<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[BEAUTIFUL, ALSO, ARE THE SOULS OF MY BLACK SISTERS]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://kathmanduk2.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[Ann]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://kathmanduk2.wordpress.com/author/kathmanduk2/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[IN REMEMBRANCE: 8-17-2014]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p><strong>LAUREN BACALL; IN A BYGONE HOLLYWOOD, SHE PURRED EVERY WORD</strong></p>
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<p class="byline-dateline"><span class="byline">By <a title="More Articles by ENID NEMY" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/n/enid_nemy/index.html" rel="author"><span class="byline-author">ENID NEMY</span></a></span></p>
<p class="byline-dateline">AUG. 12, 2014</p>
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<h4 class="headline">Lauren Bacall Dies at 89</h4>
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<li class="sharetool email-sharetool login-modal-trigger"><a title="Internet Movie Database entry." href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000002/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1">Lauren Bacall</a>, the actress whose provocative glamour elevated her to stardom in Hollywood’s golden age and whose lasting mystique put her on a plateau in American culture that few stars reach, died on Tuesday in New York. She was 89.</li>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content">Her death was confirmed by her son Stephen Bogart. “Her life speaks for itself,” Mr. Bogart said. “She lived a wonderful life, a magical life.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">With an insinuating pose and a seductive, throaty voice — her simplest remark sounded like a jungle mating call, one critic said — Ms. Bacall shot to fame in 1944 with her first movie, Howard Hawks’s adaptation of the Ernest Hemingway novel “<a title="Review of the movie." href="http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9E05EEDE1E31E03BBC4A52DFB667838F659EDE">To Have and Have Not</a>,” playing opposite Humphrey Bogart, who became her lover on the set and later her husband.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">It was a smashing debut sealed with a handful of lines now engraved in Hollywood history.</p>
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<h2 class="module-heading">Related Coverage</h2>
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<div class="thumb"><img src="https://i1.wp.com/static01.nyt.com/images/2014/08/14/arts/14BACALLalt/14BACALLalt-thumbStandard.jpg" alt="Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in “To Have and Have Not.”" /></p>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">Critic’s Notebook: Lauren Bacall’s Debut in ‘To Have and Have Not’</span></h2>
<h2 class="story-heading">AUG. 13, 2014</h2>
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<div class="thumb"><img src="https://i2.wp.com/static01.nyt.com/images/2014/08/14/nyregion/laurennyc2/laurennyc2-thumbStandard.jpg" alt="Lauren Bacall in 1950 with her husband, Humphrey Bogart, at the Stork Club in New York. Ms. Bacall died Tuesday at age 89." /></p>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text"><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/14/nyregion/with-gruffness-and-glamour-a-true-new-yorker.html">With Gruffness and Glamour, Bacall Was a True New Yorker</a> </span>AUG. 13, 2014</h2>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">Remembering Bacall in The Times</span></h2>
<h2 class="story-heading">AUG. 13, 2014</h2>
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<p id="story-continues-2" class="story-body-text story-content">“You know you don’t have to act with me, Steve,” her character says to Bogart’s in the movie’s <a title="A YouTube video of the scene." href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9Ay727EYzw">most memorable scene</a>. “You don’t have to say anything, and you don’t have to do anything. Not a thing. Oh, maybe just whistle. You know how to whistle, don’t you, Steve? You just put your lips together and blow.”</p>
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<h4 class="headline">Bacall and Bogart, a Romance on Film</h4>
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<p class="summary">Lauren Bacall had a long career in film and theater, but she remains best known for the roles she played opposite Humphrey Bogart.</p>
<p><span class="credit video-credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Video Credit</span> By Adam Freelander on <span class="visually-hidden">Publish Date </span>August 13, 2014. </span> <span class="credit photo-credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Image Credit</span>Gabriel Bouys/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images </span></p>
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<p id="story-continues-3" class="story-body-text story-content">The film was the first of <a title="A filmography." href="http://www.nytimes.com/movies/person/3116/Lauren-Bacall/filmography">more than 40</a> for Ms. Bacall, among them “The Big Sleep” and “Key Largo” with Bogart, “How to Marry a Millionaire” with Marilyn Monroe and Betty Grable, “Designing Woman” with Gregory Peck, the all-star “Murder on the Orient Express” (1974) and, later in her career, Lars von Trier’s “Dogville” (2003) and “Manderlay” (2005) and Robert Altman’s “Prêt-à-Porter” (1994).</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">But few if any of her movies had the impact of her first — or of that one scene. Indeed, her film career was a story of ups, downs and long periods of inactivity. Though she received an honorary Academy Award in 2009 “in recognition of her central place in the Golden Age of motion pictures,” she was not nominated for an Oscar until 1997.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">The theater was kinder to her. She won Tonys for her starring roles in two musicals adapted from classic films: “<a title="A review of the musical." href="http://www.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/theater/80485924.pdf">Applause</a>” (1970), based on “All About Eve,” and “<a title="A review of the musical." href="http://www.nytimes.com/1981/03/30/theater/stage-lauren-bacall-in-woman-of-year.html">Woman of the Year</a>” (1981), based on the Spencer Tracy-Katharine Hepburn movie of the same name. Earlier she starred on Broadway in the comedies “Goodbye, Charlie” (1959) and “Cactus Flower” (1965).</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">She also won a National Book Award in 1980 for the first of her two autobiographies, “<a title="A profile on the publication of her second volume." href="http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=980CE2DB163DF937A15751C0A9639C8B63">Lauren Bacall: By Myself</a>.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Though often called a legend, she did not care for the word. “It’s a title and category I am less than fond of,” she wrote in 1994 in “Now,” her second autobiography. “Aren’t legends dead?”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content"><strong>Forever Tied to Bogart</strong></p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">She also expressed impatience, especially in her later years, with the public’s continuing fascination with her romance with Bogart, even though she frequently said that their 12-year marriage was the happiest period of her life.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“I think I’ve damn well earned the right to be judged on my own,” she said in <a href="http://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1970/03/22/83251610.html">a 1970 interview with The New York Times</a>. “It’s time I was allowed a life of my own, to be judged and thought of as a person, as <em>me</em>.”</p>
