Showing posts with label The Man From U.N.C.L.E.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Man From U.N.C.L.E.. Show all posts

Friday, 11 November 2016

Oscar-nominated Man From U.N.C.L.E. star Robert Vaughn dies aged 83 after brief battle with cancer

Oscar-nominated Man From U.N.C.L.E. star Robert Vaughn dies aged 83 after brief battle with cancer

  • Actor Robert Vaughn passed away on Friday at the age of 83
  • Vaughn died following a brief battle with acute leukemia according to his manager
  • He is best known for playing the role of Napoleon Solo on the classic television series The Man From U.N.C.L.E.
  • Vaughn also starred in such classic films as The Magnificent Seven and The Young Philadelphians, for which he received an Oscar nomination
  • In recent years, Vaughn appeared on the British television programs Hustle and Coronation Street
  • He is survived by his wife of 40 years Linda Staab and their children Cassidy and Caitlin 
Robert Vaughn passed away on Friday at the age of 83 following a brief battle with acute leukemia.
The beloved American actor, whose career stretched across six decades, was best known for his role as Napoleon Solo on the classic NBC series The Man From U.N.C.L.E., which ran for over 100 episodes from 1964 to 1968.   
Over the course of his lifetime, Vaughn appeared on over 200 different television programs.
Vaughn was also a regular on the big screen, starting off his career with an unaccredited role in The Ten Commandments before going on to land sup[porting roles in films such as The Magnificent Seven and The Young Philadelphians, for which he received an Academy Award nomination back in 1960 for Best Supporting Actor.
In recent years he had found success across the pond, starring in the long-running British soap opera Coronation Street as well as all eight seasons of the television drama Hustle.
'Mr. Vaughn passed away with his family around him,' his manager said in a statement to Deadline.
He is survived by his wife of 40 years, actress Linda Staab, and their two children, son Cassidy and daughter Caitlin. 
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Robert Vaughn
Robert Vaughn
Man with a plan: Robert Vaughn, the star of the popular TV series The Man From U.N.C.L.E. (above) passed away on Friday at the age of 83
Family: He is survived by his wife of 40 years Linda Staab and their children Cassidy and Caitlin (above in 1998) 
Family: He is survived by his wife of 40 years Linda Staab and their children Cassidy and Caitlin (above in 1998) 
Staggering feat: Over the course of his lifetime, Vaughn appeared on over 200 different television programs (above with Marcia Cross in a 2015 episode of Law & Order: SVU)
Staggering feat: Over the course of his lifetime, Vaughn appeared on over 200 different television programs (above with Marcia Cross in a 2015 episode of Law & Order: SVU)
Looking back: Robert Vaughn filming 'Bridge at Remagen' in 1968
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Vaughn continued to work even in the past few years, and in 2015 filmed a memorable guest spot on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit opposite Desperate Housewives actress Marcia Cross.
In that episode, Vaughn played an elderly writer of great acclaim who was suffering from dementia.
His daughters had taken issue with his current wife, who they accused of abusing him by giving erectile dysfunction pills in order to produce a new heir and gain access to his fortune.
It marked the second time that Vaughn had appeared on the show, filming another episode of the long-running series back in 2006, in which he portrayed a different character. 
His work on that show brought him back to New York City, where he was born in 1932 to a mother and father who were also performers.
Vaughn's mother Marcella was a stage actress while his father Gerald did voice acting on radio programs.
He eventually left the Big Apple though and headed off to Minneapolis when his parents divorced, and stayed close by when it was time to go to college by majoring in journalism at University of Minnesota.
School was not a good fit for Vaughn at the time however, and after a year he packed up his things and moved out to Los Angeles to be with his mother.
He eventually earned his master's degree in theater from Los Angeles State College of Applied Arts and Sciences, and in 1955 he booked his first role on the television series Medic.
The following year he got his first film role in The Ten Commandments and the year after that he got his first credited role in the 1957 movie Hell's Crossroads.
His career was briefly put on hold at this point as Vaughn was drafted in the United States Army.
