View Full Version : Katherine Hepburn dead at 96.
Tom Samborski
06-29-2003, 05:33 PM
http://www.cnn.com
No details yet, but in the red breaking news bar, CNN has confirmed that Hepburn had died.
The Other
06-29-2003, 05:46 PM
I just saw on the news! My grandmother told me cause she was just watching the news. My heart just sank! So sad.
Nate6
06-29-2003, 05:46 PM
Barring the chance that this is yet another one of CNN's infamous little slip-ups announcing the death of star before the star has actually died, this is awful, awful news. Hepburn was one of the best actresses in film history, and the fact that she lived to be 96 is impressive. RIP Ms. Hepburn, you'll certainly be remembered.
Nate6
06-29-2003, 05:49 PM
Here's the full story from CNN.com (http://www.cnn.com) :
Legendary actress Katharine Hepburn dies
By Jamie Allen, CNN
(CNN) -- Screen and stage legend Katharine Hepburn has died, according to Old Saybrook, Connecticut police. She was 96.
Hepburn's film career spanned seven decades, and she was perhaps the most decorated actor, male or female, in the industry. She won more Academy Awards for lead roles (four) than anyone -- and her 12 nominations in the best actress category also was a record.
In her work, she transformed herself from the key actress of a generation into thespian royalty, an uncontested icon of live theater and cinematic art. In private life, her 25-year love affair with actor Spencer Tracy is the stuff of Hollywood legend, and so are her bouts with Hollywood itself.
But her performances in some of the century's top films are what stand out as enduring evidence of her power and gifts. The American Film Institute ranked Hepburn the top female star in its "50 Greatest Movie Legends," one of a handful of AFI picks that ruffled few feathers.
"I'm a personality as well as an actress," Hepburn once said. "Show me an actress who isn't a personality, and you'll show me a woman who isn't a star."
An unconventional star
Katharine Houghton Hepburn was born May 12, 1907, in Hartford, Connecticut. She was the second of six children. Her father was a doctor, and her mother was a suffragette -- an influential combination that perhaps brought out the brazen, outspoken personality that distinguished the actress as "a personality."
Hepburn said she was always fascinated with acting. As a youngster, she used to take on odd jobs to pay for tickets to the latest silent films. Her first acting experience can be traced to an amateur production at age 12.
She attended college at Bryn Mawr, at first struggling with academics but then finding her calling in the theater. After college, she toured the East Coast with a stock company, eventually making a name for herself in the Broadway hit "The Warrior's Husband."
By the early 1930s, Hollywood came calling. But in true Hepburn fashion -- which would later both hurt and embellish her career -- she had the audacity to turn down her first contract offer from Paramount Pictures, then make outlandish salary demands when approached by RKO Pictures.
She told the studio she wanted $1,500 per week for her work. After seeing her screen test for "A Bill of Divorcement" (1932), the studio agreed to her demands, and Hepburn's film career was launched opposite that of screen legend John Barrymore.
The following year, she starred as Eva Lovelace in "Morning Glory." Her characterization of a young woman trying to succeed in New York won Hepburn her first Oscar for best actress.
Also in 1933, she starred as Jo in the screen adaptation of the Louisa May Alcott classic "Little Women"; it was a box-office record breaker. In 1935, Hepburn wowed audiences again, in the title role of "Alice Adams," which earned her a second Oscar nomination. (Bette Davis won that year for "Dangerous.")
The 1938 screwball comedy "Bringing Up Baby" was a popular pick among critics and audiences. But some observers at the time said it came too late to save Hepburn's career, which was in decline.
'Box office poison'
It seems that Hepburn's unconventional personality off-screen was affecting audience perspective. Always known as the straightforward, anti-Hollywood New Englander, Hepburn refused to play the celebrity game.
She defied the era's stereotypes for actresses, dressing unfashionably with no makeup and turning down interviews and autograph requests. Soon she'd attracted the "difficult to work with" label -- and audiences responded by staying away from her movies.
Perhaps the low point in Hepburn's career came during the period when she was a contender for Scarlett O'Hara in "Gone With the Wind." She lost out to a young British actress named Vivien Leigh. It was around this time that an exhibitor publication branded her "box office poison."
But Hepburn wasn't going quietly. "Not everyone is lucky enough to understand how delicious it is to suffer," the actress once said.
