Sunday, June 23, 2024

To Absent Friends - Donald Sutherland

Donald Sutherland
1935-2024

Actor Donald Sutherland died earlier this week, a few weeks short of his 89th birthday.  At that age, one can say that Sutherland had a long and terrific run as an actor.  He has been around for so long and has such a wonderful body of work, that you just assume that he would always be around, popping up in this movie or that streaming mini-series and giving his usual great performance.

The first of his one hundred ninety-nine (199!!!) acting credits in IMDB came in 1962 when he played "Switchboard Operator" in an episode of something called Studio 4.  There followed dozens of appearances on television and small movies, many in his native Canada, before his big break in Hollywood came in "The Dirty Dozen" in 1967.  From then on, his career took off and he never really went away from our movie theater and television screens.


Here is just a partial list of some of the great films in which Donald Sutherland appeared, oft times in a leading role, sometimes in a supporting character role.

The Dirty Dozen 1967
M*A*S*H 1970
Klute 1971
Don't Look Now 1973
The Eagle Has Landed 1976
Animal House 1978
The Great Train Robbery 1978
Ordinary People 1980
The Eye of the Needle 1981
JFK 1991
Pride & Predjudice 2005
The Undoing 2020

And these are just movies that I have seen and liked.  Others could probably make equally long lists of Sutherland's credits and not include any of the above.

I can remember watching "The Undoing" back in 2020.  It was a six part mini-series that starred Nicole Kidman and Hugh Grant.  It was a thriller/murder mystery and was quite good.  We wanted to watch it because of Kidman and Grant.  Donald Sutherland had a sporting role.  He might have played Kidman's father, but I can't actually remember at this point four years down the road.  What did strike me at the time was that this was the first time I had seen Sutherland in anything for quite a while, and he held your attention from the get go as soon as he appeared on screen. He was easily the best part of show, and I was amazed when I looked it up and saw that the was 85 years old at the time.  

And since I have not been a watcher of "The Hunger Games" I was unaware that he created an entire new fan base for himself by playing The President on all of these films that were made from 2012 through 2015.  Like I said, he has never gone away.  His last IMDB acting credit was eight episodes in the series "Lawman Bass Reeves" in 2023.  Incredibly, he was never nominated for an Oscar, but the Motion Academy righted that particular wrong by awarding him an honorary Oscar in 2018 in recognition of his extraordinary body of work.

In addition to his legacy on film, Donald Sutherland leaves behind and acting legacy in his son, Kiefer Sutherland, who is in the process of fashioning a pretty good body of work himself.

RIP Donald Sutherland

Just a few scenes from a memorable career....

"M*A*S*H"
The original Hawkeye Pierce

"Klute"
with Jane Fonda

"Animal House"
The put-upon college professor

"Ordinary People"
with Timothy Hutton

"The Undoing"
with Nicole Kidman

Donald and Kiefer Sutherland
Father and Son

POST SCRIPT:

Over the course of the last 27 days, beginning on May 27, I have posted four Absent Friends posts about four people of whom it can be said they were true  giants in their fields, Bill Walton, Jerry West, Willie Mays, and now Donald Sutherland.  It is almost overwhelming, and one could say that it is depressing.  I prefer to look at it in the same way that Kareem Abdul-Jabbar put it in his recent tribute to Willie Mays:

"I’m at a point in my life where I want to spend less time mourning the deaths of my friends and heroes and more time celebrating their lives."

So, let us celebrate these folks.  Start by watching a Donald Sutherland movie this week.  As you can see from the above, there are many. many from which to choose.

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

To Absent Friends - Willie Mays

 


Willie Mays died yesterday at the age of 93.

Willie Mays.

I mean, really, what more needs to be said.  There is certainly nothing that I can add to the marvelous obituaries that have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Associated Press and other places.  You can find them all over the internet, so I won't reiterate all of the numbers that comprised Mays' amazing career, but I'll throw out a few personal thoughts.

When Three Rivers Stadium opened in 1970, Pittsburgh fans were able, for the first time ever, to buy tickets in centerfield.  The 200 Level of Three Rivers between the foul poles were general admission, and I can remember sitting in the first row of those seats one night for a game between the Pirates and Giants, which put us directly behind the Say Hey Kid himself.  What I particularly remember about that was watching Mays talking to his left and right fielders constantly through the game, and waving them into position with each different Pirates batter.  No need for the outfielders to have index cards from front office analytics geeks in their pockets telling them where to play when Willie Mays was their quarterback in centerfield.

