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Kirk Douglas

Kirk Douglas (born Issur Danielovitch; December 9, 1916 – February 5, 2020) was an American actor and filmmaker. After an impoverished childhood, he made his film debut in The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) with Barbara Stanwyck. Douglas soon developed into a leading box-office star throughout the 1950s, known for serious dramas, including westerns and war films. During his career, he appeared in more than 90 films and was known for his explosive acting style. He was named by the American Film Institute the 17th-greatest male star of Classic Hollywood cinema.

Kirk Douglas
Douglas in 1963
Born
Issur Danielovitch

(1916-12-09)December 9, 1916
DiedFebruary 5, 2020(2020-02-05) (aged 103)
Resting placeWestwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery, Westwood, California
Other names
  • Isador Demsky
  • Izzy Demsky
Alma materSt. Lawrence University
Occupations
  • Actor
  • filmmaker
  • philanthropist
Years active1944–2008
Political partyDemocratic
Spouses
(m. 1943; div. 1951)
(m. 1954)
Children
Military career
Service/branchUnited States Navy
Years of service1941–1944
Websitehttp://www.kirkdouglas.com
Signature

Douglas became an international star for his role as an unscrupulous boxing hero in Champion (1949), which brought him his first nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor. His other early films include Out of the Past (1947); Young Man with a Horn (1950), playing opposite Lauren Bacall and Doris Day; Ace in the Hole (1951); and Detective Story (1951), for which he received a Golden Globe nomination. He received his second Oscar nomination for his dramatic role in The Bad and the Beautiful (1952), opposite Lana Turner, and earned his third for portraying Vincent van Gogh in Lust for Life (1956), a role for which he won the Golden Globe for the Best Actor in a Drama. He also starred with James Mason in the adventure 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954), a large box-office hit.

In September 1949, he established Bryna Productions, which began producing films as varied as Paths of Glory (1957) and Spartacus (1960). In those two films, he collaborated with the then-relatively unknown director Stanley Kubrick, taking lead roles in both films. Douglas has been praised for helping to break the Hollywood blacklist by having Dalton Trumbo write Spartacus with an official on-screen credit.[1] He produced and starred in Lonely Are the Brave (1962) and Seven Days in May (1964), the latter opposite Burt Lancaster, with whom he made seven films. In 1963, he starred in the Broadway play One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, a story that he purchased and later gave to his son Michael Douglas, who turned it into an Oscar-winning film. Douglas continued acting into the 1980s, appearing in such films as Saturn 3 (1980), The Man from Snowy River (1980), Tough Guys (1986), a reunion with Lancaster, and in the television version of Inherit the Wind (1988) plus in an episode of Touched by an Angel in 2002, for which he received his third nomination for an Emmy Award.

As an actor and philanthropist, Douglas received an Academy Honorary Award for Lifetime Achievement and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. As an author, he wrote ten novels and memoirs. After barely surviving a helicopter crash in 1991 and then suffering a stroke in 1996, he focused on renewing his spiritual and religious life. He lived with his second wife (of 65 years), producer Anne Buydens, until his death in 2020. A centenarian, Douglas was one of the last surviving stars of the film industry's Golden Age.[2]

Early life and education

Douglas was born Issur Danielovitch (Belarusian: Іссур Даніелавіч, Russian: Иссур Даниелович, Yiddish: איסור דאַניעלאָוויטש) in Amsterdam, New York, on December 9, 1916, the son of Bryna "Bertha" (née Sanglel) and Herschel "Harry" Danielovitch.[3] His parents were immigrants from Chavusy, Mogilev Governorate, in the Russian Empire (present-day Belarus),[4][5][6][7][8][9] and the family spoke Yiddish at home.[10][11][12] Douglas was the fourth child of seven children and the only son born to his parents.[13] His sisters were: Pesha “Bessie”, Kaleh “Katherine”, Tamara “Mary”, Siffra “Frieda”,[14] Haska “Ida”, and Rachel “Ruth”.[15][16] Douglas embraced his Jewish heritage in his later years, after a near-fatal helicopter crash at the age of 74.[17]

His father's brother, who had immigrated earlier, used the surname Demsky, which Douglas's family adopted in the United States.[18]: 2  Douglas grew up as Izzy Demsky and legally changed his name to Kirk Douglas before entering the United States Navy during World War II.[19][a]

In his 1988 autobiography, The Ragman's Son, Douglas notes the hardships that he, along with his parents and six sisters, endured during their early years in Amsterdam:

My father, who had been a horse trader in Russia, got himself a horse and a small wagon, and became a ragman, buying old rags, pieces of metal, and junk for pennies, nickels, and dimes … Even on Eagle Street, in the poorest section of town, where all the families were struggling, the ragman was on the lowest rung on the ladder. And I was the ragman's son.[20]

 
College graduation photo of Douglas, 1939

Douglas had an unhappy childhood, living with an alcoholic, physically abusive father.[21] While his father drank up what little money they had, Douglas and his mother and sisters endured "crippling poverty".[22]

Douglas first wanted to be an actor after he recited the poem "The Red Robin of Spring" while in kindergarten and received applause.[23] Growing up, he sold snacks to mill workers to earn enough to buy milk and bread to help his family. He later delivered newspapers, and he had more than forty jobs during his youth before becoming an actor.[24] He found living in a family with six sisters to be stifling: "I was dying to get out. In a sense, it lit a fire under me." After appearing in plays at Amsterdam High School, from which he graduated in 1934,[25] he knew he wanted to become a professional actor.[26] Unable to afford the tuition, Douglas talked his way into the dean's office at St. Lawrence University and showed him a list of his high school honors. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1939. He received a loan which he paid back by working part-time as a gardener and a janitor. He was a standout on the wrestling team and wrestled one summer in a carnival to make money.[27] He later became good friends with world-champion wrestler Lou Thesz.

Douglas's acting talents were noticed at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City, which gave him a special scholarship. One of his classmates was Betty Joan Perske (later known as Lauren Bacall), who would play an important role in launching his film career.[28] Bacall wrote that she "had a wild crush on Kirk",[29] and they dated casually. Another classmate, and a friend of Bacall's, was aspiring actress Diana Dill, who would later become Douglas's first wife.[30]

During their time together, Bacall learned Douglas had no money and that he once spent the night in jail since he had no place to sleep. She once gave him her uncle's old coat to keep warm: "I thought he must be frozen in the winter … He was thrilled and grateful." Sometimes, just to see him, she would drag a friend or her mother to the restaurant where he worked as a busboy and waiter. He told her his dream was to someday bring his family to New York to see him on stage. During that period she fantasized about someday sharing her personal and stage lives with Douglas, but would later be disappointed: "Kirk did not really pursue me. He was friendly and sweet—enjoyed my company—but I was clearly too young for him," the eight-years-younger Bacall later wrote.[29]

Career

1940s

Douglas joined the United States Navy in 1941, shortly after the United States entered World War II, where he served as a communications officer in anti-submarine warfare aboard USS PC-1139.[31] He was medically discharged in 1944 for injuries sustained from the premature explosion of a depth charge.[32]

After the war, Douglas returned to New York City and found work in radio, theater, and commercials. In his radio work, he acted in network soap operas and saw those experiences as being especially valuable, as skill in using one's voice is important for aspiring actors; he regretted that the same avenues were no longer available. His stage break occurred when he took over the role played by Richard Widmark in Kiss and Tell (1943), which then led to other offers.[28]

Douglas had planned to remain a stage actor until his friend Lauren Bacall helped him get his first film role by recommending him to producer Hal B. Wallis, who was looking for a new male talent.[33] Wallis's film The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) with Barbara Stanwyck became Douglas' debut screen appearance. He played a young, insecure man stung by jealousy, whose life was dominated by his ruthless wife, and he hid his feelings with alcohol. It would be the last time that Douglas portrayed a weakling in a film role.[34][35] Reviewers of the film noted that Douglas already projected qualities of a "natural film actor", with the similarity of this role with later ones explained by biographer Tony Thomas:

His style and his personality came across on the screen, something that does not always happen, even with the finest actors. Douglas had, and has, a distinctly individual manner. He radiates a certain inexplicable quality, and it is this, as much as talent, that accounts for his success in films.[36]

In 1947, Douglas appeared in Out of the Past (UK: Build My Gallows High), playing a large supporting role in this classic noir thriller starring Robert Mitchum and Jane Greer. Douglas made his Broadway debut in 1949 in Three Sisters, produced by Katharine Cornell.[37] The month after Out of the Past was released, I Walk Alone, the first film teaming Douglas with Burt Lancaster, presented Douglas playing a supporting part quite similar to his role in Out of the Past in another classic fast-paced noir thriller.

Douglas' image as a tough guy was established in his eighth film, Champion (1949), after producer Stanley Kramer chose him to play a selfish boxer. In accepting the role, he took a gamble, however, since he had to turn down an offer to star in a big-budget MGM film, The Great Sinner, which would have earned him three times the income.[38][39] Melvyn Douglas played the third-billed (above the title) part Kirk Douglas passed on. The Great Sinner flopped.

Film historian Ray Didinger says Douglas "saw Champion as a greater risk, but also a greater opportunity ... Douglas took the part and absolutely nailed it." Frederick Romano, another sports film historian, described Douglas's acting as "alarmingly authentic":

Douglas shows great concentration in the ring. His intense focus on his opponent draws the viewer into the ring. Perhaps his best characteristic is his patented snarl and grimace ... he leaves no doubt that he is a man on a mission.[40]

 
Douglas and Lauren Bacall in Young Man with a Horn (1950)

Douglas received his first Academy Award nomination, and the film earned six nominations in all. Variety called it "a stark, realistic study of the boxing rackets."[39]

After Champion he decided that, to succeed as a star, he needed to ramp up his intensity, overcome his natural shyness, and choose stronger roles. He later stated, "I don't think I'd be much of an actor without vanity. And I'm not interested in being a 'modest actor'".[41] Early in his Hollywood career, Douglas demonstrated his independent streak and broke his studio contracts to gain total control over his projects, forming his own movie company, Bryna Productions (named after his mother) in September 1949.[26][42]

1950s

 
Douglas and Silvana Mangano in a pause during the shootings of Ulysses (1954)

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Douglas was a major box-office star, playing opposite some of the leading actresses of that era. He portrayed a frontier peace officer in his first western, Along the Great Divide (1951). He quickly became very comfortable with riding horses and playing gunslingers, and he appeared in many Westerns. He considered Lonely Are the Brave (1962), in which he plays a cowboy trying to live by his own code, his personal favorite.[43] The film, written by Dalton Trumbo, was respected by critics but did not do well at the box office due to poor marketing and distribution.[41][44]

In 1950, Douglas played Rick Martin in Young Man with a Horn, based on a novel of the same name by Dorothy Baker inspired by the life of jazz cornetist Bix Beiderbecke. Composer and pianist Hoagy Carmichael, playing the sidekick, added realism to the film and gave Douglas insight into the role, being a friend of the real Beiderbecke.[45] Doris Day starred as Jo, a young woman who was infatuated with the struggling jazz musician. This was strikingly opposite of the real-life account in Doris Day's autobiography, which described Douglas as "civil but self-centered" and the film as "utterly joyless".[46] During filming, bit actress Jean Spangler disappeared, and her case remains unsolved. On October 9, 1949, Spangler's purse was found near the Fern Dell entrance to Griffith Park in Los Angeles. There was an unfinished note in the purse addressed to a "Kirk," which read: "Can't wait any longer, Going to see Dr. Scott. It will work best this way while mother is away". Douglas, married at the time, called the police and told them he was not the Kirk mentioned in the note. When interviewed via telephone by the head of the investigating team, Douglas stated that he had "talked and kidded with her a bit" on set,[47][48] but that he had never been out with her.[49] Spangler's girlfriends told police that she was three months pregnant when she disappeared,[50] and scholars such as Jon Lewis of Oregon State University have speculated that she may have been considering an illegal abortion.[51]

In 1951, Douglas starred as a newspaper reporter anxiously looking for a big story in Ace in the Hole, director Billy Wilder's first effort as both writer and producer. The subject and story was controversial at the time, and U.S. audiences stayed away. Some reviews saw it as "ruthless and cynical ... a distorted study of corruption, mob psychology and the free press."[52] Possibly it "hit too close to home", said Douglas.[53] It won a Best Foreign Film award at the Venice Film Festival. The film's stature has increased in recent years, with some surveys placing it in their Top 500 Films list.[54] Woody Allen considers it one of his favorite films.[55] As the film's star and protagonist, Douglas is credited for the intensity of his acting. Film critic Roger Ebert wrote, "his focus and energy ... is almost scary. There is nothing dated about Douglas' performance. It's as right-now as a sharpened knife."[56] Biographer Gene Philips noted that Wilder's story was "galvanized" by Douglas's "astounding performance" and no doubt was a factor when George Stevens, who presented Douglas with the AFI Life Achievement Award in 1991, said of him: "No other leading actor was ever more ready to tap the dark, desperate side of the soul and thus to reveal the complexity of human nature."[57]

Also in 1951, Douglas starred in Detective Story, nominated for four Academy Awards, including one for Lee Grant in her debut film. Grant said Douglas was "dazzling, both personally and in the part. ... He was a big, big star. Gorgeous. Intense. Amazing."[58] To prepare for the role, Douglas spent days with the New York Police Department and sat in on interrogations.[59] Reviewers recognized Douglas's acting qualities, with Bosley Crowther describing Douglas as "forceful and aggressive as the detective".[60]

