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Thursday, March 1, 2012

'Conservative activist Andrew Breitbart dead at 43'

REUTERS

[THE NEWS CONTINUES TO BE SHOCKING...YOU WILL RECALL THAT VINCENT WAS BLAMED FOR ASKING TO SEE THE PHOTO THAT ANDREW HAD ON HIS CELL PHONE OF WEINER'S WEINER THAT SUBSEQUENTLY WAS SNAPPED FROM STUDIO CAMERAS AND PUT ON THE INTERNET.]

By Alex Dobuzinskis
LOS ANGELES | Thu Mar 1, 2012 1:58pm EST

(Reuters) - Conservative activist Andrew Breitbart, an influential voice in U.S. Republican politics known for his attacks on liberals and Democrats, died unexpectedly of natural causes in Los Angeles early on Thursday, his family said. He was 43.

Breitbart was walking last night near his Los Angeles home when he collapsed, said his father-in-law, actor Orson Bean.

"He collapsed on the sidewalk and the paramedics were there very quickly and they couldn't revive him," Bean told Reuters in a phone interview.

A friend of Breitbart told Reuters he had a history of heart problems and is believed to have suffered a heart attack.

'Vincent D'Onofrio: He's Not as Famous as He Ought to Be'

LA TIMES

For someone who revels in quirky, offbeat roles, the actor manages to stay very, very busy.

August 25, 2000|
JOHN ANDERSON | NEWSDAY

NEW YORK —

"How are you!? How was it?"

"The screening? Very well. Great. How're your rehearsals?"

"Great! I just came from one. I'm, like, living by your advice. . . ."
"Good. You should."

". . . knowing that half of them will [expletive]. But it gives you a lot of . . . "

"Freedom."

"It does, actually."

"I know."

*

Tableside tutorial, compliments of Vincent D'Onofrio, actor's actor, inside a restaurant near Manhattan's Avenue A ("specializing in the cuisines of Northern Africa"). The slinkier-than-standard-issue waitress-actress has gotten D'Onofrio's impressions of "The Cell"--just one of three new movies the actor stars in--and reaffirmed D'Onofrio's earlier advice about rehearsals-auditions.

It's the kind of week actors dream of and publicists justifiably fear. In the aforementioned "The Cell," D'Onofrio plays a serial killer in a coma, whose fevered mind provides the strange terrain of Tarsem Singh's hallucinogenic thriller. In Robert Greenwald's "Steal This Movie!" D'Onofrio is yippie founder/'60s icon Abbie Hoffman. And in Lodge Kerrigan's "Claire Dolan," he's a New York cabby who befriends the title character, an Irish immigrant turned prostitute.


All of which promises to perpetuate D'Onofrio's image as an actor who'll do anything--who loves acting perhaps not wisely but too well.

How else do you consider D'Onofrio's several crash-and-burn movies: His blind white-water rafter in "Good Luck"? His mob accountant in "Feeling Minnesota"? His slacker brother in "Stuart Saves His Family"? Even his Los Angeles cop in the voyeur's delight "Strange Days"?

D'Onofrio has picked this location to talk, because it's near his apartment, where he lives with his Dutch-born wife, son and daughter--and, just as likely, because even the East Village in its mid-gentrification promotes the image of art-as-struggle and an anti-Hollywood attitude.

So why has he shown up with two publicists and a makeup man? Ah, the mysteries of the filmic arts.

D'Onofrio's career does, in fact, contain enough mysterious weirdness for a movie of its own:

He played Lili Taylor's boyfriend in "Mystic Pizza" and then played her father in "Household Saints."

He played Kennedy assassination witness Bill Newman in "JFK"--and then played him again in "Malcolm X."

He Played Conan's Creator

One of his most respected performances was as Robert E. Howard, the creator of Conan the Barbarian, in "The Whole Wide World."

He gained 70 pounds to play the disturbed Pvt. Pyle in Stanley Kubrick's "Full Metal Jacket" (1987) and 40 pounds recently to play a speed dealer named Pooh Bear in "The Salton Sea" opposite Val Kilmer.

Pooh Bear aside, D'Onofrio's role as Edgar, the sugar-water-slurping, skin-stretching alien of "Men in Black," has given him a genuine audience among kids. "I like that," the actor says, looking up from his salad.

And yet, despite this pan-generational popularity, D'Onofrio is usually described as "obscure," "eccentric," "eclectic" and the dreaded "an actor's actor"--the classic euphemism for a guy not as famous as he should be.

"I guess I care," D'Onofrio says, "but the problem with doing film is you never stop having an audience. When you do theater, you have an audience for a couple of hours, and then they go home. You do film, you never stop having an audience.

"But whether they hate me or like me is up to them," he says. "I know that a lot of people don't like a lot of my performances. But that's OK, 'cause I know people come up to me on the street and like some of them, too. So that's OK, too. I just consider it part of my job to be acceptant of anything anybody says. I don't think of it on any other level than that, that kind of stuff. I'm an actor, so that's what I get."

D'Onofrio, a large, imposing figure currently goateed and possibly slimming, has a big man's disregard for propriety, at least concerning lesser-known directors and smaller movies.

"Claire Dolan"?


"Oh God. He [Kerrigan] sent me his film 'Clean, Shaven.' He sent me the script and told me Katrin Cartlidge had agreed to do it, and I always wanted to work with her, so we did it. A horrible experience. Making it was horrible. I didn't get along with anyone but Katrin. But you know, the guy is a good director. He makes a certain type of film. 'Claire Dolan' is a certain kind of film, not everyone can sit through a film like that. But the guy has a definite style and a definite talent. He was good to work for, in the sense that you knew you were working for a guy with a lot of originality and a real sense of cinema. But I really didn't have much fun doing it."

D'Onofrio is much kinder toward director Robert Greenwald, for whom "Steal This Movie!" was a real labor of love. And Greenwald?


"I have a lot to say, but unfortunately it's all good," Greenwald says from Los Angeles. "I wish he was an egomaniac or a pain . . . because it would make a better story, but he's an amazingly hard-working actor.

"The scariest part of it all," Greenwald adds, "was that Vincent is a shy, quiet guy. And when it came to portraying the crazy, extroverted side of Abbie, the side that always wanted the spotlight, I noticed in rehearsals that he'd started using everybody around him to feed that 'Look at me!' thing. More and more, he demanded the spotlight, from the extras and the casts; during the demonstration and riot scenes he would really work the crowd."

The director says he had been confident that D'Onofrio would get all the other aspects of Hoffman's personality, "but it was wonderful watching him suppress his own character to find that Abbie-ness. So unlike him in life. He was hysterical. And the extras were thrilled."

OK, then. And what else is up for D'Onofrio this summer? How about the third annual Riverrun International Film Festival? Held Labor Day weekend in Brevard, S.C., it's run by D'Onofrio's father, Gene, and sister, Beth, and will open with--what else?--"Steal This Movie!," featuring a personal appearance by--yes!--Vincent D'Onofrio.

"It's their film festival," the actor says, "but they use my name a lot. I told my dad--he used to be an interior designer--that if he wanted to keep himself busy, he should start a film festival. He lives in the perfect town, a small town right near Asheville, the perfect town to do something like that, lots of little shops and stuff. So I said go ahead and do it, and he did. And every year it's gotten better and better. This year they've got 20, 30 films."

And no, in case you're wondering, not all of them star Vincent D'Onofrio.