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1 posted on 09/28/2003 3:45:19 PM PDT by lowbridge
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To: lowbridge
God Bless his soul and may he Rest in Peace.
2 posted on 09/28/2003 3:48:42 PM PDT by netmilsmom (Ray has gone bye-bye Egon, what have you got??)
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To: lodwick
Another famous name in the obit column.
3 posted on 09/28/2003 3:49:25 PM PDT by pubmom (911 is not a suitable substitute for a .45)
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To: lowbridge
R.I.P.
4 posted on 09/28/2003 3:49:46 PM PDT by krb (the statement on the other side of this tagline is false)
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To: lowbridge
I remember the Oscar telecast in '99.....
..and the controversy of Kazan presented with the special award.

....and Ed Harris remaining seated----his disrepect of Kazan showing in his smirky face----while almost everyone else stood and applauded.

I've not wanted to watch another Ed Harris movie since, even though he's a passable actor.

Harris has no class.

5 posted on 09/28/2003 3:56:24 PM PDT by Guenevere (..., .Press On!!!)
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To: lowbridge
This is a guy who had real courage to do the right thing at a most difficult moment.

Hollywood lacks people of such courage and has become overpopulated with people who make subversive comments, but, I believe, aren't intelligent enough to be truly subversive.
6 posted on 09/28/2003 3:56:54 PM PDT by LA Conservative (evil triumphs when good men do nothing)
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To: lowbridge
They hated Kazan because he was right AND talented.
8 posted on 09/28/2003 4:00:50 PM PDT by thegreatbeast (Quid lucrum istic mihi est?)
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To: lowbridge
"(T)here was a police state among the Left element in Hollywood and Broadway. . . . I would rather do what I did than crawl in front of a ritualistic Left and lie the way those other comrades did and betray my own soul. I didn't betray it. I made a difficult decision."

R.I.P. To a Man who stood up to Hollywood, are you listening Mr. Medved?

9 posted on 09/28/2003 4:03:59 PM PDT by TommyUdo (The Democrat Party, Pimping off Po' Folk and Balkanizing Republicans since 1964)
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To: lowbridge
According to The World Almanac, he was born 9/7/1909 in Istanbul.
11 posted on 09/28/2003 4:11:02 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: lowbridge
Splendor in the Grass - I will remember
15 posted on 09/28/2003 4:18:18 PM PDT by Truth666
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To: lowbridge
You can bet that at the Streisand and Saradon residences there is the clinking of champagne glasses as we speak.
18 posted on 09/28/2003 4:34:26 PM PDT by DoctorMichael (Thats my story, and I'm sticking to it.)
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To: lowbridge
The link doesn't work and I can't find this news anywhere else!
20 posted on 09/28/2003 4:46:50 PM PDT by Chi-townChief
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To: lowbridge
Wait 'til you see the obits from the neocommunists at some of our leading propaganda mills. They will be like cockroaches over week old food. The Hollywood commie traitors who worked against America and them congratulated each other for doing so will damn Kazan with faint praise.

My bet is that CNN will interview any of the old generation traitors still living and allow them to criticize Kazan and praise those who would have put most of us in the gulags.

When will we realize that most "celebrities" are no talent hacks set up by groups of parasites who take percentages of their false success?

22 posted on 09/28/2003 4:50:50 PM PDT by Tacis
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To: lowbridge
A remarkable filmmaker who had superior skills, talent and ability and who made some unforgettable movies. Thanks for the entertainment Mr.Kazan and RIP.
23 posted on 09/28/2003 4:54:51 PM PDT by Reagan Man (The few, the proud, the conservatives.)
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To: lowbridge
Bozell's commentary on all this
26 posted on 09/28/2003 4:56:38 PM PDT by Bonaparte
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To: lowbridge
"FREEDOM: The Right to say NO to Communism" =

The Sign I was blessed to carry outside ELIA KAZAN's OSCAR Ceremony

I will NEVER FORGET that Day for FREEDOM
41 posted on 09/28/2003 5:40:33 PM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE (Vet-Battle of IA DRANG-1965 www.LZXRAY.comFI)
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To: lowbridge
Date of birth (location)
7 September 1909
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Mini biography
Elia Kazan, known for his creative stage direction, was born Elia... (show more)
Elia Kazan
Biography from Leonard Maltin's Movie Encyclopedia:
A truly pioneering Hollywood director, Elia Kazan in the late 1940s and early 1950s helped blaze trails into the largely uncharted territories of social consciousness and cinematic naturalism, turning out some of the era's most memorable movies and influencing subsequent generations of filmmakers. Born to Greek parents who came to America when he was a small child, Kazan fell under the spell of the theater as a young man, acting in New York's avant-garde Group Theatre troupe and eventually becoming a director whose Broadway triumphs included the original productions of "The Skin of Our Teeth," "All My Sons," "A Streetcar Named Desire," and "Death of a Salesman."

