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| Also Known As: | Burton Stephen Lancaster | Died: | October 20, 1994 |
| Born: | November 2, 1913 | Cause of Death: | heart attack |
| Birth Place: | New York City, New York, USA | Profession: | actor, producer, circus performer, director, refrigerator repairman, engineer in meat-packing plant, firefighter, salesman, singing waiter |
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Burt Lancaster did not enter the film world until his mid-thirties, having developed a taste for acting in Army shows but lacking any formal dramatic training. A former circus performer, his strong personality and presence, athletic physique and winning smile made him a popular Hollywood star from the 1940s into the 70s, and kept him prominent in star character roles thereafter. Lancaster's first film role, as an ex-prizefighter on the lam in Robert Siodmak's splendid film noir, "The Killers" (1946), turned out to be one of Hollywood's most impressive star debuts and one of his finest performances ever. It was also the first in a series of noir thrillers to which he brought a streetwise toughness, a sense of menace and, at times, a surprising tenderness.From the beginning Lancaster sought to control his own career, alternating roles as tough-guy gangsters, cops and convicts (memorably in the blistering "Brute Force" 1947) with offbeat, adventurous and challenging projects. He sought to expand his range as an actor-star and supported adaptations of notable plays which might not have otherwise been filmed (Arthur Miller's "All My Sons" 1948, Tennessee Williams's "The Rose Tattoo" 1955). In 1948 he...
Burt Lancaster did not enter the film world until his mid-thirties, having developed a taste for acting in Army shows but lacking any formal dramatic training. A former circus performer, his strong personality and presence, athletic physique and winning smile made him a popular Hollywood star from the 1940s into the 70s, and kept him prominent in star character roles thereafter. Lancaster's first film role, as an ex-prizefighter on the lam in Robert Siodmak's splendid film noir, "The Killers" (1946), turned out to be one of Hollywood's most impressive star debuts and one of his finest performances ever. It was also the first in a series of noir thrillers to which he brought a streetwise toughness, a sense of menace and, at times, a surprising tenderness.
From the beginning Lancaster sought to control his own career, alternating roles as tough-guy gangsters, cops and convicts (memorably in the blistering "Brute Force" 1947) with offbeat, adventurous and challenging projects. He sought to expand his range as an actor-star and supported adaptations of notable plays which might not have otherwise been filmed (Arthur Miller's "All My Sons" 1948, Tennessee Williams's "The Rose Tattoo" 1955). In 1948 he formed Norma Productions, the first of several independent production companies, to help make another noir, "Kiss the Blood Off My Hands". His partner was his agent Harold Hecht and, about half a decade later, producer James Hill joined them. One of the first actor-dominated production companies, the renamed Hecht-Hill-Lancaster was responsible for the Oscar-winning realist drama "Marty" (1955) and "Bachelor Party" (1957), another landmark in adult urban drama, as well as films starring Lancaster, such as the gripping submarine drama, "Run Silent, Run Deep" (1958).
Lancaster the actor had also switched gears as he moved into the 50s, leaving film noir, baring his massive chest and gnashing his teeth in a series of tongue-in-cheek swashbucklers and adventure yarns including the exuberant "The Flame and the Arrow" (1950) and the well-liked spoof "The Crimson Pirate" (1952), which he also produced. That same year he essayed his first serious "character" role, playing a middle-aged former alcoholic married to a slatternly wife (Shirley Booth) in an adaptation of William Inge's stage hit "Come Back, Little Sheba" (1952). Soon thereafter he also tried his hand behind the camera, directing the spirited frontier saga "The Kentuckian" (1955). Throughout his career, he alternated crowd-pleasers aimed at the mass audience with ambitious, risky projects. One critic noted that Lancaster's performances could be typed based on his hairstyles--long and pompadoured for rousing adventure roles, close-cropped or parted in the middle for "serious" projects (e.g. "The Rose Tattoo" 1955, "Birdman of Alcatraz" 1962).
Throughout the 1950s and 60s, Lancaster starred in a host of successful Westerns, war films and melodramas, giving memorable performances as the rigid sergeant in "From Here to Eternity" (1953) and the charming con man who brings rain to a parched community in "The Rainmaker" (1956). Two very different films brought out his best: He was a monster of restrained menace as vicious, all-powerful gossip columnist J.J. Hunsecker in the gritty "Sweet Smell of Success" (1957); and in Richard Brooks' successful adaptation of Sinclair Lewis' "Elmer Gantry" (1960), Lancaster utilized his grinning charm and larger-than-life presence to create a seductive portrait of a charlatan evangelist which earned him the best actor Oscar. He also gave a landmark performance as an Italian aristocrat in Visconti's "The Leopard" (1963)--a character he claimed was modeled on Visconti himself.