 
With Eve Miller in The Big Trees (1952)

In The Bad and the Beautiful (1952), another of his three Oscar-nominated roles, Douglas played a hard-nosed film producer who manipulates and uses his actors, writers, and directors. In 1954 Douglas starred as the titular character in Ulysses, a film based on Homer's epic poem Odyssey, with Silvana Mangano as Penelope and Circe, and Anthony Quinn as Antinous.[61]

In 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954), Douglas showed that in addition to serious, driven characters, he was adept at roles requiring a lighter, comic touch. In this adaptation of the Jules Verne novel, he played a happy-go-lucky sailor who was the opposite in every way to the brooding Captain Nemo (James Mason). The film was one of Walt Disney's most successful live-action movies and a major box-office hit.[62] Douglas managed a similar comic turn in the western Man Without a Star (1955) and in For Love or Money (1963). He showed further diversity in one of his earliest television appearances. He was a musical guest (as himself) on The Jack Benny Program (1954).[63]

In 1955, Douglas was finally able to get his film production company, Bryna Productions, off the ground.[26] To do so, he had to break contracts with Hal B. Wallis and Warner Bros., but he began to produce and star in his own films, starting with The Indian Fighter in 1955.[64] Through Bryna, he produced and starred in the films Paths of Glory (1957), The Vikings (1958), Spartacus (1960), Lonely are the Brave (1962), and Seven Days in May (1964).[65] In 1958, Douglas formed the music publishing company Peter Vincent Music Corporation, a Bryna Productions subsidiary.[66] Peter Vincent Music was responsible for publishing the soundtracks of The Vikings and Spartacus.[66][67]

While Paths of Glory did not do well at the box office, it has since become one of the great anti-war films, and it is one of director Stanley Kubrick's early films. Douglas, a fluent French speaker,[68] portrayed a sympathetic French officer during World War I who tries to save three soldiers from facing a firing squad.[69] Biographer Vincent LoBrutto describes Douglas's "seething but controlled portrayal exploding with the passion of his convictions at the injustice leveled at his men."[70] The film was banned in France until 1976. Before production of the film began, however, Douglas and Kubrick had to work out some major issues, one of which was Kubrick's rewriting the screenplay without informing Douglas first. It led to their first major argument: "I called Stanley to my room ... I hit the ceiling. I called him every four-letter word I could think of ... 'I got the money, based on that [original] script. Not this shit!' I threw the script across the room. 'We're going back to the original script, or we're not making the picture.' Stanley never blinked an eye. We shot the original script. I think the movie is a classic, one of the most important pictures—possibly the most important picture—Stanley Kubrick has ever made."[70]

Douglas played military men in numerous films, with varying nuance, including Top Secret Affair (1957), Town Without Pity (1961), The Hook (1963), Seven Days in May (1964), Heroes of Telemark (1965), In Harm's Way (1965), Cast a Giant Shadow (1966), Is Paris Burning (1966), The Final Countdown (1980), and Saturn 3 (1980). His acting style and delivery made him a favorite with television impersonators such as Frank Gorshin, Rich Little, and David Frye.[71][72][73]

 
In Lust for Life as Vincent van Gogh

His role as Vincent van Gogh in Lust for Life (1956), directed by Vincente Minnelli and based on Irving Stone's bestseller, was filmed mostly on location in France. Douglas was noted not only for the veracity of van Gogh's appearance but for how he conveyed the painter's internal turmoil. Some reviewers consider it the most famous example of the "tortured artist" who seeks solace from life's pain through his work.[74] Others see it as a portrayal not only of the "painter-as-hero", but a unique presentation of the "action painter", with Douglas expressing the physicality and emotion of painting, as he uses the canvas to capture a moment in time.[75][76]

Douglas was nominated for an Academy Award for the role, with his co-star Anthony Quinn winning the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor as Paul Gauguin, van Gogh's friend. Douglas won a Golden Globe award, although Minnelli said Douglas should have won an Oscar: "He achieved a moving and memorable portrait of the artist—a man of massive creative power, triggered by severe emotional stress, the fear and horror of madness."[62] Douglas himself called his acting role as Van Gogh a painful experience: "Not only did I look like Van Gogh, I was the same age he was when he committed suicide."[77] His wife said he often remained in character in his personal life: "When he was doing Lust for Life, he came home in that red beard of Van Gogh's, wearing those big boots, stomping around the house—it was frightening."[78]

In general, however, Douglas's acting style fit well with Minnelli's preference for "melodrama and neurotic-artist roles", writes film historian James Naremore. He adds that Minnelli had his "richest, most impressive collaborations" with Douglas, and for Minnelli, no other actor portrayed his level of "cool": "A robust, athletic, sometimes explosive player, Douglas loved stagy rhetoric, and he did everything passionately."[79] Douglas had also starred in Minnelli's film The Bad and the Beautiful four years earlier, for which he received a Best Actor Oscar nomination.[80]

1960s

 
Spartacus (1960)

In 1960, Douglas played the title role in what many consider his career-defining appearance[81] as the Thracian gladiator slave rebel Spartacus with an all-star cast in Spartacus (1960). He was the executive producer as well, which increased the $12 million production cost and made Spartacus one of the most expensive films up to that time.[82] Douglas initially selected Anthony Mann to direct, but replaced him early on with Stanley Kubrick, with whom he had previously collaborated in Paths of Glory.[83]

When the film was released, Douglas gave full credit to its screenwriter, Dalton Trumbo, who was on the Hollywood blacklist, and thereby effectively ended it.[18]: 81  About that event, Douglas said, "I've made over 85 pictures, but the thing I'm most proud of is breaking the blacklist."[5] However, the film's producer, Edward Lewis, and the family of Dalton Trumbo publicly disputed Douglas's claim.[84] In the film Trumbo (2015), Douglas is portrayed by Dean O'Gorman.[85]

 
With Joan Tetzel in the 1963 Broadway play One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

Douglas bought the rights to stage a play of the novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest from its author, Ken Kesey. He mounted a play from the material in 1963 in which he starred and that ran on Broadway for five months. Reviews were mixed. Douglas retained the movie rights due to an innovative loophole of basing the rights on the play rather than the novel, despite Kesey's objections, but after a decade of being unable to find a producer he gave the rights to his son, Michael. In 1975, the film version was produced by Michael Douglas and Saul Zaentz, and starred Jack Nicholson, as Douglas was then considered too old to play the character as written.[2] The film won all five major Academy Awards, only the second film to do so (after It Happened One Night in 1934).[86]

Douglas made seven films over four decades with actor Burt Lancaster: I Walk Alone (1947), Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957), The Devil's Disciple (1959), The List of Adrian Messenger (1963), Seven Days in May (1964), Victory at Entebbe (1976), and Tough Guys (1986), which fixed the notion of the pair as something of a team in the public imagination. Douglas was always billed under Lancaster in these movies, but, with the exception of I Walk Alone and, even more so, The List of Adrian Messenger (where Lancaster's part is just a cameo appearance, while Douglas plays the film's villain), their roles were usually of a similar size. Both actors arrived in Hollywood at about the same time and first appeared together in the fourth film for each, albeit with Douglas in a supporting role. They both became actor-producers who sought out independent Hollywood careers.[78]

John Frankenheimer, who directed the political thriller Seven Days in May in 1964, had not worked well with Lancaster in the past and originally did not want him in this film. However, Douglas thought Lancaster would fit the part and "begged me to reconsider," said Frankenheimer, and he then gave Lancaster the most colorful role. "It turns out that Burt Lancaster and I got along magnificently well on the picture," he later said.[87]

In 1967 Douglas starred with John Wayne in the western film directed by Burt Kennedy titled The War Wagon.[88]

In The Arrangement (1969), a drama directed by Elia Kazan and based upon his novel of the same title, Douglas starred as a tormented advertising executive, with Faye Dunaway as costar. The film did poorly at the box office, receiving mostly negative reviews. Dunaway believed many of the reviews were unfair, writing in her biography, "I can't understand it when people knock Kirk's performance, because I think he's terrific in the picture," adding that "he's as bright a person as I've met in the acting profession."[89] She says that his "pragmatic approach to acting" would later be a "philosophy that ended up rubbing off on me."[90]

1970–2020

 
Douglas in 1975

In the 1970s, he starred in films such as There Was a Crooked Man... (1970),[91] A Gunfight (1971),[92] The Light at the Edge of the World (1971).[93] and The Fury (1978).[94] He made his directorial debut in Scalawag. (1973),[95] and subsequently also directed Posse (1975), in which he starred alongside Bruce Dern.[96]

In 1980, he starred in The Final Countdown,[97] playing the commanding officer of the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz, which travels through time to the day before the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. It was produced by his son Peter Douglas. He also played in a dual role in The Man from Snowy River (1982), an Australian film which received critical acclaim and numerous awards.

In 1986, he reunited with his longtime co-star, Burt Lancaster, in a crime comedy, Tough Guys, with a cast including Charles Durning and Eli Wallach. It marked the final collaboration between Douglas and Lancaster, completing a partnership of more than 40 years.[98] That same year, he co-hosted (with Angela Lansbury) the New York Philharmonic's tribute to the 100th anniversary of the Statue of Liberty. The symphony was conducted by Zubin Mehta.[99]

In 1988, Douglas starred in a television adaptation of Inherit the Wind, opposite Jason Robards and Jean Simmons. The film won two Emmy Awards. In the 1990s, Douglas continued starring in various features. Among them was The Secret in 1992, a television movie about a grandfather and his grandson who both struggle with dyslexia. That same year, he played the uncle of Michael J. Fox in a comedy, Greedy. He appeared as the Devil in the video for the Don Henley song "The Garden of Allah". In 1996, after suffering a severe stroke at age 79 which impaired his ability to speak, Douglas still wanted to make movies. He underwent years of voice therapy and made Diamonds in 1999, in which he played an old prizefighter who was recovering from a stroke. It co-starred his longtime friend from his early acting years, Lauren Bacall.[100]

In 2003, Michael and Joel Douglas produced It Runs in the Family, which along with Kirk starred various family members, including Michael, Michael's son Cameron, and his wife from 50 years earlier, Diana Dill, playing his wife. His final feature-film appearance was in the 2004 Michael Goorjian film Illusion, in which he depicts a dying film director forced to watch episodes from the life of a son he had refused to acknowledge.[101][102][103] His last screen role was the TV movie Empire State Building Murders, which was released in 2008.[101] In March 2009, at the age of 92, Douglas did an autobiographical one-man show, Before I Forget, at the Center Theatre Group's Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City, California. The four performances were filmed and turned into a documentary that was first screened in January 2010.[104]

On December 9, 2016, he celebrated his 100th birthday at the Beverly Hills Hotel, joined by several of his friends, including Don Rickles, Jeffrey Katzenberg, and Steven Spielberg, along with Douglas's wife Anne, his son Michael and his daughter-in-law Catherine Zeta-Jones. Douglas was described by his guests as being still in good shape, able to walk with confidence into the Sunset Room for the celebration.[105]

Douglas appeared at the 2018 Golden Globes with his daughter-in-law Catherine Zeta-Jones, a rare public appearance in the final decade of his life.[106] He received a standing ovation and helped Zeta-Jones present the award for "Best Screenplay – Motion Picture".[107]

Style and philosophy of acting

 
Douglas with Lana Turner in The Bad and the Beautiful (1952)

Kirk is one of a kind. He has an overpowering physical presence, which is why on a large movie screen he looms over the audience like a tidal wave in full flood. Globally revered, he is now the last living screen legend of those who vaulted to stardom at the war's end, that special breed of movie idol instantly recognizable anywhere, whose luminous on-screen characters are forever memorable.

Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America.[2]

Douglas stated that the keys to acting success are determination and application: "You must know how to function and how to maintain yourself, and you must have a love of what you do. But an actor also needs great good luck. I have had that luck."[108] Douglas had great vitality and explained that "it takes a lot out of you to work in this business. Many people fall by the wayside because they don't have the energy to sustain their talent."[109]

That attitude toward acting became evident with Champion (1949). From that one role, writes biographer John Parker, he went from stardom and entered the "superleague", where his style was in "marked contrast to Hollywood's other leading men at the time".[33] His sudden rise to prominence is explained and compared to that of Jack Nicholson's:

He virtually ignored interventionist directors. He prepared himself privately for each role he played, so that when the cameras were ready to roll he was suitably, and some would say egotistically and even selfishly, inspired to steal every scene in a manner comparable in modern times to Jack Nicholson's modus operandi.[33]

As a producer, Douglas had a reputation of being a compulsively hard worker who expected others to exude the same level of energy. As such, he was typically demanding and direct in his dealing with people who worked on his projects, with his intensity spilling over into all elements of his film-making.[36] This was partly due to his high opinion of actors, movies, and moviemaking: "To me it is the most important art form—it is an art, and it includes all the elements of the modern age." He also stressed prioritizing the entertainment goal of films over any messages, "You can make a statement, you can say something, but it must be entertaining."[41]

As an actor, he dived into every role, dissecting not only his own lines but all the parts in the script to measure the rightness of the role, and he was willing to fight with a director if he felt justified.[109] Melville Shavelson, who produced and directed Cast a Giant Shadow (1966), said that it didn't take him long to discover what his main problem was going to be in directing Douglas:

Kirk Douglas was intelligent. When discussing a script with actors, I have always found it necessary to remember that they never read the other actors' lines, so their concept of the story is somewhat hazy. Kirk had not only read the lines of everyone in the picture, he had also read the stage directions ... Kirk, I was to discover, always read every word, discussed every word, always argued every scene, until he was convinced of its correctness. ... He listened, so it was necessary to fight every minute.[109]

 
Douglas with Zubin Mehta, March 2011

For most of his career, Douglas enjoyed good health and what seemed like an inexhaustible supply of energy. He attributed much of that vitality to his childhood and pre-acting years: "The drive that got me out of my hometown and through college is part of the makeup that I utilize in my work. It's a constant fight, and it's tough."[109] His demands on others, however, were an expression of the demands he placed on himself, rooted in his youth. "It took me years to concentrate on being a human being—I was too busy scrounging for money and food, and struggling to better myself."[110]

Actress Lee Grant, who acted with him and later filmed a documentary about him and his family, notes that even after he achieved worldwide stardom, his father would not acknowledge his success. He said "nothing. Ever."[58] Douglas's wife, Anne, similarly attributes the energy he devotes to acting to his tough childhood:

He was reared by his mother and his sisters and as a schoolboy he had to work to help support the family. I think part of Kirk's life has been a monstrous effort to prove himself and gain recognition in the eyes of his father ... Not even four years of psychoanalysis could alter the drives that began as a desire to prove himself.[71]

Douglas has credited his mother, Bryna, for instilling in him the importance of "gambling on yourself", and he kept her advice in mind when making films.[36] Bryna Productions was named in her honor. Douglas realized that his intense style of acting was something of a shield: "Acting is the most direct way of escaping reality, and in my case it was a means of escaping a drab and dismal background."[111]

Personal life

Personality

In The Ragman's Son, Douglas described himself as a "son of a bitch", adding, "I’m probably the most disliked actor in Hollywood. And I feel pretty good about it. Because that’s me…. I was born aggressive, and I guess I’ll die aggressive."[7] Co-workers and associates alike noted similar traits, with Burt Lancaster once remarking, "Kirk would be the first to tell you that he is a very difficult man. And I would be the second."[112] Douglas's brash personality is attributed to his difficult upbringing living in poverty and his aggressive alcoholic father who was neglectful of Kirk as a young child.[7][113] According to Douglas, "there was an awful lot of rage churning around inside me, rage that I was afraid to reveal because there was so much more of it, and so much stronger, in my father."[113] Douglas's discipline, wit, and sense of humor were also often recognized.[7]

Marriages and children

 
Anne Buydens and Douglas at the 2003 Jefferson Awards for Public Service ceremony

Douglas and his first wife, Diana Dill, married on November 2, 1943. They had two sons, actor Michael Douglas and producer Joel Douglas, before divorcing in 1951. According to his autobiography The Ragman's Son, he and Italian actress Pier Angeli were engaged in the early 1950s after meeting on the set of the film The Story of Three Loves (1953), but they never made it down the aisle.[114] Afterwards, in Paris, he met producer Anne Buydens (born Hannelore Marx; April 23, 1919, Hanover, Germany) while acting on location in Act of Love.[115] She originally fled from Germany to escape Nazism and survived by putting her multilingual skills to work at a film studio, creating translations for subtitles.[116] They married on May 29, 1954. In 2014, they celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary at the Greystone Mansion in Beverly Hills.[117] They had two sons, Peter, a producer, and Eric, an actor who died on July 6, 2004, from an overdose of alcohol and drugs at the age of 46.[118] In 2017, the couple released a book, Kirk and Anne: Letters of Love, Laughter and a Lifetime in Hollywood, that revealed intimate letters they shared through the years.[119] Throughout their marriage, Douglas had affairs with other women, including several Hollywood starlets. He never hid his infidelities from his wife, who was accepting of them and explained, "as a European, I understood it was unrealistic to expect total fidelity in a marriage."[120]


Religion

In February 1991, aged 74, Douglas was in a helicopter and was injured when the aircraft collided with a small plane above Santa Paula Airport. Two other people were also injured including Noel Blanc, the son of voice actor Mel Blanc who was piloting the helicopter, and two people in the plane were killed.[121][122] This near-death experience sparked a search for meaning by Douglas, which led him, after much study, to embrace the Judaism in which he had been raised. He documented this spiritual journey in his book, Climbing the Mountain: My Search for Meaning (1997).[123]

He decided to visit Jerusalem again and wanted to see the Western Wall Tunnel during a trip where he would dedicate two playgrounds he donated to the state. His tour guide arranged to end the tour of the tunnel at the bedrock where, according to Jewish tradition, Abraham's binding of Isaac took place.[124]

In his earlier autobiography, The Ragman's Son, he recalled, "years back, I tried to forget that I was a Jew," but later in his career he began "coming to grips with what it means to be a Jew," which became a theme in his life.[125] In an interview in 2000, he explained this transition:[126]

Judaism and I parted ways a long time ago, when I was a poor kid growing up in Amsterdam, N.Y. Back then, I was pretty good in cheder, so the Jews of our community thought they would do a wonderful thing and collect enough money to send me to a yeshiva to become a rabbi. Holy Moses! That scared the hell out of me. I didn't want to be a rabbi. I wanted to be an actor. Believe me, the members of the Sons of Israel were persistent. I had nightmares – wearing long payos and a black hat. I had to work very hard to get out of it. But it took me a long time to learn that you don't have to be a rabbi to be a Jew.

 
Douglas, his wife Anne, and President Ronald Reagan, December 1987

Douglas noted that an underlying theme of some of his films, including The Juggler (1953), Cast a Giant Shadow (1966), and Remembrance of Love (1982), was about "a Jew who doesn't think of himself as one, and eventually finds his Jewishness."[125] The Juggler was the first Hollywood feature to be filmed in the newly established state of Israel. Douglas recalled that, while there, he saw "extreme poverty and food being rationed." But he found it "wonderful, finally, to be in the majority." The film's producer, Stanley Kramer, tried to portray "Israel as the Jews' heroic response to Hitler's destruction."[127]

Although his children had non-Jewish mothers, Douglas stated that they were "aware culturally" of his "deep convictions" and he never tried to influence their own religious decisions.[125] Douglas's wife, Anne, converted to Judaism before they renewed their wedding vows in 2004.[5] Douglas celebrated a second Bar-Mitzvah ceremony in 1999, aged 83.[18]: 125 

Philanthropy

Douglas and his wife donated to various non-profit causes during his career and planned on donating most of their $80 million net worth.[128] Among the donations have been those to his former high school and college. In September 2001, he helped fund his high school's musical, Amsterdam Oratorio, composed by Maria Riccio Bryce, who won the school Thespian Society's Kirk Douglas Award in 1968.[129] In 2012 he donated $5 million to St. Lawrence University, his alma mater. The college used the donation for the scholarship fund he began in 1999.[130][131]

He donated to various schools, medical facilities, and other non-profit organizations in southern California. This included the rebuilding of over 400 Los Angeles Unified School District playgrounds that were aged and in need of restoration. The Douglases established the Anne Douglas Center for Homeless Women at the Los Angeles Mission, which has helped hundreds of women turn their lives around. In Culver City, they opened the Kirk Douglas Theatre in 2004.[117] They supported the Anne Douglas Childhood Center at the Sinai Temple of Westwood.[131] In March 2015, Douglas and his wife donated $2.3 million to the Children's Hospital Los Angeles.[132]

Since the early 1990s, Kirk and Anne Douglas donated up to $40 million to Harry's Haven, an Alzheimer's treatment facility in Woodland Hills, to care for patients at the Motion Picture Home.[5] To celebrate his 99th birthday on December 9, 2015, they donated another $15 million to help expand the facility with a new two-story Kirk Douglas Care Pavilion.[133]

Douglas donated a number of playgrounds in Jerusalem and donated the Kirk Douglas Theater at the Aish Center across from the Western Wall.[134]

Politics

 
Douglas in 2002 with his book My Stroke of Luck

Douglas and his wife traveled to more than 40 countries, at their own expense, to act as goodwill ambassadors for the U.S. Information Agency, speaking to audiences about why democracy works and what freedom means.[116] In 1980, Douglas flew to Cairo to talk with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. For all his goodwill efforts, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Jimmy Carter in 1981.[117] At the ceremony, Carter said that Douglas had "done this in a sacrificial way, almost invariably without fanfare and without claiming any personal credit or acclaim for himself".[135] In subsequent years, Douglas testified before Congress about elder abuse.[136]

Douglas was a lifelong member of the Democratic Party.[citation needed] He wrote letters to politicians who were friends. He noted in his memoir, Let's Face It (2007), that he felt compelled to write to former president Jimmy Carter in 2006 to stress that "Israel is the only successful democracy in the Middle East ... [and] has had to endure many wars against overwhelming odds. If Israel loses one war, they lose Israel."[18]: 226  During the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries he endorsed Michael Bloomberg's campaign.[137]

Blogging

Douglas blogged from time to time. Originally hosted on Myspace,[138] his posts were hosted by the Huffington Post beginning in 2012.[139] As of 2008, he was believed to be the oldest celebrity blogger in the world.[140]

Rape allegation

Douglas is alleged to have raped actress Natalie Wood in the summer of 1955, when she was aged 15 and he was 38 years old.[141] Wood's alleged rape was first publicised in Suzanne Finstad's 2001 biography of the actress, though Finstad never named the offender.[142]

The allegation received renewed attention in January 2018, after the 75th Golden Globe Awards ceremony paid tribute to Douglas, with several news outlets citing a 2012 anonymous blog post which accused Douglas.[143] In July 2018, Wood's sister Lana said during a 12-part podcast about her sister's life that her sister was sexually assaulted as a teen and that the attack had occurred inside the Chateau Marmont during an audition and went on "for hours".[144]

According to professor Cynthia Lucia, who studied the attack claim, Wood's rape was brutal and violent.[144] In the 2021 memoir Little Sister: My Investigation Into the Mysterious Death of Natalie Wood, Lana Wood alleged Douglas was her sister's assailant.[141] Douglas's son Michael issued a statement saying, "May they both rest in peace."[141]

Health problems and death

On January 28, 1996, at age 79, Douglas suffered a severe stroke, which impaired his ability to speak.[145] Doctors told his wife that unless there was rapid improvement, the loss of the ability to speak was likely permanent. After a regimen of daily speech-language therapy that lasted several months, his ability to speak returned, although it was still limited. He was able to accept an honorary Academy Award two months later in March and thanked the audience.[146][147] He wrote about this experience in his 2002 book My Stroke of Luck, which he hoped would be an "operating manual" for others on how to handle a stroke victim in their own family.[147][148]

Douglas died at his home in Beverly Hills, California, surrounded by his family, on February 5, 2020, at the age of 103. His cause of death was kept private.[149][150] Douglas's funeral was held at the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery, on February 7, 2020, two days after his death. He was buried in the same plot as his son, Eric.[151][152] On April 29, 2021, his wife Anne died at the age of 102 and was buried next to him and their son.[153]

Filmography

In a 2014 article, Douglas cited The Strange Love of Martha Ivers, Champion, Ace in the Hole, The Bad and the Beautiful, Act of Love, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, The Indian Fighter, Lust for Life, Paths of Glory, Spartacus, Lonely Are the Brave, and Seven Days in May as the films he was most proud of throughout his acting career.[154]

Radio appearances

Honors and awards

 
President Jimmy Carter greets Anne and Kirk Douglas, March 1978
 
Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
 
Douglas's star is located at the famous Hollywood and Vine intersection.
 
Signing his name at Grauman's Chinese Theatre on November 1, 1962
 
His handprints and footprints at Grauman's Chinese Theatre

AFI Life Achievement Award

 
Dean O'Gorman portrayed Kirk Douglas in Trumbo (2015)
  • 1991 Accepted AFI Life Achievement Award[167]

Kennedy Center Honors

Academy Awards

Golden Globes

  • 1986 Amos nominated for Best Actor in a Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for TV[170]
  • 1968 Cecil B. DeMille Award for Lifetime Achievement[171]
  • 1957 Lust for Life won for Best Actor-Drama[170]
  • 1952 Detective Story nominated for Best Actor-Drama[170]

Emmy Awards

  • 2002 Touched by an Angel nominated for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series[172]
  • 1992 Tales from the Crypt nominated for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series[172]
  • 1986 Amos nominated for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or Special[172]

Screen Actors Guild Awards

  • 1999 Lifetime Achievement Award[173]

BAFTA Awards

  • 1963 Lonely Are the Brave nominated for Best Foreign Actor[174]

Britannia Awards

  • 2009 BAFTA/LA award for Worldwide Contribution To Filmed Entertainment[175]

Berlin International Film Festival

Cesar Awards

Hollywood Film Festival

  • 1997 Lifetime Achievement Award[178]

National Board of Review

  • 1988 Career Achievement Award[170]

New York Film Critics Circle Award

  • 1956 Lust for Life won for Best Actor[179]
  • 1951 Detective Story nominated for Best Actor[170]

In 1983, Douglas received the S. Roger Horchow Award for Greatest Public Service by a Private Citizen, an award given out annually by Jefferson Awards.[180]

In 1996, Douglas received an Honorary Academy Award for "50 years as a moral and creative force in the motion picture community." The award was presented by producer/director Steven Spielberg.[146] As a result of Douglas's stroke the previous summer, however, in which he lost most of his speaking ability, his close friends and family were concerned about whether he should try to speak, or what he should say. Both his son Michael, and his long-time friend Jack Valenti, urged him to only say "Thank you", and leave the stage. Douglas agreed, but had second thoughts when standing in front of the audience. He later reflected that: "I intended to just say 'thank you,' but I saw 1,000 people, and felt I had to say something more, and I did."[181] Valenti remembers that after Douglas held up the Oscar, addressed his sons, and told his wife how much he loved her, everyone was astonished at his voice's improvement:

