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Gen Media Hunk of the Week 2/11/09: Burt Lancaster

Hunk of the Week: Burt Lancaster


  • Total voters
    15
  • Poll closed .

auntiehill

The Blooness
Premium Member
This week's choice is American film actor and star,Burt Lancaster. He was often noted for his athletic physique, distinct smile (which he called "The Grin") and, later, his willingness to play roles that went against his initial "tough guy" image. Initially dismissed as "Mr. Muscles and Teeth", in the late 1950s Lancaster abandoned his "all-American" image and gradually came to be regarded as one of the best actors of his generation. (wiki)

Lancaster was nominated four times for Academy Awards and won once, for his work in Elmer Gantry in 1960. He also won a Golden Globe for that performance, and BAFTA Awards for The Birdman of Alcatraz (1962) and Atlantic City (1980).

As a child, he worked shining shoes, selling newspapers, and shoveling snow to help out with domestic finances. The young Burt had hopes of singing opera, but these were dashed when his voice broke.Lancaster enrolled at New York University in the hope of becoming a gym teacher, but soon got bored and ran away to join the circus, where he became an acrobat. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1942, Burt joined the army. On his return he was visiting his family in New York, when he was invited to audition for a play 'A Sound Of Hunting'. The play closed after three weeks, but during that time Burt was spotted by Hollywood producer, Hal Wallis.

Burt Lancaster enjoyed his first success as a film actor in 1947, in the film noir The Killers, based on the novel by Ernest Hemingway. He then went on to star in films such as Brute Force, I Walk Alone, and Sorry, Wrong Number. Burt also turned his hand to producing, and became one of the first actors to set up his own production company. When producing films for his own company, Lancaster was careful to market himself alongside other Hollywood stars in order to increase popularity. These included Trapeze, starring Tony Curtis, The Rainmaker with Katherine Hepburn, Run Silent, Run Deep with Clark Gable, and Kirk Douglas in Gunfight At The O.K. Corral, the latter becoming a lifelong friend of Lancaster’s. The high point of Burt Lancaster’s career was the 1953 adaptation of James Jones’ book, From Here To Eternity, in which he starred as Sergeant Milt Warden, opposite Deborah Kerr.

In 1960, Burt’s production company folded, but this was also the year in which Lancaster appeared as Elmer Gantry, thought by many to be the actor’s signature role.

Burt Lancaster continued to act throughout the 1970s and 1980s in films such as The Island Of Dr. Moreau, Local Hero and Field Of Dreams, as well as doing some work for TV. In 1982 Lancaster underwent successful open-heart surgery and continued acting, but a massive stroke in 1990 led to him withdrawing from the public eye. He died from a heart attack in 1994.

His performance as J.J. Hunsecker in Sweet Smell of Success (1957) is ranked #61 on Premiere Magazine's 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time. He was voted the 39th Greatest Movie Star of all time by Entertainment Weekly.

The Killers
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Brute Force
BruteForce1947BurtLancaster.jpg


Sorry, Wrong Number
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The Crimson Pirate
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From Here to Eternity
burtlancastereternity.jpg

Burt-Lancaster-Deborah_Kerr.jpg


Trapeze
trapeze-burtlancastermed.jpg


The Rainmaker
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The Sweet Smell of Success
sweet-smell-of-success-curtis-lanca.gif

sweetsmellBurt-Lancaster-Posters.jpg


Elmer Gantry
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The Birdman of Alcatraz
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The Leopard
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The Train
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The Swimmer
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Airport
airport_w434_h_q80.jpg


Atlantic City
atlanticcity2_w434_h_q80.jpg


Field of Dreams
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Publicity shots
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174675Burt-Lancaster-Posters.jpg

burtlancaster.jpg
 
Thumbs up for Burt!

Burt Lancaster was IMO alot like Bette Davis - he wasn't afraid of playing parts that cast him as a villain or as an unsavory character, and I liked that about him. One of his best films, IMO, was Sweet Smell of Success, and he plays just a GHASTLY excuse for a human being character in that film.

Other favorite films of mine are From Here to Eternity (although he REALLY had to share the male spotlight in that one with Montgomery Clift and Frank Sinatra, the latter of whom won an Oscar for his role in the film), Run Silent, Run Deep (also had to share the spotlight - this time with Clark Gable), The Train, Airport, and Vera Cruz, in which he co-starred with my favorite movie star of all time, Gary Cooper.

I heard that he was a perfectionist and fairly difficult to work with...but there is no gettin' around it - he put out quality work.
 
Yes, some on the basis of his skills...looks are rugged. While they are nice, not totally my cuppa,

Do love his skills very much.
 
If anyone can find a decent picture of him in Local Hero, I'd be much obliged.

I think the very first thing I ever saw him in was The Rainmaker. That was the perfect part for him--part showman, part little boy, part poet, part conman. Burt really had a presence, an energy, onscreen, even when he was just standing still. Then I saw him Trapeze. Whoa, Mama!

I also love his voice--the clipped, Northeastern accent, the perfect pronunciation of each letter. It was a voice that definitely got your attention.
 
^ Well, if you like part showman/part conman, then if you've not yet seen Elmer Gantry, you need to do so. Not my personal favorite movie as it hits a bit close to home here down south...but he is spectacular in the role...and it is a good movie.
 
I'm voting Yes. I found him much more attractive in his middle years than his youth, actually. Also, he's in Field of Dreams. That alone warrants a thumbs up. :)
 
I went back and forth between sideways and thumbs up. I decided on thumbs up.

I don't think he was the most gorgeous guy ever but he was definitely ruggedly sexy and was a great actor. We don't have enough of that kind of actor anymore. Sad that now, we have so many pretty boys that couldn't act to save their lives.
 
I don't want to vote. I think the only thing I know I've seen him in is Field of Dreams, and I don't remember him in it at all - I barely remember the movie. He's not terribly attractive to me just going by the pictures, but he gives an air of having more behind his eyes than what you can get on the surface.

Funny how he's such a film icon, and I've never really noticed him.
 
Automatic Thumbs Up to anybody who runs away to join the circus. :bolian:

I'd consider his signature role to be in From Here To Eternity. He's Hunk-a-licious. :D
 
That kiss on the beach is so iconic now that's it's almost hard to just see it in context of the film.
 
^ Heh. I am working at home but had Elmer Gantry on in the backgroud (TCM is always on in my house).

As soon as it came on I thought of this thread and wondered if anyone else would catch it. :lol:


And by the way, From Here to Eternity is airing on Saturday (2/21) at 8 pm eastern. :)

The Rainmaker (3/3/09 - 8pm) and Run Silent, Run Deep (3/6/09 - 8 pm) are also coming up on TCM's schedule. Other films scheduled later in March, but that's what's coming up in the more near term.
 
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That beach scene in From Here To Eternity is definitely one of the all-time iconic images in movie history.
 
Sideways. He never did anything for me but he's certainly not a turn-off either.

Sad that now, we have so many pretty boys that couldn't act to save their lives.
Amen to that. It really does seem to be all about looks rather than whether or not someone can actually act - for both genders.
 
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