Hepburn returned to Broadway in 1938 in Philip Barry's "The Philadelphia Story." She played Tracy Lord, a role Barry wrote for her. She felt so strongly for the project that she purchased the screen rights. After becoming a Broadway hit, the film, starring Hepburn, James Stewart and Cary Grant, came out in 1940, breaking all box-office records.
Hepburn, meanwhile, was nominated for a best actress Oscar. In her early 30s, she was at the top of her game. But defining moments in her career were still around the corner.
One of them came in 1942 when she co-starred with Tracy in "Woman of the Year." The romantic comedy about a sports reporter who wins the heart of a world-famous political commentator was a hit and earned Hepburn another Oscar nomination.
Behind the scenes, she and Tracy fell in love. The relationship, like Hepburn's life, defied celebrity convention -- the pair never married.(Tracy, a devout Catholic, had been married to another woman since 1928 and remained so until his death), but the love affair lasted until Tracy died in 1967.
Dream team on- and off-screen
Hepburn and Tracy, who went on to film nine movies together, were the yin and yang of middle-century moviemaking. From different backgrounds, they complemented each other and brought out the other's strengths. To this day, they are one of the most popular screen teams of all time, a benchmark to which other movie couples are inevitably compared.
The actress, as always, was honest about her feelings for men such as Tracy.
"I often wonder whether men and women really suit each other," she once said. "Perhaps they should live next door and just visit now and then."
On another occasion, she said, "I've been loved, and I've been in love. There's a big difference."
After "Woman of the Year," Hepburn worked steadily through the 1940s, including the 1949 comedy "Adam's Rib," also with Tracy.
A mark of a great actress is her ability to switch parts to match her age, and Hepburn did just that with her next acclaimed film. In "The African Queen" (1951), she starred opposite Humphrey Bogart -- by now, a legend in his own right -- as a straight-laced World War I missionary who convinces Bogart's gin-swilling riverboat captain to use his boat to attack a German ship.
It was another Oscar-nominated performance for Hepburn; Bogart won the best actor Oscar.
Hepburn was again nominated for Oscars for "Summertime" (1955), "The Rainmaker" (1956), "Suddenly, Last Summer" (1959) and "Long Day's Journey Into Night" (1962).
An Oscar record breaker
But she didn't win an Academy Award again until she returned to the screen with Tracy in "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" (1967). The acting team played a couple who deals with their daughter's decision to marry a black man, played by Sidney Poitier.
For Tracy, it was his final role. After battling his ailing health for years, he passed away a few weeks after the movie completed shooting.
Hepburn followed this Oscar-winning role with her portrayal of Eleanor of Aquitaine in "The Lion in Winter" (1968), winning her third Oscar. The story of Henry II details the king's deliberations over his successor on a fateful Christmas Eve.
In 1969, Hepburn returned to Broadway in the musical "Coco." Years of success apparently had not mellowed her; during one performance, she dropped out of character to chastise an audience member for using flash photography.
The 1970s saw Hepburn delve into television. She won an Emmy in 1975 for her lead role in "Love Among the Ruins." She was nominated for four Emmys in her acting career.
Hepburn continued to redefine herself with age. Suffering from a progressive neurological disease, which caused uncontrollable shaking, she starred in 1981's "On Golden Pond" as the devoted wife of an aging professor played by Henry Fonda. Both won Oscars for their roles.
Hepburn last appeared in a major motion picture in 1994's "Love Affair," which starred Warren Beatty and Annette Bening. Her minor role as a grand-aunt received high praise.
She once told a reporter that she lived her life on her own terms.
"I don't regret anything I've ever done," she said, "as long as I enjoyed it at the time."
A.J. Hakari
06-29-2003, 05:58 PM
R.I.P.
:(
One of the last legends of the screen left, she will be missed.
Jim H
06-29-2003, 07:02 PM
This reminded me, I've been meaning to see more of her films. I've only seen a few of her many films, unfortunately.
On my "should of seen already" list is On Golden Pond, The Lion in Winter, and the African Queen, plus a few others.
I'll be brief, about one little nagging thing... I don't really consider her death a tragedy, incredibly sad, or awful. She was extremely old, just a few short of a hundred, an age few live to, had one of the most celebrated careers in history, and apparently died relatively painlessly.
We should all be so fortunate, and from what I've heard of her as a person, she'd rather we didn't grieve too much over her.
Hannibal21
06-29-2003, 07:06 PM
:( :( :(
I can't even express my sadness enough. One of the greatest actresses ever lived who has given outstanding performances in every movie, she has always been one of my idols and she will be missed by everyone. But I am glad she lived to be 96; RIP Miss Hepburn and may the lord be with you.
