Subject: | Shelley Winters Dies ... |
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Date: | Sat, 14 Jan 2006 15:16:56 -0500 |
From: | Sandy P. Klein <spklein52@hotmail.com> |
Reply-To: | SPKlein52@hotmail.com |
To: | SPKlein52@hotmail.com |
By Adam Bernstein
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, January 14, 2006; 2:48 PM
Shelley Winters, 85, a brassy actress and raconteur who appeared in more than 120 films and twice won the Academy Award for supporting performances, died Jan. 14 at a rehabilitation center in Beverly Hills, Calif. She had been hospitalized in October after suffering a heart attack.
At first a peroxide-dyed "Blonde Bombshell," Ms. Winters was typecast for years as a gangster's moll and dance-hall dame before transitioning to fuller characterizations. Even in her two best films of the early period, "A Double Life" (1947) and "A Place in the Sun" (1951), she once joked of her tendency to perish as a sinner or martyr.
She wrote in a memoir: "I had been strangled by Ronald Colman, drowned by Montgomery Clift, stabbed and drowned by Robert Mitchum, shot by Jack Palance and by Rod Steiger in two different films and, oh yes, overdosed with heroin by Ricardo Montalban."
By the late 1950s, a plumper Ms. Winters carved a successful career in character parts -- the brash and frowzy secondary roles that she said would sustain her career as she aged.
She brought a sympathetic quality to Charlotte Haze, the mother of a teenage vamp in "Lolita" (1962), based on the Vladimir Nabokov novel.
She once called the role "one of the best performances I ever gave in any medium. She is dumb and cunning, silly, sad, sexy, and bizarre, and totally American and human."
The director, Stanley Kubrick, "had the insight to find the areas of me that were pseudointellectual and pretentious. We all have those things in us."