'Sound of Music' Star
Christopher Plummer Dead at 91
KM JEEBU
In 2012, he became the
oldest actor to win an Oscar for his role as an elderly man who comes out of
the closet as gay in the movie 'Beginners'.
Christopher
Plummer, a patrician Canadian who starred as widower Captain von Trapp opposite
Julie Andrews in the blockbuster 1965 musical The Sound Of Music and
in 2012 became the oldest actor to win an Oscar, has died at 91, his longtime
friend and manager said on Friday.
“The the world has lost a consummate actor today and I have lost a cherished friend,”
Andrews said in a statement. “I treasure the memories of our work together and
all the humor and fun we shared through the years.”
Plummer
passed away peacefully at his home in Connecticut with his wife Elaine Taylor
at his side.
“Chris
was an extraordinary man who deeply loved and respected his profession with
great old fashion manners, self-deprecating humor, and the music of words,”
manager Lou Pitt said in a statement.
Plummer,
an accomplished Shakespearean actor honored for his varied stage, television
and film work in a career that spanned more than six decades, was best known
for his role in The Sound Of Music, which at the time
eclipsed Gone With the Wind (1939) as the top-earning movie
ever.
Plummer
flourished in a succession of meaty roles after age 70 – a time in life when
most actors merely fade away. At age 82, he became the oldest actor to get a
competitive Oscar when he won for his supporting role in Beginners as
an elderly man who comes out of the closet as gay.
“You’re
only two years older than me, darling,” Plummer, who was born in 1929, purred
to his golden statuette at the 2012 Oscars ceremony. “Where have you been all
my life?”
One
of his last major roles was as in the dark comedy Knives Out in
2019.
“This
is truly heartbreaking,” Knives Out co-star Chris Evans said
on Twitter. “What an unbelievable loss. Few careers have such longevity and
impact. One of my favorite memories from Knives Out was
playing piano together in the Thrombey house between set-ups. He was a lovely
man and a legendary talent.”
Plummer
appeared in more than 100 films and also was nominated for an Oscar for his
portrayal of Russian author Leo Tolstoy in 2009’s The Last Station.
He won two Tony Awards for his Broadway work, two Emmy Awards for TV work, and
performed for some of the world’s top theatre companies.
But
for many fans, his career was defined by his performance as a stern widower
in The Sound Of Music – a role he called “a cardboard figure,
humorless and one-dimensional.” In his 2008 autobiography In Spite Of
Myself, Plummer refers to the movie with the mischievous acronym “S&M.”
It
took him four decades to change his view of the film and embrace it as a
“terrific movie” that made him proud.
Director
Robert Wise’s sentimental film follows the singing von Trapp family and their
1938 escape from the Nazis after Plummer’s “captain with seven children” falls
in love with the aspiring nun played by Andrews. The movie won the Academy
Award as best picture of 1965.
“Originally
I had accepted Robert Wise’s offer simply because I wanted to find out what it
was like to be in a musical comedy,” Plummer wrote in his book. “I had a secret
plan to one day turn ‘Cyrano de Bergerac’ into a Broadway musical. ‘S&M’
would therefore be a perfect workout in preparation for such an event.”
He
said he had never sung before – “not even in the shower” – before taking a role
that included crooning the song ‘Edelweiss’. He blamed his own “vulgar streak”
for the desire to star in a big, splashy Hollywood extravaganza.
“And
yes, all right, I’ll admit it, I was also a pampered, arrogant, young bastard,
spoiled by too many great theater roles,” he wrote. “Ludicrous though it may
seem, I still harbored the old-fashioned stage actor’s snobbism toward
moviemaking.”
Late-career
renaissance
Plummer’s the late-career renaissance began with director Michael Mann’s The Insider (1999)
in which he portrayed CBS News interviewer Mike Wallace, acting alongside Al
Pacino and Russell Crowe.
That
was followed by triumphs in director Ron Howard’s Academy Award best picture
winner A Beautiful Mind (2001), director Spike Lee’s Inside
Man (2006), Up and The Imaginarium of Doctor
Parnassus (both 2009) and Barrymore and The
Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (both 2011).
In
2017, Plummer replaced Kevin Spacey as oil billionaire J. Paul Getty in All
the Money in the World. The film had been completed when Spacey was accused
of sexual misconduct. Plummer re-shot all of Spacey’s scenes and received an
Oscar nomination for the role.
Plummer
was born in Toronto on December 13, 1929, into a privileged railroad family. He
was the great-grandson of Sir John Abbott, the third prime minister of Canada.
Plummer
confessed to a boozy lifestyle with plenty of affairs through the 1960s. He
said his third wife, British actress Elaine Taylor, forced him after their 1970
marriage to stop the carousing that consumed some of his peers and friends,
such as Richard Burton and Peter O’Toole.
“Yeah,
I stopped,” he told Britain’s Telegraph newspaper in 2010.
“Square son of a bitch that I was, coward that I was! No, Elaine did say, ‘If
you don’t quit this stupid over-drinking I’m outta here.’ And thank God. She
did in a sense save my life.”
Plummer’s
early films included 1965’s Inside Daisy Clover with Natalie
Wood and Robert Redford released the same year as The Sound Of Music, The
Fall of the Roman Empire (1964) with Sophia Loren and Alec Guinness,
and Triple Cross (1966).
Among
his more colorful roles were as an eye-patch-wearing Klingon in Star
Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991) and as an urbane jewel thief
in The Return of the Pink Panther (1975). He said he kicked
himself for turning down the Gandalf role in the popular The Lord of
the Rings trilogy.
His
TV roles included the 1983 miniseries The Thorn Birds.

 
 
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