydream at 10:38 AM JST - 27th March
I enjoyed his movies. Nice long life.
ancientone at 10:42 AM JST - 27th March
Yeah, we were just talking about all the old movie stars who are still alive. Richard Widmark was my favorite. There was something just calming about his presence, just like Johnny Carson. He will be missed.
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