<p id="story-continues-4" class="story-body-text story-content">Years later, however, she seemed resigned to being forever tied to Bogart and expressed annoyance that her later marriage to another leading actor, Jason Robards Jr., was often overlooked.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“My obit is going to be full of Bogart, I’m sure,” she told Vanity Fair magazine in <a href="http://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/features/2011/03/lauren-bacall-201103">a profile of her in March 2011</a>, adding: “I’ll never know if that’s true. If that’s the way, that’s the way it is.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Ms. Bacall was an 18-year-old model in New York when her face on the cover of Harper’s Bazaar caught the eye of Slim Hawks, Howard Hawks’s wife. Brought to Hollywood and taken under the Hawkses’ wing, she won the role in “To Have and Have Not,” loosely based on the novel of the same name.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">She played Marie Browning, known as Slim, an American femme fatale who becomes romantically involved with Bogart’s jaded fishing-boat captain, Harry Morgan, known as Steve, in wartime Martinique. Her deep voice and the seductive way she looked at Bogart in the film attracted attention.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Their on-screen chemistry hadn’t come naturally, however. In one of the first scenes she filmed, she asked if anyone had a match. Bogart threw her a box of matches; she lit her cigarette and then threw the box back to him.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“My hand was shaking, my head was shaking, the cigarette was shaking, I was mortified,” she wrote in “By Myself.” “The harder I tried to stop, the more I shook. &#8230; I realized that one way to hold my trembling head still was to keep it down, chin low, almost to my chest, and eyes up at Bogart. It worked and turned out to be the beginning of The Look.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Ms. Bacall’s naturally low voice was further deepened in her early months in Hollywood. Hawks wanted her voice to remain low even during emotional scenes and suggested she find some quiet spot and read aloud. She drove to Mulholland Drive and began reading “The Robe,” making her voice lower and louder than usual.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“Who sat on mountaintops in cars reading books aloud to the canyons?” she later wrote. “I did.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">During her romance with Bogart, she asked him if it mattered to him that she was Jewish. His answer, she later wrote, was “Hell, no — what mattered to him was <em>me</em>, how I thought, how I felt, what kind of person I was, not my religion, he couldn’t care less — why did I even ask?”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content"><strong>An Impulsive Kiss</strong></p>
<p id="story-continues-5" class="story-body-text story-content">Ms. Bacall’s love affair with Bogart began with an impulsive kiss. While filming “To Have and Have Not,” he had stopped at her trailer to say good night when he suddenly leaned over, lifted her chin and kissed her. He was 25 years her senior and married at the time to Mayo Methot, his third wife, but to Ms. Bacall, “he was the man who meant everything in the world to me; I couldn’t believe my luck.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">As her fame grew in the ensuing months — she attracted wide publicity in February 1945 when she was photographed on top of a piano, legs draped over the side, with Vice President Harry S. Truman at the keyboard — so did the romance, particularly as she and Bogart filmed “The Big Sleep,” based on a Raymond Chandler whodunit.</p>
<p id="story-continues-6" class="story-body-text story-content">But her happiness alternated with despair. Bogart returned to his wife several times before he accepted that the marriage could not be saved. He and Ms. Bacall were married on May 21, 1945, at Malabar Farm in Lucas, Ohio, the home of Bogart’s close friend the writer Louis Bromfield. Bogart was 45; Ms. Bacall was 20.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Returning to work, she soon suffered a setback, when the critics savaged her performance in “Confidential Agent,” a 1945 thriller with Charles Boyer set during the Spanish Civil War. The director was Herman Shumlin, who, unlike Hawks and Bogart on her first two movies, offered her no guidance. “I didn’t know what the hell I was doing,” she recalled. “I was a novice.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“After ‘Confidential Agent,’ it took me years to prove that I was capable of doing anything at all worthwhile,” she wrote. “I would never reach the ‘To Have and Have Not’ heights again — on film, anyway — and it would take much clawing and scratching to pull myself even halfway back up that damn ladder.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“Dark Passage,” her third movie with Bogart, came after several years of concentrating on her marriage. Had she not married Bogart, she told The Times in 1996, her career would probably have flourished, but she did not regret the marriage.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“I would not have had a better life, but a better career,” she said. “Howard Hawks was like a Svengali; he was molding me the way he wanted. I was his creation, and I would have had a great career had he been in control of it. But the minute Bogie was around, Hawks knew he couldn’t control me, so he sold my contract to Warner Bros. And that was the end.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">She was eventually suspended 12 times by the studio for rejecting scripts.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content"><strong>‘And We Made a Noise’</strong></p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In 1947, as the House Un-American Activities Committee investigated Americans suspected of Communism, Ms. Bacall and Bogart were among 500 Hollywood personalities to sign a petition protesting what they called the committee’s attempt “to smear the motion picture industry.” Investigating individual political beliefs, the petition said, violated the basic principles of American democracy.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">The couple flew to Washington as part of a group known as the Committee for the First Amendment, which also included Danny Kaye, John Garfield, Gene Kelly, John Huston, Ira Gershwin and Jane Wyatt. “I am an outraged and angry citizen who feels that my basic civil liberties are being taken away from me,” Bogart said in a statement.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Three decades later, Ms. Bacall would express doubts about “whether the trip to Washington ultimately helped anyone.” But, she added: “It helped those of us at the time who wanted to fight for what we thought was right and against what we knew was wrong. And we made a noise — in Hollywood, a community which should be courageous but which is surprisingly timid and easily intimidated.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Nevertheless, bowing to studio pressure, Bogart later said publicly he believed the trip to Washington was “ill advised,” and Ms. Bacall went along with him.</p>
<p id="story-continues-7" class="story-body-text story-content">A year after that trip she had what she termed “one of my happiest movie experiences” starring with Bogart, Lionel Barrymore, Edward G. Robinson and Claire Trevor in John Huston’s thriller “Key Largo.” It was Bogart’s and Ms. Bacall’s last film together. “Young Man With a Horn” (1950), with Kirk Douglas and Doris Day, in which she played a student married to a jazz trumpeter, was less successful.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Ms. Bacall’s first son, Stephen H. Bogart (named after Bogart’s character in “To Have and Have Not”), was born in 1949. A daughter, Leslie Bogart (named after the actor Leslie Howard), was born in 1952. In a 1995 memoir, Stephen wrote, “My mother was a lapsed Jew, and my father was a lapsed Episcopalian,” adding that he and his sister, Leslie, were raised Episcopalian “because my mother felt that would make life easier for Leslie and me during those post-World War II years.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content"><strong>Rat Pack Den Mother</strong></p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Ms. Bacall, however, wrote that she felt “totally Jewish and always would” and that it was Bogart who thought the children should be christened in an Episcopal church because “with discrimination still rampant in the world, it would give them one less hurdle to jump in life’s Olympics.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">She was, she said, happy being a wife and mother. She was also “den mother” to the so-called Hollywood Rat Pack, whose members included Bogart, Frank Sinatra, David Niven, Judy Garland and others. (It would evolve into the better-known Rat Pack whose members included Sinatra, Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr.)</p>
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<p id="story-continues-8" class="story-body-text story-content">In 1952 she campaigned for Adlai E. Stevenson, the Democratic candidate for president, and persuaded Bogart, who had originally supported the Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower, to join her. The two accompanied Stevenson on motorcades and flew east to help in the final lap of his campaign in New York and Chicago.</p>
<p id="story-continues-9" class="story-body-text story-content">Her film career at this point appeared to be going nowhere, but she had no intention of allowing Lauren Bacall the actress to slide into oblivion. In 1953 her fortunes revived with what she called “the best part I’d had in years,” in “How to Marry a Millionaire,” playing alongside Marilyn Monroe and Betty Grable as New York models with sights set on finding rich husbands.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In the early 1950s the Bogarts dabbled in radio and the growing medium of television. They starred in the radio adventure series “Bold Venture” and, with Henry Fonda, in a live television version of “The Petrified Forest,” the 1936 film that starred Bogart, Bette Davis and Leslie Howard. In 1956 Ms. Bacall appeared in a television production of Noël Coward’s “Blithe Spirit,” in which Coward himself also starred. She would occasionally return to the small screen for the rest of her career, making guest appearances on shows like “The Rockford Files” and “Chicago Hope” and starring in TV movies.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Bogart was found to have cancer of the esophagus in 1956. Although an operation was successful — his esophagus and two lymph nodes were removed — after some months the cancer returned. He died in January 1957 at the age of 57.</p>
