How much should we mourn celebrities whom we don't even know?
With Tim Russert, "stranger mourning" makes sense with those folks who watched him every week and made him "one of our family" in their homes. TV by its very nature was designed to create such relationships.
I recall a one-two-three-four series of deaths in 1980 that rather affected me, all coming in the same year:
-- Steve McQueen, at 50. After overtaking Paul Newman to become the young superstar of the sixties (it took "Bullitt" to do it in '68), McQueen had an on-off career in the early seventies and then had a huge hit (WITH Paul Newman) in 1974's "Towering Inferno." Steve grabbed his profits from that one and pretty much took the rest of the 70's off, becoming a hermit in Malibu.
McQueen made a film of Ibsen's "Enemy of the People" in '77 that was barely shown (he did the movie in a mop of long hair and beard), and then "came back" in 1980 with two weird releases: "Tom Horn," a downbeat little real-life Western in which McQueen is hanged at the end, and "The Hunter" , an amateur TV-movie-for-the-big-screen action thriller that hurt anyone with memories of "Bullitt." Hopes were high that McQueen was just rusty and would soon make good movies again-- he looked great, rumpled and rugged and slender.
But it was not to be. As soon as we got McQueen back for movies in 1980, we lost him in life for good. Cancer. Sudden onset. Age 50. Just like that. No more Steve McQueen movies.
To show us what we lost: after McQueen's death, Paul Newman's career rather coincidentally came back to life in the 80's -- "Absence of Malice," "The Verdict" and "The Color of Money" -- and Newman got 25+ more years of career (and life; here's hoping Paul stays around a bit longer, but he's made it to his 80's, already).
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Peter Sellers. Sellers had been a mainstay of British-import comedy movies in the fifties and early sixties, and then worked the one-two 1964 combination of "Dr. Strangelove" and "The Pink Panther" to rocket to full stardom. But he was nuts, and a druggie, and he had a heart attack in his thirties (also in 1964) that weakened him severely. His career plummeted until he agreed to do a new, clunkier "Pink Panther" in 1975. It hit, and then two more 70's "Pink Panthers" kept him afloat at the box office, and then in 1979, he gave a superb comic-dramatic performance in "Being There." They gave him a Time cover.
And in 1980, while preparing another Pink Panther movie, Sellers long-weakened heart gave out, and he was gone, too. No more Peter Sellers movies.
--John Lennon. Rather like Steve McQueen, John Lennon had gone the hermit house-husband route for much of the 70's, but he came back with a splash and a new album in 1980, with a hit tune "Starting Over" to reflect his return. He did some interviews.
Saturday Night Live did a tour of the Dakota apartment complex where Lennon lived that year (outside only). Shortly thereafter, Lennon was shot and killed there, right where SNL had filmed. Age 40. No more John Lennon tunes. And of course, no more possiblity of a Beatles reunion.
That one REALLY hurt.
It's funny how all these years later I remember this. But Lennon and McQueen were major icons, and Sellers certainly had a name.
It was my first inkling of how connected to celebrities we can get. Their personal loss should only matter to their family and closest friends.
But certainly when they die young -- and as violently as John Lennon did -- its a double shock: we lose the artist, and we lose all the art that could have been. All the movies, all the songs...never to be.
P.S. Oh, we lost Alfred Hitchcock in 1980, too. Natural causes, AT age 80. No more Alfred Hitchcock movies...but then, we weren't really expecting them. It was as if Hitchcock figured it was time to pass the baton to Spielberg for good.