The audience went wild with applause [and] erupted in affection ... rising to their feet to salute this last of the great movie legends, who had survived the threat of death and stared down the demons that had threatened to silence him. I felt an emotional tidal wave roaring through the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in the L.A. Music Center.[2]

Since 2006, the Santa Barbara International Film Festival has awarded the Kirk Douglas Award for Excellence in film to acknowledge lifetime contributions to the film industry. Recipients of the award include Robert De Niro, Ed Harris, Harrison Ford, Michael Douglas, Hugh Jackman and Judi Dench.[182] The award is typically presented to actors, although directors Quentin Tarantino and Martin Scorsese have been presented with it.[183] In 2015, a star was nicknamed after Douglas in the International Star Registry to commemorate his 99th birthday.[184]

Books

  • The Ragman's Son. Simon & Schuster, 1988. ISBN 0671637177.
  • Dance with the Devil. Random House, 1990. ISBN 0394582373.
  • The Gift. Grand Central Publishing, 1992. ISBN 0446516945.
  • Last Tango in Brooklyn. Century, 1994. ISBN 0712648526.
  • The Broken Mirror: A Novella. Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 1997. ISBN 0689814933.
  • Young Heroes of the Bible. Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 1999. ISBN 0689814917.
  • Climbing the Mountain: My Search for Meaning. Simon and Schuster, 2001. ISBN 0743214382.
  • My Stroke of Luck. HarperCollins, 2003. ISBN 0060014040.
  • Let's Face It: 90 Years of Living, Loving, and Learning. John Wiley & Sons, 2007. ISBN 0470084693.
  • I Am Spartacus!: Making a Film, Breaking the Blacklist. Open Road Media, 2012. ISBN 1453239375.
  • Life Could Be Verse: Reflections on Love, Loss, and What Really Matters. Health Communications, Inc., 2014. ISBN 978-0757318474

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In his autobiography, Douglas explains that for many actors at the time who had unusual or foreign-sounding birth names, a simpler Americanized name was often preferred. His friend Karl Malden, who also changed his name for that reason, made suggestions. Douglas knew that many leading stars at the time had adopted stage names, including Robert Taylor, John Wayne, Cary Grant, and Fred Astaire.[18]: 1–2 

