Jonathan Demme, 'Silence of the Lambs' director, dead at 73
He was not on the list.
Filmmaker Jonathan Demme, whose Oscar-winning thriller
"The Silence of the Lambs" terrified audiences and introduced one of
the most indelible villains in movie history, died Wednesday morning in New
York. He was 73.
He died of complications from esophageal cancer, according
to a statement from his publicist.
Demme won consistent acclaim as the director of such diverse
movies as the Talking Heads concert film "Stop Making Sense";
"Philadelphia," the 1993 drama starring Tom Hanks as a lawyer
battling AIDS; and "Beloved," the 1998 Oprah Winfrey movie based on
Toni Morrison's bestseller about a 19th century slave haunted by the ghost of
her daughter.
But it's "Silence of the Lambs" for which he was
best known. The 1991 movie, based on Thomas Harris' novel, swept the Academy
Awards the following year, winning Oscars for best picture and its two stars,
Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins, whose Hannibal Lecter character became a
cultural icon. Demme also won the Oscar for best director.
The movie was a box-office hit, spawned several sequels and
a TV series, and chilled viewers with its portrait of Lecter, a refined but
cannibalistic serial killer who bragged about eating a victim's liver
"with some fava beans and a nice Chianti."
Over a career that spanned four decades Demme directed an
eclectic mix of films, including the Michelle Pfeiffer comedy "Married to
the Mob," the Melanie Griffith-Jeff Daniels road-trip adventure
"Something Wild," a remake of political thriller "The Manchurian
Candidate" with Denzel Washington, and the Anne Hathaway indie drama
"Rachel Getting Married."
He also was a big lover of music, filling his movies with
songs and directing documentaries or videos for such artists as Neil Young, the
Pretenders, Bruce Springsteen and Justin Timberlake.
"Sadly, I can confirm that Jonathan passed away early
this morning in his Manhattan apartment, surrounded by his wife, Joanne Howard,
and three children," the publicist said. There will be a private family
funeral.
Jonathan Demme had one of the most varied filmographies of a
major filmmaker ever. He followed his own path. pic.twitter.com/xSU6x1GPS1
— Sean Fennessey (@SeanFennessey) April 26, 2017
Demme was known for a compassionate approach to his
characters and his use of dramatic close-ups, most effectively in "Silence
of the Lambs'" tense exchanges between Hopkins ("quid pro quo,
Clarice") and Foster's young FBI trainee.
By Wednesday afternoon tributes to Demme were pouring out of
Hollywood.
"I am heartbroken to lose a friend, a mentor, a guy so
singular and dynamic you'd have to design a hurricane to contain him,"
Jodie Foster said in a statement to Rolling Stone. "Jonathan was as quirky
as his comedies and as deep as his dramas. He was pure energy; the unstoppable
cheerleader for anyone creative."
"Jonathan taught us how big a heart a person can have,
and how it will guide how we live and what we do for a living," Tom Hanks,
who won an Oscar for "Philadelphia," said in a statement to Entertainment
Weekly. "He was the grandest of men."
Where do I begin..? Words just aren't enough with heartache
like this. You, master of humanity. You, genius of storytelling. You, generous
and warm man. You, special soul. You taught me so much about life and art and
about standing up for what you believe. You made me better at my craft. And,
the time I spent with you away from a camera and a stage made a better human
out of me. You are truly irreplaceable. I will miss you so dearly, my sweet
friend. I hope we meet again someday. I love you, JD. May you Rest In Peace.
--Justin
A post shared by Justin Timberlake (@justintimberlake) on
Apr 26, 2017 at 2:14pm PDT
Unlike many directors of his generation, Demme didn't go to
film school. He broke into the industry through a friendship with cult
filmmaker Roger Corman, who hired him to write and direct such low-budget genre
movies as "Caged Heat," about inmates in a women's prison.
Demme's critical breakthrough was "Melvin and
Howard," a 1980 film about a much-disputed encounter between gas station
owner Melvin Dummar and reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes.
Other films included "Swing Shift," a period
romance with Goldie Hawn; "Swimming to Cambodia," a Spalding Gray
monologue; and the documentary "Jimmy Carter Man from Plains," about
the former president.
His final film was 2015's "Ricki and the Flash,"
starring Meryl Streep as an aging rocker.
No comments:
Post a Comment