Vaughn in Good Day For a Hanging
Robert Vaughn in The Magnificent Seven
Wild West: Vaughn in the 1959 film Good Day for a Hanging (left) and the 1960 classic The Magnificent Seven (right)
In living color: Vaughn in his role as Harry Rule in the 1970s series The Protector (above)
In living color: Vaughn in his role as Harry Rule in the 1970s series The Protector (above)
TV legend: Vaughn with his 1979 Emmy Award for outstanding supporting actor for a drama series in Washington: Behind Closed Doors (above)
TV legend: Vaughn with his 1979 Emmy Award for outstanding supporting actor for a drama series in Washington: Behind Closed Doors (above)
When the 27-year-old Vaughn returned to Hollywood his first role back was in The Young Philadelphians opposite Paul Newman.
In that filmed Vaughn portrayed Chester Gwynn, a young man who loses his arm during combat while fighting in the Korean War and later returns home only to be falsely accused of first-degree murder.
For his work on The Young Philadelphians Vaughn was nominated for both the Golden Globe and Academy Award in the category of Best Supporting Actor.
Vaughn then followed that up with the biggest film role of his career, starring alongside Hollywood legends including Steve McQueen, Yul Brynner and Eli Wallach in the classic western The Magnificent Seven. 
Once again Vaughn received a Golden Globe nomination, this time for Most Promising Newcomer. 
He was only five years into his career by this point but already Vaughn had appeared on over 40 episodes of television playing different characters, and his frequent work on TV would continue throughout the 1960s.
His first major role in a series came in 1963 when he was cast on The Lieutenant, which was cancelled after only one season.
A star is born: Vaughn in the 1959 film The Young Philadelphians, for which he was nominated for an Academy Award 
A star is born: Vaughn in the 1959 film The Young Philadelphians, for which he was nominated for an Academy Award 
Men on the range: Steve McQueen, Yul Brenner, Horst Buccholz, James Coburn,Robert Vaughn, John Sturges and Brad Dexter in The Magnificent Seven 
Men on the range: Steve McQueen, Yul Brenner, Horst Buccholz, James Coburn,Robert Vaughn, John Sturges and Brad Dexter in The Magnificent Seven 
Dapper gentleman: Steve McQueen and Vaughn in the 1968 film Bullitt 
Dapper gentleman: Steve McQueen and Vaughn in the 1968 film Bullitt 
That turned out to be a fantastic stroke of luck for Vaughn though, who was free to audition for a new television drama that premiered in 1964 - The Man From U.N.C.L.E.
Vaughn won the role of Napoleon Solo and David McCallum was Illya Kuryakin, top agents for the United Network Command for Law and Enforcement.
The show ran for 105 episodes and four seasons, but aired in reruns for decades to come.
Over the four seasons that he portrayed Solo, Vaughn was twice nominated for a Golden Globe Award.
The year that the series ended, Vaughn again landed himself an impressive film role, starring opposite McQueen and Jacqueline Bisset in Bullitt, which was both a critical and financial success.
It also earned Vaughn a Best Supporting Actor nomination at the BAFTAs that year.
Vaughn spent the next few years focused mostly on film work until 1974 when he booked another series, The Protectors. 
For that show he played the role of Harry Case, the leader of an international crime fighting agency. 
The Protectors ran for only two seasons, but gave Vaughn the best award of all - his wife.
Vaughn met actress Linda Staab in 1973 when she guest starred on an episode of the program and they were married one year later.
They remained together until his death and adopted two children shortly after they were wed, son Cassidy and daughter Caitlin.
Love at first sight: Vaughn and wife Linda Staab on the episode of The Protectors when they first met
Love at first sight: Vaughn and wife Linda Staab on the episode of The Protectors when they first met
Vaughn and Staab wedding
Happy couple: The pair married in 1974 (right), one year after meeting on the set of the television series (left)
Until the end: Vaughn and Staab were together for the past 40 years (above in 2006)
Until the end: Vaughn and Staab were together for the past 40 years (above in 2006)
Shortly before he married Staab Vaughn also believed he had fathered a son Matthew with his girlfriend at the time, Kathy Ceaton.
A paternity test later revealed that Matthew was not Vaughn's son however, and in a 2002 interview Vaughn said he had not seen the boy since he was a child and that the two had no contact.
Matthew would also go on to work in the film industry too though, as the much in-demand director of films including Layer Cake, Kick-Ass and X-Men: First Class.
He is now married to the model Claudia Schiffer and close friends with director Guy Ritchie, who in 2015 made a feature length remake of the classic 1960s television show The Man From U.N.C.L.E.
