Oscar-winning actor Philip Seymour Hoffman has passed away
at the age of 46.
Thirteen years before winning the Oscar for Best Actor for
his transformative performance in CAPOTE (2005), Philip Seymour Hoffman was
making early impressions for his work in the acclaimed SCENT OF A WOMAN (1992),
and later as a tornado-chaser in TWISTER (1996). In 1997 he would make even
bigger impressions in BOOGIE NIGHTS, the first of four collaborations with
director Paul Thomas Anderson which would include MAGNOLIA (1999), PUNCH-DRUNK
LOVE (2002), and THE MASTER (2012), for which he would earn an Oscar nomination
for Best Supporting Actor.
His list of notable performances includes THE BIG LEBOWSKI
(1998), THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY (1999), ALMOST FAMOUS (2000), RED DRAGON
(2002), COLD MOUNTAIN (2003), MISSION IMPOSSIBLE III (2006), BEFORE THE DEVIL
KNOWS YOU’RE DEAD (2007), THE SAVAGES (2007), CHARLIE WILSON’S WAR (2007),
SYNECDOCHE, NEW YORK (2008), DOUBT (2008), PIRATE RADIO (2009), MONEYBALL
(2011), THE IDES OF MARCH (2011), and A
LATE QUARTET (2012).
Off the silver screen, he was also an acclaimed theater
actor and director, earning three Tony Award nominations. He was a strong
supporter of local theatres in New York City.
*
This Blogger is gutted. Philip Seymour Hoffman was one of
the most consistent pillars of the film world; every year when there was a good
film, he was there. When awards season rolled around, he was always there. We
may have become spoiled by just how good he was at his craft, for we were
always used to him being there and being great. Every death is sad, but this
one feels like a robbery; for every robbery leaves an empty space.
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