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Further reading

External links

kirk, douglas, born, issur, danielovitch, december, 1916, february, 2020, american, actor, filmmaker, after, impoverished, childhood, made, film, debut, strange, love, martha, ivers, 1946, with, barbara, stanwyck, douglas, soon, developed, into, leading, offic. Kirk Douglas born Issur Danielovitch December 9 1916 February 5 2020 was an American actor and filmmaker After an impoverished childhood he made his film debut in The Strange Love of Martha Ivers 1946 with Barbara Stanwyck Douglas soon developed into a leading box office star throughout the 1950s known for serious dramas including westerns and war films During his career he appeared in more than 90 films and was known for his explosive acting style He was named by the American Film Institute the 17th greatest male star of Classic Hollywood cinema Kirk DouglasDouglas in 1963BornIssur Danielovitch 1916 12 09 December 9 1916Amsterdam New York U S DiedFebruary 5 2020 2020 02 05 aged 103 Beverly Hills California U S Resting placeWestwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery Westwood CaliforniaOther namesIsador DemskyIzzy DemskyAlma materSt Lawrence UniversityOccupationsActorfilmmakerphilanthropistYears active1944 2008Political partyDemocraticSpousesDiana Dill m 1943 div 1951 wbr Anne Buydens m 1954 wbr ChildrenMichaelJoelPeterEricMilitary careerService wbr branchUnited States NavyYears of service1941 1944Websitehttp www kirkdouglas comSignatureDouglas became an international star for his role as an unscrupulous boxing hero in Champion 1949 which brought him his first nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor His other early films include Out of the Past 1947 Young Man with a Horn 1950 playing opposite Lauren Bacall and Doris Day Ace in the Hole 1951 and Detective Story 1951 for which he received a Golden Globe nomination He received his second Oscar nomination for his dramatic role in The Bad and the Beautiful 1952 opposite Lana Turner and earned his third for portraying Vincent van Gogh in Lust for Life 1956 a role for which he won the Golden Globe for the Best Actor in a Drama He also starred with James Mason in the adventure 20 000 Leagues Under the Sea 1954 a large box office hit In September 1949 he established Bryna Productions which began producing films as varied as Paths of Glory 1957 and Spartacus 1960 In those two films he collaborated with the then relatively unknown director Stanley Kubrick taking lead roles in both films Douglas has been praised for helping to break the Hollywood blacklist by having Dalton Trumbo write Spartacus with an official on screen credit 1 He produced and starred in Lonely Are the Brave 1962 and Seven Days in May 1964 the latter opposite Burt Lancaster with whom he made seven films In 1963 he starred in the Broadway play One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest a story that he purchased and later gave to his son Michael Douglas who turned it into an Oscar winning film Douglas continued acting into the 1980s appearing in such films as Saturn 3 1980 The Man from Snowy River 1980 Tough Guys 1986 a reunion with Lancaster and in the television version of Inherit the Wind 1988 plus in an episode of Touched by an Angel in 2002 for which he received his third nomination for an Emmy Award As an actor and philanthropist Douglas received an Academy Honorary Award for Lifetime Achievement and the Presidential Medal of Freedom As an author he wrote ten novels and memoirs After barely surviving a helicopter crash in 1991 and then suffering a stroke in 1996 he focused on renewing his spiritual and religious life He lived with his second wife of 65 years producer Anne Buydens until his death in 2020 A centenarian Douglas was one of the last surviving stars of the film industry s Golden Age 2 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 1940s 2 2 1950s 2 3 1960s 2 4 1970 2020 3 Style and philosophy of acting 4 Personal life 4 1 Personality 4 2 Marriages and children 4 3 Religion 4 4 Philanthropy 4 5 Politics 4 6 Blogging 4 7 Rape allegation 5 Health problems and death 6 Filmography 7 Radio appearances 8 Honors and awards 9 Books 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life and education EditDouglas was born Issur Danielovitch Belarusian Issur Danielavich Russian Issur Danielovich Yiddish איסור דא ניעלא וויטש in Amsterdam New York on December 9 1916 the son of Bryna Bertha nee Sanglel and Herschel Harry Danielovitch 3 His parents were immigrants from Chavusy Mogilev Governorate in the Russian Empire present day Belarus 4 5 6 7 8 9 and the family spoke Yiddish at home 10 11 12 Douglas was the fourth child of seven children and the only son born to his parents 13 His sisters were Pesha Bessie Kaleh Katherine Tamara Mary Siffra Frieda 14 Haska Ida and Rachel Ruth 15 16 Douglas embraced his Jewish heritage in his later years after a near fatal helicopter crash at the age of 74 17 His father s brother who had immigrated earlier used the surname Demsky which Douglas s family adopted in the United States 18 2 Douglas grew up as Izzy Demsky and legally changed his name to Kirk Douglas before entering the United States Navy during World War II 19 a In his 1988 autobiography The Ragman s Son Douglas notes the hardships that he along with his parents and six sisters endured during their early years in Amsterdam My father who had been a horse trader in Russia got himself a horse and a small wagon and became a ragman buying old rags pieces of metal and junk for pennies nickels and dimes Even on Eagle Street in the poorest section of town where all the families were struggling the ragman was on the lowest rung on the ladder And I was the ragman s son 20 College graduation photo of Douglas 1939 Douglas had an unhappy childhood living with an alcoholic physically abusive father 21 While his father drank up what little money they had Douglas and his mother and sisters endured crippling poverty 22 Douglas first wanted to be an actor after he recited the poem The Red Robin of Spring while in kindergarten and received applause 23 Growing up he sold snacks to mill workers to earn enough to buy milk and bread to help his family He later delivered newspapers and he had more than forty jobs during his youth before becoming an actor 24 He found living in a family with six sisters to be stifling I was dying to get out In a sense it lit a fire under me After appearing in plays at Amsterdam High School from which he graduated in 1934 25 he knew he wanted to become a professional actor 26 Unable to afford the tuition Douglas talked his way into the dean s office at St Lawrence University and showed him a list of his high school honors He graduated with a bachelor s degree in 1939 He received a loan which he paid back by working part time as a gardener and a janitor He was a standout on the wrestling team and wrestled one summer in a carnival to make money 27 He later became good friends with world champion wrestler Lou Thesz Douglas s acting talents were noticed at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City which gave him a special scholarship One of his classmates was Betty Joan Perske later known as Lauren Bacall who would play an important role in launching his film career 28 Bacall wrote that she had a wild crush on Kirk 29 and they dated casually Another classmate and a friend of Bacall s was aspiring actress Diana Dill who would later become Douglas s first wife 30 During their time together Bacall learned Douglas had no money and that he once spent the night in jail since he had no place to sleep She once gave him her uncle s old coat to keep warm I thought he must be frozen in the winter He was thrilled and grateful Sometimes just to see him she would drag a friend or her mother to the restaurant where he worked as a busboy and waiter He told her his dream was to someday bring his family to New York to see him on stage During that period she fantasized about someday sharing her personal and stage lives with Douglas but would later be disappointed Kirk did not really pursue me He was friendly and sweet enjoyed my company but I was clearly too young for him the eight years younger Bacall later wrote 29 Career Edit1940s Edit Douglas joined the United States Navy in 1941 shortly after the United States entered World War II where he served as a communications officer in anti submarine warfare aboard USS PC 1139 31 He was medically discharged in 1944 for injuries sustained from the premature explosion of a depth charge 32 After the war Douglas returned to New York City and found work in radio theater and commercials In his radio work he acted in network soap operas and saw those experiences as being especially valuable as skill in using one s voice is important for aspiring actors he regretted that the same avenues were no longer available His stage break occurred when he took over the role played by Richard Widmark in Kiss and Tell 1943 which then led to other offers 28 Douglas had planned to remain a stage actor until his friend Lauren Bacall helped him get his first film role by recommending him to producer Hal B Wallis who was looking for a new male talent 33 Wallis s film The Strange Love of Martha Ivers 1946 with Barbara Stanwyck became Douglas debut screen appearance He played a young insecure man stung by jealousy whose life was dominated by his ruthless wife and he hid his feelings with alcohol It would be the last time that Douglas portrayed a weakling in a film role 34 35 Reviewers of the film noted that Douglas already projected qualities of a natural film actor with the similarity of this role with later ones explained by biographer Tony Thomas His style and his personality came across on the screen something that does not always happen even with the finest actors Douglas had and has a distinctly individual manner He radiates a certain inexplicable quality and it is this as much as talent that accounts for his success in films 36 In 1947 Douglas appeared in Out of the Past UK Build My Gallows High playing a large supporting role in this classic noir thriller starring Robert Mitchum and Jane Greer Douglas made his Broadway debut in 1949 in Three Sisters produced by Katharine Cornell 37 The month after Out of the Past was released I Walk Alone the first film teaming Douglas with Burt Lancaster presented Douglas playing a supporting part quite similar to his role in Out of the Past in another classic fast paced noir thriller Douglas image as a tough guy was established in his eighth film Champion 1949 after producer Stanley Kramer chose him to play a selfish boxer In accepting the role he took a gamble however since he had to turn down an offer to star in a big budget MGM film The Great Sinner which would have earned him three times the income 38 39 Melvyn Douglas played the third billed above the title part Kirk Douglas passed on The Great Sinner flopped Film historian Ray Didinger says Douglas saw Champion as a greater risk but also a greater opportunity Douglas took the part and absolutely nailed it Frederick Romano another sports film historian described Douglas s acting as alarmingly authentic Douglas shows great concentration in the ring His intense focus on his opponent draws the viewer into the ring Perhaps his best characteristic is his patented snarl and grimace he leaves no doubt that he is a man on a mission 40 Douglas and Lauren Bacall in Young Man with a Horn 1950 Douglas received his first Academy Award nomination and the film earned six nominations in all Variety called it a stark realistic study of the boxing rackets 39 After Champion he decided that to succeed as a star he needed to ramp up his intensity overcome his natural shyness and choose stronger roles He later stated I don t think I d be much of an actor without vanity And I m not interested in being a modest actor 41 Early in his Hollywood career Douglas demonstrated his independent streak and broke his studio contracts to gain total control over his projects forming his own movie company Bryna Productions named after his mother in September 1949 26 42 1950s Edit Douglas and Silvana Mangano in a pause during the shootings of Ulysses 1954 Throughout the 1950s and 1960s Douglas was a major box office star playing opposite some of the leading actresses of that era He portrayed a frontier peace officer in his first western Along the Great Divide 1951 He quickly became very comfortable with riding horses and playing gunslingers and he appeared in many Westerns He considered Lonely Are the Brave 1962 in which he plays a cowboy trying to live by his own code his personal favorite 43 The film written by Dalton Trumbo was respected by critics but did not do well at the box office due to poor marketing and distribution 41 44 In 1950 Douglas played Rick Martin in Young Man with a Horn based on a novel of the same name by Dorothy Baker inspired by the life of jazz cornetist Bix Beiderbecke Composer and pianist Hoagy Carmichael playing the sidekick added realism to the film and gave Douglas insight into the role being a friend of the real Beiderbecke 45 Doris Day starred as Jo a young woman who was infatuated with the struggling jazz musician This was strikingly opposite of the real life account in Doris Day s autobiography which described Douglas as civil but self centered and the film as utterly joyless 46 During filming bit actress Jean Spangler disappeared and her case remains unsolved On October 9 1949 Spangler s purse was found near the Fern Dell entrance to Griffith Park in Los Angeles There was an unfinished note in the purse addressed to a Kirk which read Can t wait any longer Going to see Dr Scott It will work best this way while mother is away Douglas married at the time called the police and told them he was not the Kirk mentioned in the note When interviewed via telephone by the head of the investigating team Douglas stated that he had talked and kidded with her a bit on set 47 48 but that he had never been out with her 49 Spangler s girlfriends told police that she was three months pregnant when she disappeared 50 and scholars such as Jon Lewis of Oregon State University have speculated that she may have been considering an illegal abortion 51 In 1951 Douglas starred as a newspaper reporter anxiously looking for a big story in Ace in the Hole director Billy Wilder s first effort as both writer and producer The subject and story was controversial at the time and U S audiences stayed away Some reviews saw it as ruthless and cynical a distorted study of corruption mob psychology and the free press 52 Possibly it hit too close to home said Douglas 53 It won a Best Foreign Film award at the Venice Film Festival The film s stature has increased in recent years with some surveys placing it in their Top 500 Films list 54 Woody Allen considers it one of his favorite films 55 As the film s star and protagonist Douglas is credited for the intensity of his acting Film critic Roger Ebert wrote his focus and energy is almost scary There is nothing dated about Douglas performance It s as right now as a sharpened knife 56 Biographer Gene Philips noted that Wilder s story was galvanized by Douglas s astounding performance and no doubt was a factor when George Stevens who presented Douglas with the AFI Life Achievement Award in 1991 said of him No other leading actor was ever more ready to tap the dark desperate side of the soul and thus to reveal the complexity of human nature 57 Also in 1951 Douglas starred in Detective Story nominated for four Academy Awards including one for Lee Grant in her debut film Grant said Douglas was dazzling both personally and in the part He was a big big star Gorgeous Intense Amazing 58 To prepare for the role Douglas spent days with the New York Police Department and sat in on interrogations 59 Reviewers recognized Douglas s acting qualities with Bosley Crowther describing Douglas as forceful and aggressive as the detective 60 With Eve Miller in The Big Trees 1952 In The Bad and the Beautiful 1952 another of his three Oscar nominated roles Douglas played a hard nosed film producer who manipulates and uses his actors writers and directors In 1954 Douglas starred as the titular character in Ulysses a film based on Homer s epic poem Odyssey with Silvana Mangano as Penelope and Circe and Anthony Quinn as Antinous 61 In 20 000 Leagues Under the Sea 1954 Douglas showed that in addition to serious driven characters he was adept at roles requiring a lighter comic touch In this adaptation of the Jules Verne novel he played a happy go lucky sailor who was the opposite in every way to the brooding Captain Nemo James Mason The film was one of Walt Disney s most successful live action movies and a major box office hit 62 Douglas managed a similar comic turn in the western Man Without a Star 1955 and in For Love or Money 1963 He showed further diversity in one of his earliest television appearances He was a musical guest as himself on The Jack Benny Program 1954 63 In 1955 Douglas was finally able to get his film production company Bryna Productions off the ground 26 To do so he had to break contracts with Hal B Wallis and Warner Bros but he began to produce and star in his own films starting with The Indian Fighter in 1955 64 Through Bryna he produced and starred in the films Paths of Glory 1957 The Vikings 1958 Spartacus 1960 Lonely are the Brave 1962 and Seven Days in May 1964 65 In 1958 Douglas formed the music publishing company Peter Vincent Music Corporation a Bryna Productions subsidiary 66 Peter Vincent Music was responsible for publishing the soundtracks of The Vikings and Spartacus 66 67 While Paths of Glory did not do well at the box office it has since become one of the great anti war films and it is one of director Stanley Kubrick s early films Douglas a fluent French speaker 68 portrayed a sympathetic French officer during World War I who tries to save three soldiers from facing a firing squad 69 Biographer Vincent LoBrutto