Deborah Kerr, the actress whom the Academy once called an "artist
of impeccable grace and beauty," has died from Parkinson's disease in Suffolk,
England. She was 86.
While Kerr acted in 45 movies during the height of her career between 1940 and 1970, she made her greatest impact with a single image: the passionate kiss between she and Burt Lancaster in From Here to Eternity. The image of Kerr and Lancaster on the beach shore with ocean crashing upon them endures as the poster image for old Hollywood romanticism, and made waves at the time for breaking Kerr's image as a prim and conservative lady of the screen.
"I came over here [Hollywood] to act," Kerr is reported to have once said, "But it turned out all I had to do was to be high-minded, long suffering, white-gloved and decorative."
Kerr began her career with a small part in 1940's Contraband that was ultimately left on the cutting room floor. Contraband was also her first instance of working with legendary filmmaking duo Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, establishing between them a fruitful working relationship. Playing three separate roles in Powell and Pressburger's 1943's The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, presenting herself as a formidable on-screen presence.
The success of 1947's Black Narcissus (another Powell and Pressburger production) made her an oft-spoken name in Hollywood and American households. As a stern nun establishing a religious commune in the Himalayas, the film gave her the austere image that would mark her memorable turns in films like The King and I, An Affair to Remember, and Bonjour Tristesse.
Kerr entered cinematic history with From Here to Eternity, which the American Film Institute deemed in 2002 the 20th most romantic film of all time. Kerr's performance in that picture earned her second of six Oscar nominations, tying with Thelma Ritter as the most nominated actress to never win an acting Oscar. However, Kerr received an honorary lifetime Oscar in 1993, considered by the Academy "a dedicated actress whose motion picture career has always stood for perfection, discipline and elegance."
By 1970, Kerr took a leave of absence from acting, calling herself "either too young or too old" for the parts she was receiving. She also registered disappointment over the increasing violence and sexuality that marked contemporary and upcoming movies, but did enter a brief return to acting in the early and mid 1980s with a handful of TV and now-obscure movies.
Kerr is survived by her husband, author Peter Vertel, two daughters, and three granddaughters.
Sources:
San Francisco Chronicle,
IMDb
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on Oct 18 2007 05:59 PM Seems a shame that this has gotten no responses. Parkinson's is truly horrible. Maybe she just came and went before the time of most RT posters... myself included. Although I've been meaning to add From Here to Eternity to my Netflix. I'll do that. (Reply to this) |
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on Oct 18 2007 06:33 PM rest in peace (Reply to this) |
![]() on Oct 19 2007 06:07 PM Ah, she was a great actress. I think she holds the record for most Leading Actress noms without a win as well, actually. But that's all rather trivial. Rest in Peace. (Reply to this) |
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on Oct 20 2007 06:10 AM Another link to Old Hollywood gone. Rest in Peace! (Reply to this) |
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on Oct 20 2007 12:33 PM A truly wonderful actress! Rest in Peace, Deborah. (Reply to this) |
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on Dec 18 2007 11:52 AM The article erred in that she had three grandsons, not granddaughters, as indicated on her IMDB page. The grandsons are Joe, Lex and Tom Shrapnel by her daughter Francesca and her husband John Shrapnel. To see my tribute to Deborah Kerr, click on: htt (Reply to this) |
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