Kazan, whose first brush with the movie industry consisted of assisting documentarian Ralph Steiner in the mid 1930s and acting in two Warner Bros. films, City for Conquest (1940) and Blues in the Night (1941), was courted by 20th CenturyFox's Darryl F. Zanuck, who signed him to a contract in 1944. From the first, directing A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945), Kazan evinced an ability to coax great performances from his actors; star James Dunn and child actress Peggy Ann Garner both won Oscars for their turns in this lovely, evocative film.Boomerang! (1947), part-murder mystery, partcourtroom drama, also featured superb performances and presented a subtle but definite comment on political corruption.Gentleman's Agreement (also 1947), starring Gregory Peck, was a full-blown treatise on anti-Semitism that won Oscars for Kazan, supporting actress Celeste Holm, and as Best Picture. Seen today, the picture seems rather tame and obvious, but it was considered a real breakthrough back in 1947. Kazan took on race relations in Pinky (1949), the story of a light-skinned black woman (improbably played by Jeanne Crain) who passes for white; it too was thought very daring at the time but has lost much of its impact in the intervening years. In retrospect, Kazan considered his first "real" film to be Panic in the Streets (1950), a solid thriller about efforts to contain a burgeoning epidemic which was shot entirely on the streets of New Orleans.

A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) not only earned Kazan another Oscar nod for Best Director, it made a full-fledged screen star of Marlon Brando, leading exponent of the "Method" acting technique taught at Lee Strasberg's Actors' Studio, which was cofounded by Kazan. The Tennessee Williams play, which Kazan had directed on Broadway, was strong stuff to moviegoers of 1951, but it ushered in an era of similarly ambitious and unusual stage-to-screen translations. Brando continued his association with the director most successfully, first in Viva Zapata! (1952, which, like Streetcar netted him a Best Actor nomination) and then in the classic On the Waterfront (1954), which took eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Actor. Budd Schulberg's hard-hitting exposé of the longshoremen's unions was ideal fodder for Kazan's mastery of heightened realism. (It came, ironically, on the heels of the director's still-infamous decision to testify and name names before the House Un-American Activities Committee.) He went abroad to make Man on a Tightrope (1953), the story of a circus troupe's escape from behind the Iron Curtain.

Kazan picked up yet another nomination for East of Eden (1955), in which he did for newcomer James Dean what he'd done for Brando a few years earlier. Viewers today are still riveted by the rawness of emotions the director managed to capture in this powerful Steinbeck story of a family in conflict. By this time, he had fully mastered the cinematic technique (critics of his earlier pictures suggested that they were too much like filmed stage plays), and was producing his own pictures. The wildly provocative Baby Doll (1956), A Face in the Crowd (1957), Wild River (1960), and Splendor in the Grass (1961) all bore Kazan's stamp of quality, but didn't quite match his earlier successes.America, America (1963), based on the experiences of Kazan's own uncle, movingly captured the turn-of-the-century immigrant experience and snagged Oscar nominations for Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Screenplay (which Kazan himself had written). It also ended his most fertile creative period.

Since then, Kazan has directed only three films-The Arrangement (1969, based on his own novel), the little-seen The Visitors (1972), and The Last Tycoon (1976, a highly anticipated but ultimately disappointing F. Scott Fitzgerald adaptation)and has abandoned the theater altogether. Kazan was married to actresses Molly Day Thatcher and Barbara Loden. His autobiography, "A Life," was published in 1988. His son, Nicholas Kazan, is a screenwriter who was Oscar-nominated for Reversal of Fortune (1990) and made his directing debut with Dream Lover (1994).

Copyright © 1994 Leonard Maltin, used by arrangement with Signet, a division of Penguin Putnam, Inc.









Filmography as: Director, Producer, Actor, Writer, Miscellaneous Crew, Himself




Director - filmography
(1980s) (1970s) (1960s) (1950s) (1940s) (1930s)

Beyond the Aegean (1989)


Last Tycoon, The (1976)
Visitors, The (1972)


Arrangement, The (1969)
America, America (1963)
... aka Anatolian Smile, The (1963) (UK)
Splendor in the Grass (1961)
... aka Splendour in the Grass (1961) (UK)
Wild River (1960)


Face in the Crowd, A (1957)
Baby Doll (1956)
East of Eden (1955)
... aka John Steinbeck's East of Eden (1955) (USA: complete title)
On the Waterfront (1954)
Man on a Tightrope (1953)
Viva Zapata! (1952)
Streetcar Named Desire, A (1951)
Panic in the Streets (1950)