describes Douglas s seething but controlled portrayal exploding with the passion of his convictions at the injustice leveled at his men 70 The film was banned in France until 1976 Before production of the film began however Douglas and Kubrick had to work out some major issues one of which was Kubrick s rewriting the screenplay without informing Douglas first It led to their first major argument I called Stanley to my room I hit the ceiling I called him every four letter word I could think of I got the money based on that original script Not this shit I threw the script across the room We re going back to the original script or we re not making the picture Stanley never blinked an eye We shot the original script I think the movie is a classic one of the most important pictures possibly the most important picture Stanley Kubrick has ever made 70 Douglas played military men in numerous films with varying nuance including Top Secret Affair 1957 Town Without Pity 1961 The Hook 1963 Seven Days in May 1964 Heroes of Telemark 1965 In Harm s Way 1965 Cast a Giant Shadow 1966 Is Paris Burning 1966 The Final Countdown 1980 and Saturn 3 1980 His acting style and delivery made him a favorite with television impersonators such as Frank Gorshin Rich Little and David Frye 71 72 73 In Lust for Life as Vincent van Gogh His role as Vincent van Gogh in Lust for Life 1956 directed by Vincente Minnelli and based on Irving Stone s bestseller was filmed mostly on location in France Douglas was noted not only for the veracity of van Gogh s appearance but for how he conveyed the painter s internal turmoil Some reviewers consider it the most famous example of the tortured artist who seeks solace from life s pain through his work 74 Others see it as a portrayal not only of the painter as hero but a unique presentation of the action painter with Douglas expressing the physicality and emotion of painting as he uses the canvas to capture a moment in time 75 76 Douglas was nominated for an Academy Award for the role with his co star Anthony Quinn winning the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor as Paul Gauguin van Gogh s friend Douglas won a Golden Globe award although Minnelli said Douglas should have won an Oscar He achieved a moving and memorable portrait of the artist a man of massive creative power triggered by severe emotional stress the fear and horror of madness 62 Douglas himself called his acting role as Van Gogh a painful experience Not only did I look like Van Gogh I was the same age he was when he committed suicide 77 His wife said he often remained in character in his personal life When he was doing Lust for Life he came home in that red beard of Van Gogh s wearing those big boots stomping around the house it was frightening 78 In general however Douglas s acting style fit well with Minnelli s preference for melodrama and neurotic artist roles writes film historian James Naremore He adds that Minnelli had his richest most impressive collaborations with Douglas and for Minnelli no other actor portrayed his level of cool A robust athletic sometimes explosive player Douglas loved stagy rhetoric and he did everything passionately 79 Douglas had also starred in Minnelli s film The Bad and the Beautiful four years earlier for which he received a Best Actor Oscar nomination 80 1960s Edit Spartacus 1960 In 1960 Douglas played the title role in what many consider his career defining appearance 81 as the Thracian gladiator slave rebel Spartacus with an all star cast in Spartacus 1960 He was the executive producer as well which increased the 12 million production cost and made Spartacus one of the most expensive films up to that time 82 Douglas initially selected Anthony Mann to direct but replaced him early on with Stanley Kubrick with whom he had previously collaborated in Paths of Glory 83 When the film was released Douglas gave full credit to its screenwriter Dalton Trumbo who was on the Hollywood blacklist and thereby effectively ended it 18 81 About that event Douglas said I ve made over 85 pictures but the thing I m most proud of is breaking the blacklist 5 However the film s producer Edward Lewis and the family of Dalton Trumbo publicly disputed Douglas s claim 84 In the film Trumbo 2015 Douglas is portrayed by Dean O Gorman 85 With Joan Tetzel in the 1963 Broadway play One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest Douglas bought the rights to stage a play of the novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest from its author Ken Kesey He mounted a play from the material in 1963 in which he starred and that ran on Broadway for five months Reviews were mixed Douglas retained the movie rights due to an innovative loophole of basing the rights on the play rather than the novel despite Kesey s objections but after a decade of being unable to find a producer he gave the rights to his son Michael In 1975 the film version was produced by Michael Douglas and Saul Zaentz and starred Jack Nicholson as Douglas was then considered too old to play the character as written 2 The film won all five major Academy Awards only the second film to do so after It Happened One Night in 1934 86 Douglas made seven films over four decades with actor Burt Lancaster I Walk Alone 1947 Gunfight at the O K Corral 1957 The Devil s Disciple 1959 The List of Adrian Messenger 1963 Seven Days in May 1964 Victory at Entebbe 1976 and Tough Guys 1986 which fixed the notion of the pair as something of a team in the public imagination Douglas was always billed under Lancaster in these movies but with the exception of I Walk Alone and even more so The List of Adrian Messenger where Lancaster s part is just a cameo appearance while Douglas plays the film s villain their roles were usually of a similar size Both actors arrived in Hollywood at about the same time and first appeared together in the fourth film for each albeit with Douglas in a supporting role They both became actor producers who sought out independent Hollywood careers 78 John Frankenheimer who directed the political thriller Seven Days in May in 1964 had not worked well with Lancaster in the past and originally did not want him in this film However Douglas thought Lancaster would fit the part and begged me to reconsider said Frankenheimer and he then gave Lancaster the most colorful role It turns out that Burt Lancaster and I got along magnificently well on the picture he later said 87 In 1967 Douglas starred with John Wayne in the western film directed by Burt Kennedy titled The War Wagon 88 In The Arrangement 1969 a drama directed by Elia Kazan and based upon his novel of the same title Douglas starred as a tormented advertising executive with Faye Dunaway as costar The film did poorly at the box office receiving mostly negative reviews Dunaway believed many of the reviews were unfair writing in her biography I can t understand it when people knock Kirk s performance because I think he s terrific in the picture adding that he s as bright a person as I ve met in the acting profession 89 She says that his pragmatic approach to acting would later be a philosophy that ended up rubbing off on me 90 1970 2020 Edit Douglas in 1975 In the 1970s he starred in films such as There Was a Crooked Man 1970 91 A Gunfight 1971 92 The Light at the Edge of the World 1971 93 and The Fury 1978 94 He made his directorial debut in Scalawag 1973 95 and subsequently also directed Posse 1975 in which he starred alongside Bruce Dern 96 In 1980 he starred in The Final Countdown 97 playing the commanding officer of the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz which travels through time to the day before the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor It was produced by his son Peter Douglas He also played in a dual role in The Man from Snowy River 1982 an Australian film which received critical acclaim and numerous awards In 1986 he reunited with his longtime co star Burt Lancaster in a crime comedy Tough Guys with a cast including Charles Durning and Eli Wallach It marked the final collaboration between Douglas and Lancaster completing a partnership of more than 40 years 98 That same year he co hosted with Angela Lansbury the New York Philharmonic s tribute to the 100th anniversary of the Statue of Liberty The symphony was conducted by Zubin Mehta 99 In 1988 Douglas starred in a television adaptation of Inherit the Wind opposite Jason Robards and Jean Simmons The film won two Emmy Awards In the 1990s Douglas continued starring in various features Among them was The Secret in 1992 a television movie about a grandfather and his grandson who both struggle with dyslexia That same year he played the uncle of Michael J Fox in a comedy Greedy He appeared as the Devil in the video for the Don Henley song The Garden of Allah In 1996 after suffering a severe stroke at age 79 which impaired his ability to speak Douglas still wanted to make movies He underwent years of voice therapy and made Diamonds in 1999 in which he played an old prizefighter who was recovering from a stroke It co starred his longtime friend from his early acting years Lauren Bacall 100 In 2003 Michael and Joel Douglas produced It Runs in the Family which along with Kirk starred various family members including Michael Michael s son Cameron and his wife from 50 years earlier Diana Dill playing his wife His final feature film appearance was in the 2004 Michael Goorjian film Illusion in which he depicts a dying film director forced to watch episodes from the life of a son he had refused to acknowledge 101 102 103 His last screen role was the TV movie Empire State Building Murders which was released in 2008 101 In March 2009 at the age of 92 Douglas did an autobiographical one man show Before I Forget at the Center Theatre Group s Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City California The four performances were filmed and turned into a documentary that was first screened in January 2010 104 On December 9 2016 he celebrated his 100th birthday at the Beverly Hills Hotel joined by several of his friends including Don Rickles Jeffrey Katzenberg and Steven Spielberg along with Douglas s wife Anne his son Michael and his daughter in law Catherine Zeta Jones Douglas was described by his guests as being still in good shape able to walk with confidence into the Sunset Room for the celebration 105 Douglas appeared at the 2018 Golden Globes with his daughter in law Catherine Zeta Jones a rare public appearance in the final decade of his life 106 He received a standing ovation and helped Zeta Jones present the award for Best Screenplay Motion Picture 107 Style and philosophy of acting Edit Douglas with Lana Turner in The Bad and the Beautiful 1952 Kirk is one of a kind He has an overpowering physical presence which is why on a large movie screen he looms over the audience like a tidal wave in full flood Globally revered he is now the last living screen legend of those who vaulted to stardom at the war s end that special breed of movie idol instantly recognizable anywhere whose luminous on screen characters are forever memorable Jack Valenti president of the Motion Picture Association of America 2 Douglas stated that the keys to acting success are determination and application You must know how to function and how to maintain yourself and you must have a love of what you do But an actor also needs great good luck I have had that luck 108 Douglas had great vitality and explained that it takes a lot out of you to work in this business Many people fall by the wayside because they don t have the energy to sustain their talent 109 That attitude toward acting became evident with Champion 1949 From that one role writes biographer John Parker he went from stardom and entered the superleague where his style was in marked contrast to Hollywood s other leading men at the time 33 His sudden rise to prominence is explained and compared to that of Jack Nicholson s He virtually ignored interventionist directors He prepared himself privately for each role he played so that when the cameras were ready to roll he was suitably and some would say egotistically and even selfishly inspired to steal every scene in a manner comparable in modern times to Jack Nicholson s modus operandi 33 As a producer Douglas had a reputation of being a compulsively hard worker who expected others to exude the same level of energy As such he was typically demanding and direct in his dealing with people who worked on his projects with his intensity spilling over into all elements of his film making 36 This was partly due to his high opinion of actors movies and moviemaking To me it is the most important art form it is an art and it includes all the elements of the modern age He also stressed prioritizing the entertainment goal of films over any messages You can make a statement you can say something but it must be entertaining 41 As an actor he dived into every role dissecting not only his own lines but all the parts in the script to measure the rightness of the role and he was willing to fight with a director if he felt justified 109 Melville Shavelson who produced and directed Cast a Giant Shadow 1966 said that it didn t take him long to discover what his main problem was going to be in directing Douglas Kirk Douglas was intelligent When discussing a script with actors I have always found it necessary to remember that they never read the other actors lines so their concept of the story is somewhat hazy Kirk had not only read the lines of everyone in the picture he had also read the stage directions Kirk I was to discover always read every word discussed every word always argued every scene until he was convinced of its correctness He listened so it was necessary to fight every minute 109 Douglas with Zubin Mehta March 2011 For most of his career Douglas enjoyed good health and what seemed like an inexhaustible supply of energy He attributed much of that vitality to his childhood and pre acting years The drive that got me out of my hometown and through college is part of the makeup that I utilize in my work It s a constant fight and it s tough 109 His demands on others however were an expression of the demands he placed on himself rooted in his youth It took me years to concentrate on being a human being I was too busy scrounging for money and food and struggling to better myself 110 Actress Lee Grant who acted with him and later filmed a documentary about him and his family notes that even after he achieved worldwide stardom his father would not acknowledge his success He said nothing Ever 58 Douglas s wife Anne similarly attributes the energy he devotes to acting to his tough childhood He was reared by his mother and his sisters and as a schoolboy he had to work to help support the family I think part of Kirk s life has been a monstrous effort to prove himself and gain recognition in the eyes of his father Not even four years of psychoanalysis could alter the drives that began as a desire to prove himself 71 Douglas has credited his mother Bryna for instilling in him the importance of gambling on yourself and he kept her advice in mind when making films 36 Bryna Productions was named in her honor Douglas realized that his intense style of acting was something of a shield Acting is the most direct way of escaping reality and in my case it was a means of escaping a drab and dismal background 111 Personal life EditPersonality Edit In The Ragman s Son Douglas described himself as a son of a bitch adding I m probably the most disliked actor in Hollywood And I feel pretty good about it Because that s me I was born aggressive and I guess I ll die aggressive 7 Co workers and associates alike noted similar traits with Burt Lancaster once remarking Kirk would be the first to tell you that he is a very difficult man And I would be the second 112 Douglas s brash personality is attributed to his difficult upbringing living in poverty and his aggressive alcoholic father who was neglectful of Kirk as a young child 7 113 According to Douglas there was an awful lot of rage churning around inside me rage that I was afraid to reveal because there was so much more of it and so much stronger in my father 113 Douglas s discipline wit and sense of humor were also often recognized 7 Marriages and children Edit Anne Buydens and Douglas at the 2003 Jefferson Awards for Public Service ceremony Douglas and his first wife Diana Dill married on November 2 1943 They had two sons actor Michael Douglas and producer Joel Douglas before divorcing in 1951 According to his autobiography The Ragman s Son he and Italian actress Pier Angeli were engaged in the early 1950s after meeting on the set of the film The Story of Three Loves 1953 but they never made it down the aisle 114 Afterwards in Paris he met producer Anne Buydens born Hannelore Marx April 23 1919 Hanover Germany while acting on location in Act of Love 115 She originally fled from Germany to escape Nazism and survived by putting her multilingual skills to work at a film studio creating translations for subtitles 116 They married on May 29 1954 In 2014 they celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary at the Greystone Mansion in Beverly Hills 117 They had two sons Peter a producer and Eric an actor who died on July 6 2004 from an overdose of alcohol and drugs at the age of 46 118 In 2017 the couple released a book Kirk and Anne Letters of Love Laughter and a Lifetime in Hollywood that revealed intimate letters they shared through the years 119 Throughout their marriage Douglas had affairs with other women including several Hollywood starlets He never hid his infidelities from his wife who was accepting of them and explained as a European I understood it was unrealistic to expect total fidelity in a marriage 120 vteKirk Douglas family treeDiana DillKirk DouglasAnne BuydensDiandra LukerMichael DouglasCatherine Zeta JonesJoel DouglasPeter DouglasLisa SchroederEric DouglasViviane ThibesCameron DouglasDylan Michael DouglasCarys Zeta DouglasKelsey