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Oscar-winner Jack Palance dies at 87
From Dan Whitcomb
LOS
ANGELES—Oscar-winning actor Jack Palance, one of Hollywood’s best-known
screen villains who personified evil as a cold-blooded gunslinger in the
classic western “Shane,” died on Friday at the age of 87, his spokesman
said.
Palance, who later won an Oscar for the comedy “City Slickers” and
famously brought down the house by performing one-armed push-ups on the
stage, died of natural causes, spokesman Dick Guttman said.
Though he had dozens of film and TV parts, Palance’s gaunt features,
raspy voice and squinty eyes were perfect for menacing roles and he
often played dangerous characters. He was nominated for Oscars as the
beady-eyed hired gun who is shot down by Alan Ladd’s title character in
“Shane” and for 1952’s “Sudden Fear,” in which he starred opposite Joan
Crawford as a man plotting to kill his wife.
Born in Pennsylvania in 1919, Palance was a professional boxer who
injured his throat in a fight, leaving him with his signature raspy
voice, before serving in World War Two. The son of Ukrainian immigrants,
his birth name was Vladimir Palahnuik, variously spelled as Palahniuk or
Palaniuk.
After the war Palance moved to New York and served as Marlon Brando’s
understudy for the classic Broadway production of “A Streetcar Named
Desire.” He made his screen debut in the 1950 Elia Kazan film “Panic in
the Streets.” “Shane,” with its beautiful cinematography of bleak
landscapes and themes of good versus evil, is considered one of
Hollywood’s greatest westerns.
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