Douglas at 100, still ‘in love’ with Anne – Five must-see movies

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LOS ANGELES, Dec 7, (AFP): Kirk Douglas, whose illustrious career has taken in some of cinema’s landmark roles, turns 100 on Friday — attributing his remarkable longevity to his “wonderful marriage” of more than six decades.

The iconic actor revealed in a special essay to mark the milestone that his second wife Anne, 97, had been his inspiration in rebounding from adversity over the years.

“I was lucky enough to find my soulmate 63 years ago, and I believe our wonderful marriage and our nightly ‘golden hour’ chats have helped me survive all things,” he writes in celebrity magazine Closer Weekly.

The three-time Oscar nominee will celebrate with 200 friends and family at a party in California hosted by his son Michael and daughter-in-law Catherine Zeta Jones.

The star, who was forced to retire because of speech problems after a stroke, has practiced delivering a few words on the day with the help of a speech therapist.

“I am always asked for advice on living a long and healthy life. I don’t have any. I do believe, however, that we have a purpose for being here,” he says.

“I was spared after a helicopter crash and a stroke to do more good in the world before I leave it.”

Douglas, the son of illiterate Russian immigrants, appeared in some of cinema’s most iconic roles, from slave Spartacus and painter Vincent van Gogh to Western legend Doc Holliday.

He was in more than 80 movies but, unlike stars of younger generations, never took a role in a sequel.

Born Issur Danielovitch in poverty in New York to a Jewish father and Protestant mother, Douglas went to the city’s Academy of Dramatic Arts.

Eluded

“Champion” (1949) earned him the first of three Oscar nominations for best actor, an award that has eluded him but was finally snared by his son Michael for “Wall Street” (1987).

Among his most famous films were 1956 Van Gogh biopic “Lust for Life,” “Gunfight at the OK Corral” (1957), “Spartacus” (1960) and “Seven Days in May” (1964).

Douglas’s first marriage to American actress Diana Webster produced sons Michael and Joel before it ended in divorce in 1951.

Three years later he married Belgian-American Anne Buydens, who once wrote of Douglas: “Living with my husband is like sitting in a beautiful garden right next to a volcano that may erupt at any moment.”

The couple would go on to have two sons, Eric and Peter.

“One hundred years old is certainly a milestone, but the facts are what dad has accomplished in 100 years,” Michael Douglas writes in the Closer Weekly article.

“I think his stamina and tenacity are the qualities that stand out for me,” he continues. “He has taught me always to give it your best shot at whatever you take on. He’s the full package.”

The Douglas family has been touched by its fair share of tragedy and disaster over the years.

Eric, also an actor, died from a lethal combination of alcohol and prescription drugs at the age of just 46 in 2004, after years battling addiction.

Kirk had already been deeply shaken by a mid-air collision between his helicopter and an airplane over California in 1991 that killed two people, prompting him to rediscover his Jewish faith.

His 1996 stroke robbed him of the ability to speak entirely, although he managed to make a partial recovery after months of therapy.

As his health limited his film roles, Douglas and his wife turned increasingly to philanthropy, and have expressed their intention to give most of their fortune to charity on their deaths.

The couple have rebuilt 400 school playgrounds in Los Angeles and were behind the establishment of “Harry’s Haven,” an Alzheimer’s unit named after Kirk’s father at the Motion Picture and Television Fund Home in Woodland Hills, California.

Double Golden Globe winner and lifelong friend Angie Dickinson shared a bedroom scene with the legend in “Cast a Giant Shadow” (1966), which required the pair to be naked.

“You couldn’t ask for more than you get with Kirk,” the 85-year-old actress, an ex-wife of legendary composer Burt Bacharach, told AFP.

“He’s just a perfect man, I must say. Everything he does is perfect.”

Here are his most noteworthy roles:

“Champion” (1949)

Douglas punched his way to his first best actor nomination from the Academy for his role as Midge Kelly, a double-crossing and womanizing boxer who battles his demons as he climbs to the top of his sport.

Shot in 23 days for $600,000, the movie ended up being a cash cow for director Mark Robson, who used a recut version of Douglas’s workout montage nearly 20 years later in “Valley of the Dolls.”

“The Bad and the Beautiful” (1952)

Co-starring screen legend Lana Turner, “The Bad and the Beautiful” cast Douglas as ambitious but ruthless movie producer Jonathan Shields, who unscrupulously uses friends and colleagues in his scramble to the top.

“20,000 Leagues Under the Sea” (1954)

Adapted from Jules Verne’s 19th Century novel of the same name, the first sci-fi movie shot in Cinemascope saw Douglas assume the role of whaler Ned Land opposite James Mason’s Captain Nemo.

“Lust for Life” (1956)

Douglas’s third best actor Oscar nomination came for Vincente Minnelli’s biopic of tortured genius Vincent Van Gogh, who descends into mental illness and a string of unhappy relationships.

Legend has it that a very young Michael Douglas ran screaming from the theater during the scene where Van Gogh cuts off his ear, believing his father had actually gone through with it in real life.

“Spartacus” (1960)

Without doubt Douglas’s best known role, his portrayal of the rebellious slave turned gladiator cemented his place in the history of cinema, not to mention modern day popular culture.

At the time the biggest money-maker in Universal’s history, Stanley Kubrick’s historical epic effectively ended the “Hollywood Ten” blacklist of suspected Communists.

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