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Galaxia
03-27-2002, 03:01 PM
http://movies.yahoo.com/news/ap/20020327/101726673200.html


Actor Dudley Moore, who became an unlikely Hollywood heart-throb portraying a cuddly pipsqueak whose charm melted hearts in "10" and "Arthur," died Wednesday at his home in New Jersey, a spokeswoman said. He was 66.

Moore died at 11 a.m. EST, said publicist Michelle Bega in Los Angeles. The British-born actor died of pneumonia as a complication of progressive supranuclear palsy, she said.

There was more than a touch of autobiography in "10," the 1979 film in which Moore played a musician determined to marry a perfect woman. But the happy ending eluded him in real life. Four marriages ended in divorce.

He confessed to being driven by feelings of inferiority about his working-class origins in Dagenham, east London, and because of his height of five feet, 2 1/2 inches. In later life he also spoke of the pain of being rejected by his mother because he was born with a deformed left foot.

Comedians, he said in an interview with Newsday in 1980, are often driven by such feelings. "I certainly did feel inferior. Because of class. Because of strength. Because of height. ... I guess if I'd been able to hit somebody in the nose, I wouldn't have been a comic."

Music was Moore's entree into public performance, first as a chorister and organist in his parish church in Dagenham, near London, and then in 1960 as a young Oxford graduate recruited for the hit four-man comedy review "Beyond the Fringe."

"Fringe," which played two years in London and then moved to Broadway, was perhaps the greatest assembly of young comic talent in Britain in this century. Moore was teamed with Alan Bennett, later a successful playwright; Jonathan Miller, the cerebral opera producer and medical doctor, and Peter Cook, a surreal comic talent and a famously dissipated talent.

Moore's whimsical sense of humor fitted oddly with the more savage satirical style of his partners. "Apart from his musical contributions to the show," Cook wrote in Esquire in 1974, "Dudley's suggestions were treated with benign contempt by the rest of us."

One of Moore's celebrated contributions to the show was his impersonation of the pianist Dame Myra Hess, playing a bombastic version of "Colonel Bogey's March" which he couldn't seem to end.

Moore and Cook formed a fast friendship and later teamed on television as Dud and Pete on "Not Only ... but Also," a sketch comedy series. They also plumbed the depths of taste and decency in a series of recordings as "Derek and Clive."

Cook and Moore made their screen debuts in "The Wrong Box" in 1966, and followed up the next year with another success, "Bedazzled."

Moore wrote, starred and composed the score for his next film, "30 is a Dangerous Age," in 1968.

Moore and Cook teamed again in 1971 for a comedy review titled "Beyond the Fridge," which was a success in London and a smash on Broadway in the 1973-74 season, with the pair winning a special Tony award for their "unique contribution to the theater of comedy."

Cook returned to England but Moore settled in Southern California, where he met the director Blake Edwards in a therapy group. When George Segal walked out of Edwards' production of "10," the director turned to Moore.

The 1979 film, co-starring Bo Derek, established Moore as a Hollywood star. Two years later, he had another: "Arthur," playing a rich drunk who falls for Liza Minnelli.

That marked the peak of Moore's film career, though he made several more films including a sequel to "Arthur" in 1988.

Music remained part of Moore's life, both as a jazz pianist and as a parodist.

"I can't imagine not having music in my life, playing for myself or for other people. If I was asked, 'Which would you give up,' I'd have to say acting," he said in an interview with The Associated Press in 1988.

Moore married Suzy Kendall in 1958, Tuesday Weld in 1975, Brogan Lane in 1988 and Nicole Rothschild in 1994. He had a son, Patrick, by his second marriage and a son, Nicholas, by his fourth.

James
03-27-2002, 03:26 PM
A terribly sad way for a musician to go. Must confess I hated his movies, but his work with the late and great Peter Cook was priceless.

Regardless of his movie career - good or bad - his illness must have been crippling for such a musical genius as Mr Moore.

Calhoun07
03-27-2002, 03:54 PM
I loved Arthur beyond words. But other than that I never really watched any of his movie, tho his music was great. I knew he was unhappy in the latter stages of his life, as he gave up public appearances and such. Tragic really that he never got over things that happened in his childhood.

Trent Lane
03-27-2002, 04:10 PM
I never really watched his moives, but I knew of "10"- I think we've got the soundtrack on vinyl around here somewhere. I just remember the few times they joked about him on The Critic... like it was said before, not the best way to go, but he's in no pain now if that helps...

Lonestarr
03-27-2002, 07:15 PM
Haven't seen "Arthur" or "10", but I just loved Moore's narration for the American release of "The Adventures of Milo and Otis". He was like a kindly uncle reading a story to his charges. He will be missed.

I have seen "Bedazzled", however; it was terrific.

LightAngel
03-27-2002, 10:13 PM
I have fond memories of his roles in many of my favorite childhood movies. My favorite was his role as Patch in The Santa Clause Movie. He was the pefect elf! Many people will remember him as the narrator of Milo and Otis, another one of my favorites.

Elven Moon
03-27-2002, 11:19 PM
Originally posted by LightAngel
I have fond memories of his roles in many of my favorite childhood movies. My favorite was his role as Patch in The Santa Clause Movie. He was the pefect elf!

I think that's the only Moore movie I've seen, and what childhood christmas memories I get from watching it! I always cried at the part where Patch runs away, I don't know why :( I also saw him in a The Muppet Show episode I taped off Nick Jr. years ago. It made me sad to hear about his death. RIP.