|
Sydney Pollack, Hollywood Film Director, Is Dead at 73
By Robert Simonson
Sydney Pollack, a former stage actor who rose to direct a series of highly commercial and star-laden pictures in the 1970s and 1980, died May 27 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 73. Sydney Irwin Pollack was born on July 1, 1934, in Lafayette, IN, and raised in South Bend by David and Rebecca Pollock. His parents divorced when he was young and his mother, an alcoholic, died when he was 16. Following high school, he went to New York and enrolled at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theater, where he studied for two years under Sanford Meisner. He spent five more years as Meisner's assistant. His brother, Bernard, was a Broadway stage manager in the 1960s and 1970s, and worked as costume designer on many of Sydney's films. In 1955, he appeared on Broadway with Katharine Cornell in The Dark Is Light Enough. He also acted in other Off-Broadway dramas and on television, but, in the 1960s, acting on advice from Burt Lancaster, he began directing for television. In later years, he directed little, preferring to work as an actor ("Eye Wide Shut," "A Civil Action," "Michael Clayton") and producer ("Cold Mountain," "The Interpreter"). |
Send questions and comments to the Webmaster
Copyright © 2012 Playbill, Inc. All Rights Reserved.