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Showing Original Post only (View all)Actor Fred Ward dies. He had the right stuff in movies from 'Tremors' to 'The Player' [View all]
Source: NPR
Actor Fred Ward has died, according to his publicist, Ron Hofmann.
The star, who brought gentlemanly gruffness to films that included The Right Stuff, Tremors, Henry and June and The Player died Sunday, May 8 at the age of 79. No cause of death was given.
Ward brought reservoirs of tenderness to his tough guy roles, and plenty of street credibility. A former boxer, lumberjack and short-order cook who served in the U.S. Air Force, Ward went to acting school and got his start when he moved to Rome as a young man and worked as a mime, then a voice-over actor. That led to a few appearances in TV productions by Italian neorealist pioneer Roberto Rossellini, and then Hollywood. Ward made his U.S. movie debut as a convict in the Clint Eastwood movie Escape from Alcatraz in 1979.
"The unique thing about Fred Ward is that you never knew where he was going to pop up, so unpredictable were his career choices," Hofmann wrote in an email. "He could play such diverse characters as Remo Williams, a cop trained by Chiun, Master of Sinanju (Joel Grey) to become an unstoppable assassin in Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins, or Earl Bass, who, alongside Kevin Bacon, battle giant, worm-like monsters hungry for human flesh in 'cult' horror/comedy film, Tremors (1990), or a detective in the indie film Two Small Bodies (1993) directed by underground filmmaker Beth B., or a terrorist planning to blow up the Academy Awards in The Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult (1994), or the father of the lead character in Jennifer Lopez's revenge thriller Enough (2002)."
Read more: https://www.npr.org/2022/05/13/1098760992/actor-fred-ward-dies
Most people knew him best from Tremors, but his role as Gus Grissom in The Right Stuff was top notch excellent acting.
Portrayed Grissom as an almost tragic, anguished character whose flight--sandwiched between Alan Shepard and John Glenn's--suffered from lack of fanfare that was given to the others, and the sinking of his capsule at splashdown (which ultimately was determined not to have been his fault) cast a further shadow over the mission.
There's a scene between Grissom and his wife back at the hotel after his flight where he breaks down because people are unjustly blaming him for the loss of the capsule that always gets me every time. You can't help but feel for Grissom, and Fred Ward really nailed it.
Can't find that scene, but here's the splashdown scene:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?vJZvXdQxzLwg
RIP to a talented actor.