I can also remember watching a game on TV when Mays was caught in a rundown, and proceeded to make it last long enough for the infielder to botch it up and allow Willie to get the the forward base.  My brother, Jim, watching the game with me said, "Only Mays can get out of rundowns like that, and I've seen him do it a million times."  Okay, maybe not an exact quote, but that was the gist of it.

A younger work colleague once asked me who was the best ball player that  had ever seen in the flesh.  Well, here are some of the guys that I have seen play live and in person:  Roberto Clemente and Willie Stargell, of course, and players like Hank Aaron, Frank Robinson, Ken Griffey Jr, Pete Rose, Sandy Koufax, Bob Gibson, Alex Rodriguez, and Stan Musial, but I didn't really have to even think to answer because it was an easy question:  Willie Mays.

When Marilyn and I visited San Francisco in January 2015, we took a tour of AT&T Park.  Not unexpectedly, much of the Park is devoted to Willie Mays.  Seeing that I was wearing a Pirates windbreaker  at the time, the Tour Guide asked me if I had ever seen Roberto Clemente play.  Many times, I replied, to which he said, "Well, he was the second best outfielder ever."  My reply was that well, I'll give you that one.  Last year I had the occasion to meet Luis and Roberto Clemente Jr., and I told them that story.  They loved it.

He was the original Five Tool Player, and I feel fortunate to have been able to see him play, and the game may never see his like again.

RIP Willie Mays.


THE Catch at the Polo Grounds in the 1954 World Series.
I don't really have to give you the background on that one, do I?

A classic Mays pose.

Obviously taken at an All-Star game one year.  
Not a bad outfield, wouldn't you agree?


Presidential Medal of Freedom Awardee

The Grandstander outside of AT&T Park
January 2015


Sunday, June 16, 2024

To Absent Friends - Howard Fineman

 


The death of political writer Howard Fineman at the age of 75 made the news this week, primarily because he was a highly regarded chronicler of the American political scene.  He was the chief political correspondent for Newsweek magazine for over twenty years, and later, following the demise of that printed magazine, with the Huffington Post.  He was also a frequent talking head on CNN, MSNBC, and other outlets. Tributes to him came from both sides of the aisle in Washington.

Long time listeners to the Tony Kornheiser radio show and podcast, also felt the loss of Fineman for he was a regular guest on TK's shows offering his insights into telling all of us Loyal Littles just "where we were now" in regard to Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Bill and Hillary, upcoming debates, conventions, and, of course, thoughts on the 45th POTUS.   While he always informative on these weighty matters, he never took himself so seriously as to be crashing boor on these particular topics.

To me, though, I really enjoyed listening to Howard Fineman because he came from and grew up in the same Pittsburgh neighborhood of Squirrel Hill that I did, and he would share tales of those formative years.   While Howard was three years older than me and went to  different schools than I did, I always thought that it was quite possible that Howard Fineman and I could have crossed paths with each other at places like Murray Pharmacy, Mineo's Pizza, the Manor Theater, Poli's Restaurant, or a Giant Eagle Supermarket.  Call me a fanboy, but I thought that was pretty cool.

I had missed Fineman on Tony's show in recent years, and it was only upon his death that I learned that he had spent the last two years battling pancreatic cancer.   Very sad.

RIP Howard Fineman.


To Absent Friends - Jerry West


For the second time this month, the sports world in general and the basketball world in particular have been rocked with the news of the passing of one of its most significant figures.   The first was Bill Walton, and this time it was Jerry West, who died earlier this week at the age of 88.

A West Virginia native ("Zeke from Cabin Creek"),  he was born in poverty in a West Virginia mining town with a population fewer that 1,000 people,  and from there he went on to All-America honors at West Virginia University, the Most Outstanding Player award in the 1959 NCAA Tournament, even though the Mountainers lost in the Final game, an Olympic Gold Medal in 1960, and a professional career as both a player and an executive that is unparalleled. 

