Domain Registration

Legendary film actor Kirk Douglas dies aged 103

  • February 06, 2020

Hollywood Actor Kirk Douglas has died at the age of 103, his son Michael Douglas announced on Wednesday.

“It is with tremendous sadness that my brothers and I announce that Kirk Douglas left us today at the age of 103,” Michael Douglas said on his official Facebook page.

“To the world, he was a legend, an actor from the golden age of movies who lived well into his golden years, a humanitarian whose commitment to justice and the causes he believed in set a standard for all of us to aspire to,” Michael Douglas added. “But to me and my brothers Joel and Peter he was simply Dad.”

“He leaves a legacy in film that will endure for generations to come, and a history as a renowned philanthropist who worked to aid the public and bring peace to the planet,” the younger Douglas said.

Kirk Douglas celebrated his 103rd birthday less than two months ago.

  • Kirk Douglas as a boxer in Champion (Foto: Imago/Hollywood Photo Archive)

    An outstanding actor: Kirk Douglas turns 103

    Distinctive features

    Kirk Douglas always wanted to be an actor. But then he studied philosophy, chemistry and English literature. From a poor background, he financed his studies with the help of a boxing grant. He became known for being a fighter – like here in one of his early films, “Champion” (1949).

  • Kirk Douglas family picture (Foto: picture-alliance/universal studios)

    An outstanding actor: Kirk Douglas turns 103

    A happy family — for the photographers

    In 1943, Kirk Douglas married actress Diana Dill. As a Hollywood star, he loved presenting his happy family to photographers. But the truth behind all the glamour was quite different — they divorced in 1951. His children Michael, then 15, and Joel, 12 at the time, suffered immensely from the break-up of the family.

  • Kirk Douglas Ace In The Hole (Imago /Entertainment Pictures)

    An outstanding actor: Kirk Douglas turns 103

    ‘Ace in The Hole’ (1951)

    Here, Kirk Douglas plays an ambitious and self-centered reporter who does just about anything for a good story. Sacked several times for drunkenness, adultery and defamation, he gets wind of a sensational report when he comes across an accident, while obstructing rescue operations. The film was superbly directed by Billy Wilder.

  • Kirk Douglas as Ulysses (Foto: Imago/United Archives)

    An outstanding actor: Kirk Douglas turns 103

    ‘Ulysses’ (1955)

    Kirk Douglas gave one of his strongest performances in the Hollywood film “Ulysses” (1955). He found submissive roles extremely challenging, and even when playing the underdog, he always remained a rebel at the same time. In this film, he also had difficulties depicting a subservient character: His nature as a fighter quickly won the upper hand. He often bullied the directors.

  • Kirk Douglas as Vincent van Gogh (Foto: Hollyood Photo Archive)

    An outstanding actor: Kirk Douglas turns 103

    ‘Lust for Life’ (1956)

    In 1956, Kirk Douglas was nominated for an Oscar for his performance as Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh (“Lust for Life”), but did not win the award. With incredible passion and drama, Douglas played the desperate and lunatic painter who cut off one of his ears towards the end of his life. It was a role that demanded everything that Douglas was able to give.

  • Kirk Douglas in 'Last Train from Gun Hill' (Foto: Imago/AD)

    An outstanding actor: Kirk Douglas turns 103

    ‘Last Train from Gun Hill’ (1959)

    Hollywood loved him in the role of tough Western heroes and daredevils. However, such roles could not satisfy him, as they only reflected one part of his personality. After all, Kirk Douglas also had a more serious side. He was even religious, although he discovered his Jewish roots only late in life – following a stroke.

  • Kirk Douglas in Spartacus

    An outstanding actor: Kirk Douglas turns 103

    ‘Spartacus’ (1960)

    This role was one of the most physically demanding ones in his entire film career. Even though he was very well trained, Douglas found it very exhausting to play the main character in the historical drama “Spartacus.” This Hollywood film featuring the biggest slave rebellion against the Roman Empire became a big success, and has remained a classic in film history.

