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Thursday 30 September 2010

Hollywood Film Star Tony Curtis dies at 85


Hollywood star Tony Curtis has died of a cardiac arrest at his US home in Nevada aged 85.




The Oscar-nominated actor, who starred in Some Like it Hot opposite Marilyn Monroe, passed away peacefully in bed, a family spokesman said.



The star received an Oscar nod in 1959 for The Defiant Ones, in which he starred with Sidney Poitier.




His career spanned six decades and he made more than 120 films including Trapeze, Spartacus and
The Vikings.


Clark County coroner Mike Murphy told the Associated Press that the actor died at 2125 local time on Wednesday.



Born Bernard Schwartz on 3 June 1925 in New York, the actor served in World War II before taking on the name Tony Curtis when he began his film career in 1949.



'A fine actor'



He began his career as a heart-throb, but became a respected actor after starring in more substantial roles, starting in 1957 with harrowing showbusiness tale Sweet Smell of Success.

Tony Curtis Jerry Lewis - Boeing Boeing (1965)





He went on to appear in The Defiant Ones as an escaped racist convict handcuffed to a black escapee.





Tony Curtis was married to actress Janet Leigh, with whom he had actress daughter Jamie Lee Curtis But he became best known for his role in Billy Wilder's acclaimed comedy Some Like It Hot, where he donned women's clothing.



After his star faded in the late 1960s, Curtis shifted to lesser roles and fell into drug and alcohol addiction.



In the 1970s he turned to television, starring in a number of TV series including The Persuaders! opposite Sir Roger Moore, and Michael Mann's Vegas.

Tony Curtis and Sir Roger Moore are The Persuaders




Sir Roger led the tributes to the actor, calling him "a fine actor".



"We had a lot of laughs together for about 15 months, working together every day. He was great fun to work with, a great sense of humour and wonderful ad libs. We had the best of times."



'Wonderfully indiscreet'



Sir Michael Parkinson, who interviewed Curtis several times, said his performance in Some Like It Hot would live forever.



"Some Like It Hot is one of the greatest comedies of all time," he said.



"Billy Wilder, did not suffer fools so for Tony Curtis to work with him and make that film shows just how good he was. He was an extraordinary man.



"Hollywood tried to make him into a sex symbol in the 1950s and 1960s but he was his own man. He was a great chatshow guest and was wonderfully indiscreet but he was very bright and did not take himself too seriously," he added.



After recovering from addiction in the early 1980s, he later became a painter whose canvasses sold for as much as $20,000 (£12,600).



The actor was married six times, including to Psycho star Janet Leigh, with whom he had two children including daughter and actress Jamie Lee Curtis.



He is survived by his wife, Jill Vandenberg Curtis, and six children

Tony Curtis Interview



Batmobile for £100,000 ( $149,999 )

The original Batmobile from the 1960s TV series starring Adam West is still the ultimate screen car for an entire generation of caped crusader fans. Now anybody with a spare $149,999 (£95,000) can buy one.




American company Fiberglass Freaks is producing officially licensed, road-legal 1966 Batmobiles. And yes, the flamethrower works.



Each car takes six months to build and features an array of working gadgets, including a red flashing beacon, a radar screen called 'Detect-a-scope', a retractable, gold-coloured 'Batbeam' and a dashboard DVD player.



The flamethrower in the original Batmobile was the result of the car's turbine engine, but the replica uses a propane tank - mounted in the boot - to create the same effect.




The astonishing car is the brainchild of Fiberglass Freaks founder Mark Racop. He decided he wanted to build a Batmobile at two years old.



"I fell in love the show, fell in love with the action, the color, the music - everything. But the best feature was the Batmobile, speeding out of the Batcave," he said.



The Lincoln Futura on which the Batmobile is based was never actually put into production, but after finding a body shell on eBay in 2004, Racop had the basis of his replica.



The chassis and running gear come from a Lincoln Town Car, onto which a fibreglass body is placed. The licence from D.C. Comics limits the company to making just eight per year, which renders it one of the world's most exclusive production cars.



Racop says that buyers are generally in their forties and fifties and fans of the original show - some drive their cars every day. "Wealth seems to breed that eccentricity. This was their childhood dream car, just as it was for me," he commented.

Mark Nichol