After marrying Staab, Vaughn and his family lived most of their life in Ridgefield, Connecticut.
Staab gave up acting to focus on other endeavors and her family while Vaughn continued to appears in a number of television programs and the occasional film.
He also won his first Emmy in 1978 for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series for Washington: Behind Closed Doors.
And for his final role, Vaughn was the lead in the 2016 independent film Gold Star.
At the time of his death, Vaughn was just 11 days shy of his birthday. He would have been 84.  
Celebrities responded to the news of Vaughn's passing on Twitter Friday, with British producer and director Edgar Wright writing: 'RIP Napoleon Solo! The great Robert Vaughn was the coolest guy on TV when I was a kid. Superb in Bullitt, The Magnificent Seven & many more.'
Stephen Fry wrote: 'Oh no. Robert Vaughn, such a fine actor, one of the best Columbo villains (no higher praise than that) & an utterly charming man, has died.' 


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3928206/Man-Uncle-Coronation-Street-Hustle-Robert-Vaughn-83-dies-surrounded-family.html#ixzz4PjWi0ogj
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Monday, 7 September 2015

The Man From U.N.C.L.E and Mad Max are the first of a long list of films that are set to be revisited by Hollywood

Why is Hollywood hooked on re-makes? The Man From U.N.C.L.E and Mad Max are the first of a long list of films that are set to be revisited

  • Film industry is obsessed with remaking classics and 1980s blockbusters
  • Movie version of Sixties hit TV series The Man From U.N.C.L.E. is out now
  • Follows release of spin-offs Mad Max: Fury Road and Terminator: Genisys
  • Long list of remakes are due to be released like Ghostbusters and Scarface
Big hair, bigger shoulders and mobile phones the size of a breeze block — who’d want to to turn the clock back a couple of generations?
Hollywood, that’s who. The film industry is suddenly obsessed with remaking the classics that enthralled our parents and grandparents.
Guy Ritchie’s movie version of Sixties hit TV series The Man From U.N.C.L.E. starring Henry Cavill as superspy Napoleon Solo, is out now, and, fast-forwarding to the Eighties, just about every box-office smash of the Reagan/Thatcher years, whether thriller, chiller or comedy, is ripe for revisiting.
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1964: Robert Vaughn and Luciana Paluzzi in the TV original of The Man From U.N.C.L.E.
2015: Armie Hammer and Alicia Vikander in the new film of The Man From U.N.C.L.E.
1964: Robert Vaughn and Luciana Paluzzi in the TV original of The Man From U.N.C.L.E. (left) 2015: Armie Hammer and Alicia Vikander in the new film (right)
This year has already seen the release of Mad Max: Fury Road and Terminator: Genisys, both spin-offs from archetypal Eighties blockbusters.
And there’s much more to come. Chris Columbus, who wrote the original Gremlins movie and, three decades on, is directing its reinvention, believes he has identified what makes remakes so successful: ‘They touch into that emotional connection we have with our past.’
In other words, we loved these films once and we’re ready to love them all over again.
One of the most important factors is a guest appearance by an original star. A remake feels almost like a rip-off without the stamp of approval an elderly A-lister can bring. Witness the excitement earlier this year when Harrison Ford as Han Solo, and sidekick Chewbacca turned up in the trailer for the reboot of 1977’s Star Wars.
1981: Mel Gibson starred as Mad Max in the original movie
2015: Tom Hardy donned the leathers for this year's Mad Max: Fury Road remake
1981: Mel Gibson starred as Mad Max in the original movie (left) 2015: Tom Hardy donned the leathers for this year's Mad Max: Fury Road remake (right)
Tom Hardy and Nicholas Hoult star in explosive Mad Max trailer
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But it’s the Eighties and early Nineties that exert maximum fascination — partly because the teen audiences of that era generally have teenagers of their own now, making these films into family events.
The irony is that 30 years ago, nobody with any self-respect made sequels or remakes . . . or paid to see them.
But in the past decade, 90 per cent of the most popular films have been based on earlier movies, comic books or novels. It seems no one in Hollywood now has an original notion in their heads.
Good job there are so many great ideas to be plundered from the past.