Lancaster's 60s and 70s Hollywood credits included the powerful political thriller "Seven Days in May" (1964), with the star as a power-hungry general; "The Swimmer" (1968), which offered Lancaster a particularly good role as a middle-aged businessman; and "Go Tell the Spartans" (1978), an interesting, underrated Vietnam War drama. Much of his work, though, highlighted the more routine melodramatics of the all-star adventure dramas "Airport" (1970) and "Twilight's Last Gleaming" (1978), but Lancaster always gave his roles a flamboyantly hammy, full-blown sense of commitment.
Lancaster made a graceful transition to senior roles, notably in Bertolucci's "1900" (1976), "Local Hero" (1983) and "Atlantic City" (1980). For the latter film, in which he played an aging con man, he received his fourth Oscar nomination as well as the New York Film Critics' Best Actor award. His last American feature roles included his sixth co-starring role opposite Kirk Douglas in the nostalgic gangster comedy "Tough Guys" (1986) and in the gentle baseball-themed fantasy "Field of Dreams" (1989). Formerly married to circus performer June Ernst (1935-36) and actress Norma Anderson (1946-69; by whom he had two sons and three daughters), Lancaster wed TV producer Susan Scherer in 1990.
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CAST: (feature film)
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Notes
"The Prince (in "The Leopard") was a very complex character-at times autoocratic, rude, strong--at times romantic, good, understanding--and sometimes even stupid, and above all, mysterious. Burt is all these things too. I sometimes think Burt the most perfectly mysterious man I have ever met in my life." --Luchino Visconti (quoted in "Encyclopedia of Film Stars" by Douglas Jarvis, 1985)
"He is as extroverted as an actor can be. When he entered movies he was a beautiful blank--an athlete-actor, like Jim Brown, all physical charge. A typically American star, he was best in the open air and when his desires were expressed (and fulfilled) in direct physical action. The only time he had a strong personality was when he was bounding through a swashbuckler, like the classic "The Crimison Pirate", or selling pure energy, as in "The Rainmaker". Acting with his whole body, he was buoyantly beautiful, and his grin--with those great white Chiclets flashing--could make you grin back at the screen. Yet when he closed his mouth there was an appealing puzzled dissatisfaction in his slightly traumatized look, and that, too, came to seem typically American--taking pleasure in action but feeling violated and incomplete." --Pauline Kael in her review of "Conversation Piece" in The New Yorker, September 29, 1975.
"He admits that Shirley Booth once told him, 'Burt, once in a while you hit a note of truth and you can hear a bell ring. But most of the time I can see the wheels turning and your brain working.'" --David Shipman ("The Great Movie Stars: The International Years", 1972)
"His vitality is more than cheerfulness or strength; he seems charged with power. This accounts for his threatening, polite calm as a villian and coincides with Norman Mailer's comment that he never looked into eyes as chilling as Lancaster's. He seems soft spoken and attentive, until one notices the intensity of his gaze." --David Thomson ("A Biographical Dictionary of Film", 1975)
"He is remembered by the laugh. His muscular head would snap back, and out would come three bold, staccato barks: 'Ha. Ha. Ha.' That laugh helped define Burt Lancaster's personality and gave employment to a generation of mimics. But the cool thing about the Lancaster laugh was that it could mean anything; it might express amusement or a jolly contempt. His smile, a CinemaScope revelation of perfect teeth, had the same enigmatic edge to it... Was it seductive or perhaps a predatory baring of fangs? This mystique made Lancaster... the first modernist movie hunk... Lancaster had been a salesman too, and these performances suggested that here was a man who could peddle any dream to anybody... In an important way, Lancaster put a brash face on poststudio Hollywood, on the industry-cum-art that wanted to retain its old magic while venturing to faraway places and into man's dark heart. And that's a grand legacy for a mysterious, hard-working man." --Richard Corliss Time, October 31, 1994.
He was at one time president of the American Civil Liberties Union and was later appointed a national advisory council member.
He represented the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) before the US Select Committee on Aging in Washington DC in 1990.
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