<p id="story-continues-10" class="story-body-text story-content"><strong>Romance With Sinatra</strong></p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Shortly after Bogart’s death, Ms. Bacall, by then 32, had a widely publicized but brief romance with Sinatra, who had been a close friend of the Bogarts. She moved to New York in 1958 and, three years later, married Mr. Robards, settling in a spacious apartment in the Dakota, on Central Park West, where she continued to live until her death. They had a son, the actor Sam Robards, and were divorced in 1969. She is survived by her sons, Stephen Bogart and Sam Robards; her daughter, Leslie Bogart; and six grandchildren.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Lauren Bacall was born Betty Joan Perske in the Bronx on Sept. 16, 1924, the daughter of William and Natalie Perske, Jewish immigrants from Poland and Romania. Her parents were divorced when she was 6 years old, and her mother moved to Manhattan and adopted the second half of her maiden name, Weinstein-Bacal.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“I didn’t really have any love in my growing-up life, except for my mother and grandmother,” Ms. Bacall said in the Vanity Fair interview. Her father, she said, “did not treat my mother well.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">From then until her move to Hollywood, Ms. Bacall was known as Betty Bacal; she added an “l” to her name because, she said, the single “l” caused “too much irregularity of pronunciation.” The name Lauren was given her by Howard Hawks before the release of her first film, but family and old friends called her Betty throughout her life, and to Bogart she was always Baby.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Although finances were a problem as she was growing up — “Nothing came easy, everything was worked for” — her mother’s family was close-knit, and through an uncle’s generosity she attended the Highland Manor school for girls in Tarrytown, N.Y., where she graduated from grade school at 11. She went on to Julia Richman High School in Manhattan and also studied acting at the New York School of the Theater and ballet with Mikhail Mordkin, who had on occasion been Pavlova’s partner.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">After graduation in 1940, Ms. Bacall became a full-time student at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts but left after the first year; her family could no longer subsidize her, and the academy at the time did not offer scholarships to women.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">So she turned to modeling, and in 1941, at 16, she landed jobs with David Crystal, a Seventh Avenue dress manufacturer, and Sam Friedlander, who made evening gowns. During lunch hours she would stand outside Sardi’s selling copies of Actor’s Cue, a casting tip sheet, hoping to catch the attention of producers. She also became an usher at Broadway theaters and a hostess at the newly opened Stage Door Canteen.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Her first theater role was a walk-on in a Broadway play called “Johnny 2 x 4.” It paid $15 a week and closed in eight weeks, but she looked back on the experience as “magical.” Another stab at modeling, with the Walter Thornton agency, proved disappointing, but her morale soared in July 1942, with a sentence by George Jean Nathan in Esquire: “The prettiest theater usher — the tall slender blonde in the St. James Theater right aisle, during the Gilbert &amp; Sullivan engagement — by general rapt agreement among the critics, but the bums are too dignified to admit it.”</p>
<p id="story-continues-11" class="story-body-text story-content"><strong>Watching ‘Casablanca’</strong></p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Later that year she was cast by the producer Max Gordon in “Franklin Street,” a comedy directed by George S. Kaufman, which closed out of town. It was her last time onstage for 17 years.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">It was about this time that she saw Bogart in “Casablanca.” She later recalled that she could not understand the reaction of a friend who was “mad” about him. “So much for my judgment at that time,” she said.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In 1942, she met Nicolas de Gunzburg, an editor at Harper’s Bazaar, who took her to meet Diana Vreeland, the fashion editor. After a thorough inspection, Vreeland asked her to return the next day to meet the photographer Louise Dahl-Wolfe. Test shots were taken, and a few days later she was called.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">A full-page color picture of her standing in front of a window with the words “American Red Cross Blood Donor Service” on it led to inquiries from David O. Selznick, Howard Hughes and Howard Hawks, among others. The Hawks offer was accepted, and Betty Bacall, 18 years old, left for the West Coast by train with her mother. She returned to New York less than two years later as Lauren Bacall, star.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In her 70s, Ms. Bacall began lending her distinctive voice to television commercials and cartoons, and her movie career again picked up steam. Between 1995 and 2012 she was featured in more than a dozen pictures, most notably “The Mirror Has Two Faces” (1996), in which she played Barbra Streisand’s monstrous, vain mother.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">The role brought her an Academy Award nomination as best supporting actress; the smart money was on her to win. But the Oscar went to Juliette Binoche for her part in “The English Patient,” to the astonishment of almost everyone, including Ms. Binoche.</p>
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<p id="story-continues-12" class="story-body-text story-content">Ms. Bacall — who received a consolation prize of sorts when she was named a Kennedy Center Honors winner a few months later — was perhaps prepared for the Oscar rebuff. Shortly before the Academy Awards ceremony, she told an interviewer that she hadn’t been happy for years. “Contented, yes; pleased and proud, yes. But happy, no.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Still, she said, she had been lucky: “I had one great marriage, I have three great children and four grandchildren. I am still alive. I still can function. I still can work.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">As she said in 1996: “You just learn to cope with whatever you have to cope with. I spent my childhood in New York, riding on subways and buses. And you know what you learn if you’re a New Yorker? The world doesn’t owe you a damn thing.”</p>
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<div class="story-addendum story-content theme-correction"><em><strong>Correction: August 15, 2014 </strong></em><br />
<em> An obituary on Wednesday about the actress Lauren Bacall misidentified the borough in New York in which she was born. It is the Bronx, not Brooklyn.</em></div>
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<p><em>Emma G. Fitzsimmons contributed reporting.</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/13/movies/lauren-bacall-sultry-movie-star-dies-at-89.html?_r=0"><strong>SOURCE</strong></a></p>
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<p><strong>ROBIN WILLIAMS, OSCAR-WINNING COMEDIAN, DIES IN SUSPECTED SUICIDE</strong></p>
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<p class="byline-dateline"><span class="byline">By <a title="More Articles by DAVE ITZKOFF" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/i/dave_itzkoff/index.html" rel="author"><span class="byline-author">DAVE ITZKOFF</span></a></span></p>
<p class="byline-dateline">AUG. 11, 2014</p>
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<p class="credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Credit</span>Jay Paul for The New York Times</p>
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<li class="sharetool email-sharetool login-modal-trigger"><a title="link to appraisal" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/12/movies/robin-williams-an-improvisational-genius-forever-present-in-the-moment.html">Robin Williams</a>, the comedian who evolved into the surprisingly nuanced, <a title="link to video" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6Egi5V_jNU">Academy Award-winning actor</a>, imbuing his performances with wild inventiveness and a kind of manic energy, died on Monday at his home in Tiburon, Calif., north of San Francisco. He was 63.</li>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content">The Marin County sheriff’s office said in a statement that it “suspects the death to be a suicide due to asphyxia.” An investigation was underway.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">The statement said that the office received a 911 call at 11:55 a.m. Pacific time, saying that a man had been found “unconscious and not breathing inside his residence.” Emergency personnel sent to the scene identified him as Mr. Williams and pronounced him dead at 12:02 p.m.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Williams’s publicist, Mara Buxbaum, said in a statement that Mr. Williams “has been battling severe depression.”</p>