Blade Runner (1982)
Blade Runner (1982): Harrison Ford describes the sequel’s script as ‘the best thing I’ve ever read’
Blade Runner (1982): Harrison Ford describes the sequel’s script as ‘the best thing I’ve ever read’
Harrison Ford describes the sequel’s script as ‘the best thing I’ve ever read’.
Set 30 years after the original story, little has been revealed about the plot — but robot-hunter Rick Deckard (Ford) is not expected to appear until the climax of the film.
So far the only actor confirmed apart from Ford is Ryan Gosling. Director Ridley Scott has handed over to French-Canadian Denis Villeneuve, while the cinematographer is one of the most respected in Hollywood, Roger Deakins.
He’s steeped in movie imagery, and he will need to be because Blade Runner’s flying cars, rain-soaked electronic billboards and billowing smoke were all achieved in an era before computer graphics, and still look convincing.
Release date: Filming starts in 2016.
Ghostbusters (1984)
Ghostbusters (1984): Who ya gonna call? Not Bill Murray and his original slapstick parapsychologists
Ghostbusters (2015): The new stars are Kristen Wiig, Leslie Jones, Melissa McCarthy and Kate McKinnon.Director Paul Feig is promising to rein in the comedy and deliver a more frightening, horror-filled movie
Ghostbusters (2015): The new stars are Kristen Wiig, Leslie Jones, Melissa McCarthy and Kate McKinnon.Director Paul Feig is promising to rein in the comedy and deliver a more frightening, horror-filled movie
Who ya gonna call? Not Bill Murray and his original slapstick parapsychologists. Next year a feminist reboot of the spooky comedy will feature four women as the hapless raygun-toting scientists.
The new stars are Kristen Wiig, Leslie Jones, Melissa McCarthy and Kate McKinnon.Director Paul Feig is promising to rein in the comedy and deliver a more frightening, horror-filled movie. Creator Dan Ackroyd has confirmed a cameo role.
Clearly, that won’t be enough to satisfy him, because earlier this year Ackroyd announced he was in talks about producing another remake — with a squad of male Ghostbusters.
Never mind ‘Who ya gonna call?’, which ya gonna watch?
Release date: July 22, 2016.
Gremlins (1984)
Gremlins (1984): The rules are the same: if you have a pet Mogwai, never expose it to sunlight, never get it wet and, no matter how it begs, never feed it after midnight — or it will turn into a Gremlin.
Gremlins (1984): The rules are the same: if you have a pet Mogwai, never expose it to sunlight, never get it wet and, no matter how it begs, never feed it after midnight — or it will turn into a Gremlin.
The rules are the same: if you have a pet Mogwai, never expose it to sunlight, never get it wet and, no matter how it begs, never feed it after midnight — or it will turn into a Gremlin. Inevitably, the boy who gets a Mogwai for Christmas in this remake breaks the rules.
Original writer Chris Columbus is directing the sequel, set 30 years on, with the involvement of producer Steven Spielberg. Zach Gilligan, who played Billy, the boy whose fluffy, big-eared pet wreaked havoc, wants a role, too.
The new Gremlins is unlikely to rely wholly on CGI. Columbus has said the charm and energy of the original stemmed from the ‘sense of anarchy the creatures had, because behind the scenes are 25 puppeteers making them come to life’.
Release date: To be announced.
It (1990)
It (1990): The original was not a film but a two-part TV serial. Pennywise The Dancing Clown was played by Tim Curry
It (1990): The original was not a film but a two-part TV serial. Pennywise The Dancing Clown was played by Tim Curry
Stephen King tweeted in May he feared the remake of arguably his scariest story, starring demonic clown Pennywise, would never be released: director Carey Fukunaga had just quit.
But like Pennywise himself, the movie refuses to die, and director Andy Muschietti has now been assigned.
Like many remakes, this version is set 30 years on — but the characters have lost their memories, and can remember nothing about the gory summer when they ganged up to fight the supernatural serial killer dismembering children.
The original was not a film but a two-part TV serial. Pennywise The Dancing Clown was played by Tim Curry.
Release date: To be announced.
