Tuesday, October 30, 2012
RIP Did You Know ... Gone Too Soon!
Actor Adolph Caesar (December 5, 1933 – March 6, 1986), whose gruff portrayal of a hate-filled Army sergeant in "A Soldier's Story" earned him an Oscar nomination, died after suffering an apparent heart attack on a film set in downtown Los Angeles. He was 52. A spokesman at County-USC Medical Center said Caesar was in "full cardiac arrest," when he was brought to the hospital's emergency room by paramedics shortly after 1:30 p.m. He was pronounced dead a few minutes later, said Adelaida de la Cerda, the hospital's public information officer. The New York actor was stricken on the set of "Tough Guys," a Walt Disney comedy-adventure, on which he had been working for two days. The film's stars, Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas, released this statement Thursday evening: "Of course, you're never prepared for such an unexpected event. We both admired Adolph as an actor, and in the short time we worked together, we both liked him as a man--filled with humor as well as talent." Caesar appeared in Steven Spielberg's film of the Alice Walker novel, "The Color Purple." He played the father of the bullying husband of Celie, the main character, whose life in the rural South is traced from the early 1900s until the 1940s. Another film in which Caesar has a leading role, a comedy titled "Club Paradise," which also stars Robin Williams and Peter O'Toole, is was released by Warner Bros.
A longtime member of the New York-based Negro Ensemble Company, Caesar had worked in theater for years without winning widespread public recognition, before the film adaptation of Charles Fuller's "A Soldier's Play," in Mark Starkman's (his agent) words, "gave the world a chance to know about him."
"It wasn't a lucky shot at all," Starkman said. "It was a very well-prepared career. The film performance was the culmination of about 300 stage performances." "A Soldier's Story," released in 1984, is set in Louisiana during the waning days of World War II, when the U.S. Army was still segregated. Caesar, whose voice and manner have been described as both resonant and rough, portrays Sgt. Vernon C. Waters, a black whose pathological desire to become a supersoldier makes him hate the frailties of the black men under his command. In a series of flashbacks, the film recounts the events that led to Waters' murder.
Caesar won a Los Angeles Film Critics Award for his work in the film, as well as the Oscar nomination. For his earlier performance in the play, he was rewarded with the Drama Desk Award, handed out by New York theater critics, and the Obie Award, given for excellence in the off-Broadway theater.
"A painful experience of my own led me to Waters," Caesar said in an interview published in The Times. "I'd studied Shakespeare to death. I knew more about Shakespeare than Shakespeare knew about himself. After I did one season at a Shakespearean repertory company, a director said to me, 'You have a marvelous voice. You know the king's English well. You speak iambic pentameter. My suggestion is that you go to New York and get a good colored role.'
Caesar was graduated from George Washington High School in New York City in 1952. He served as a hospital corpsman in the U.S. Navy for five years, before breaking into the theater. In addition to his theatrical and film roles, he provided the voice-overs in a number of television commercials and has produced shows for himself, including a poetry program titled "The Square Root of Soul."
At the time of his death Caesar left behind to mourn his loss, his wife, Diane; two daughters, Tiffani, 15(now 41), and Alexandria, 5(now 31), and a 17-month-old son(now 28).
** I created this weekly tribute dedicated to the stars who for one reason or another did not receive the send off through the media that they deserved. Please join me every Tuesday as I continue to celebrate 'LIFE'. People will live on as long as we remember them. Thank you Adolph Ceasar for your contribution to this world and through your artistry, you will live on forever. kk **
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I remember watching 'Entertainment Tonight' years ago, around oscar time when A Soldiers Story was in the theartres and Adolph was nominated, ew thought he was going to win, so they followed him around leading to the oscars, the piece showed a softer side to this man with his wife. He didn't win, but I think he gain lots of fans, and it was like he was on his way, only to pass away, befoe his dream was truly realized. thanks for helping me to stroll down memory lane with your Gone To Soon.
ReplyDeleteMarissa Ann
lovely remembrence. you have a very easy way about yourself. keep on doing what you do.
ReplyDeleteNash
another good person to showcase Kevin. I like the way that your mind works.
ReplyDeleteceleste