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<h2 class="module-heading">Related Coverage</h2>
<h2 class="module-heading"><span style="text-decoration:underline;"><span style="color:#0066cc;">An Appraisal: Robin Williams, an Improvisational Genius, Forever Present in the Moment</span></span></h2>
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<h6><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/13/arts/television/on-tv-a-super-sized-performer-breaking-out-of-a-small-box.html?ref=obituaries"> An Alien at Home on TV</a></h6>
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<h6><a href="http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/08/14/robin-williams-had-parkinsons-disease-his-widow-says/?ref=obituaries"> Robin Williams Had Parkinson’s Disease, His Widow Says</a></h6>
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<h6><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/15/opinion/timothy-egan-robin-williams-the-vulnerable-showman.html?ref=obituaries"> Timothy Egan: Robin Williams, the Vulnerable Showman</a></h6>
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<h2 class="story-heading">Aug. 11, 2014</h2>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">An Appraisal: Robin Williams Was Always Perfect for the Small Screen</span></h2>
<h2 class="story-heading">AUG. 12, 2014</h2>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">ArtsBeat: Remembering Robin Williams</span></h2>
<h2 class="story-heading">AUG. 11, 2014</h2>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">Video: Movie Minutes: &#8216;The Night Listener&#8217;</span></h2>
<h2 class="story-heading">AUG. 27, 2012</h2>
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<div class="thumb"><img src="https://i0.wp.com/static01.nyt.com/images/2013/04/16/arts/winters/winters-thumbStandard.jpg" alt="Jonathan Winters, seated, with Robin Williams and Pam Dawber on the sitcom “Mork &amp; Mindy.”" /></p>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">An Appraisal: Robin Williams Recalls the Lessons of Jonathan Winters</span></h2>
<h2 class="story-heading">APRIL 15, 2013</h2>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">Film: Robin Williams Opens Wide His (Repaired) Heart</span>NOV. 19, 2009</h2>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">Times Article: ‘Comedy for a Narcissistic Time’ (December 28, 1978)</span></h2>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">Times Review: ‘Robin Williams, Life-Size’ (April 13, 1979)</span></h2>
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<p id="story-continues-2" class="story-body-text story-content">His wife, Susan Schneider, said in a statement, “This morning, I lost my husband and my best friend, while the world lost one of its most beloved artists and beautiful human beings.” She added: “As he is remembered, it is our hope the focus will not be on Robin’s death, but on the countless moments of joy and laughter he gave to millions.”</p>
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<p class="summary">Robin Williams performs an excerpt from Rajiv Joseph’s Broadway play, “Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo.”</p>
<p><span class="credit video-credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Video Credit</span> By Erik Piepenburg and Mekado Murphy on <span class="visually-hidden">Publish Date </span>March 31, 2011. </span></p>
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<p id="story-continues-3" class="story-body-text story-content">The privileged son of a Detroit auto executive who grew up chubby and lonesome, playing by himself with 2,000 toy soldiers in an empty room of a suburban mansion, Mr. Williams, as a boy, hardly fit the stereotype of someone who would grow to become a brainy comedian, or a goofy one, but he was both. Onstage he was known for <a title="link to video" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8UqTp6h9lzo">ricochet riffs</a> on politics, social issues and cultural matters both high and low; tales of <a title="link to video" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIWB-Neyj-c">drug and alcohol abuse</a>; lewd commentaries on relations between the sexes; and lightning-like improvisations on anything an audience member might toss at him. His gigs were always rife with frenetic, spot-on impersonations that included Hollywood stars, presidents, princes, prime ministers, popes and <a title="link to video" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6u5wVGngD_c">anonymous citizens of the world</a>. His irreverence was legendary and uncurtailable.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“Chuck, Cam, great to see you,” he once called out from a London stage at Charles, Prince of Wales, and his wife, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall. “Yo yo, wussup Wales, House of Windsor, keepin’ it real!”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">And yet he never seemed to offend.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Almost from the moment that he first uttered the greeting “Nanoo, nanoo” as Mork from Ork, an alien who befriends a wholesome young Colorado woman (Pam Dawber), on the sitcom “Mork and Mindy,” Mr. Williams was a comedy celebrity. “Mork and Mindy” made <a title="link to video" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQx4--L0TdY">its debut</a> on ABC in September 1978, and within two weeks had reached No. 7 in the Nielsen ratings. By the spring of 1979, 60 million viewers were tuning in to “Mork and Mindy” each week to watch Mr. Williams drink water through his finger, stand on his head when told to sit down, speak gibberish words like “shazbot” and “nimnul” that came to have meaning when he used them, and misinterpret, in startlingly literal fashion, the ordinary idioms of modern life.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">He went on to earn Academy Award nominations for his roles in films like <a title="link to article" href="http://www.nytimes.com/1988/01/25/movies/in-robin-williams-s-world-delight-is-a-many-sided-thing.html">“Good Morning, Vietnam,”</a> in which he played a loquacious radio D.J.; <a title="link to review" href="http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=950DE0DE1F31F931A35755C0A96F948260">“Dead Poets Society,”</a> playing a mentor to students in need of inspiration; and <a title="link to review" href="http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9D0CE1DB1E3BF933A1575AC0A967958260">“The Fisher King,”</a> as a homeless man whose life has been struck by tragedy. He won an Oscar in 1998 for <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9C00EFD7123DF936A35751C1A961958260">“Good Will Hunting,”</a> playing a therapist who works with a troubled prodigy played by Matt Damon.</p>
<p id="story-continues-4" class="story-body-text story-content">In <a title="link to statement" href="http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/08/11/statement-president-passing-robin-williams">a statement</a>, President Obama said of Mr. Williams, “He gave his immeasurable talent freely and generously to those who needed it most — from our troops stationed abroad to the marginalized on our own streets.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Robin McLaurin Williams was born in Chicago on July 21, 1951, and was raised in Bloomfield Hills, Mich., and Marin County. He studied acting at the Juilliard School.</p>
