Actor Gregory Peck Has Died----he was 87 yrs old

Chat about anything and everything... (well almost anything) Whether it be the front porch or the pot belly stove or news of interest or a topic of your liking, this is the place to post it.

Moderator: S2k Moderators

Message
Author
User avatar
bfez1
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 6548
Joined: Thu Oct 10, 2002 10:14 am
Location: Meraux--10 mi E of New Orleans-totally destroyed by Katrina
Contact:

Actor Gregory Peck Has Died----he was 87 yrs old

#1 Postby bfez1 » Thu Jun 12, 2003 12:47 pm

Another sad loss today :cry:
Last edited by bfez1 on Thu Jun 12, 2003 1:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
0 likes   

User avatar
TexasStooge
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 38127
Joined: Tue Mar 25, 2003 1:22 pm
Location: Irving (Dallas County), TX
Contact:

#2 Postby TexasStooge » Thu Jun 12, 2003 12:51 pm

Sad news indeed.
0 likes   
Weather Enthusiast since 1991.
- Facebook
- Twitter

User avatar
Stephanie
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 23843
Age: 63
Joined: Thu Feb 06, 2003 9:53 am
Location: Glassboro, NJ

#3 Postby Stephanie » Thu Jun 12, 2003 12:58 pm

Wow! Two big names in one day! May they both rest in peace!
0 likes   

User avatar
mf_dolphin
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 17758
Age: 68
Joined: Tue Oct 08, 2002 2:05 pm
Location: St Petersburg, FL
Contact:

#4 Postby mf_dolphin » Thu Jun 12, 2003 12:59 pm

Another giant of his industry. Thanks for the memories!
0 likes   

User avatar
azsnowman
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 8591
Joined: Wed Feb 05, 2003 8:56 pm
Location: Pinetop Arizona. Elevation 7102' (54 miles west of NM border)

#5 Postby azsnowman » Thu Jun 12, 2003 2:44 pm

My goodness......like Stephanie said, 2 big names in one day called home, the Good Ol guys are leaving us one by one.

Dennis
0 likes   

User avatar
cycloneye
Admin
Admin
Posts: 145422
Age: 68
Joined: Thu Oct 10, 2002 10:54 am
Location: San Juan, Puerto Rico

#6 Postby cycloneye » Thu Jun 12, 2003 3:29 pm

Sad news today the death of those 2 important persons that gave their talents to entretain Gregory Peck and to inform David Brinckly.
0 likes   
Visit the Caribbean-Central America Weather Thread where you can find at first post web cams,radars
and observations from Caribbean basin members Click Here

User avatar
streetsoldier
Retired Staff
Retired Staff
Posts: 9705
Joined: Wed Feb 05, 2003 11:33 pm
Location: Under the rainbow

#7 Postby streetsoldier » Thu Jun 12, 2003 4:27 pm

Gregory Peck was another of those Hollywood "giants" who was beyond reproach, both on-screen and in private life. A philanthropist of note, he gave freely of his time and money in a multitude of charitable causes over the years.

He believed his finest role was as the defense counsel in To Kill A Mockingbird, although I would disagree, after having seen his performance as General Douglas MacArthur.

Sterling of character in all things, Peck will be missed...most of all, by those of us who remember when character MEANT something.[/i]
0 likes   

User avatar
Lindaloo
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 22658
Joined: Sat Mar 29, 2003 10:06 am
Location: Pascagoula, MS

#8 Postby Lindaloo » Thu Jun 12, 2003 11:11 pm

I loved that movie "To Kill A Mockingbird." Everytime I have seen him in another movie he was still Atticus Finch and Scout's Father to me.
0 likes   

chadtm80

#9 Postby chadtm80 » Thu Jun 12, 2003 11:14 pm

Image

Peck was nominated for Best Actor Oscars five times in the course of his career and appeared in nine Best Picture nominated films.
0 likes   

