Hollywood veteran Alan Arkin, whose career spanned more than a hundred roles, died on Friday at the age of 89. His children made a statement about it. “Our father was an exceptionally gifted force of nature, as an artist and as a human being. A loving husband, father, great and great grandfather, he was adored and will be greatly missed by us.” they wrote.
noticed in the theater
Alan Arkin grew up in the Brooklyn neighborhood of New York in a family of Jewish intellectuals and artists, immigrants from Russia and Germany. A ball kid who showed a passion for music and theater from an early age, he nevertheless dropped out of higher education to form his own musical group. “Tarriers”.
He even wrote a song in 1956, “Banana Boat Song”, which would be taken triumphantly by a certain Harry Belafonte shortly after. Living on improvised and odd jobs, he tries his best to get a small role on television or in the theater. Luck smiled on him in 1957 when he got a small role as a singer in the musical film Calypso Heat Wave.
His career took off on stage in the early 60s when he joined a famous Chicago improv group. “Second City Theater”. His first role on Broadway was the lead character in Carl Reiner’s play, “enter laughing”costs Tony Award Best Actor for an Actor.
In 1966, he had a breakthrough in the satirical comedy The Russians Are Coming, directed by Norman Jewison, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Actor and won Golden Globe. The following year, he responded to blind Audrey Hepburn in Alone in the Night, where he played a terrifying psychopath.
Twist: In 1968, he played a deaf-mute in The Heart is Solitary Hunter; A role for which he received his second Oscar nomination. In 1970, he gave a hilarious performance as bomber captain Yossarian in the anti-war pamphlet Catch 22 (Mike Nichols), before signing his directorial debut with Little Murders. After a few years on television, in 1976 he portrayed the amazing Dr. Freud in the highly successful film Sherlock Holmes Attacks the Orient Express.
Oscar and it starts all over again
The 80s and 90s marked a half-hearted career for him, characterized by sometimes questionable artistic choices and honest successes. In the early 90s, he worked under Sydney Pollack in Havana before Tim Burton called him in for Edward Scissorhands.
In 1992, he was part of the impressive cast that made up Glengarry Glen Ross alongside Al Pacino, Kevin Spacey and Jack Lemmon. After a detour with SF (Bienvenue à Gattaca) and Tribunal Central director Sidney Lumet, in 2006 he played a sex-obsessed (but annoying) grandfather in the excellent Little Miss Sunshine, which won him an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. .

Very active, the actor shares the posters of the thrillers Firewall (2006) and Secret Detention (2008). Alan Arkin then teamed up again with Steve Carell in the comedy Max la Menace, inspired by the TV series of the same name, before starring in Marley & moi with the Owen Wilson/Jennifer Aniston pairing.
A supporting role, he played Robin Wright’s husband in Pippa Lee’s Private Life, then discovered the group in The Muppet Show after appearing in an episode of The Muppets Return in 1980. The actor also stars in a clever con (Thin Ice) and plays Ryan Reynolds’ father in the comedy Standard Exchange.
The prestige of a secondary role
In 2012, Alan Arkin starred in the highly awarded Argo. He plays for the occasion Lester Siegel, a funny producer who is responsible for Ben Affleck’s coverage with John Goodman: his performance is nominated for an Oscar for the best actor in a supporting role.
The answer is given by the actor who is always in shape Al Pacino and Christopher Walken in The Last Stand before playing Sylvester Stallone’s trainer in the boxing comedy Match Return and rubbing shoulders with Mad Men star Jon Hamm in Million Dollar (another sports-themed film).
In 2019, he reunited with Tim Burton for Dumbo and starred alongside Michael Douglas for two seasons of the Netflix series The Kominsky Method. His final role is in the yet-to-be-released film The Smack, a story of a con man and a con man, in which he answers to Casey Affleck.
Source: Allocine

Rose James is a Gossipify movie and series reviewer known for her in-depth analysis and unique perspective on the latest releases. With a background in film studies, she provides engaging and informative reviews, and keeps readers up to date with industry trends and emerging talents.