<p id="story-continues-5" class="story-body-text story-content">He is survived by a son, Zak, from his marriage to Valerie Velardi, and a daughter, Zelda, and a son, Cody, from his marriage to Marsha Garces.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Beginning with roles in the 1977 sex farce “Can I Do It ‘Til I Need Glasses?” and “The Richard Pryor Show,” a variety series hosted by one of his comedy mentors, Mr. Williams rapidly ascended the entertainment industry’s ladder.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Soon after “Mork and Mindy” made him a star, Mr. Williams graduated into movie roles that included the title characters in <a title="link to review" href="http://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/65569/Popeye/overview">“Popeye,”</a> Robert Altman’s 1980 live-action musical about that spinach-gulping cartoon sailor, and <a title="link to review" href="http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9C0DE6DB103BF930A15754C0A964948260">“The World According to Garp,”</a> the director George Roy Hill’s 1982 adaptation of the John Irving novel.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">He also continued to appear in raucous stand-up comedy specials like <a title="link to review" href="http://www.nytimes.com/1986/10/14/arts/robin-williams-in-evening-at-the-met-on-hbo.html">“Robin Williams: An Evening at the Met,”</a> which showcased his garrulous performance style and his indefatigable ability to free-associate without the apparent benefit of prepared material. Alongside his friends and fellow actors Billy Crystal and Whoopi Goldberg, Mr. Williams appeared in an annual series of HBO telethons for Comic Relief, a charity organization that helps homeless people and others in need.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Williams’s acting career reached a new height in 1987 with his performance in Barry Levinson’s film “Good Morning, Vietnam,” in which he played Adrian Cronauer, a nonconformist Armed Forces Radio host working in Saigon in the 1960s. It earned Mr. Williams his first Oscar nomination. He earned another, two years later, for “Dead Poets Society,” directed by Peter Weir and released in 1989, in which he played an unconventional English teacher at a 1950s boarding school who inspires his students to tear up their textbooks and seize the day. (Or, as Mr. Williams’s character famously put it in the original Latin, “Carpe diem.”)</p>
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<p class="summary">Robin Williams was one of the most explosively, exhaustingly, prodigiously verbal comedians who ever lived, says film critic A. O. Scott. And the only thing faster than Williams’s mouth was his mind.</p>
<p><span class="credit video-credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Video Credit</span> By Adam Freelander on <span class="visually-hidden">Publish Date </span>August 12, 2014. </span> <span class="credit photo-credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Image Credit</span>ABC, via Associated Press </span></p>
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<p id="story-continues-6" class="story-body-text story-content">In dozens of film roles that followed, Mr. Williams could be warm and zany, whether providing the voice of an irrepressible magic genie in <a title="link to review" href="http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9E0CE7DC1138F932A25752C1A964958260">“Aladdin,”</a> the 1992 animated Walt Disney feature, or playing a man who cross-dresses as a British housekeeper in <a title="link to article" href="http://www.nytimes.com/1994/01/06/arts/robin-williams-seriously-speaking.html">“Mrs. Doubtfire,”</a> a 1993 family comedy, or a doctor struggling to treat patients with an unknown neurological malady in “Awakenings,” the 1990 Penny Marshall drama adapted from the Oliver Sacks memoir.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Some of Mr. Williams’s performances were criticized for a mawkish sentimentality, like <a title="link to review" href="http://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/174233/Patch-Adams/overview">“Patch Adams,”</a> a 1998 film that once again cast him as a good-hearted doctor, and “Bicentennial Man,” a 1999 science-fiction feature in which he played an android.</p>
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<p id="story-continues-7" class="story-body-text story-content">But Mr. Williams continued to keep audiences guessing. In addition to his Oscar-winning role in “Good Will Hunting,” which saw him play a gently humorous therapist, his résumé included roles as a villainous crime writer in “Insomnia,” Christopher Nolan’s 2002 thriller; Teddy Roosevelt in the “Night at the Museum” movies; and Dwight D. Eisenhower in the 2013 drama “Lee Daniels’ The Butler.”</p>
<p id="story-continues-8" class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Williams made his acting debut on Broadway in 2011 in <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/24/theater/robin-williams-in-bengal-tiger-at-the-baghdad-zoo.html?_r=0">“Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo,”</a> a play written by Rajiv Joseph and set amid the American invasion of Iraq. (He had starred with Steve Martin in an Off Broadway production of “Waiting for Godot” in 1988.) In 2013, Mr. Williams returned to series television in “The Crazy Ones,” a CBS comedy that cast him as an idiosyncratic advertising executive, but it was canceled after one season.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Williams had completed work on several films that have not yet been released, including a third installment of the “Night at the Museum” franchise that Fox has scheduled for December, and “Merry Friggin’ Christmas,” an independent comedy about a dysfunctional family. He also provided the voice of an animated character called Dennis the Dog in a British comedy, “Absolutely Anything,” that is planned for release next year, and appeared in “Boulevard,” an independent movie that was shown at the Tribeca Film Festival but does not yet have theatrical distribution.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Williams was an admitted abuser of cocaine — which he also referred to as “Peruvian marching powder” and “the devil’s dandruff” — in the 1970s and ‘80s, and addressed his drug habit in his comedy act. “What a wonderful drug,” he said in a sardonic routine from “Live at the Met.” “Anything that makes you paranoid and impotent, give me more of that.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In 2006, he checked himself into the Hazelden center in Springbrook, Ore., to be treated for an addiction to alcohol, having fallen off the wagon after some 20 years of sobriety.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">He later explained in an interview with ABC’s Diane Sawyer that this addiction had not been “caused by anything, it’s just there.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“It waits,” Mr. Williams continued. “It lays in wait for the time when you think, ‘It’s fine now, I’m O.K.’ Then, the next thing you know, it’s not O.K. Then you realize, ‘Where am I? I didn’t realize I was in Cleveland.’ ”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In 2009, he underwent heart surgery for an aortic valve replacement at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio, an event that Mr. Williams said caused him to take stock of his life.</p>
<p id="story-continues-10" class="story-body-text story-content">“You appreciate little things,” he said in <a title="link to article" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/22/movies/22williams.html">an interview in The New York Times</a>, “like walks on the beach with a defibrillator.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">More seriously, Mr. Williams said he had reassessed himself as a performer. “How much more can you give?” he told The Times. “Other than, literally, open-heart surgery onstage? Not much. But the only cure you have right now is the honesty of going, this is who you are. I know who I am.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Earlier this year, Mr. Williams checked himself into a rehab facility. His publicist told People magazine that he was “taking the opportunity to fine-tune and focus on his continued commitment, of which he remains extremely proud.”</p>
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<div class="story-addendum story-content theme-correction"><em><strong>Correction: August 13, 2014 </strong> </em><br />
<em>Because of an editing error, an obituary on Tuesday about the actor and comedian Robin Williams misstated the name and title of Prince Charles’s wife, with whom the prince once attended a London performance by Mr. Williams. She is Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall — not Lady Camilla Bowles.</em></div>
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<p><em>Bruce Weber and Emma G. Fitzsimmons contributed reporting.</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/12/movies/robin-williams-oscar-winning-comedian-dies-at-63.html?ref=obituaries"><strong>SOURCE</strong></a></p>
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<p><strong>MENAHEM GOLAN, PASSIONATE AUTEUR OF THE B-MOVIE</strong></p>
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<p class="byline-dateline"><span class="byline">By <a title="More Articles by ANITA GATES" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/g/anita_gates/index.html" rel="author"><span class="byline-author">ANITA GATES</span></a></span></p>
<p class="byline-dateline">AUG. 10, 2014</p>
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<div class="image"></div><figcaption class="caption"><span class="caption-text">Menahem Golan in 2003.</span> <span class="credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Credit</span> Scott Barbour/Getty Images </span> </figcaption></figure>
