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Theresa Lux Mihi Deus
Joined: 17 Jun 2001 Posts: 27256 Location: United States of America
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Thu May 15, 2003 10:34 pm Robert Stack |
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The guy who hosted "Unsolved Mysteries" died today.
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Link, the Hero of Time Vice Admiral
Joined: 15 Sep 2001 Posts: 5581 Location: Kokori Forest, Hyrule
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Fri May 16, 2003 6:49 am |
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, This sucks, he was a good actor.
Actor Robert Stack dies
Stack's career was characterised by his "good guy" persona
Actor Robert Stack, who played the Prohibition detective Eliot Ness in the 1960s TV series The Untouchables, died on Wednesday in his Los Angeles home aged 84.
The actor, who became internationally famous for his role as Ness, died of heart failure, his wife Rosemarie said.
She said she found him slumped over in the couple's home on Wednesday afternoon.
Stack had recently undergone treatment for prostate cancer.
"He was feeling so good," she said on Thursday. "He had a bout with a tumour but that was gone. It wasn't that, it was his heart. He was too weak. He wouldn't have lived through a bypass."
Stack starred in more than 40 movies in an career that started in 1939.
His greatest role, however, came in 1959, when he was cast as the hard-bitten Chicago detective Ness in The Untouchables, which ran for four years in the US.
'Not Al Capone'
It won him an Emmy for best actor, and also created Stack's "good guy" persona that was to become a hallmark of his acting career.
"I think there's a definite carry-over from Eliot Ness," Stack said in 1998 . "Somebody once said, 'You really think you're Eliot Ness.' No, I don't think I'm Ness, but I sure as hell know I'm not Al Capone.'"
Stack followed the hit show as the host of the equally popular Unsolved Mysteries.
Stack was born into a showbusiness family in Los Angeles in 1919. His mother, uncle and grandparents were opera singers, and his great-grandfather opened the first circus in the city.
Stack even featured in the Beavis & Butthead movie
His film career started in 1939 in the film First Love.
He received acting advice from Hollywood icon Clark Gable, who told him: "If you ever become a thing called a celebrity - a word I hate - if you ever do, and you use that power to push people around, I'm gonna kick you."
He received a best supporting actor Oscar nomination for his part in 1956's Written on the Wind.
Comedy roles
In the 1960s film roles included The Caretakers (1963) and Is Paris Burning? (1966).
Stack's latter career was marked by comedy roles that sometimes lampooned his straight-up persona. He starred in Airplane! (1979) and Caddyshack II (1988).
He even provided the voice to a law agent in Beavis & Butthead Do America (1996).
Stack married his wife Rosemarie in 1956 and had two children, Charles and Elizabeth. They were both at the family home when he died.
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"Dissent is the highest form of patriotism." President Thomas Jefferson
"A man's respect for law and order exists in precise relationship to the size of his paycheck." Adam Clayton Powell Jr.
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