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Post by subdjoe on Aug 9, 2010 15:06:45 GMT -5
Damn, only 84.
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Post by danceswithdogs on Aug 9, 2010 15:45:26 GMT -5
She played a fantastic character in HUD. I don't know much about her other films, but she will always be remembered.
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mrbose
Senior Member
Posts: 898
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Post by mrbose on Aug 9, 2010 20:56:35 GMT -5
Patricia Neal AKA Patsy Louise Neal
Born: 20-Jan-1926 Birthplace: Packard, KY Died: 8-Aug-2010 Location of death: Edgartown, MA Cause of death: Cancer - Lung
Gender: Female Religion: Roman Catholic Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Actor
Nationality: United States Executive summary: The Day the Earth Stood Still
Patricia Neal was raised in Knoxville, where she appeared in school plays and by high school was spending her vacations in summer stock performances in Virginia. After graduation, she briefly attended Northwestern University, but dropped out and came to New York, where she made her Broadway debut at 20, in Lillian Hellman's Another Part of the Forest. Her performance won Neal her first Tony Award for Best Actress, and she soon signed a contract with Warner Brothers and came to Hollywood.
In her film debut, she played Ronald Reagan's fiancé in the rather unfunny comedy John Loves Mary. During and after starring in her second film, Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead, she had a five-year affair with her co-star Gary Cooper, ending it only when she came to realize he would not leave his wife. In one of the great science fiction films, 1951's The Day the Earth Stood Still, she saved the world by uttering the words: "Klaatu barada nikto." In A Face in the Crowd, she was treated poorly by Andy Griffith but retaliated. In Breakfast at Tiffany's, she played George Peppard's doting benefactor. She won an Oscar playing maid, housekeeper, and object of desire for Paul Newman in Hud. In In Harm's Way, she played a military nurse who fell for John Wayne.
For 30 years, she was married to author Roald Dahl, though their marriage was filled with tragedy. Their infant son was left brain-damaged when his baby carriage was crumpled by a Manhattan cab in 1960. Two years later, their 7-year-old daughter contracted the measles and died. Three years after that, at the age of 39 and the height of her career, Neal suffered three strokes in one evening. While she was hospitalized, the showbiz tabloid Variety mistakenly reported her death. Dahl oversaw her therapy and recovery, in a manner some -- but not Neal -- called tyrannical and overbearing.
She returned to the screen in The Subject Was Roses, giving an Oscar-nominated performance as the troubled mother of Martin Sheen and wife of Jack Albertson. In the 1971 pilot episode of The Waltons, Neal played Momma Walton, although the role was played by Miss Michael Learned when the series was picked up. Neal has continued working in the decades since, albeit mostly on television and in lesser films.
She has devoted much of her time and energy to developing the Patricia Neal Rehabilitation Center in Knoxville, a facility nationally recognized for its rehabilitation services for patients with stroke, spinal cord, and traumatic brain injuries. She has also made innumerable charity appearances at fundraisers for stroke victims. The story of her post-stroke rehabilitation was made into a telefilm, The Patricia Neal Story, in 1981, with Glenda Jackson as Neal and Dirk Bogarde as Dahl.
Neal is the grandmother of British supermodel Sophie Dahl.
Father: William Burdette "Coot" Neal Mother: Eura Mildred Petrey (b. 1899, d. 2003 Sister: Margaret Ann Neal Vandenoord Brother: William Petrey Neal Boyfriend: Gary Cooper (actor) Husband: Roald Dahl (author, m. 2-Jul-1953, div. 17-Nov-1983, five children) Daughter: Chantal Sophia Dahl ("Tessa", author, b. 11-Apr-1957) Daughter: Olivia Dahl (b. 20-Apr-1955, d. age 8, measles) Son: Theo Matthew Roald Dahl (b. 30-Jul-1960, brain damaged in auto accident) Daughter: Ophelia Magdalena Dahl (health care advocate, Partners in Health, b. 12-May-1964) Daughter: Lucy Neal Dahl (author, b. 4-Aug-1965)
University: Northwestern University (dropped out)
Pi Beta Phi Fraternity for Women Oscar for Best Actress 1964 for Hud Golden Globe 1972 for The Homecoming: A Christmas Story Abortion Coma 1965 Stroke 1965 Paralyzed Endorsement of Liggett Group Chesterfield cigarettes Risk Factors: Smoking, Aviophobia
FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR Cookie's Fortune (22-Jan-1999) Heidi (18-Jul-1993) Caroline? (29-Apr-1990) Ghost Story (15-Dec-1981) All Quiet on the Western Front (14-Nov-1979) The Passage (13-Apr-1979) The Bastard (22-May-1978) Baxter! (4-Mar-1973) The Homecoming: A Christmas Story (19-Dec-1971) The Night Digger (12-May-1971) The Subject Was Roses (13-Oct-1968) In Harm's Way (6-Apr-1965) Psyche 59 (29-Apr-1964) Hud (28-May-1963) Breakfast at Tiffany's (5-Oct-1961) A Face in the Crowd (28-May-1957) Something for the Birds (Oct-1952) Washington Story (1-Jul-1952) Diplomatic Courier (13-Jun-1952) The Day the Earth Stood Still (18-Sep-1951) Operation Pacific (27-Jan-1951) Three Secrets (20-Oct-1950) The Breaking Point (30-Sep-1950) Bright Leaf (16-Jun-1950) The Hasty Heart (2-Dec-1949) The Fountainhead (2-Jul-1949) John Loves Mary (4-Feb-1949)
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Post by The Big Dog on Aug 9, 2010 22:59:44 GMT -5
She was a damned fine actress and a classy lady who lived a long and rich life in spite of nearly dying in her late 30's.
Pretty good epitaph if you ask me.
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