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<div id="MiddleRight" class="ad middle-right-ad marginalia-anchor-ad nocontent robots-nocontent hidden">Menahem Golan, the colorful Israeli filmmaker who began his prolific B-movie career with Roger Corman, introduced audiences to Jean-Claude Van Damme and during his 1980s heyday directed action stars like Sylvester Stallone and Chuck Norris, died on Friday in Jaffa, Israel. He was 85.</div>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content">His family announced his death. No cause was given.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Golan’s best-known films as producer, director or both included “The Delta Force” (1986), in which terrorists go up against elite commandos including Mr. Norris and Lee Marvin; “Over the Top” (1987), starring Mr. Stallone as an arm wrestler; and the four “Death Wish” sequels, with Charles Bronson.</p>
<p id="story-continues-2" class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Golan produced more than 200 films, directed more than 40 and wrote almost as many (often under the name Joseph Goldman), including works as serious as a 2002 production of “Crime and Punishment,” with John Hurt and Vanessa Redgrave, and as exploitative as “The Versace Murder” (1998), filmed less than four months after the fashion designer Gianni Versace’s death. An article in The New York Times described one of Mr. Golan’s contributions to that movie as <a title="The article" href="http://www.nytimes.com/1997/11/02/magazine/sunday-november-2-1997-you-are-there-bring-me-the-script-of-gianni-versace.html?module=Search&amp;mabReward=relbias%3Aw&amp;37;2C&amp;123;&amp;37;222&amp;37;22&amp;37;3A&amp;37;22RI&amp;37;3A13&amp;37;22&amp;125;">standing behind the camera throwing fake blood</a> on the actor playing the killer.</p>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content">To say that Mr. Golan discovered Mr. Van Damme, when he was a Belgian kickboxer who had appeared only in tiny parts in a handful of films, is to give Mr. Van Damme too little credit. As he has told the story, he spotted Mr. Golan outside a restaurant in Beverly Hills, Calif., and leapt into action, executing a karate kick above the filmmaker’s head. Mr. Golan promptly gave him his first starring role, in “Bloodsport” (1988), about a potentially deadly martial arts tournament. Mr. Van Damme was paid $25,000, and the film earned almost $12 million in the United States alone.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">At the annual <a class="meta-classifier" title="More articles about the Cannes International Film Festival." href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/c/cannes_international_film_festival/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier">Cannes Film Festival</a> in France, Mr. Golan became a celebrity. Working with Yoram Globus, his cousin and business partner in Cannon Films, he promoted his high-minded films and his less lofty action titles with equal fervor. Perhaps the oddest deal he made at the festival was an agreement with Jean-Luc Godard, said to have been signed on a napkin at a hotel bar, to direct a version of <a title="Times review" href="http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=940DE6D6103EF931A15752C0A96E948260">“King Lear.”</a> The cast of that film, which when released in 1987 ended up being a science-fiction comedy about post-Chernobyl culture, included Norman Mailer, Woody Allen and the director Peter Sellars. In 1990, when the mayor of Cannes proposed giving Mr. Golan key to the city, Mr. Golan said, “Why not just give me the piece of the Croisette that I already own with all the money I’ve spent here?”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Golan was born Menahem Globus on May 31, 1929, in Tiberias, a city on the Sea of Galilee, in what was then <a class="meta-classifier" title="More articles about Palestinians." href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/p/palestinians/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier">Palestine</a> and is now Israel.</p>
<p id="story-continues-3" class="story-body-text story-content">He served as a pilot and bombardier in the Israeli war of independence; in 1948, when the state of Israel was established, he changed his surname to Golan. He studied drama in London and in the United States and worked in theater before landing his first film job, as a production assistant on Mr. Corman’s “The Young Racers” (1963), a racecar drama starring Mark Damon.</p>
<p id="story-continues-4" class="story-body-text story-content">That same year Mr. Golan directed his first movie, “El Dorado,” a crime story set in Israel. The next year he produced his first, <a title="Times review" href="http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9400EFDE1730E33ABC4B52DFB667838E679EDE">“Sallah Shabati,”</a> a satire about Israeli immigration and non-European Jews. Both films starred Topol.</p>
<p id="story-continues-5" class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Golan directed and helped write “Mivtsa Yonatan” (<a title="Times review" href="http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9B04E6DF113EE632A25754C1A9679C946990D6CF">“Operation Thunderbolt”</a>), about the 1976 Israeli raid on Entebbe, Uganda, which was nominated for a 1978 Oscar as best foreign-language film.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">But Mr. Golan had not forgotten his lessons from Mr. Corman. Besides prestige projects like “A Cry in the Dark” (1988), with Meryl Streep, and “I’m Almost Not Crazy,” a 1984 documentary about the actor and director John Cassavetes, Mr. Golan and his company churned out movies about ninjas, cyborgs, chain saws and the likes of “Teenage Bonnie and Klepto Clyde” (1993).</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">His final production was “Rak Klavim Ratzim Hofshi” (“Only Dogs Run Free,” 2007), a low-budget drama filmed in Israel, and his final directing and writing credit was “Marriage Agreement” (2008), a comedy. A documentary, “The Go-Go Boys: The Inside Story of Cannon Films,” is scheduled for the fall.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Golan, who lived in Jaffa and whose survivors include his wife and three children, sometimes defended his artistic choices. When he was filming “Mack the Knife,” an earthy 1989 version of “The Threepenny Opera” in which 19th-century characters carry semiautomatic weapons, <a title="The article" href="http://www.nytimes.com/1989/01/15/movies/film-brecht-and-weill-meet-the-cinema-man-weill-and-brecht-go-on-the-screen.html?module=Search&amp;mabReward=relbias%3Ar%2C{%222%22%3A%22RI%3A13%22}">he told The New York Times:</a> “Believe it or not, in Berlin they’ve done a punk version. People are doing it with green in their hair.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In the same article, David Toguri, the film’s choreographer, said: “The purists won’t like it, but it works. It’s made for cinema, and Menahem Golan is a real cinema man.”</p>
<p><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/11/arts/menahem-golan-passionate-auteur-of-the-b-movie-is-dead-at-85.html"><strong>SOURCE</strong></a></p>
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<p><strong>ERONI KUMANA, WHO SAVED KENNEDY AND HIS SHIPWRECKED CREW</strong></p>
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<p class="byline-dateline"><span class="byline">By <a title="More Articles by PAUL VITELLO" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/v/paul_vitello/index.html" rel="author"><span class="byline-author">PAUL VITELLO</span></a></span></p>
<p class="byline-dateline">AUG. 16, 2014</p>
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<div class="image"></div><figcaption class="caption"><span class="caption-text">Eroni Kumana, left, in an undated photograph, holding a bust of President John F. Kennedy.</span> <span class="credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Credit</span> Melissa Armstrong/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images </span> </figcaption></figure>
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<div id="XXL" class="ad xxl-ad marginalia-anchor-ad nocontent robots-nocontent hidden">Eroni Kumana, who lived his entire life on a tiny Pacific island called Rannoga, about 900 miles east of New Guinea, in a village without electricity, telephone service, running water or a paved road, left his mark on the history of the world on or about Aug. 5 and 6, 1943.</div>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content">That was when he and a fellow boatman, Biuku Gasa, were credited with spotting and rescuing Navy Lt. <a class="meta-per" title="More articles about John Fitzgerald Kennedy." href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/john_fitzgerald_kennedy/index.html?inline=nyt-per">John F. Kennedy</a> and members of his PT-109 crew, nearly a week after their boat had been destroyed by a Japanese warship in the <a class="meta-loc" title="More news and information about Solomon Islands." href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/solomonislands/index.html?inline=nyt-geo">Solomon Islands</a>.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">The future 35th president of the United States and his men were exhausted and starving. Mr. Kumana and Mr. Gasa gave them what food they had. Then Mr. Kumana built them a fire, the way he usually did — by rubbing two sticks together.</p>
