Two
defining actors of their generation, Philip Seymour Hoffman and
Maximilian Schell, died within 24 hours of each other, one through
natural causes and the other through a drug overdose. Both added
greatly to the film environment of their times.
Philip
Seymour Hoffman, 46, was found dead
in an apartment in the West Village of New York on Sunday morning of
an apparent drug overdose.
A
friend, who was concerned at not being able to reach him, discovered
his body around 11:30 a.m., according to law enforcement officials.
At
the scene, police found a syringe in his left forearm, with at least
two plastic envelopes with what appeared to be heroin nearby. Five
empty plastic envelopes were also found in a nearby trash bin.
Hoffman
won the Academy Award in 2006 for Best Actor for his role in the
film Capote, in which he portrayed the author Truman
Capote during Capote's research for his book In Cold Blood.
Hoffman
was nominated for the Academy Award in the Best Supporting Actor
category three times: for The Master (2012), Doubt (2008), Charlie
Wilson’s War (2007). He also was featured in a role
in the popular The Hunger Games.
According
to Variety, Hoffman had completed a detox program for
substance abuse, including snorting heroin, last May. His struggle
with alcohol and drugs began as a young man, and in a 2006 interview
with the CBS program 60 Minutes, Heffman declared that he
had been sober since the age of 22.
Hoffman
was a prolific actor, having worked in films for the last two
decades; films that often called for him to undertake a physical
transformation. Besides appearing in films, he was also active on
Broadway, earning two Tony nominations: one in 2000 for Best Actor
(Play) for a revival of Sam Shephard’s “True West,” and as Best
Actor (Featured Role – Play) in 2003 for a revival of Eugene
O’Neill’s “Long Day’s Journey Into Night.”
He
was also the Co-Artistic Director of the LAByrinth Theater Company in
New York, for which he directed Stephen Adly Guirgis’ "Our
Lady of 121st Street" and “Jesus Hopped the 'A' Train.” In
addition, he directed Rebecca Gilman’s "The Glory of Living"
at the Manhattan Class Company.
Hoffman
was born in the Rochester, New York, suburb of Fairport on July 23,
1967. His interest and involvement in high school theatrics led him
to New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, where he graduated
with a B.F.A. degree in Drama in 1989.
His
feature film debut came in 1991 in an indie production called Triple
Bogey on a Par Five Hole (as Phil Hoffman), with his first
role in a major release coming the next year in My New Gun.
His breakthrough role came in Paul Thomas Anderson’s 1997
production of Boogie Nights. Besides his Oscar wins and
nominations, his other notable films included Twister (1996), The
Big Lebowski (1998), The Talented Mr.
Ripley (1999), Magnolia (2000), Almost
Famous (2000), State and Main (2000), Red
Dragon (2002), and Cold Mountain (2003).
Hoffman
leaves behind three young children, a son and two daughters, with his
partner, Mimi O’Donnell, a costume designer.
Maximilian
Schell, probably the most successful German-speaking
actor in English-language films since the silent days of
Emil Jannings, died on early Saturday at the age of 83 in a hospital
in Innsbruck, Austria, of natural causes (pneumonia). Schell's wife,
Iva, who he married in August, was at his bedside when he passed.
Like
Hoffman, Schell was a multi-faceted talent. Not only was he a
celebrated actor with more than 100 film and TV credits, but he also
achieved fame as a director of films, documentaries, plays and opera.
Schell
was born in Vienna, Austria, on December 8, 1930, but his parents
could read the handwriting on the wall concerning Austria’s future
and fled to Zurich, Switzerland, where young Maxililian was raised.
He attended the University of Basel, and began acting on the stage in
1952 and made his film debut in 1955 in the West German production
of Kinder, Mutter und ein General (“Children,
Mother and a General”).
His
Hollywood debut came in 1958 in the World War II film,The Young
Lions. The irony of his hiring is that the producers wanted his
sister, Maria Schell, instead, but because of an unfortunate mix-up
in communications, hired him instead. The producers were impressed
with his work as Capt. Hardenberg, the friend of German soldier
Marlon Brando. It was Brando who tutored Schell in English on the
set, and so Schell gained fluency in both English and Brando’s
native tongue, Mumble.
He next gained notice in the role of the
German defense attorney in the 1959 “Playhouse 90” production
of Judgment at Nuremberg. This led to his being cast in
the same role for Stanley Kramer’s Hollywood remake, for which he
won a Golden Globe, the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best
Supporting Actor, and most importantly, the 1961 Academy Award for
Best Actor, beating out fellow nominee Spencer Tracy. In addition he
earned a 1962 BAFTA nomination as Best Actor for his work in the
film.
He
would gain two more Oscar nominations for acting: in 1976 as Best
Actor for the Man in the Glass Booth (1975, with an
accompanying Golden Globe nomination), and in 1978 as Best Supporting
Actor for Julia (1977), for which he was also
nominated for a Golden Globe and by the New York Film Critics Circle
for Best Supporting Actor. He was twice been nominated for an Emmy
for his TV work: in 1992 for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries
or Special for Miss Rose White, and the following year as
Best Supporting Actor for his turn as Lenin in the HBO film, Stalin,
and won the 1993 Golden Globe for best performance by an actor in a
supporting role in a series, mini-series or made-for-TV movie for the
film.
Other
notable films, in addition to those named above,
were Topkapi (1964), The Castle (1968), The
Odessa File (1974), director Sam Peckinpah’s war
drama,Cross of Iron (1977), The Black
Hole (1979), The Freshman (1979), where he
was reunited with old friend Marlon Brando, and Deep
Impact (1998).
As
a director, his 1974 film, The Pedestrian, which he also
wrote and starred in, was nominated for an Oscar as Best Foreign
Language Film, and won a Golden Globe in the same category. His 1984
documentary about Marlene Dietrich, Marlene, was
nominated in the Best Documentary category. Another notable
documentary was My Sister Maria (2002), a mixture of
documentary and staged footage about the career of his sister, Maria
Schell, and his relationship with her.
And
if all this weren’t enough, Schell was an accomplished pianist and
conductor. His love for opera led him to produce and direct several,
including Richard Wagner’s “Lohengrin,” and Richard Strauss’
“Der Rosenkavilier” for the L.A. Opera. He also spent time as a
guest professor at the University of Southern California and received
an honorary doctorate from Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and
Leadership in Chicago.
In
addition to his wife, Iva, Schell's survivors include a daughter,
Nastassja, from a previous marriage to actress Natalia Andreichenko
that ended in divorce, and a grandchild.
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