Posts Tagged ‘Roy scheider’

Tom lantos, annette lantos, electronic frontier foundation, rep. tom lantos, lantos, roy scheider

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Tom Lantos dies

Rep. Tom Lantos, a California Democrat who chaired the House Foreign Affairs Committee, died early Monday morning after a bout with esophageal cancer, according to a release by his office.  He was 80.

Lantos, the only Holocaust survivor to serve in Congress, died at Bethesda Naval Medical Center, according to the release.

Lantos disclosed last month that he had been diagnosed with cancer of the esophagus and would not seek another term in the House.
Governor Dean issued the following statement:

Our nation has lost a great public servant with the passing of Representative Tom Lantos. In serving his constituents and his country, Tom never forgot the Democratic Party’s ideals of freedom, fairness, and opportunity for all. As Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, he was an authority on foreign policy issues and a voice for the oppressed. The only Holocaust survivor in Congress, he was a forceful and passionate advocate for civil liberties and human rights. Today, I join with countless others across the country in offering my thoughts and prayers to Rep. Lantos’ family and friends as we honor his life and legacy.
And from a statement on Lantos’ House website:

Throughout his adult life Lantos sought to be a voice for human rights and civil liberties. He and Annette Lantos, his childhood sweetheart and wife of nearly 58 years were, as Lantos put it, “full partners both in Congress and in life,” and they continued their work right up to his final days. Tom Lantos was the founding co-chairman of the 24-year-old Congressional Human Rights Caucus, which Annette directed as a volunteer since its inception. He also founded the Congressional Friends of Animals Caucus.
Annette said that her husband’s life was “defined by courage, optimism, and unwavering dedication to his principles and to his family.”

Roy scheider, roy schneider, jaws, brenda seimer, seaquest, roy sheider

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Roy Richard Scheider (November 10, 1932 – February 10, 2008)[1] was an Academy Award- and Golden Globe-nominated American actor. He had a long and outstanding resume of films. He was possibly best known for his role as police chief Martin Brody in the 1975 blockbuster Jaws.

was an auto mechanic.[2] Scheider’s mother was of Irish Catholic background and his father was German American and Protestant.[3][4] As a child, Scheider was an athlete, participating in organized baseball and boxing competitions. He attended Columbia High School in Maplewood, New Jersey, and was inducted into the school’s hall of fame in 1985. He traded his boxing gloves for the stage, studying drama at both Rutgers University and Franklin and Marshall College, where he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. After three years in the United States Air Force, he appeared with the New York Shakespeare Festival, and won an Obie Award in 1968.

Film career

Scheider’s first film role was in the 1963 horror film Curse of the Living Corpse. (He was billed as “Roy R. Sheider”). In 1971, he appeared in two highly popular movies, Klute and The French Connection, the latter garnering him an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. Four years later, he portrayed Chief Martin Brody in the Hollywood blockbuster Jaws which also starred Robert Shaw and Richard Dreyfus. Scheider’s famous movie line, “You’re gonna need a bigger boat”, was voted 35th on the American Film Institute’s list of best movie quotes. In 1976, he starred as Doc, a secret agent in Marathon Man with Dustin Hoffman and Laurence Olivier.

He was originally cast as Michael in The Deer Hunter, the second movie of a three-movie deal with Universal Studios. However, bound by a Universal contract to make a Jaws sequel, he was deprived of the role. In 1979, four years after he appeared in Jaws, he was nominated for his second Academy Award, this time as Best Actor in All That Jazz.

He was the original choice to play John Rambo in the 1982 film, First Blood, but the part eventually went to Sylvester Stallone.[citation needed] In 1983, he starred in Blue Thunder, a John Badham film about a fictitious technologically advanced prototype attack helicopter which was to be used as security over the city of Los Angeles during the 1984 Summer Olympic Games. This was followed by roles in Peter Hyams’ 2010: The Year We Make Contact, a 1984 sequel to Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 science fiction classic 2001: A Space Odyssey. One of his later parts was that of Dr. Benway in the long-in-production 1991 film adaptation of William S. Burroughs’ novel Naked Lunch.