He spent his entire playing career as a Los Angeles Laker where his teams made the NBA Finals nine times, winning the Championship once.  Following his playing career, he had a three stint as the Lakers coach, wherein his teams made the playoffs all three years.  There then followed a career as Lakers GM.  As GM, West was able to draft Magic Johnson and Kobe Bryant, and trade for Shaquille O'Neal.  His Lakers teams then made it to the Finals eight more times, winning six of them.

Oh, and when the NBA decided to adopt a logo, they used Jerry West as the model:


I will leave it to professional wordsmiths to further encapsulate Jerry West:

In THIS FRONT PAGE TRIBUTE to West that ran in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette  the day after West died, Paul Zeise makes the case that West may well be the greatest "basketball man" ever, as well as the most important person to ever come from the State of West Virgina.

And today's Sunday edition of the PG, GENE COLLIER PAYS TRIBUTE to Jerry West as only Gene Collier can.

I wish that I could say that I saw Jerry West play a lot, but, alas, much of his career as a player took place when those of us in Pittsburgh didn't get to see a lot NBA basketball on television.  I certainly knew who he was and that he was great, though, and I do remember seeing him sink that 60 foot shot at the buzzer against the Knicks in the Playoffs that season that Collier references in his column.

RIP Jerry West.

POST SCRIPT......That 1960 Olympic team referenced above? In addition to Jerry West, others on the team included Walt Bellamy, Bob Boozer, Darrell Imhof, Jerry Lucas, Oscar Robertson, and Adrian Smith.  All you kids out there need to be aware that there were dream teams long before there was The Dream Team.




 

Friday, June 7, 2024

Kwickie Kritical Kommentaries

Cleaning out the Mental In-Box.....


I have yet to read a book by Erik Larson that, if it wasn't GREAT, it was at least VERY, VERY GOOD.  His newest one, "The Demon of Unrest" is proving to be in that same category.  It covers events leading up to the attack of Fort Sumpter in Charleston Harbor that was the beginning of the American Civil War.   In his introduction to the book, Larson tells us that he was well into the research of this book when the events of January 6, 2021 unfolded, and that he couldn't help but see the parallels  to what took place in 1860.   I am only 100 pages into the book, and I can say that he is exactly correct.  The unrest stirred up in the American South prior to the Civil War is exactly what we are seeing being fomented in America today by the Convicted Felon-in-Chief and his minions, and it scares the shit out of me.

I always wait until I finish a book or movie before giving it a rating, but this one is well on it's way to Four Grandstander Stars.


This movie was released in mid-May and within two weeks was available on streaming, so it seems to have bombed at the box office.  It was still playing in our local multiplex, so we took it on last weekend, and enjoyed it a lot.

Ryan Gosling plays a professional movie stuntman, and Emily Blunt plays his ex-lover who is an aspiring movie director,  there is a plot to this one that I won't go into, since these are all "Kwickie Kommentaries" today, but it's a fun movie to see.  Gosling is charming as the put upon lead, and has Blunt ever been bad in anything?

Three Stars from The Grandstander, and be sure and stay for all of the closing credits.



I sought out this 1946 British mystery movie based upon a write-up on a classic movie Facebook Group to which I belong called My Reel Life.  It was said to be the type of movie that Hitchcock would have made back in Britain at the time.  It takes place in a London hospital that was set up to care for those injured and wounded during the Blitz of Great Britain by German V-1 rockets (called "doodlebugs" by the Brits; I had to google it when I heard it in the film) during WW II.  A death takes place.  Was it a murder?  Then another death takes place that most certainly was a murder.  There are five possible suspects, and a Scotland Yard detective played by Alistair Sim has to  unravel the whole bloody mess.  Sim, who is best known as being the best ever film version of Ebenezer Scrooge, can be classified as a distant antecedent to America's Lt. Columbo, in his portrayal of the detective in this one.

I found this one on Amazon Prime, and give it Two Grandstander Stars.

Now let's talk about Uniforms, and I'll be brief.

MLB's City Connect Uniforms are an abomination.  I have yet to see one that I like.   At PNC Park on Wednesday night, I saw a guy coming out of the Pirates Clubhouse Store putting on his newly purchased Pirates City Connect uni with the Number 21 and the name CLEMENTE on it. It made me want to gag.

YUCK!!!!