• Features
  • Blogs
  • Food and Dining
  • Best Of Baltimore
  • Arts
  • Travel
  • Home and Garden
  • Shopping
  • Party Pics
  • Bride
Top Doctors    |    City Guide    |    Top Singles    |    Best Places To Live
On the Town    |     In Good Taste    |     MaxSpace    |     All the Pieces Matter    |     Eyes On the Street    |     Learning To Crawl    |     Talk Shop
Dining Guide    |    Best Restaurants    |    Neighborhood Restaurants
2008    |    2007    |    2006

May 27th, 2008

The Way He Was

aleqm5jbceizjl6a7vp8ntey4z1a8hzeka.jpg

Although I knew he was sick, so at least it didn’t come as a total shock, I’m tremendously sad about the death of director/actor Sydney Pollack, who succumbed to cancer yesterday at the too-young age of 73.
Sydney Pollack has directed two of my all-time favorite films—Tootsie (quite simply, a perfect comedy) and The Way We Were (a flawed, but perfect to me, political romance). And he co-starred in one of my favorite Woody Allen films, Husbands and Wives (he was just brilliant as a man whose mid-life crisis led to a highly inappropriate affair and a bout of hilarious self-loathing).
That’s three major film touchstones for me that this man was a part of. He’s best known for his directing—he won the Oscar for Out of Africa. But he was an underrated actor, I think. He was able to play a certain kind of under-represented character—the Jewish alpha male, if you will—and did so in an incredibly earthy, human way (he even managed to ground the loopy Eyes Wide Shut).
I felt like I knew him. Or at least, I wished that I knew him. Sometimes when a film icon dies it feels personal. This is one of those times.
RIP, Sydney.

Leave a Reply

 

Home Page Events Online Store Contact Us Subscribe Give a gift Manage account