DouglasTyler DouglasRyan DouglasJason DouglasLua Izzy DouglasRyder DouglasNotes Religion Edit In February 1991 aged 74 Douglas was in a helicopter and was injured when the aircraft collided with a small plane above Santa Paula Airport Two other people were also injured including Noel Blanc the son of voice actor Mel Blanc who was piloting the helicopter and two people in the plane were killed 121 122 This near death experience sparked a search for meaning by Douglas which led him after much study to embrace the Judaism in which he had been raised He documented this spiritual journey in his book Climbing the Mountain My Search for Meaning 1997 123 He decided to visit Jerusalem again and wanted to see the Western Wall Tunnel during a trip where he would dedicate two playgrounds he donated to the state His tour guide arranged to end the tour of the tunnel at the bedrock where according to Jewish tradition Abraham s binding of Isaac took place 124 In his earlier autobiography The Ragman s Son he recalled years back I tried to forget that I was a Jew but later in his career he began coming to grips with what it means to be a Jew which became a theme in his life 125 In an interview in 2000 he explained this transition 126 Judaism and I parted ways a long time ago when I was a poor kid growing up in Amsterdam N Y Back then I was pretty good in cheder so the Jews of our community thought they would do a wonderful thing and collect enough money to send me to a yeshiva to become a rabbi Holy Moses That scared the hell out of me I didn t want to be a rabbi I wanted to be an actor Believe me the members of the Sons of Israel were persistent I had nightmares wearing long payos and a black hat I had to work very hard to get out of it But it took me a long time to learn that you don t have to be a rabbi to be a Jew Douglas his wife Anne and President Ronald Reagan December 1987 Douglas noted that an underlying theme of some of his films including The Juggler 1953 Cast a Giant Shadow 1966 and Remembrance of Love 1982 was about a Jew who doesn t think of himself as one and eventually finds his Jewishness 125 The Juggler was the first Hollywood feature to be filmed in the newly established state of Israel Douglas recalled that while there he saw extreme poverty and food being rationed But he found it wonderful finally to be in the majority The film s producer Stanley Kramer tried to portray Israel as the Jews heroic response to Hitler s destruction 127 Although his children had non Jewish mothers Douglas stated that they were aware culturally of his deep convictions and he never tried to influence their own religious decisions 125 Douglas s wife Anne converted to Judaism before they renewed their wedding vows in 2004 5 Douglas celebrated a second Bar Mitzvah ceremony in 1999 aged 83 18 125 Philanthropy Edit Douglas and his wife donated to various non profit causes during his career and planned on donating most of their 80 million net worth 128 Among the donations have been those to his former high school and college In September 2001 he helped fund his high school s musical Amsterdam Oratorio composed by Maria Riccio Bryce who won the school Thespian Society s Kirk Douglas Award in 1968 129 In 2012 he donated 5 million to St Lawrence University his alma mater The college used the donation for the scholarship fund he began in 1999 130 131 He donated to various schools medical facilities and other non profit organizations in southern California This included the rebuilding of over 400 Los Angeles Unified School District playgrounds that were aged and in need of restoration The Douglases established the Anne Douglas Center for Homeless Women at the Los Angeles Mission which has helped hundreds of women turn their lives around In Culver City they opened the Kirk Douglas Theatre in 2004 117 They supported the Anne Douglas Childhood Center at the Sinai Temple of Westwood 131 In March 2015 Douglas and his wife donated 2 3 million to the Children s Hospital Los Angeles 132 Since the early 1990s Kirk and Anne Douglas donated up to 40 million to Harry s Haven an Alzheimer s treatment facility in Woodland Hills to care for patients at the Motion Picture Home 5 To celebrate his 99th birthday on December 9 2015 they donated another 15 million to help expand the facility with a new two story Kirk Douglas Care Pavilion 133 Douglas donated a number of playgrounds in Jerusalem and donated the Kirk Douglas Theater at the Aish Center across from the Western Wall 134 Politics Edit Douglas in 2002 with his book My Stroke of Luck Douglas and his wife traveled to more than 40 countries at their own expense to act as goodwill ambassadors for the U S Information Agency speaking to audiences about why democracy works and what freedom means 116 In 1980 Douglas flew to Cairo to talk with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat For all his goodwill efforts he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Jimmy Carter in 1981 117 At the ceremony Carter said that Douglas had done this in a sacrificial way almost invariably without fanfare and without claiming any personal credit or acclaim for himself 135 In subsequent years Douglas testified before Congress about elder abuse 136 Douglas was a lifelong member of the Democratic Party citation needed He wrote letters to politicians who were friends He noted in his memoir Let s Face It 2007 that he felt compelled to write to former president Jimmy Carter in 2006 to stress that Israel is the only successful democracy in the Middle East and has had to endure many wars against overwhelming odds If Israel loses one war they lose Israel 18 226 During the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries he endorsed Michael Bloomberg s campaign 137 Blogging Edit Douglas blogged from time to time Originally hosted on Myspace 138 his posts were hosted by the Huffington Post beginning in 2012 139 As of 2008 he was believed to be the oldest celebrity blogger in the world 140 Rape allegation Edit Douglas is alleged to have raped actress Natalie Wood in the summer of 1955 when she was aged 15 and he was 38 years old 141 Wood s alleged rape was first publicised in Suzanne Finstad s 2001 biography of the actress though Finstad never named the offender 142 The allegation received renewed attention in January 2018 after the 75th Golden Globe Awards ceremony paid tribute to Douglas with several news outlets citing a 2012 anonymous blog post which accused Douglas 143 In July 2018 Wood s sister Lana said during a 12 part podcast about her sister s life that her sister was sexually assaulted as a teen and that the attack had occurred inside the Chateau Marmont during an audition and went on for hours 144 According to professor Cynthia Lucia who studied the attack claim Wood s rape was brutal and violent 144 In the 2021 memoir Little Sister My Investigation Into the Mysterious Death of Natalie Wood Lana Wood alleged Douglas was her sister s assailant 141 Douglas s son Michael issued a statement saying May they both rest in peace 141 Health problems and death EditOn January 28 1996 at age 79 Douglas suffered a severe stroke which impaired his ability to speak 145 Doctors told his wife that unless there was rapid improvement the loss of the ability to speak was likely permanent After a regimen of daily speech language therapy that lasted several months his ability to speak returned although it was still limited He was able to accept an honorary Academy Award two months later in March and thanked the audience 146 147 He wrote about this experience in his 2002 book My Stroke of Luck which he hoped would be an operating manual for others on how to handle a stroke victim in their own family 147 148 Douglas died at his home in Beverly Hills California surrounded by his family on February 5 2020 at the age of 103 His cause of death was kept private 149 150 Douglas s funeral was held at the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery on February 7 2020 two days after his death He was buried in the same plot as his son Eric 151 152 On April 29 2021 his wife Anne died at the age of 102 and was buried next to him and their son 153 Filmography EditMain article Kirk Douglas filmography In a 2014 article Douglas cited The Strange Love of Martha Ivers Champion Ace in the Hole The Bad and the Beautiful Act of Love 20 000 Leagues Under the Sea The Indian Fighter Lust for Life Paths of Glory Spartacus Lonely Are the Brave and Seven Days in May as the films he was most proud of throughout his acting career 154 Radio appearances EditYear Program Episode source1947 Suspense Community Property 155 1950 Screen Directors Playhouse Champion 156 1950 Suspense The Butcher s Wife 156 1952 Lux Radio Theatre Young Man with a Horn 157 1954 Lux Radio Theatre Detective Story 156 Honors and awards Edit President Jimmy Carter greets Anne and Kirk Douglas March 1978 Douglas has been honored by governments and organizations of various countries including France Italy Portugal Israel and Germany 116 In 1957 he won the Best Actor award at the San Sebastian International Film Festival for The Vikings 158 In 1958 He was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Fine Arts from St Lawrence University 159 In 1981 Douglas received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Jimmy Carter 160 In 1984 he was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy amp Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City Oklahoma 161 In 1990 he received the French Legion of Honor for distinguished services to France in arts and letters 116 In 1991 he received the AFI Life Achievement Award 162 In 1994 Douglas s accomplishments in the performing arts were celebrated in Washington D C where he was among the recipients of the annual Kennedy Center Honors 163 In 1998 he received the Screen Actors Guild Lifetime Achievement Award 164 In 2002 he received the National Medal of Arts award from President Bush 116 Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame Douglas s star is located at the famous Hollywood and Vine intersection In October 2004 Kirk Douglas Way a thoroughfare in Palm Springs California was unveiled by the city s International Film Society and Film Festival 165 For his contributions to the motion picture industry Douglas has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6263 Hollywood Blvd He is one of the few personalities along with James Stewart Gregory Peck and Gene Autry whose star has been stolen and later replaced 166 Signing his name at Grauman s Chinese Theatre on November 1 1962 His handprints and footprints at Grauman s Chinese Theatre AFI Life Achievement Award Dean O Gorman portrayed Kirk Douglas in Trumbo 2015 1991 Accepted AFI Life Achievement Award 167 Kennedy Center Honors 1994 Honoree 168 Academy Awards Douglas received three nominations for the Academy Award for Best Actor for Champion 1949 The Bad and the Beautiful 1952 and Lust for Life 1956 but never won 159 In 1996 he received an Honorary Award for 50 years as a creative and moral force in the motion picture community 169 Golden Globes 1986 Amos nominated for Best Actor in a Mini Series or Motion Picture Made for TV 170 1968 Cecil B DeMille Award for Lifetime Achievement 171 1957 Lust for Life won for Best Actor Drama 170 1952 Detective Story nominated for Best Actor Drama 170 Emmy Awards 2002 Touched by an Angel nominated for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series 172 1992 Tales from the Crypt nominated for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series 172 1986 Amos nominated for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or Special 172 Screen Actors Guild Awards 1999 Lifetime Achievement Award 173 BAFTA Awards 1963 Lonely Are the Brave nominated for Best Foreign Actor 174 Britannia Awards 2009 BAFTA LA award for Worldwide Contribution To Filmed Entertainment 175 Berlin International Film Festival 2001 Honorary Golden Bear 176 1975 Posse nominated for Competing Film 177 Cesar Awards 1980 Honorary Cesar 170 Hollywood Film Festival 1997 Lifetime Achievement Award 178 National Board of Review 1988 Career Achievement Award 170 New York Film Critics Circle Award 1956 Lust for Life won for Best Actor 179 1951 Detective Story nominated for Best Actor 170 In 1983 Douglas received the S Roger Horchow Award for Greatest Public Service by a Private Citizen an award given out annually by Jefferson Awards 180 In 1996 Douglas received an Honorary Academy Award for 50 years as a moral and creative force in the motion picture community The award was presented by producer director Steven Spielberg 146 As a result of Douglas s stroke the previous summer however in which he lost most of his speaking ability his close friends and family were concerned about whether he should try to speak or what he should say Both his son Michael and his long time friend Jack Valenti urged him to only say Thank you and leave the stage Douglas agreed but had second thoughts when standing in front of the audience He later reflected that I intended to just say thank you but I saw 1 000 people and felt I had to say something more and I did 181 Valenti remembers that after Douglas held up the Oscar addressed his sons and told his wife how much he loved her everyone was astonished at his voice s improvement The audience went wild with applause and erupted in affection rising to their feet to salute this last of the great movie legends who had survived the threat of death and stared down the demons that had threatened to silence him I felt an emotional tidal wave roaring through the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in the L A Music Center 2 Since 2006 the Santa Barbara International Film Festival has awarded the Kirk Douglas Award for Excellence in film to acknowledge lifetime contributions to the film industry Recipients of the award include Robert De Niro Ed Harris Harrison Ford Michael Douglas Hugh Jackman and Judi Dench 182 The award is typically presented to actors although directors Quentin Tarantino and Martin Scorsese have been presented with it 183 In 2015 a star was nicknamed after Douglas in the International Star Registry to commemorate his 99th birthday 184 Books EditThe Ragman s Son Simon amp Schuster 1988 ISBN 0671637177 Dance with the Devil Random House 1990 ISBN 0394582373 The Gift Grand Central Publishing 1992 ISBN 0446516945 Last Tango in Brooklyn Century 1994 ISBN 0712648526 The Broken Mirror A Novella Simon amp Schuster Books for Young Readers 1997 ISBN 0689814933 Young Heroes of the Bible Simon amp Schuster Books for Young Readers 1999 ISBN 0689814917 Climbing the Mountain My Search for Meaning Simon and Schuster 2001 ISBN 0743214382 My Stroke of Luck HarperCollins 2003 ISBN 0060014040 Let s Face It 90 Years of Living Loving and Learning John Wiley amp Sons 2007 ISBN 0470084693 I Am Spartacus Making a Film Breaking the Blacklist Open Road Media 2012 ISBN 1453239375 Life Could Be Verse Reflections on Love Loss and What Really Matters Health Communications Inc 2014 ISBN 978 0757318474See also EditList of centenarians actors filmmakers and entertainers Notes Edit In his autobiography Douglas explains that for many actors at the time who had unusual or foreign sounding birth names a simpler Americanized name was often preferred His friend Karl Malden who also changed his name for that reason made suggestions Douglas knew that many leading stars at the time had adopted stage names including Robert Taylor John Wayne Cary Grant and Fred Astaire 18 1 2 References Edit Muir David June 29 2012 Person of the Week Kirk Douglas on Helping to Break Blacklist ABC News Retrieved February 5 2020 a b c d Valenti Jack This Time This Place My Life in War the White House and Hollywood Crown Publishing 2007 Ch 12 Kirk Douglas 1988 The Ragman s Son An Autobiography p 16 ISBN 978 0671637170 Retrieved February 15 2020 Kirk and Michael Douglas Land Of Ancestors Belarus November 17 2012 Archived from the original on November 3 2014 Retrieved December 6 2014 a b c d Paskin Barbra September 20 2012 Hollywood gladiator Kirk Douglas has his eyes set on a third barmitzvah The Jewish Chronicle Retrieved May 25 2018 Plessel John December 8 2016 5 reasons to celebrate actor Kirk Douglas on his 100th birthday Los Angeles Daily News Retrieved May 10 2018 a b c d Darrach Brad October 3 1988 Kirk Douglas People Retrieved May 10 2018 Kirk Douglas honoured by World Jewish Congress BBC November 10 2016 Retrieved May 10 2018 Freeman Hadley February 12 2017 Kirk Douglas I never thought I d live to 100 That s shocked me The Guardian Retrieved May 10 2018 Spence Rebecca July 18 2007 A Legend Looks Back A Visit With Kirk Douglas The Jewish Daily Forward Retrieved December 6 2014 Farndale Nigel July 23 2011 Kirk Douglas in pretty good shape at 94 The Telegraph Archived from the original on January 10 2022 Other Celebrity Houses of Worship seeing stars com Retrieved December 4 2012 Berkvist Robert February 5 2020 Kirk Douglas a Star of Hollywood s Golden Age Dies at 103 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on February 6 2020 Retrieved February 11 2022 Grondahl Paul September 23 2015 Funeral for Kirk Douglas sister in Albany Times Union Retrieved February 11 2022 Kirk Douglas www jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved February 11 2022 Guideposts Remembers Kirk Douglas Guideposts December 8 2016 Retrieved February 11 2022 Tugend Tom Kirk Douglas an iconic star who reconnected to Judaism after near fatal crash The Times of Israel a b c d e Douglas Kirk Let s Face It John Wiley amp Sons 2007 ISBN 0470084693 Douglas Kirk 2007 Let s face it 90 years of living loving and learning John Wiley and Sons p 3 ISBN 978 0470084694 Douglas 1988 p 19 Seemayer Zach February 5 2020 Inside Kirk Douglas Relationship With Son Michael Douglas Entertainment Tonight Retrieved February 14 2020 Kindon Frances February 6 2020 Inside Michael and Kirk Douglas feuds and addiction gene that destroyed family Daily Mirror Retrieved February 14 2020 Douglas Kirk November 5 