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June 12, 2014

Actress and Activist Ruby Dee Dead at 91

Filed under: Obit — Tags: , , , , — Tom Stockman @ 3:22 pm

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Now she can join her long-time husband and acting partner Ossie Davis. Ruby Dee was Mother Sister, the old black woman who observes the neighborhood goings-ons from the window of her tenement in Spike Lee’s DO THE RIGHT THING in 1990. In 1950 she played the wife of Jackie Robinson opposite the ball player himself in THE JACKIE ROBINSON STORY. Ruby Dee’s seven-decade career included triumphs and awards on stage, screen, print, and in the arena of civil rights. Her many movie credits credits included A RAISIN IN THE SUN (1961), BUCK AND THE PREACHER (1972),and AMERICAN GANGSTER (2007) for which she received an Oscar nom for Best Supporting Actress. Ruby Dee died today 91.

RUBYDEE

SAG-AFTRA Mourns the Loss of SAG Life Achievement Award Recipient Ruby Dee in this statement:

SAG-AFTRA today released the following statement on the death of actor, activist and SAG Life Achievement recipient Ruby Dee:

SAG-AFTRA mourns the loss of SAG Life Achievement Award recipient Ruby Dee, who died yesterday at the age of 91. The multitalented Dee distinguished herself as an actor, writer and activist and received the Life Achievement Award in 2000 with husband Ossie Davis. They were only the second husband-and-wife team to win the award, the other being Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward in 1985. Dee was predeceased by Davis in 2005.

As she accepted the award, Dee spoke of the power of the acting profession.

“We are artists also, and workers above all. We are image-makers,” She said. “Why can’t we image-makers become peacemakers too? Why cannot we, in such a time as this, use all the magic of our vaunted powers to lift the pistol from the schoolboy’s backpack and replace it with bright images of peace, with images of hope and faith in humankind? Of life lit by some large vision of goodness and beauty and truth?”

“Ruby Dee was truly one of a kind. She was a woman who believed deeply in fairness, a conviction that motivated her lifelong efforts to advance civil rights,” said SAG-AFTRA President Ken Howard. “The acting community — and the world — is a poorer place for her loss.”

From Variety:

Ruby Dee, best known for her role in 1961’s “A Raisin in the Sun” and latterly for her Oscar-nominated turn as Denzel Washington’s mother in 2007’s “American Gangster,” died Wednesday in New York. She was 91.

Dee’s Oscar nomination in 2008 for her performance as the feisty mother of a Harlem druglord played by Washington in Ridley Scott’s “American Gangster” was particularly impressive because the actress made an impression on the Motion Picture Academy with only 10 minutes of screen time. She won a SAG Award for the same performance.

Dee also won an Emmy in 1991 for her performance in the “Hallmark Hall of Fame” movie “Decoration Day.”

She and her husband, Ossie Davis, who often performed together, were among the first generation of African-American actors, led by Sidney Poitier, afforded the opportunity for significant, dignified dramatic roles in films, onstage and on television…….

Read the rest HERE

http://variety.com/2014/film/news/oscar-nominated-actress-ruby-dee-dies-at-91-1201219148/

November 3, 2007

Review: ‘American Gangster’

Zac:

Keys to a great movie? Ridley Scott, check. Denzel Washington, check. Russell Crowe, check. Larger than life and wouldn’t believe it if it wasn’t true story, check. Now all of these are thrown into one movie, and what comes out is absolutely fantastic. I do not have a single complaint about this movie and can not recommend to you enough to see it. But it was missing just that little something to make it special and absolutely amazing.
Ridley Scott is usually always solid as a director and occasionally pumps out pristine pieces of work like this film. The movie moves right along never slowing down and never losing our interest. It looks great and everyone turns in top notch performances but everyone involved here has done something better, it’s no one’s best work, and maybe that’s what holds it back in the end.
Denzel is Denzel and that equals a badass as Frank Lucas. The opening scene of the movie sets up Frank Lucas for the rest of the movie; he is not someone to be trifled with and will do anything that he needs to. The rise of Frank Lucas is incredible and amazing, especially in the time and era that he did it in, and Denzel does a perfect job of selling us on the fact that he is capable of doing everything that he does. The story of heroin smuggling and drug selling has been done before, but this definitely at the top of the list for those types of epics.
Russell Crowe plays Richie Roberts, the honest cop that is frowned upon by his peers for being just that, honest. Crowe has more to do here in this movie and isn’t just the intimidating bad ass that Denzel is most of the time. Roberts has an impending custody battle, friendship with gangsters, and the New Jersey Bar Exam to deal with and Crowe plays the part magnificently as he shows us how he deals with juggling it all. Crowe has the deepest role in the film, which really never cuts that deep into the characters lives as there is a lot of good story to tell, so good we can forgive for the lack of character depth.
The supporting cast is great here as well with no one getting any significant screen time over one another. This is pretty much a two horse race with every scene dealing with either Roberts or Lucas, as it should be.
Another minor complaint with the movie is the weak soundtrack. While meaning nothing to most, I think it could have really added something to the movie with some great music choices, ala what Scorsese, Tarantino, and Wes Anderson bring to their movies with their choices.
Any minor gripes aside, this is the movie to see this winter that pretty much anyone can enjoy. If you like any of the big three involved in this movie, and if you don’t you don’t like movies, than you have no reason to not go see this movie.

[rating: 4.5/5]

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