abcdefz
03-20-2008, 12:47 PM
Awwwwwwwwwwwwwww mannnnnnn.
Scofield was fantastic. I think my favorite performance of his was in Quiz Show.
From IMDB:
Actor Paul Scofield Dies at 86
Paul Scofield, the imperious British actor of stage and screen who won an Oscar for his portrayal of Sir Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons,
died Wednesday; he was 86. Scofield, who passed away at a hospital near his home in southern England, had been suffering from leukemia.
Scofield began his acting career onstage, where it would always be centered, and he found his first successes in taking on a variety of
Shakespearean roles during and after World War II. His towering presence and amazing performances quickly drew comparison to fellow
thespian Laurence Olivier. While continuing his theater work, Scofield began appearing in a handful of films in the 1950s and early 1960s,
most notably the John Frankenheimer thriller The Train. In fact, he had only three films to his credit when he was asked to reprise his
celebrated role as Sir Thomas More in the 1966 film adaptation of A Man for All Seasons, directed by Oscar-winning filmmaker Fred Zinnemann.
The story of King Henry VIII's Chancellor of England, who refused to go along with the monarch's break from the Roman Catholic Church
and was executed for it, the film was a sumptuous adaptation of the Robert Bolt play and a critical and commercial success, winning six
Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Director and Actor for Scofield.
Despite his acclaimed Oscar success, the actor continued to work mainly in the theater, with occasional forays into cinema, primarily in
stage-to-film adaptations; notable films in the 1970s included Peter Brook's version of King Lear and Edward Albee's A Delicate Balance
opposite Katharine Hepburn. Scofield found the second role of a lifetime in the stage production of Amadeus, where he played the tortured
and envious composer Antonio Salieri (F. Murray Abraham would win an Oscar for the role in the 1984 film). Considered reclusive, a trait he
would deny in many interviews, he hand-picked his film roles very carefully, appearing in Kenneth Branagh's Henry V and Franco Zeffirelli's
Hamlet, and he received a second Oscar nomination, this time for Best Supporting Actor, for Robert Redford's Quiz Show. His last major
film role was in 1996's The Crucible, which won him his third BAFTA award. Scofield is survived by his wife, the actress Joy Parker, whom
he married in 1943, and their two children, Martin and Sarah. --Mark Englehart, IMDb staff
Scofield was fantastic. I think my favorite performance of his was in Quiz Show.
From IMDB:
Actor Paul Scofield Dies at 86
Paul Scofield, the imperious British actor of stage and screen who won an Oscar for his portrayal of Sir Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons,
died Wednesday; he was 86. Scofield, who passed away at a hospital near his home in southern England, had been suffering from leukemia.
Scofield began his acting career onstage, where it would always be centered, and he found his first successes in taking on a variety of
Shakespearean roles during and after World War II. His towering presence and amazing performances quickly drew comparison to fellow
thespian Laurence Olivier. While continuing his theater work, Scofield began appearing in a handful of films in the 1950s and early 1960s,
most notably the John Frankenheimer thriller The Train. In fact, he had only three films to his credit when he was asked to reprise his
celebrated role as Sir Thomas More in the 1966 film adaptation of A Man for All Seasons, directed by Oscar-winning filmmaker Fred Zinnemann.
The story of King Henry VIII's Chancellor of England, who refused to go along with the monarch's break from the Roman Catholic Church
and was executed for it, the film was a sumptuous adaptation of the Robert Bolt play and a critical and commercial success, winning six
Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Director and Actor for Scofield.
Despite his acclaimed Oscar success, the actor continued to work mainly in the theater, with occasional forays into cinema, primarily in
stage-to-film adaptations; notable films in the 1970s included Peter Brook's version of King Lear and Edward Albee's A Delicate Balance
opposite Katharine Hepburn. Scofield found the second role of a lifetime in the stage production of Amadeus, where he played the tortured
and envious composer Antonio Salieri (F. Murray Abraham would win an Oscar for the role in the 1984 film). Considered reclusive, a trait he
would deny in many interviews, he hand-picked his film roles very carefully, appearing in Kenneth Branagh's Henry V and Franco Zeffirelli's
Hamlet, and he received a second Oscar nomination, this time for Best Supporting Actor, for Robert Redford's Quiz Show. His last major
film role was in 1996's The Crucible, which won him his third BAFTA award. Scofield is survived by his wife, the actress Joy Parker, whom
he married in 1943, and their two children, Martin and Sarah. --Mark Englehart, IMDb staff