M2

#10 Postby M2 » Fri Jun 13, 2003 1:18 am

He made many great movies over a long period of time, and one of
the more recent was "Boys From Brazil" - great flick.
0 likes   

weatherlover427

#11 Postby weatherlover427 » Fri Jun 13, 2003 1:31 am

May you rest in peace.
0 likes   

David
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 4517
Joined: Mon Apr 21, 2003 9:47 pm
Location: Topeka, Kansas
Contact:

#12 Postby David » Fri Jun 13, 2003 2:33 pm

From AOL:

LOS ANGELES (June 12) - Gregory Peck, the lanky, handsome movie star whose long career included such classics as ''Roman Holiday,'' ''Spellbound'' and his Academy Award winner, ''To Kill a Mockingbird,'' has died, a spokesman said Thursday. He was 87.Peck died overnight, Monroe Friedman told The Associated Press.Peck's craggy good looks, grace and measured speech contributed to his screen image as the decent, courageous man of action. From his film debut in 1944 with ''Days of Glory,'' he was never less than a star. He was nominated for an Oscar five times, and his range of roles was astonishing.He portrayed a priest in ''Keys of the Kingdom,'' combat heroes in ''Twelve O'Clock High'' and ''Pork Chop Hill,'' Westerners in ''Yellow Sky'' and ''The Gunfighter,'' a romantic in ''Roman Holiday.'' His commanding presence suited him for legendary characters: King David in ''David and Bathsheba,'' sea captains in ''Captain Horatio Hornblower'' and ''Moby Dick,'' F. Scott Fitzgerald in ''Beloved Infidel,'' the war leader ''MacArthur,'' and Abraham Lincoln in the TV miniseries ''The Blue and the Grey.''Peck's rare attempts at unsympathetic roles usually failed. He played the renegade son in the Western ''Duel in the Sun'' and the infamous Nazi doctor Josef Mengele in ''The Boys from Brazil.''Off-screen as well as on, Peck conveyed a quiet dignity. He had one amicable divorce, and scandal never touched him. He served as president of the Motion Picture Academy and was active in the Motion Picture and Television Fund, American Cancer Society, National Endowment for the Arts and other causes.''I'm not a do-gooder,'' he insisted after learning of the Academy's Jean Hersholt humanitarian award in 1968. ''It embarrassed me to be classified as a humanitarian. I simply take part in activities that I believe in.''Peck died at his Los Angeles home overnight, with his wife, Veronique, at his side, Friedman said.''She told me very briefly that he died peacefully. She was with him, holding his hand, and he just went to sleep,'' Friedman said. ''He had just been getting older and more fragile. He wasn't really ill. He just sort of ran his course and died of old age.''During his first five years in films, Peck scored four Academy Award nominations as best actor: ''Keys of the Kingdom'' (1944), ''The Yearling'' (1946), ''Gentleman's Agreement'' (1947), ''Twelve O'Clock High'' (1949).''Gentleman's Agreement,'' in which he played a magazine writer who poses as a Jew to expose anti-Semitism, was considered a daring film in its time. Peck commented in 1971 that his agent cautioned him: ''You're just establishing yourself, and a lot of people will resent the picture. Anti-Semitism runs very deep in this country.''Peck ignored his advice. ''Gentleman's Agreement'' proved a moneymaker and won the Oscar as best picture.The actor listed ''Gentleman's Agreement'' among his favorites of his movies. The others: the sea adventure ''Captain Horatio Hornblower''; ''Roman Holiday'' in which he played a reporter to Audrey Hepburn's princess; ''The Guns of Navarone'' (''good, all-out entertainment, though it's really a comedy''); and ''To Kill a Mockingbird'' - for which he won the 1962 Oscar as best actor. He played Atticus Finch, a small-town Southern lawyer who defies public sentiment to defend a black man accused of rape.''I put everything I had into it - all my feelings and everything I'd learned in 46 years of living, about family life and fathers and children,'' he remarked in 1989. ''And my feelings about racial justice and inequality and opportunity.''In 2003, an American Film Institute listing of the top heroes in film history ranked Peck's Finch as No. 1.''I think Gregory Peck's whole career was defined by that film, because he was the classic, quintessential American hero - a fellow who puts to hazard his whole future in order to do something he believes is right to do,'' said Jack Valenti, president