LOS ANGELES — Legendary film star Paul
Newman, whose brilliant blue eyes, good looks, cool style and
talent made him one of Hollywood’s top actors over six decades
has died at age 83 after a long battle with cancer.
Newman died on Friday night at his farmhouse
near Westport, Connecticut, surrounded by his wife of 50 years,
actress Joanne Woodward, and other family and friends.
"His death was as private and discreet as the
way he had lived his life, a humble artist who never thought of
himself as ‘big,’" said a statement released by his family on
Saturday.
Paul Leonard Newman, known as "PL" to his
friends, appeared in more than 50 movies, including "Cat on a
Hot Tin Roof," "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" and "The
Sting." He earned nine Oscar nominations for acting and won the
best actor honor for 1986’s "The Color of Money."
A director and race car driver as well as an
actor, Newman was also known for his extensive philanthropy. He
created Newman’s Own food products, which funneled more than
$250 million in profits to thousands of charities worldwide.
"He quietly succeeded beyond measure in
impacting the lives of so many with his generosity," his five
daughters said in a statement. "Always and to the end, Dad was
incredibly grateful for his good fortune. In his own words:
‘It’s been a privilege to be here.’"
"There is a point where feelings go beyond
words. I have lost a real friend. My life - and this country -
is better for his being in it," said actor Robert Redford,
Newman’s friend and co-star in "Butch Cassidy" and "The Sting."
Former President Bill Clinton and US Senator
Hillary Clinton said in a statement that they will miss their
"dear friend." California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger called
Newman the "ultimate cool guy" who was "one of a kind."
Born in a Cleveland suburb on Jan. 26, 1925,
Newman was a Navy radio man in the Pacific during World War Two.
He went to Kenyon College in Ohio on a football scholarship, but
took up acting after he was cut from the team over a barroom
brawl.
He helped run the family sporting goods
store, then headed to the Yale Drama School and ended up in New
York, winning a Broadway role in "Picnic" in 1953. His first
major movie role was as boxer Rocky Graziano in "Somebody Up
There Likes Me."
In 1958, Newman starred in "The Long Hot
Summer" with Woodward, whom he married that year shortly after
divorcing his first wife, Jacqueline Witte.
He played an alcoholic loser in "Cat on a Hot
Tin Roof," opposite Elizabeth Taylor, and pool shark Fast Eddie
Felson in "The Hustler." Other hits were "Hud" and "Cool Hand
Luke."
Newman was also recognized for work behind
the camera, earning a best picture Oscar nomination and a Golden
Globe award for best director for "Rachel, Rachel," starring
Woodward, which he produced and directed.
Although his movie career slowed in later
years, Newman picked up Oscar nominations in 1994 for "Nobody’s
Fool" and in 2002 for "Road to Perdition."
He returned to the stage the same year in
"Our Town" at a Connecticut playhouse. The show moved to
Broadway and Newman was nominated for a Tony award. He won an
Emmy, US television’s highest honor, for its 2003 broadcast.
In 2005 he won another Emmy for best
supporting actor in the mini-series "Empire Falls." His last
film part was a voice-over role in the 2006 animated "Cars."
Newman resisted the glare of Hollywood’s
spotlight.
His long marriage to Woodward ran counter to
Hollywood’s tradition of fast weddings and quick divorces, and
the pair lived in a 200-year-old Connecticut house, far from the
heart of the entertainment industry.
Asked the secret of his marriage, Newman once said there was
no reason to roam, asking: "I have steak at home. Why should I
go out for a hamburger?" – Reuters