Among his most recent films is the crusty father of hero Frank Castle in The Punisher (2004). In 2007, he starred in The Poet and If I Didn’t Care. When Scheider died in February 2008, he had two movies upcoming: Dark Honeymoon, which had been completed, and Iron Cross, which is in post-production.

Other work

In 1993, Scheider signed on to be the lead star in the Steven Spielberg-produced television series SeaQuest DSV. During the second season, Scheider voiced disdain for the direction in which the series was heading. His comments were highly publicized and the media criticized him for panning his own show. NBC made additional casting and writing changes in the third season, and Scheider decided to exit the show. His contract however, required that he make several guest appearances that season. He has also repeatedly guest starred on the NBC television series Third Watch.

Scheider hosted an episode of Saturday Night Live in the tenth (1984-1985) season (musical guest: Billy Ocean) and appeared on the Family Guy episode Bill and Peter’s Bogus Journey, voicing himself as the host of a toilet-training video. In 2007, Scheider received one of two annually-presented Lifetime Achievement Awards at the SunDeis Film Festival in Waltham, Massachusetts. (Academy Award winner Patricia Neal was the recipient of the other.) Scheider guest-starred in an episode Law & Order: Criminal Intent as a death row inmate on May 14, 2007.

Personal life

Scheider’s first marriage was to Cynthia Bebout on November 8, 1962. The couple had one daughter, Maximillia, before divorcing in 1989. On February 11, 1989, he married actress Brenda Siemer Scheider, with whom he had a son, Christian, and a daughter, Molly. They remained married until his death.

Death

In 2004, Scheider was diagnosed with myeloma, a cancer of the plasma cells. In June 2005, he underwent a bone marrow transplant to successfully treat the cancer which was classified as being in partial remission. Scheider died on February 10, 2008, in Little Rock, Arkansas, at the University of Arkansas Medical Sciences Hospital. Though a cause of death was not immediately released,[5] Scheider’s wife attributed her husband’s death to a staph infection.[6]

Filmography

* The Curse of the Living Corpse (1964)
* Paper Lion (1968)
* Stiletto (1969)
* Puzzle of a Downfall Child (1969)
* Loving (1970)
* Klute (1971)
* The French Connection (1971)
* The Seven-Ups (1973)
* Jaws (1975)
* Marathon Man (1976)
* Sorcerer (1977)
* Jaws 2 (1978)
* Last Embrace (1979)
* All That Jazz (1979)
* Still of the Night (1982)
* Blue Thunder (1983)
* Tiger Town (1983)
* 2010: The Year We Make Contact (1984)
* The Men’s Club (1986)
* The Egg’s Sunset on the Upside Down Turned Ramp (1986)
* 52 Pick-Up (1986)
* Cohen and Tate (1988)
* Listen to Me (1989)
* Night Game (1989)
* The Fourth War (1989)
* The Russia House (1990)
* Somebody has to Shoot the Picture (1990)
* Naked Lunch (1991)
* Wild Justice (1993)
* seaQuest DSV (1993) (television series)
* Romeo is Bleeding (1994)
* The Peacekeeper (1996)
* Executive Target (1997)
* The Myth of Fingerprints (1997)
* The Rainmaker (1997)
* The Rage (1997)
* Plato’s Run (1997)
* Evasive Action (1998)
* RKO 281 (1999)
* Falling Through (2000)
* Daybreak (2000)
* The Doorway (2000)
* Texas 46 (2002) aka The Good War (USA)
* Dracula II: Ascension (2003)
* The Punisher (2004)
* The Poet (2007)
* If I Didn’t Care (2007)
* Dark Honeymoon (2008) (completed)
* Iron Cross (2008) (in post-production)