Sunday, September 9, 2018

Obituary Passage: Remembering Burt Reynolds was 82.

Burt Reynolds Movies

The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, 1982

Raised in the Sunshine State, Reynolds was a rising football star at Florida State University until injuries from a car crash led him to acting instead. He found work on television starting in the late 1950s, and for a time had a continuing role on the TV western "Gunsmoke."

By the late '70s, Burt Reynolds was the highest-grossing star in Hollywood. But it wasn't all a smooth and untroubled ride.
Reynolds' 1972 decision to pose nude for Cosmopolitan magazine won him plenty of notice, but undercut his reputation as a serious actor. "It was really stupid," he once said. "I don't know what I was thinking."
Reynolds was also known for some of the plum roles he let get away, including the "Terms of Endearment" lead that went to Jack Nicholson, and a one-time chance to play James Bond.
A string of bad movies and health problems put his career in eclipse for many years, but he came back strong in the 1997 film "Boogie Nights":
lthough his performance won him an Academy Award nomination, the Oscar itself was denied him.
Along with Sally Field, Burt Reynolds was long and prominently linked romantically with Dinah Shore, and his marriage to, and divorce from, Loni Anderson was the stuff of tabloid headlines.
Still, through all the ups-and-downs, Reynolds projected his easy-going mischievous persona virtually right up to the very end.
Burt Reynolds was 82.