*sniff*
:(
El Bracamonti
06-29-2003, 07:19 PM
r.i.p.
edonline
06-29-2003, 08:32 PM
I loved her in The African Queen, Bringing Up Baby and The Philadelphia Story, which proved that the could do comedy as well as drama. With the deaths of such actors as Gregory Peck and Katherine, it often makes me wonder where are the actors of their caliber in Hollywood today. There may be those who can pull in huge money at the box office or who can get blockbusters made for themselves, but where is the Art, where is the craftsmenship. RIP Kate, thanks for all of the wonderful films.
Jon Lyrik
06-29-2003, 09:14 PM
Good-bye, Ms. Hepburn. You'll be missed.
Deckard
06-29-2003, 09:34 PM
My god, One of my favourite actreses of all time.
A sad day indeed. This is a cinematic tragedy...to many greats dissappearing .
platanero79
06-29-2003, 10:23 PM
damn sorry to hear that Katherine Hepburn die I never watch any of her films yet but well try to soon R.I.P and to Gregory Peck as well he is in one of my favourite film To Kill a Mockingbird
Tommy Doyle
06-29-2003, 11:29 PM
Utterly devastating...
Truly one of the finest, most gifted actors to ever walk the earth.
She brought so much to so many (including me) through her films and her performances, more so than perhaps any other actor ever. Truly one of the remaining great screen legends... I'll admit, I cried when I heard the news, it's shaken me up. It's so sad...
R.I.P. Miss Katharine Hepburn... you will forever be remembered as one of the greats...
:( :(
bowieee
06-29-2003, 11:53 PM
Sad new indeed. But she definetly left her mark in the halls of film history.
RIP.
flowrchild
06-30-2003, 12:36 AM
Great actress. Had a great life, great career, great attitude. Could I have said 'great' a few more times in this post?
arto_j
06-30-2003, 06:01 AM
R.I.P
One of the true legends, she was one of the greatest ever.
James Logan
06-30-2003, 07:03 AM
Damn, saw this on the news just fifteen minutes ago...She was one of my favorite actresses. She was when of the last "old school" actresses left, beautiful, classy, great, a thousand times better than the bimbos we got today. She'll be missed.
R.I.P Ma'am...
Moviefan1234
06-30-2003, 08:32 AM
My dad told me last night and instantly sadness swept over me. Such a sad day. :( We can only be glad she lived as long and as happy as she did. My thoughts and prayers are with her family members and friends.
Puck Bond
06-30-2003, 09:23 AM
I was very saddened when I heard this on the news yesterday. One of the greatest actresses of all time...with a long and illustrious career. The Philadelphia Story will always be my favorite film and performance of hers.
:(Goodbye "Red"...R.I.P. Katherine Hepburn, you will be missed:(
quoth_the_raven
06-30-2003, 10:32 AM
Legendary...
RIP
BadCoverVersion
06-30-2003, 02:05 PM
I bow down to the woman...
One of the true greats.
Goodbye Katherine...R.I.P.
Jerk Shapiro
06-30-2003, 02:48 PM
First Mr. Peck, now Ms. Hepburn. Two equally great screen legends.
R.I.P Ms. Hepburn...:(
Succubus
06-30-2003, 03:05 PM
A true legend who will live on in cinematic history as one of the real greats.
RIP Ms Hepburn.
electriclite
06-30-2003, 03:15 PM
Originally posted by flowrchild
Great actress. Had a great life, great career, great attitude. Could I have said 'great' a few more times in this post?
That's why they called her "Katherine the Great".
What can be said about a woman who had more balls then all the men of her era? Mavericks like her are a rare gift, and thankfully she was given a long enough time to make sure we knew it.
Her work is done, time for her true "retirement".
Sweet dreams hon.
Jim H
06-30-2003, 03:39 PM
"The Great" title was appropriate - she was a direct line descendant of a King of England. The woman she plays in the Lion in Winter is one of her ancestors.
FeverDog420
06-30-2003, 03:52 PM
Y'know, if you all want to give Ms. Hepburn the proper respect, you could start by spelling her name correctly. It's "Katharine," not "Katherine."
Ren Hoek
06-30-2003, 08:51 PM
It's sad to see another great screen legend go. I truly hope she had a fulfilled life...
R.I.P. Madame Hepburn
:(
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