Right Thinking From The Left Coast
The price of anything is the amount of life you exchange for it - Henry David Thoreau

And The Village Wept

Two icons have left us. First, Number Six.

Patrick McGoohan, an actor who created and starred in the cult classic TV show “The Prisoner,” died Tuesday in Los Angeles after a short illness. He was 80.

His son-in-law, film producer Cleve Landsberg, announced the news Wednesday.

McGoohan starred in the 1960s CBS series “Secret Agent,” and won two Emmys for his guest appearances on the detective drama “Columbo.” Most recently he appeared as King Edward Longshanks in the 1995 Mel Gibson Academy Award-winning film “Braveheart.”

But he was most famous as the character known only as Number Six in “The Prisoner,” a 1968 British series about a spy who resigns from the intelligence service, only to be abducted and held captive in a mysterious haven known as The Village. There his overseers strip him of his identity in their attempts to glean information, while thwarting his attempts to escape.

Prior to “The Prisoner,” McGoohan starred in “Secret Agent” (also known as “Danger Man"), which debuted in 1964, and whose memorable theme song seemed to speak of the hazards facing the characters in both series ("They’ve given you a number, and taken away your name").

McGoohan’s agent, Sharif Ali, said Wednesday that the actor was still active in Hollywood, with two offers for wide-release films on the table when he died. “The man was just cool,” Ali said. “It was an honor to have him here and work with him. ... He was one of those actors, a real actor. He didn’t have a lie.”

McGoohan had a gift for bringing moral ambiguity to the characters he played. He also wrote and directed most of The Prisoner episodes. He was also in an underrated movie from the Sixties, the Cold War drama Ice Station Zebra. But his portrayal of the unnamed Prisoner was one of the definitive statements on free will and the individual who never gives in. And now, too, Mr. Roarke, or, if you prefer, Kahn Noonian Singh:

Ricardo Montalban, the suave leading man who was one of the first Mexican-born actors to make it big in Hollywood and who was best known for his role as Mr. Roarke on TV’s “Fantasy Island,” has died. He was 88.

Montalban died Wednesday morning at his Los Angeles home of complications related to old age, said his son-in-law, Gilbert Smith.

Within the entertainment industry, Montalban was widely respected for his efforts to create opportunities for Latinos, although he and others believed that his activism hurt his career. In 1970, he founded the nonprofit Nosotros Foundation to improve the image and increase employment of Latinos in Hollywood.

“He paved the way for being outspoken about the images and roles that Latinos were playing in movies,” said Luis Reyes, co-author of “Hispanics in Hollywood” (2000).

On Wednesday, actor Edward James Olmos called Montalban “one of the true giants of arts and culture.”

“He was a stellar artist and a consummate person and performer with a tremendous understanding of culture . . . and the ability to express it in his work,” Olmos told The Times.

Montalban will, of course, be remembered mostly for Trek and Fantasy Island (as well as The Naked Gun) but whatever role he took, he was always smooth. R.I.P. to both.

Posted by West Virginia Rebel on 01/14/09 at 11:30 PM (Discuss this in the forums)

Comments


Posted by Hal_10000 on 01/15/09 at 06:26 AM from United States

Wherever Montalban is, I’m sure it’s got corinthian leather.

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