and chief executive officer of the Motion Picture Association of America.In his 60s and 70s, movie roles grew sparse. He appeared as a U.S. president in ''Amazing Grace and Chuck'' (1987), maverick author Ambrose Bierce in ''Old Gringo'' (1989) and as a humane company owner victimized by a hostile takeover in ''Other People's Money'' (1991).In 1993 he starred in a made-for-TV movie, ''The Portrait,'' with Lauren Bacall, his co-star of ''Designing Woman'' (1957), and his daughter Cecilia.A 1998 TV miniseries version of ''Moby Dick'' cast Peck in the small role of the preacher Father Mapple. He had played the protagonist, Ahab, in the 1956 film version.''I'm working as much as I like,'' he commented in 1989. ''I don't want to do, if I can avoid it, anything mediocre. It's kind of unseemly at my age to come out in a turkey.''Peck's lonely, disjointed childhood was the kind that often contributes to the making of actors. He was born Eldred Gregory Peck on April 5, 1916, in La Jolla, Calif. ''My mother had found 'Eldred' in a phone book, and I was stuck with it,'' he said.The mother was a lively Missourian, the father was a quiet druggist, son of an Irish immigrant mother. His parents divorced when their son was 6. His next two years were divided between them, then he spent two years with his maternal grandmother in La Jolla. At 10 he was shipped off to a Roman Catholic military academy in Los Angeles where he was indoctrinated by ''tough Irish nuns and square-jawed ROTC officers.''Peck majored in English at the University of California at Berkeley and rowed on the crew. One day he was accosted by the director of the campus little theater who said he was looking for a tall actor for an adaptation of ''Moby Dick.''''I don't know why I said yes,'' he recalled in a 1989 interview. ''I guess I was fearless, and it seemed like it might be fun. I wasn't any good, but I ended up doing five plays my last year in college.''Dropping the name of Eldred, he headed for New York after graduation with $195 in his pocket. He studied with Sanford Meisner and Martha Graham, worked as a barker at the 1939 World's Fair and as a tour guide at NBC. After summer stock and a tour with Katherine Cornell in ''The Doctor's Dilemma,'' he made his Broadway debut as the lead in Emlyn Williams' ''Morning Star.''A half-century later he remembered opening night:''In the dressing room I gave myself a kick and said, 'Get out there!' I was jittery for the first five minutes, and then I wasn't jittery anymore. You can die up there and say, 'Call it off, give 'em their money back and let 'em go home.' Or you can collect yourself and do it.''The play flopped, but Peck's performance brought interest from Hollywood. He accepted a modest film, ''Days of Glory,'' a story of Russian peasants during the Nazi invasion, mostly to use the $10,000 salary to pay off his dentist and other creditors. Then Darryl Zanuck offered him ''Keys of the Kingdom.''Soon Peck was under non-exclusive contracts to four studios; he refused an exclusive pact with MGM despite Louis B. Mayer's tearful pleading. With most of the male stars absent in the war, the studios desperately needed strong leading men. Peck was exempt from service because of an old back injury.A Roosevelt New Dealer, Peck campaigned for Harry Truman in 1948 ''at a time when nobody thought he had a chance to win.'' He continued championing liberal causes, producing an anti-Vietnam War film in 1972, ''The Trial of the Catonsville Nine'' and helping the campaign against the nomination of Robert Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987.Rumors arose periodically that Peck planned to run for office. They started when Ronald Reagan defeated Edmund G. ''Pat'' Brown for governor of California in 1966. Brown cracked: ''If they're going to run actors for governor, maybe the Democrats should have run Greg Peck.''''I never gave a thought to running,'' Peck always replied. ''Not even in my heart of hearts do I have an ambition to do that.''Peck married his first wife, Greta, in 1942 and they had three sons, Jonathan, Stephen and Carey. Jonathan, a TV reporter, committed suicide at the age of 30. After their divorce in 1954, he married Veronique Passani, a Paris reporter. They had two children, Anthony and Cecilia, both actors.AP-NY-06-12-03 1613EDT
0 likes   


Return to “Off Topic”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests