Notebook -- Tom Titus
They say that deaths of famous people usually happen in threes. That
adage certainly held true over the past week, when we lost baseball
legend Ted Williams, director John Frankenheimer and, most recently,
actor Rod Steiger. They don’t come much greater.
Over the years since the Oscars first were telecast in 1952, I’ve
watched the ceremonies faithfully, and on three occasions I’ve been moved
to astonished profanity over the results. Two of those occasions involved
our recent decedents in the world of entertainment (the third being the
failure of “The Last Picture Show” to win the best picture award in
1971).
The first such shock occurred in 1963, when Angela Lansbury didn’t win
the best supporting actress Oscar for her brilliant performance in “The
Manchurian Candidate,” a powerful movie directed by Frankenheimer, who
had long since carved out a memorable directing career in television.
The picture featured Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey and Janet Leigh at
the top of their form, and a wonderful interpretation of a political
doofus by James Gregory. But for me the most electric performance came
from Lansbury as Harvey’s evil incarnate mother -- leagues removed from
TV’s Jessica Fletcher. Why she didn’t win the best supporting actress
Oscar that year is one of the mysteries of all time in the entertainment
industry.
I’ve watched “The Manchurian Candidate” many times since, and it now
occupies an honored place in my home film library. Frankenheimer, along
with Peter Bogdanovich, has long earned my personal reverence as a master
of the art of movie directing.
The second Oscar night shock occurred a few years later, when Steiger
was up for the best actor award for what was clearly the performance of
his career in “The Pawnbroker.” Being bested by Lee Marvin for “Cat
Ballou” was a travesty only partially salved by his win for “In the Heat
of the Night” two years later.
Steiger was one of Hollywood’s elite actors, capable of immersing
himself thoroughly in his characters. He first caught filmgoers’
attention as the prosecutor in “The Court-Martial of Billy Mitchell,”
then solidified his presence as Marlon Brando’s brother in “On the
Waterfront.” He was the recipient of Brando’s “I coulda been a contender”
speech.
Rent “Dr. Zhivago” or “The Sergeant” or even the early potboiler “The
Big Knife” for a glimpse of this exceptionally powerful and versatile
actor who also toyed gleefully with audiences in “No Way to Treat a Lady”
or “The Loved One.” Steiger, Jack Lemmon and George C. Scott were the
giants of their genre, and now all have departed within a year’s time.
As for Ted Williams, he was simply the finest hitter I’ve ever seen --
and I was no fan of the Boston Red Sox. However, when I was a youngster,
my father and I would travel from northwestern Pennsylvania to Cleveland
a few times a year to watch the Indians play. This was back when nearly
every Sunday offered a doubleheader, and those in Cleveland would pack
the old Municipal Stadium to its 81,000-person saturation point.
The Boston twin bills were the most memorable, and one of the reasons
was Williams, then in his prime, the last player to hit .400 for a season
(.406 in 1941). Had he not been called into action as a fighter pilot
both in World War II and the Korean conflict, his statistics would have
dwarfed them all.
I vividly remember, as a boy, watching those Red Sox doubleheaders in
the mid-1950s, when Williams would play the first game and sit out the
second, since he was nearing the end of his remarkable career. But if the
game got tight in the late innings, you’d hear a rousing murmur of
anticipation from the crowd behind the visitors’ dugout as No. 9 strode
to the plate as a pitch hitter. No PA announcement was necessary.
To lose three giants in their field in the space of a few days makes
this planet a little more barren.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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