Pinky (1949)
Boomerang! (1947)
Gentleman's Agreement (1947)
... aka Laura Z. Hobson's Gentleman's Agreement (1948) (USA: complete title)
Sea of Grass, The (1947)
Watchtower Over Tomorrow (1945) (uncredited)
Tree Grows in Brooklyn, A (1945)
It's Up to You (1941)


People of the Cumberland, The (1937)







Filmography as: Director, Producer, Actor, Writer, Miscellaneous Crew, Himself




Producer - filmography
(1960s) (1950s)

Arrangement, The (1969) (producer)
America, America (1963) (producer)
... aka Anatolian Smile, The (1963) (UK)
Splendor in the Grass (1961) (producer)
... aka Splendour in the Grass (1961) (UK)
Wild River (1960) (producer)


Face in the Crowd, A (1957) (producer)
Baby Doll (1956) (producer)
East of Eden (1955) (producer)
... aka John Steinbeck's East of Eden (1955) (USA: complete title)







Filmography as: Director, Producer, Actor, Writer, Miscellaneous Crew, Himself




Actor - filmography
(1980s) (1950s) (1940s) (1930s)

"Héritage de la chouette, L'" (1989) (mini) TV Series
... aka "Owl's Legacy, The" (1989) (mini)
Brouillard, Le (1988) .... Old man in the coffee shop
... aka Fog, The (1988) (International: English title)
... aka Mist (1988) (UK)
... aka Sis (1988) (Turkey: Turkish title)


Panic in the Streets (1950) (uncredited) .... Mortuary Assistant


Blues in the Night (1941) .... Nickie Haroyen
City for Conquest (1940) .... Googi Zucco


Pie in the Sky (1935)







Filmography as: Director, Producer, Actor, Writer, Miscellaneous Crew, Himself




Writer - filmography
(2000s) (1960s) (1940s)

Diaspora (2001) (excerpts from "America, America")


Arrangement, The (1969) (also novel)
America, America (1963) (also book)
... aka Anatolian Smile, The (1963) (UK)


Gentleman's Agreement (1947) (screenplay revision) (uncredited)
... aka Laura Z. Hobson's Gentleman's Agreement (1948) (USA: complete title)
Blues in the Night (1941) (play Hot Nocturne) (uncredited)







Filmography as: Director, Producer, Actor, Writer, Miscellaneous Crew, Himself




Miscellaneous Crew - filmography

One Touch of Venus (1948) (stager: musical play)







Filmography as: Director, Producer, Actor, Writer, Miscellaneous Crew, Himself




Himself - filmography
(1990s) (1980s) (1970s) (1950s)

Liv till varje pris (1998) .... Himself
Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese Through American Movies, A (1998) (TV) (archive footage) .... Himself
Elia Kazan: A Director's Journey (1995) .... Himself


Sanford Meisner: The American Theatre's Best Kept Secret (1985) .... Himself
Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts, The (1983) (TV) .... Himself (Honoree)
34th Annual Tony Awards, The (1980) (TV) .... Himself (presenter)


Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts, The (1979) (TV) .... Presenter: Tennessee Williams


27th Annual Academy Awards, The (1955) (TV) .... Himself
Screen Director, The (1951) (uncredited) (archive footage) .... Himself
44 posted on 09/28/2003 5:59:09 PM PDT by Pharmboy (Dems lie 'cause they have to...)
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To: lowbridge
When liberals think of HUAC, they think of McCarthy. Ann Coulter makes a hilarious point about this in her recent book _Treason_. Know why? ;--)
46 posted on 09/28/2003 6:06:10 PM PDT by old-ager
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To: lowbridge
I watched A Face in the Crowd last week on TCM. It's about a sleezeball from Arkansas who becomes the most powerful man in the country. The guy was a prophet.
53 posted on 09/28/2003 6:19:24 PM PDT by Tribune7
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To: lowbridge
RIP to one of the greatest directors ever.

And I just finished watching "On the Waterfront" my favorite.

Godspeed.
57 posted on 09/28/2003 6:32:17 PM PDT by Desdemona (Kempis' Imitation of Christ online! http://www.leaderu.com/cyber/books/imitation/imitation.html)
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To: lowbridge
Nobody has mentioned (or maybe it's been mentioned to death elsewhere) how Hollywood hates Kazan, yet celebrates child-rapist Roman Polanski. If that doesn't tell you all you need to know about Hollywood's 'values', then you'll never get it.
58 posted on 09/28/2003 6:56:30 PM PDT by TrappedInLiberalHell (Hillary walks into a bar. Let's hope it leaves a nice bump on her forehead.)
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