<p id="story-continues-2" class="story-body-text story-content">When he died at 96 on Aug. 3 in his native village of Kongu, the monuments he left behind consisted mainly of the innumerable carved canoes and grass huts he had built or helped build during his lifetime, said Rellysdom A. Malakana, his grandson.</p>
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</div><figcaption class="caption"><span class="caption-text">John F. Kennedy aboard a PT-109 in the Solomon Islands in 1943. Later that year, the boat was destroyed by the Japanese.</span> </figcaption></figure>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">But from one perspective, at least, the United States as we know it is also part of Mr. Kumana’s legacy.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“If President Kennedy had not been elected president in 1960 because he had not survived the war, think what a different country this might be today,” said Maxwell T. Kennedy, a son of the president’s brother Robert.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Kennedy visited Mr. Kumana in 2002 along with the oceanographer Robert Ballard, who was on an expedition underwritten by National Geographic magazine to find the sunken wreck of PT-109. (It was 1,200 feet below the surface, and left undisturbed.) “If there is any proof that one man <em>can</em> make a difference, here it is,” Mr. Kennedy said.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Kumana was modest about his role in saving the future president and his crew. Even though it involved considerable risk of punishment or death at the hands of the Japanese troops who occupied the islands, he considered the rescue what any decent person would have done in the same situation.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Like most indigenous people in the vast, scattered and largely isolated Solomon Islands (which cover 350,000 square miles), he had known virtually nothing about Americans or Japanese — and had probably not heard much about <a class="meta-classifier" title="More articles about Wold War II." href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/w/world_war_ii_/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier">World War II</a> — until early 1942, when warnings of a Japanese attack in the Solomons prompted the islands’ British rulers to give the islanders a crash course in world politics.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Women and children were evacuated from coastal areas. Men were asked to join the effort against the invaders.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Kumana, a fisherman, canoe maker and subsistence farmer, was among several hundred men who joined the Coastal Watch, a cadre of indigenous boatmen and British military intelligence officers that tracked Japanese transport movements for the duration of the war.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">The intelligence produced by the watch was considered pivotal in helping the Americans win the battle of Guadalcanal, one of the bloodiest of the war. Guadalcanal is the principal island in the archipelago.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Intelligence provided by the Coastal Watch, in fact, had prompted the Navy command on the island of Rendova to send Kennedy’s PT-109 — along with a dozen other PT boats — into the waters off the island of Kolobangara on the night of Aug. 2, 1943. (PT stood for Patrol Torpedo.)</p>
<p id="story-continues-3" class="story-body-text story-content">Americans controlled the airspace over the Solomons, forcing the Japanese to work at night in resupplying their forces.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">While trying to intercept a flotilla of resupply ships expected to pass through a certain channel around 2 a.m., PT-109 was struck in the dark and cut in half by a Japanese destroyer.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Two crewmen were killed, and several of the 10 survivors were injured seriously, including Kennedy. The episode contributed to the back problems that would plague him in the White House.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Kennedy and his men clung to wreckage until sunrise, then swam and paddled about three miles to the first of several islands that they would struggle to reach, hoping to flag Allied ships. They had no luck.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Kennedy had set out for yet another island — swimming alone this time — when Mr. Kumana and Mr. Gasa came upon his men huddled behind dunes on the island of Olasana.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“Some of them cried, and some of them came and shook our hands,” Mr. Kumana recalled in a television documentary about the National Geographic expedition. When Kennedy rejoined the group the next day, Mr. Kumana and Mr. Gasa — using sign language — agreed to his request that they carry a message to the Naval base at Rendova, about 35 miles away.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Kumana showed him how to scratch a message with a penknife in the delicate skin beneath the hard shell of a coconut.</p>
<p id="story-continues-5" class="story-body-text story-content">Kennedy wrote: “NAURU ISL &#8230; COMMANDER &#8230; NATIVE KNOWS POS’IT &#8230; HE CAN PILOT &#8230; 11 ALIVE &#8230; NEED SMALL BOAT &#8230; KENNEDY.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">The inscribed coconut was delivered as promised and returned to Kennedy after he and his crew were retrieved by the Navy.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">It became a favorite memento. President Kennedy kept the shell on his desk in the Oval Office, said Thomas J. Putnam, director of the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum. The coconut is now on exhibit at the museum.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Kumana rarely spoke about the war. By his grandson’s account, the death and destruction left an indelible impression on him and all Solomon Islanders, many of whom spent years after the war recovering remains and body parts and dismantling explosives.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“He only wants to tell about the rescue,” Mr. Malakana wrote in an email on Friday.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Kumana told his story to authors and journalists over the years, but there was a postscript that he seldom mentioned, Mr. Malakana said.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">By Mr. Kumana’s account, he was invited to Kennedy’s inauguration in January 1961 and received a plane ticket paid for by the Kennedy family.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">But when he arrived at the airport, he was turned away by a government clerk, who told him that he was too uneducated to represent the islands at such an important event. Someone else was sent in his place.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Putnam, the president of the Kennedy library, said Mr. Kumana’s name does not appear on the list of those invited. But Maxwell Kennedy said he believed the story: He had heard it many times at family events.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Besides, he added, Mr. Kumana would not lie. “The man is incapable of guile,” he said.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Kumana is survived by nine children, 50 grandchildren and 75 great-grandchildren.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content"><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/17/world/asia/eroni-kumana-who-saved-kennedy-and-his-shipwrecked-crew-dies-at-96.html"><strong>SOURCE</strong></a></p>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content"><strong>PIERRE RYCKMANS; EXPOSED MAO&#8217;S HARD LINE</strong></p>
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<p class="byline-dateline"><span class="byline">By <span class="byline-author">MICHAEL FORSYTHE</span></span></p>
<p class="byline-dateline">AUG. 14, 2014</p>
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<div class="image"></div><figcaption class="caption"><span class="caption-text">Pierre Ryckmans, who used the pen name Simon Leys, first traveled to China as a student in 1955. His once romantic view of China dissipated when he learned of the Cultural Revolution.</span> <span class="credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Credit</span> William West/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images </span> </figcaption></figure>
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<li class="sharetool email-sharetool login-modal-trigger">Pierre Ryckmans, a Belgian-born scholar of <a class="meta-loc" title="More news and information about China." href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/china/index.html?inline=nyt-geo">China</a> who challenged a romanticized Western view of <a class="meta-per" title="More articles about Mao Zedong." href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/mao_zedong/index.html?inline=nyt-per">Mao Zedong</a> in the 1960s with his early portrayal of Mao’s Cultural Revolution as chaotic and destructive, died on Monday at his home in Sydney, Australia. He was 78.</li>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content">His daughter, Jeanne Ryckmans, said the cause was cancer.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Ryckmans, who was better known by his pen name, Simon Leys, fell in love with China at the age of 19 while touring the country with fellow Belgian students in 1955. One highlight was an audience with Prime Minister Zhou Enlai. The man-made famine of Mao’s Great Leap Forward and his Cultural Revolution, which began in 1966 and ended about the time of Mao’s death, in 1976, were still in the future. There was much to be admired in the new China.</p>