2015 Why I Felt Like a Failure When I Didn t Make It on Broadway Huffington Post Retrieved January 9 2016 Thomas Tony The Films of Kirk Douglas Citadel Press New York 1991 p 12 ISBN 0806512172 Grondahl Paul September 23 2015 Funeral for Kirk Douglas sister in Albany Times Union Retrieved February 6 2020 a b c Thomas p 13 Thomas p 15 a b Thomas p 18 a b Bacall Lauren 1978 By Myself and Then Some London Coronet pp 26 27 ISBN 978 0755313501 OCLC 664201994 Sim David December 9 2016 A look back at the life of Kirk Douglas as he celebrates his 100th birthday International Business Times Douglas Kirk LTJG www navy togetherweserved com Retrieved January 10 2018 Van Osdol William R John W Lambert 1995 Famous Americans in World War II a pictorial history Phalanx p 31 ISBN 978 1883809065 Serving in the Pacific as an ensign he was seriously injured because of a premature depth charge explosion and returned to San Diego After five months hospitalization he was granted a medical discharge in 1944 a b c Parker John 2011 Michael Douglas Acting on Instinct London Headline e book Ch 2 OCLC 1194433483 Smith Imogen Sara 2011 In Lonely Places Film Noir Beyond the City Jefferson NC McFarland p 103 ISBN 978 0786463053 OCLC 756335120 Thomas p 33 a b c Thomas p 19 Mosel Leading Lady The World and Theatre of Katharine Cornell ISBN 0316585378 Douglas 1988 p 146 a b Didinger Ray and Glen Macnow The Ultimate Book of Sports Movies Featuring the 100 Greatest Sports Films Running Press 2009 p 260 ISBN 0091521300 Romano Frederick V The Boxing Filmography American Features 1920 2003 McFarland 2004 p 31 ISBN 978 0786417933 a b c Thomas p 28 Bryna Productions Inc California Secretary of State September 28 1949 Retrieved May 18 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Thomas p 181 TCM Lonely are the Brave YouTube April 7 2013 Archived from the original on February 15 2017 Retrieved July 19 2016 Thomas p 64 Hotchner A E 1975 Doris Day Her Own Story William Morrow and Company Inc ISBN 978 0688029685 Disappearance mariamusikka com Archived from the original on March 12 2018 Retrieved March 11 2018 Actor Quizzed on Missing Girl The San Bernardino Daily Sun October 13 1949 Retrieved March 11 2018 Lyons Arthur The Mysterious Disappearance of Jean Spangler Palm Springs Life Archived from the original on February 12 2015 Retrieved February 12 2015 Mike Mayo 2008 American Murder Criminals Crimes and the Media Visible Ink Press p 332 ISBN 978 1578592562 Lewis Jon 2017 Hard Boiled Hollywood Crime and Punishment in Postwar Los Angeles Univ of California Press p 59 ISBN 978 0520284326 Sikov Ed On Sunset Boulevard The Life and Times of Billy Wilder New York Hyperion 1998 pp 325 26 ISBN 0786861940 McGovern Joe A Life in Film Kirk Douglas on four of his greatest roles Entertainment Weekly February 23 2015 Empire Magazine s The 500 Greatest Movies of All Time Archived October 9 2015 at the Wayback Machine Empire retrieved March 21 2013 Chandler Charlotte 2002 Nobody s Perfect Billy Wilder a Personal Biography New York Applause Books p 166 ISBN 978 1557836328 OCLC 932564547 Ebert Roger August 12 2007 Ace in the Hole movie review amp film summary 1951 RogerEbert com Retrieved January 4 2011 Phillips Gene 2010 Some Like it Wilder the Life and Controversial films of Billy Wilder Univ Press of Kentucky p 141 ISBN 978 0813125701 OCLC 716971755 a b Grant Lee I Said Yes to Everything a Memoir Blue Rider Press 2014 pp 75 428 29 ISBN 978 0399169304 TCM Detective Story Intro Robert Osborne YouTube May 27 2013 Archived from the original on March 5 2020 Retrieved December 17 2016 Crowther Bosley Detective Story review The New York Times November 7 1951 accessed December 26 2007 Crowther Bosley August 18 1955 Screen Ulysses Wanders Into Globe Kirk Douglas Portrays Bewhiskered Hero Silvana Mangano Both Circe and Penelope The New York Times Retrieved February 6 2020 a b Thomas p 7 Jam Session at Jacks originally telecast on CBS on October 17 1954 Hilmes Michele Kirk Douglas and Bryna Productions Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research Archived from the original on February 23 2015 James Bawden Ron Miller 2016 Conversations with Classic Film Stars Interviews from Hollywood s Golden Era University Press of Kentucky p 70 ISBN 978 0813167121 a b Dot Acquires Viking Track PDF Billboard April 21 1958 p 5 Library of Congress Copyright Office 1958 Catalog of Copyright Entries 1958 Music July Dec 3D Ser Vol 12 Pt 5 United States Copyright Office U S Govt Print Off Hughes David 2013 The Complete Kubrick Random House p 36 ISBN 978 1448133215 Monush Barry 2003 The Encyclopedia of Hollywood Film Actors Applause Books p 200 ISBN 978 1557835512 OCLC 472842790 a b LoBrutto Vincent 1997 Stanley Kubrick A Biography New York Carroll amp Graf Publishers pp 105 135 ISBN 978 0786704859 OCLC 1037232538 a b Thomas p 24 Rich Little roasts Kirk Douglasipad YouTube December 19 2013 Archived from the original on October 28 2021 Retrieved December 17 2016 David Frye Doing Kirk Douglas LBJ Rod Steiger amp Brando Impersonations YouTube January 13 2015 Archived from the original on January 17 2016 Retrieved December 17 2016 Fairbanks Brian Brian W Fairbanks Writings Lulu 2005 e book McElhaney Joe 2009 Vincente Minnelli The Art of Entertainment Detroit Wayne State Univ Press p 300 ISBN 978 0814333075 OCLC 232002215 Niemi Robert 2006 History in the Media Film and Television Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO p 296 ISBN 978 1576079522 OCLC 255629433 Douglas 1988 p 266 a b Thomas p 44 Naremore James 1993 The Films of Vincente Minnelli Cambridge Univ Press p 41 ISBN 978 0521387705 OCLC 231580819 Pfeiffer Lee n d The Bad and the Beautiful Encyclopaedia Britannica Samuelson Kate December 9 2016 3 Things to Know About Kirk Douglas on His 100th Birthday Time Retrieved April 11 2017 Thomas p 168 Thomas p 149 Meroney John Coons Sean July 5 2012 How Kirk Douglas Overstated His Role in Breaking the Hollywood Blacklist The Atlantic Retrieved December 27 2016 Trumbo s Dean O Gorman plays Kirk Douglas and earns praise from the legend Los Angeles Times October 30 2015 Douglas Edward 2009 Jack A Biography of Jack Nicholson HarperCollins p 136 ISBN 978 0061745492 OCLC 1237159010 Armstrong Stephen B ed 2013 John Frankenheimer Interviews Essays and Profiles Lanham The Scarecrow Press p 166 ISBN 978 0810890572 OCLC 820530958 New Double Bill The New York Times August 3 1967 p 0 Retrieved February 6 2020 Hunter Allan Faye Dunaway St Martin s Press NY 1986 p 81 Dunaway Faye Sharkey Betsy 1995 Looking for Gatsby My Life Simon amp Schuster p 193 ISBN 978 0684808413 OCLC 474923659 AFI Catalog catalog afi com Retrieved August 6 2021 AFI Catalog catalog afi com Retrieved August 6 2021 AFI Catalog catalog afi com Retrieved August 6 2021 AFI Catalog catalog afi com Retrieved August 6 2021 AFI Catalog catalog afi com Retrieved August 6 2021 AFI Catalog catalog afi com Retrieved August 6 2021 AFI Catalog catalog afi com Retrieved August 6 2021 Farber Stephen November 2 1986 Lancaster and Douglas A Chemistry Lesson New York Times Liberty Receives Classical Salute July 5 1986 Archived from the original on February 23 2015 Thomas Kevin December 10 1999 Diamonds Gives Douglas a Chance to Sparkle Los Angeles Times a b Silver screen veteran Kirk Douglas celebrates 100th birthday The Irish Independent Press Association December 9 2016 Timothy Shary Nancy McVittie 2016 Fade to Gray Aging in American Cinema University of Texas Press p 192 ISBN 978 1477310632 Illusion 2004 BFI Olivier Ellen January 17 2010 Kirk Douglas Before I Forget movie premieres South Coast Repertory s Ordinary Days has West Coast opening Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 4 2010 Inside Kirk Douglas s intimate 100th birthday celebration The Telegraph Associated Press December 10 2016 Archived from the original on January 10 2022 Johns Gibson January 8 2018 Kirk Douglas 101 Makes a Rare Public Appearance at the 2018 Golden Globes Aol Birkinbine Julia January 7 2018 Kirk Douglas 101 made a very rare public appearance at the 2018 Golden Globes Closer Weekly Thomas p 11 a b c d Thomas p 21 Thomas p 25 Thomas p 22 Darrach Brad October 3 1988 Kirk Douglas People Retrieved May 20 2019 a b Turan Kenneth August 14 1988 The Wrath of Issur The Ragman s Son by Kirk Douglas Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 20 2019 Douglas Kirk 1989 The Ragman s Son An Autobiography G K Hall pp 194 200 206 208 12 224 228 231 233 238 43 248 335 ISBN 0 8161 4795 7 Tugend Tom May 25 2017 New book reveals a lifetime of love letters between Kirk Douglas and wife Jewish Journal Retrieved May 10 2018 a b c d e Kirk amp Anne Douglas The Heart Foundation Retrieved November 16 2016 a b c Douglas Kirk Kirk Douglas looks back at 60 years of marriage Los Angeles Times June 20 2014 Douglas son died accidentally BBC News August 10 2004 Retrieved December 8 2016 Vargas Chanel August 9 2017 Kirk Douglas Six Decade Love Story With His Wife Anne Buydens Town amp Country Magazine Retrieved May 10 2018 Carter Maria May 3 2017 Kirk and Anne Douglas Open Up About Their Tumultuous Marriage in New Tell All Book Country Living Retrieved May 10 2018 Gorman Gary O Donnell Santiago February 14 1991 2 Die as Plane Copter Crash Kirk Douglas 2 Others Hurt Los Angeles Times Retrieved August 16 2015 Kirk Douglas Noel Blanc Recovering After Air Collision That Killed Two AP NEWS Retrieved March 13 2022 Lacher Irene September 24 1997 A Role Made to Order Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 6 2020 Tugend Tom February 6 2020 Kirk Douglas Legendary Movie Star Who Had His Second Bar Mitzvah at 83 Has Died The Jewish Week a b c Douglas 1988 p 383 Douglas Kirk March 4 2000 Climbing the Mountain Essay and Interview with Kirk Douglas aish com Retrieved August 16 2015 Moore Deborah To the Golden Cities Pursuing the American Jewish Dream in Miami and L A Harvard Univ Press 1994 p 245 Feinberg Scott August 20 2015 Why Kirk and Anne Douglas Are Giving Away Their Fortune Hollywood Reporter Cudmore Bob Oratorio describes life in the city The Daily Gazette September 30 2001 Kirk Douglas donating 5 million to St Lawrence University Associated Press July 30 2012 a b Kilday Gregg July 27 2012 Kirk and Anne Douglas Donate 50 Million to Five Non Profits The Hollywood Reporter Coleman Laura Kirk Anne Douglas Donate 2 3M To Children s Hospital Los Angeles The Beverly Hills Courier March 26 2015 Shah Yagana December 16 2015 Kirk Douglas Just Did Something Beautiful For His 99th Birthday The Huffington Post Rabinowitz Boruch December 14 2017 Kirk Douglas and His Theatre in Jerusalem Times of Israel Jimmy Carter Presidential Medal of Freedom Remarks at the Presentation Ceremony Presidency ucsb edu January 16 1981 Retrieved December 17 2016 Paskin Barbra Hollywood gladiator Kirk Douglas has his eyes set on a third barmitzvah The Jewish Chronicle September 20 2012 D Zurilla Christine February 11 2020 Kirk Douglas last words Michael Douglas says they were a political endorsement Los Angeles Times Retrieved June 11 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Kendall Nigel World s oldest blogger Maria Amelia Lopez Solino dies Times Online May 22 2009 accessed May 25 2009 Kirk Douglas blog Huffingtonpost com retrieved January 11 2014 Irvine Chris December 17 2008 Kirk Douglas becomes MySpace s oldest celebrity blogger Archived from the original on January 10 2022 Retrieved February 5 2020 via www telegraph co uk a b c Italie Hillel November 4 2021 Natalie Wood was assaulted by Kirk Douglas sister alleges Associated Press Retrieved November 4 2021 Thomson David January 14 2020 Sleeping with Strangers How the Movies Shaped Desire Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group p 223 ISBN 978 1 10197 102 4 Wulfsohn Joseph A January 7 2018 Twitter Calls Out Globes For Honoring Kirk Douglas Accused of Raping Natalie Wood Mediaite Retrieved November 18 2021 a b Chan Anna July 26 2018 Lana Wood Natalie Wood was sexually assaulted as a teen AOL Archived from the original on September 13 2018 Retrieved November 4 2021 Douglas Kirk Gold Todd October 6 1997 Lust for Life People a b Kirk Douglas receiving an Honorary Oscar YouTube April 24 2008 Archived from the original on October 28 2021 Retrieved November 16 2016 a b Cooper Chet 2001 Interview Kirk Douglas Ability Retrieved December 6 2014 Alikhan Anvar October 24 2016 Thespian gambler and time traveller the remarkable 100 year run of Kirk Douglas scroll in McLellan Dennis February 5 2020 Kirk Douglas dead at 103 Spartacus star helped end Hollywood blacklist Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 5 2020 Berkvist Robert February 5 2020 Kirk Douglas a Star of Hollywood s Golden Age Dies at 103 The New York Times Archived from the original on February 6 2020 Retrieved February 5 2020 Fernandez Alexia February 7 2020 Michael Douglas Catherine Zeta Jones and More Attend Kirk Douglas Funeral 2 Days After His Death People Kirk Douglas Laid to Rest at Private Funeral 2 Days After Death E Online February 7 2020 Barnes Mike April 29 2021 Anne Douglas Philanthropist and Widow of Kirk Douglas Dies at 102 The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on May 2 2021 Retrieved April 29 2021 Douglas Kirk December 9 2014 I ve Made About 90 Feature Films but These Are the Ones I m Proudest Of The Huffington Post Retrieved July 12 2015 Suspense Community Property Escape and Suspense Retrieved February 5 2020 a b c Those Were the Days Nostalgia Digest Vol 42 no 4 Autumn 2016 p 35 Kirby Walter March 2 1952 Better Radio Programs for the Week The Decatur Daily Review The Decatur Daily Review p 42 Retrieved May 28 2015 via Newspapers com San Sebastian Film Festival sansebastianfestival Retrieved October 2 2019 a b Barnes Mike February 5 2020 Kirk Douglas Indomitable Icon of Hollywood s Golden Age Dies at 103 The Hollywood Reporter Jimmy Carter Presidential Medal of Freedom Remarks at the Presentation Ceremony Presidency ucsb edu January 16 1981 Retrieved February 6 2020 Great Western Performers National Cowboy amp Western Heritage Museum April 19 2019 Archived from the original on April 19 2019 Retrieved October 2 2019 19th AFI Life Achievement Award A Tribute To Kirk Douglas video afi com Retrieved October 2 2019 List of Kennedy Center Honorees Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Archived from the original on November 15 2013 Retrieved December 1 2013 35th Screen Actors Guild Awards Retrieved October 2 2019 A portrait of Douglas titled The Great and the Beautiful which encapsulated his film career art collection philanthropy and rehabilitation from the helicopter crash and the stroke appeared in Palm Springs Life magazine in 1999 Hollywood Walk of Fame Guide to and locations of the stars on Hollywood Boulevard Archived from the original on June 7 2012 Retrieved June 13 2008 The AFI Life Achievement Awards American Film Institute Retrieved December 9 2016 Kilian Michael 5 Selected as Winners of Kennedy Center Honors Chicago Tribune Retrieved October 2 2019 Spotlight on Kirk Douglas Deseret News December 22 2006 Retrieved February 6 2020 a b c d e f Kirk Douglas Encyclopedia com Retrieved February 6 2020 Berk Philip January 14 2020 Ready for My deMille Profiles in Excellence Kirk Douglas 1968 Globen Globes Retrieved February 6 2020 a b c Kirk Douglas Television Academy Retrieved February 6 2020 Screen Actors Guild Winners The Washington Post Associated Press March 8 1999 Retrieved February 6 2020 Film in 1963 British Academy of Film and Television Arts Retrieved February 6 2020 Rollo Sarah November 9 2009 Douglas honoured by award presentation Digital Spy Archived from the original on June 2 2015 Retrieved February 6 2020 Prizes amp Honors 2001 berlinale de Archived from the original on October 15 2013 Retrieved June 9 2014 25th Berlin International Film Festival berlinale de Retrieved July 4 2010 Kirk Douglas Champions Hollywood Fest Hollywood Film Festival October 20 1997 Retrieved February 6 2020 Day Crosby December 6 1992 Kirk Douglas As Van Gogh Orlando Sentinel Retrieved February 6 2020 Jefferson Awards Archived from the original on November 24 2010 Retrieved December 6 2014 Hollywood Legend Kirk Douglas His Wife Delve Into Their 60 Year Love Affair www cbsnews com Retrieved July 20 2022 Kirk Douglas Award SBIFF Retrieved July 20 2022 Pond Steve August 26 2019 Martin Scorsese to Receive Kirk Douglas Award From Santa Barbara Film Festival Retrieved July 20 2022 The Rising Stars of Politics The New Yorker January 11 2016 Retrieved July 20 2022 Further reading EditKress Michael Rabbis Observations of 100 Leading and Influential Rabbis of the 21st Century Foreword by Kirk Douglas Universe 2002 ISBN 978 0789308047 McBride Joseph Kirk Douglas Pyramid Publications 1976 ISBN 0515040843 Munn Michael Kirk Douglas St Martin s Press 1985 ISBN 0312456816 Press Skip Michael and Kirk Douglas Silver Burdett Press 1995 ISBN 0382249410 Wise James Stars in Blue Movie Actors in America s Sea Services Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press 1997 ISBN 1557509379 OCLC 36824724 Entry on Kirk Douglas External links EditKirk Douglas at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Data from Wikidata Official website Kirk Douglas at IMDb Kirk Douglas at the TCM Movie Database Kirk Douglas at the Internet Broadway Database Douglas Papers at the Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research Douglas s entries on Huffington Post Tribute to Kirk Douglas Turner Classic Movies Profile at Turner Classic Movies Kirk Douglas interviewed by Dick Cavett 1971 An Interview with Kirk Douglas Archived June 24 2008 at the Wayback Machine Kirk Douglas Archived September 20 2018 at the Wayback Machine interviewed by Mike Wallace on The Mike Wallace Interview from November 2 1957 Kirk Douglas at Find a Grave Portals Biography Film Television United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kirk Douglas amp oldid 1151437135, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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