Police Academy (1984)
Police Academy (1984): The coarse, raucous Police Academy series is sometimes called America’s Carry Ons. But the plots were much less varied: an incompetent bunch of recruits cause bedlam as they try to prove themselves
Police Academy (1984): The coarse, raucous Police Academy series is sometimes called America’s Carry Ons. But the plots were much less varied: an incompetent bunch of recruits cause bedlam as they try to prove themselves
The coarse, raucous Police Academy series is sometimes called America’s Carry Ons. But the plots were much less varied: an incompetent bunch of recruits cause bedlam as they try to prove themselves.
Biggest name in the franchise was Steve Guttenberg. Now sketch-show comics Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele will star. The story is expected to see some original cast return, to train a new generation.
Release date: To be announced.
Commando (1985)
Commando (1985): Arnold Schwarzenegger starred as a retired special forces soldier waging a one-man war against South American revolutionaries who had kidnapped his daughter
Commando (1985): Arnold Schwarzenegger starred as a retired special forces soldier waging a one-man war against South American revolutionaries who had kidnapped his daughter
Arnold Schwarzenegger starred as a retired special forces soldier waging a one-man war against South American revolutionaries who had kidnapped his daughter.
It was ultra-violent, and one of the first movies to foresee the future of action movies lay in fighting terrorists.
A reboot has been on the cards for five years. One script, completed in 2011, is said to be even more violent than the original. Another, according to writer David Ayer, features a hero who is ‘less brawny, but more skilled in covert tactics and weaponry’. Tom Cruise, perhaps — but not Arnie.
Release date: To be announced.
Scarface (1983)
Scarface (1983): Al Pacino played the Cuban crime baron, in a role that was itself a remake — Scarface No 1 was Paul Muni, in 1932. The Brian de Palma version, written by Oliver Stone, also made a star of Michelle Pfeiffer, playing Tony’s wife, Elvira
Scarface (1983): Al Pacino played the Cuban crime baron, in a role that was itself a remake — Scarface No 1 was Paul Muni, in 1932. The Brian de Palma version, written by Oliver Stone, also made a star of Michelle Pfeiffer, playing Tony’s wife, Elvira
Tony Montana’s final line in this gory, drug-crazed classic might be the most quoted in cinema history: ‘Say hello to my little friend!’
Al Pacino played the Cuban crime baron, in a role that was itself a remake — Scarface No 1 was Paul Muni, in 1932.
The Brian de Palma version, written by Oliver Stone, also made a star of Michelle Pfeiffer, playing Tony’s wife, Elvira.
Writer Jonathan Herman is working on a remake, and Pacino claims he is unbothered: ‘It’s fine, it’s interesting,’ he says. ‘It’s part of what we do — we remake things.’
Release date: To be announced.
Point Break (1991)
Point Break (1991): The ultimate surfing movie starred Patrick Swayze as Bodhi, a bank robber with a passion for riding giant waves, and Keanu Reeves as Johnny Utah, the FBI agent on his trail
Point Break (1991): The ultimate surfing movie starred Patrick Swayze as Bodhi, a bank robber with a passion for riding giant waves, and Keanu Reeves as Johnny Utah, the FBI agent on his trail
The ultimate surfing movie starred Patrick Swayze as Bodhi, a bank robber with a passion for riding giant waves, and Keanu Reeves as Johnny Utah, the FBI agent on his trail.
The movie was an instant cult classic, and it is surprising the remake has not attracted bigger stars. Luke Bracey from Home And Away will play Utah, while Venezuelan actor Edgar Ramirez is Bodhi.
Release date: December 25.
Sister Act (1992)
Sister Act (1992): Whoopi Goldberg had her biggest hit as a singer who hides from a mafia boss in a convent. Maggie Smith is the Mother Superior who is horrified when Whoopi turns her choir into a rock ’n’ roll gospel band
Trailer for Whoopi Goldberg comedy classic Sister Act
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Whoopi Goldberg had her biggest hit as a singer who hides from a mafia boss in a convent. Maggie Smith is the Mother Superior who is horrified when Whoopi turns her choir into a rock ’n’ roll gospel band.
Disney has bought the rights, and the writers of Legally Blonde, Kirsten Smith and Karen McCullah, are reinventing the story. It isn’t known if Whoopi will join the cast, but the chances of Dame Maggie getting involved seem thinner than a communion wafer.
Release date: To be announced.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-3205334/Why-Hollywood-hooked-makes-man-U-N-C-L-E-Mad-Max-long-list-films-set-revisited.html#ixzz3l5FCcEsR
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