  • Kirk Douglas and Gena Rowlands (Foto: picture-alliance/United Archives/IFTN)

    An outstanding actor: Kirk Douglas turns 103

    ‘Lonely Are The Brave’ (1961)

    According to Douglas, this was his most important film. Although he tended to work in a team, he remained a lone warrior throughout his life. He discovered the law of the streets as a young child. The poverty of his Russian-Jewish family continued to serve as a protective shield against the luxurious and glamorous world of Hollywood that he always considered a false illusion.

  • Kirk and Michael Douglas (Getty images / AFP/ A. Sanchez-Gonzalez)

    An outstanding actor: Kirk Douglas turns 103

    Passing on his talents

    His son Michael Douglas followed his footsteps not only as an excellent actor, but, much to the joy of his father, also as a director and producer of outstanding films. All four sons of Kirk Douglas are working in film and the media. In 1975, Kirk performed on the stage in “One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest” — directed by his son Michael.

  • Kirk Douglas with his wife Anne Buydens 2012 (Foto: Imago/stockpeople/Unimedia Images)

    An outstanding actor: Kirk Douglas turns 103

    A loving couple – until today

    His wife Anne Buydens was born in Germany and emigrated to the US. Kirk Douglas has been married to his second wife since 1954, and they’ve been through all the ups and downs of life. Since his stroke in 1995, Anne is doing her best to help him recover. They have two sons together, Peter and Eric Anthony.

  • Kirk Douglas 2014 in Beverly Hills (Foto: picture alliance/AP Images/M. Sayles)

    An outstanding actor: Kirk Douglas turns 103

    A strong personality

    Kirk Douglas has always remained a strong personality. He certainly doesn’t like to be told what to do. As he wrote in one of his countless biographies, as the nameless son of a Jewish scavenger, he is “damn proud” of having become a highly paid Hollywood star and film producer. And he has always remained humble-minded in the face of so much “undeserved” luck.

    Author: Conny Paul (ad)


Living the dream

Kirk Douglas embodied the notion of the American Dream. The headstrong actor sparred at times with Hollywood, but his determination and skills as an actor turned him into a household name.

In 2016, just weeks before his 100th birthday, the actor was honored by the World Jewish Congress for his contribution to Jewish culture. The soon-to-be centenarian said the honor boosted his circulation. When you turn 100, every day counts, he added.

He survived a number of accidents on set over the years, as well as a helicopter crash and a stroke.

Humble beginnings

Douglas was born in 1916 in Amsterdam, an industrial city in the US state of New York. Named Issur Danielovitch, he grew up in a Jewish-Russian family, his parents having immigrated to the US from Belarus. His father earned very little as a rag collector, while his mother cooked and looked after the family. Early on, Kirk had to keep himself afloat with odd jobs and contribute to the family income.

Yet the young Douglas was extremely ambitious. His mother had told him that, as a Jew, he’d have to be twice as good as others to achieve his goals. Thanks to a scholarship, he was able to attend college, but dropped out of his law studies to pursue acting.

Over the next two years, he worked hard at the New York Academy of Dramatic Arts, and his efforts paid off: He snagged his first role on Broadway. Yet he didn’t stick to the stage for long before moving on to film  — and that was due to a mere coincidence.

That involved his friend and fellow acting student Lauren Bacall. Douglas later wrote that she was “extremely attractive, blond, blue-eyed, with dimples on her chin — and very talented on top of that.”

Alongside Humphrey Bogart, the young actress had been busy making a name for herself with Hollywood executives. Bacall used her influence and got Kirk Douglas (now his stage name) a role in The Strange Love of Martha Ivers in 1946.

However, it became the first big disappointment in the young actor’s career. He didn’t get the lead, but was cast as the weak husband of Barbara Stanwyck, who was already a big star at the time. Nevertheless, Douglas had had personal experience with alcoholics, thanks to his father, and he played Walter O’Neil with brilliance and intensity. It was a good start to what would become a legendary career, a rags-to-riches tale that epitomizes the American dream.

