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Christopher Reeve

Posted: Mon Oct 11, 2004 5:30 am
by Devil's Advocate
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/041011/325/f4b2e.html
Paralysed "Superman" actor Reeve dies

By Chris Michaud

NEW YORK (Reuters) - "Superman" actor Christopher Reeve, who became a committed campaigner for spinal cord research after being paralysed in a riding accident nine years ago, has died of heart failure, his publicist says.

Reeve, 52, went into a coma on Saturday when he suffered a heart attack during treatment for an infected pressure wound and died in Northern Westchester Hospital on Sunday afternoon without regaining consciousness, publicist Wesley Combs told reporters on Monday.

Reeve's wife Dana issued a statement thanking "the millions of fans around the world who have supported and loved my husband over the years."

Reeve, confined to a wheelchair since his riding accident in 1995, had in recent years used his celebrity status to mobilise funds and support for research into the treatment of spinal cord injuries.

Reeve's family asked that donations be made in his honour to the Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation, formed in 1999 to boost collaboration between experts working on the problem and to encourage new approaches.

An accomplished rider who owned several horses, Reeve suffered multiple injuries including two shattered neck vertebrae when he was thrown from his horse at an equestrian event in Commonwealth Park in Virginia.

Doctors initially predicted that he would never have any feeling or movement below his head. But his foundation's website, www.ChristopherReeve.org, said he had experienced a degree of recovery that his doctors considered "remarkable."

Reeve was a strong supporter of research using human stem cells, which his foundation described as having "enormous therapeutic utility." Whether federal funds should be spent on such research is a contentious issue in the U.S. presidential campaign.

BORN IN NEW YORK

Born on September 25, 1952, in New York City, Reeve attended the city's Julliard school and graduated from Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.

He began his acting career in summer stock and appeared on the television soap opera "Love of Life" while still in college.

Reeve debuted on Broadway in "A Matter of Gravity" in 1976, playing Katharine Hepburn's grandson, and later starred in Lanford Wilson's "Fifth of July," in which he portrayed embittered Kenneth Talley, a gay, crippled Vietnam War vet.

Despite his theatre credentials and work on television, Reeve is best known as the hero of the "Superman" films.

He was a virtual unknown when he was chosen from 200 candidates to become the big screen's incarnation of 1978's "Superman," in which he played fumbling Clark Kent who at will turns into the flying superhero.

In 1993 he appeared in the Merchant and Ivory hit "The Remains of the Day," which was filmed in the English countryside.

Even there, it was hard to shrug off his superhero image.

"It is very strange to walk into the House and Hound, some pub from the 15th century in the middle of Wiltshire someplace, then -- 'Aye, it's Superman, here he comes!'" he said in a 1993 interview on Cable News Network.

Earlier movies include "Gray Lady Down," "Somewhere in Time," "Switching Channels," "The Bostonians" and "Deathtrap."

Reeve and his wife Dana had one son, Will, now 12, and he had two children from a previous relationship -- Matthew, 25, and Alexandra, 21.
:(

Posted: Mon Oct 11, 2004 5:46 am
by rushlight
:cry: :cry: :cry: :cry: He was such a great Superman. I can't believe this happened.

Posted: Mon Oct 11, 2004 5:56 am
by Ogg
Very sad.

Posted: Mon Oct 11, 2004 7:58 am
by Walkinghairball
God speed big blue, God speed....RIP. :(

Posted: Mon Oct 11, 2004 9:34 am
by Slaine mac Roth
Its a very sad thing. Although I wasn't a massive fan of his acting (except for Superman), I had a hell of a lot of respect for the man. After his accident, he showed great strength of character, courage and dignity as, as such, set an example for us all.

Posted: Mon Oct 11, 2004 9:55 am
by Immortal for a Ltd Time
:sad7: :sad7: :sad7: :sad7: :sad7: :sad7:

Rest in peace.

:sad7: :sad7: :sad7: :sad7: :sad7: :sad7:

Posted: Mon Oct 11, 2004 10:15 am
by Immortal for a Ltd Time
Image

Such a brave and gracious and inspirational man....he will be missed...

Posted: Mon Oct 11, 2004 7:17 pm
by happysmilies007
SOOOO tragic..i read the RD article about him..he did show tremendous strength, he and his entire family. i'm so sorry he never had the chance to walk again, but i know he's probably doing a lot better than that where he is now.

carolynn :evil:

Posted: Tue Oct 12, 2004 6:37 am
by ElfDude
Slaine mac Roth wrote:Its a very sad thing. Although I wasn't a massive fan of his acting (except for Superman), I had a hell of a lot of respect for the man. After his accident, he showed great strength of character, courage and dignity as, as such, set an example for us all.
Very well put.

Posted: Tue Oct 12, 2004 8:37 am
by Soup4Rush
Slaine mac Roth wrote:Its a very sad thing. Although I wasn't a massive fan of his acting (except for Superman), I had a hell of a lot of respect for the man. After his accident, he showed great strength of character, courage and dignity as, as such, set an example for us all.
Somewhere in Time was a great movie.

Posted: Tue Oct 12, 2004 12:36 pm
by schuette
he was good at superman....I always enjoyed those movies...

it was saying something on the news....I need to admit I didn't really listen to it but it was saying something about how the American elections could be affected by his death....

Posted: Tue Oct 12, 2004 5:16 pm
by ElfDude
schuette wrote: it was saying something on the news....I need to admit I didn't really listen to it but it was saying something about how the American elections could be affected by his death....
I doubt the election will really be affected, but the Kerry campaign is trying to politicize this. Yesterday John Edwards was in Iowa making a speech and said the following...

"Christopher Reeve just passed away, and America just lost a great champion for this cause, somebody who was a powerful voice for the need to do stem cell research and change the lives of people like him, who have gone through a tragedy. Well, if we do the work that we can do in this country, the work that we will do when John Kerry is president, people like Christopher Reeve are going to walk, get up out of that wheelchair and walk again."

When John Kerry is president, people like Christopher Reeve are going to walk, get up out of that wheelchair and walk again. This is unconscionable.
The implication is that George Bush has kept Christopher Reeve in his wheelchair, George Bush doesn't care, George Bush chose a little cell over Christopher Reeve. George Bush is the reason that those with spinal cord injuries are in wheelchairs, George Bush is the reason because he doesn't care, he'd rather enrich his big oil buddies.

The fact is, there's only one president who has ever funded embryonic stem cell research and that's George W. Bush. They were already in existence and he made available 70 some odd lines of these things and research is ongoing. The implication from the Kerry campaign is that Bush is doing nothing, doesn't care to do anything, for whatever reason.

Last night on Special Report with Brit Hume, Charles Krauthammer was asked about this. Charles Krauthammer is in a wheelchair. Charles Krauthammer is a paraplegic. He is outraged by Edwards' comments and this is what he said.

"Well, no one really knows, one of the great mysteries in medicine is why the spinal cord does not regenerate, and no one has any idea of the answers, no one is in any way sure that we're going to learn the answer from stem cell research. We might, but I've heard a lot of hype over the last 30 years about the keys to the kingdom here in this issue and all of that have proved false. For Edwards to make the claim he did is the worst demagoguery I've heard in Washington in a quarter century. To imply that Christopher Reeve was kept in the wheelchair because of the policies of the Bush administration on stem cells is ridiculous and insulting."

I apologize for bringing the presidential campaign into this thread. I know it was supposed to just be a tribute to an actor who made us all smile, and who turned out to be a very brave individual in the face of adversity. But a question was asked, and since nobody else was responding I thought I should.

Posted: Wed Oct 13, 2004 8:47 am
by schuette
sorry about that....