<p id="story-continues-2" class="story-body-text story-content">Yet pursuing his studies of Chinese art, culture and literature in the People’s Republic itself was not an option for a Westerner, so he settled in Taiwan, where he met his future wife, Han-fang Chang. He also lived in Singapore and Hong Kong.</p>
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</div><figcaption class="caption"><span class="caption-text">Young students in the Red Guard waved copies of the “Little Red Book,” a collection of quotations by Mao, at a parade in Beijing in June 1966 to celebrate the start of the Cultural Revolution.</span> <span class="credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Credit</span> Jean Vincent/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images </span> </figcaption></figure>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">It was in Hong Kong during the late 1960s, when it was still a British colony, that Mr. Ryckmans (pronounced RICK-mans) began to follow the turmoil just across the frontier, reading accounts in the official Chinese press about the Cultural Revolution and talking to former Mao supporters who had escaped it.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">He began to find that the romantic view of Mao harbored by many Western intellectuals — as a progressive if flawed champion of the masses — was completely at odds with the cruelties of the Cultural Revolution, which sought to eradicate Chinese cultural traditions and Western capitalist influences and replace it with a Maoist orthodoxy. The movement led to purges, forced internal exiles and whipsaw shifts in the political winds, and it compelled Mr. Ryckmans to step into the arena of political commentary.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“Until 1966 Chinese politics did not loom large in my preoccupations, and I confidently extended to the Maoist regime the same sympathy I felt for all things Chinese, without giving it more specific thought,” Mr. Ryckmans wrote under his pseudonym in “<a title="The Times review." href="http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9502E7D81639E13ABC4051DFBE66838C669EDE">Chinese Shadows</a>,” which was first published in French in 1974. “But the Cultural Revolution, which I observed from beginning to end from the vantage point of Hong Kong, forced me out of this comfortable ignorance.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">His first account, “The Chairman’s New Clothes,” was also published in French, in 1971, a year after he had settled in Australia, lured by an eminent Chinese literary scholar, Liu Cunren, to teach at Australian National University. Mr. Ryckmans wrote the book under the name Simon Leys to disguise his identity so that he would not be banned from China.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">He returned to China in 1972 on a six-month assignment as a cultural attaché for the Belgian Embassy in Beijing. The wanton destruction of the city’s ancient architectural heritage shocked him.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In “Chinese Shadows,” he wrote of his frantic search for some of the most magnificent of the city’s huge gates, which he assumed had been preserved, even though he knew that the city walls had been taken apart starting in the 1950s. The gates were gone. “The destruction of the gates of Peking is, properly speaking, a sacrilege; and what makes it dramatic is not that the authorities had them pulled down but that they remain unable to understand why they pulled them down,” he wrote.</p>
<p id="story-continues-3" class="story-body-text story-content">The Cultural Revolution, he found, had destroyed the beauty of Chinese culture and civilization without destroying what needed to be exorcised: the tyranny of arbitrary rule.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In a telephone interview, Kevin Rudd, a former prime minister of Australia and a former student of Mr. Ryckmans, called him “the first of the Western Sinologists of the ’60s and ’70s to expose the truth of the cultural desecration that occurred during the Cultural Revolution, ripping away the political veneer from it all and exposing it for what it was: an ugly, violent, internal political struggle within the Chinese Communist Party led by Mao.”</p>
<p id="story-continues-4" class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Rudd added, “He was excoriated at the time by Sinologists who had been captured by the romance which many felt for the Cultural Revolution in the early days.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">The irony, Mr. Rudd said, is that the Chinese leadership moved to repudiate the Cultural Revolution after Mao’s death. Many of the delights of old Beijing — the food stalls, the street dancing on a summer’s evening — did indeed return, as did an appreciation for classical art, literature and, finally, the classical scholar Confucius, who had been vilified by the Maoists. Mr. Ryckmans translated, into English, the “Analects,” the collection of sayings attributed to Confucius.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Yet he did not change with the times. “It was difficult to get Pierre to accept that real, sustainable and positive changes had occurred in the China of the period of ‘reform and opening,’ ” Mr. Rudd said.</p>
<p id="story-continues-5" class="story-body-text story-content">More than a Sinologist, Mr. Ryckmans was also a formidable European man of letters, earning doctorates in law and art in Belgium, said Richard Rigby, a China scholar and Mr. Ryckmans’s brother-in-law. His lectures, he added, brought the best of both worlds together.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“He could look at a Chinese painting or maybe something by Orwell and essays by Montaigne and put them all together into a coherent whole,” Mr. Rigby said.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Ryckmans also wrote a novel, “<a title="Related article." href="https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/simon-leys/the-death-of-napoleon/">The Death of Napoleon</a>,” which imagines the deposed emperor escaping from exile on St. Helena and making his way back to France. First published in France in 1986 and then in English in 1992, it was hailed as “an extraordinary book” by the novelist Penelope Fitzgerald, writing in The New York Times Book Review, and <a title="A Times review." href="http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9507E0D6143CF937A25755C0A9649C8B63">adapted into a film</a>, with Ian Holm and Hugh Bonneville, in 2002.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Ryckmans was a frequent contributor to The New York Review of Books, Le Monde and other periodicals and the recipient of several literary prizes.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">He was born on Sept. 28, 1935, in Brussels. Besides his daughter, he is survived by his wife; his sons Marc, Etienne and Louis; and two grandchildren.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">He also taught at the University of Sydney and spent his later years writing and sailing. A collection of his essays, “The Hall of Uselessness,” discussing topics as far-ranging as “Don Quixote” and Confucius, was published in 2011.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In “Chinese Shadows,” Mr. Ryckmans wrote that even though Mao and his acolytes would leave the scene, and there would be an inevitable relaxation of authoritarian rule, the fundamental characteristics of Communist rule would not change.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“Among various descriptions of Communist China made at different times, one may note differences,” he wrote, “yet if these descriptions have been made conscientiously and perceptively, they will show more than ephemeral journalistic truths, for modifications will be in quantity, never in quality — variations in amplitude, not changes in basic orientation.”</p>
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<div class="story-addendum story-content theme-correction"><em><strong>Correction: August 15, 2014 </strong> </em><br />
<em>Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this obituary misspelled the name of Mr. Ryckmans’s wife. It is Han-fang Chang, not Han-fang Chan.</em><strong><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/15/world/pierre-ryckmans-78-dies-exposed-maos-hard-line.html">SOURCE</a></strong></p>
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