2011年4月19日星期二

Actor Michael Sarrazin, dies at 70

Michael Sarrazin Canadian actor, known for his role in Jane Fonda in they Shoot Horses, Don't They?, died Sunday in Montreal at the age of 70 years.

It died after a brief illness, with her daughters Catherine and Michele at his side, according to a spokesman for the family.

Born in the city of Quebec Sarrazin was a "actor brilliant exploded to fame early twenties when he was discovered by Hollywood,", said his agent Michael Oscars.

He has played in human Flim Flam with George c. Scott, sometimes a great Notion with Paul Newman and took an extraordinary turn in the production of television from 1973 of Frankenstein: the true story as a character who fights for the monster.

More recently, Sarrazin appeared in Canadian productions, including Joshua 1985 Then and now, based on the novel by Mordecai Richler and Florida, in which he plays Romeo Laflamme lounge singer. The film on a Quebec family that buys a motel in Florida to escape the cold winters won the 1993 Golden Reel award.

Quebec-born Michael Sarrazin had a 40-year career on the screen. He died Sunday in Montreal. Born in Quebec Michael Sarrazin has had a career of 40 years on the screen. It is died Sunday in Montreal. Oscars Abrams Zimel + AssociatesHis more young brother Pierre, who produced the film, said he drew Michael of Hollywood to take on the role to Rémy Girard and Margot Kidder.

"I asked him to act in French, which was difficult for him because he had so long been in Los Angeles, but it was up to him." We had grown up in Montreal from the east end, "said Pierre Sarrazin."

He also brought recognition to Montreal. "People would call on the street" Hello, Romeo Laflamme. ". After all of these roles in Hollywood, in Montreal, it was Romeo Laflamme, "Sarrazin added."

Michael joking with paramedics to the right of the hospital at the end, said Sarrazin. "It was an incredibly funny person and his best performance was for his family and friends." "It was a very original inventive and a very gentle soul".

Born on 22 May 1940 in the city of Quebec, Jacques Michel Sarrazin Andre Sarrazin went to eight different schools before dropping out.

"None of us was surprised when Hollywood called for Michael because he was such a star in our family." The next block people came to say "I hear that a very funny guy, the funny kid on the street". "It was a great storyteller," said his brother.

He went to Toronto to find work as an actor and found roles in theatre, television and CBC in his teens. One of these roles is version live TV drama of Romeo and Juliet opposite Genevieve Bujold. Later, he studied at the Actors Studio in New York.

He was noticed by Universal while playing in a short historical documentary for the Office National du Film du Canada. From his Hollywood career in 1965, he started in series the Virginian and TV Telefilm The Doomsday flight before starring in the drama of war after the shooting to Abilene.

After his arrival to wider notice with the Flim Flam man, Sarrazin played a series of drifting buoys in the hollow eyes, soulful which seemed to suit the ethos anti-hero of the time.

He played a surfer without purpose in The Sweet Ride in 1968 and a medical student that takes in The Pursuit of Happiness, both opposite Jacqueline Bisset, who was a long-time romantic partner.

It is the depression Wanderer who dance with the cynical character Fonda in they Shoot Horses of 1969, Don't They?, a role in which he delivered a few lines, transmitting his world weariness with single body language. He is also memorable in the title of the psychological thriller, the reincarnation of Peter proud role, playing a man who comes alive its past reincarnations.

He settled in addition to minor roles in the 1980s, including legal Street TV spots, this Alfred Hitchcock and Deep Space Nine of 1996. One of his last films was the chorus of Christmas 2008, but it is also a small tour to come film of Walter Salles on the road, based on the book by Jack Kerouac.

Sarrazin returns to live in Montreal five years where he was adopted as one of the major contributors of Quebec and the Canada film. He left his daughters Michelle and Catherine, sister Enid, stepsisters Marguerite Sarrazin and Suzette Couture and his brother Pierre.

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