Breakthrough as a boxer

The young actor garnered positive reviews from the critics. Hollywood producer Hal B. Wallis, always on the lookout for new talent, offered him a seven-year contract. But Douglas turned it down, not wanting to become the producer’s “slave.” However, in 1947, he worked together with Wallis on the gangster drama I Walk Alone, together with Burt Lancaster —  who would later become his only friend in Hollywood.

But Douglas, full of ambition and restlessness, kept holding up the filming with constant discussions. “That was the beginning of my reputation for being difficult,” he wrote in his autobiography.

Kirk Douglas had a mind of his own. In 1948, he turned down a lucrative offer to appear in German director Robert Siodmak’s Dostoyevsky adaptation of The Gambler with stars like Ava Gardner and Gregory Peck in the leads. Instead, he worked with the relatively unknown director Stanley Kramer on Champion (1949). The role of the unscrupulous professional boxer who is merciless to both himself and others became Douglas’ breakthrough as an actor.

His poor background motivated Douglas to work hard. He enjoyed playing men who struggle to get by, but assert themselves and resort to any means to achieve success.

No Oscar for Best Actor

The filming of painter Vincent van Gogh’s biography in Lust for Life (1956) put Douglas’ acting talent to the test —  and brought him his first Oscar nomination. That was one of the most painful films he’d ever made, he would later say. Yul Brynner would beat him to the Oscar that year, however.

Douglas would also never receive an Academy Award for a role — but he did get one for his life’s work in 1996.

Despite his success, Hollywood had mixed feelings about him earlier in his career. He was headstrong, stubborn and didn’t follow the rules. In 1958, he founded his own production company, Bryna Productions. But he lacked the patience and tact to be a good producer.

His marriage to American actress Diana Dill (with whom he had two sons, Hollywood stars Michael, and Joel) had long since ended, and the next woman in his life was German-born Anne Buydens, whom he married in 1954 and stayed with for the rest of his life. “I was lucky enough to find my soul mate […], and I believe our wonderful marriage and our nightly ‘golden hour’ chats have helped me survive all things,” he wrote in celebrity magazine Closer Weekly. They had two sons together, Peter and Eric.

Rebel and pioneer

Douglas’ spectrum as an actor was enormous. He made political films like Paths of Glory (1957) —  a critical anti-war drama about World War I battles directed by Stanley Kubrick. But he also starred in popular blockbusters like The Vikings (1958) and Spartacus (1960). He produced the latter and caused a scandal in Hollywood by getting Dalton Trumbo, who’d been ostracized in the anti-communist McCarthy era, to write the screenplay.

In 1980 Kirk Douglas started withdrawing from the film world and began writing books. In addition to his memoirs (The Ragman’s Son), he also penned novels and autobiographical books that sold well. Together with his wife, he traveled frequently and was active as a UN ambassador.

In 1995, a stroke nearly took Douglas’ life. Only after years of therapy was he able to speak again. It would have been a traumatic experience for any actor, but Douglas didn’t let it get him down. At least publicly, he seemed to take it with humor and appeared on talk shows to discuss his stroke experience.

Return to his Jewish faith

It was during that time that Douglas found his way back to his Jewish faith. He donated a great deal of money to charitable projects in the US and Israel. He and his wife built playgrounds in underprivileged neighborhoods and founded an interfaith pre-school and an Alzheimer’s clinic.

Douglas said later in life that he didn’t have a problem with his advanced age because our world is a “catastrophe” and the older he got, the closer he became to God.

Later in life, he continued to enjoy his reputation as a legendary actor. At the 2018 Golden Globe Awards, the audience rose to a standing ovation and celebrated the career of Hollywood maestro Kirk Douglas.

USA Golden Globes 2018 | Kirk Douglas and Catherine Zeta Jones (Reuters/NBC/P. Drinkwater)

Kirk Douglas and Catherine Zeta Jones, wife of his son Michael, at the 2018 Golden Globes as the Hollywood actor received a standing ovation from the audience

jsi/cmb (AFP, Reuters)

Each evening at 1830 UTC, DW’s editors send out a selection of the day’s hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/legendary-film-actor-kirk-douglas-dies-aged-103/a-52273271?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

Related News

Search

Get best offer

Booking.com
%d bloggers like this: