My Note:  Dave mentions Pickup On South Street which I  viewed for the first 
time this past year.  I then popped the DVD back  into the player three more 
times over the course of only 10  days.  I was so knocked out by Widmark's  
complex character  portrayal.  But even more so, of all people Thelma Ritter 
gives truly a  legendary  performance as an informant  for hire, and when  
circumstances  do not fall her way,  the knowledge of the consequences  are 
seen in 
every tic and line in her face, an utterly devastating   performance.  
 
March 29, 2008
An Appraisal
A Star Who Mastered a New Moral  Ambiguity 
By _DAVE KEHR_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/dave_kehr/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 
 
Of the generation of leading men who emerged in the aftermath of World War  
II, quite a few began their careers playing villains. _Kirk Douglas_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/531291/Kirk-Douglas?inline=nyt-per) , 
_Anthony Quinn_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/107297/Anthony-Quinn?inline=nyt-per) , 
_Robert Mitchum_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/49738/Robert-Mitchum?inline=nyt-per) , _Jack 
Palance_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/54755/Jack-Palance?inline=nyt-per)  and _Lee 
Marvin_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/46149/Lee-Marvin?inline=nyt-per)  were among 
the postwar stars who served  apprenticeships —
 some long, some short — as outlaws gunned down in the last  reel of westerns 
or as hoodlums crumpling under police fire in crime pictures.  Richard 
Widmark, who died at 93 on Monday, was another.  
Unlike many of his contemporaries, Mr. Widmark never quite shook the dark  
associations of his early roles, even after his studio, 20th Century Fox,  
rehabilitated him as a leading man. The obituaries that followed Mr. Widmark’s  
death almost invariably began by evoking his first and still most famous film  
appearance, as the psychotic killer Tommy Udo in Henry Hathaway’s 1947 film  
noir, _“Kiss of Death”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/gst/movies/titlelist.html?v_idlist=134831;301331;27533&inline=nyt_ttl)
  — a role that required Mr. Widmark 
to  giggle and grin as he bound an old woman (Mildred Dunnock) to her 
wheelchair and  shoved her down a flight of stairs.  
The sadistic, unhinged Udo was something new in American movies, and the  
impression he left was indelible. “Mr. Widmark runs away with all the acting  
honors,” The New York Times said, and Mr. Widmark was rewarded with an Oscar  
nomination for best supporting actor — the one and only time the Academy took  
notice of him. (On Friday night, Turner Classic Movies is set for a Widmark  
triple feature: _“Alvarez Kelly,”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/1736/Alvarez-Kelly/overview)  _“Take the High 
Ground”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/112603/Take-the-High-Ground/overview)  and 
_“The Tunnel of Love.”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/51228/The-Tunnel-of-Love/overview) )  
Mr. Widmark, then 33, had fourth billing in “Kiss of Death”; his Oscar  nomi
nation earned him better billing but similar roles in three 1948 films:  
William Keighley’s “Street With No Name,” Jean Negulesco’s _“Road House”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/gst/movies/titlelist.html?v_idlist=108102;41559;108101;415
60&inline=nyt_ttl)  and _William Wellman_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/116375/William-Wellman?inline=nyt-per) ’s 
_“Yellow Sky.”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/117905/Yellow-Sky/overview)  Only with 
Hathaway’s _“Down to the 
Sea in Ships”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/gst/movies/titlelist.html?v_idlist=14511;89899&inline=nyt_ttl)
  (1949) did Mr. Widmark get a  heroic role and his 
name on top, but the public didn’t seem interested in this  bright, blond, 
squeaky-clean figure: they wanted their morally flawed,  unpredictably violent 
Widmark back.  
And so, through much of the 1950s, Mr. Widmark moved back and forth —  
shuttling between heavies and heroes — with a freedom mostly unknown to other  
performers of the period. He was a selfless Public Health Service doctor  
searching 
for a gangster (Jack Palance) infected with plague in _Elia Kazan_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/907893/Elia-Kazan?inline=nyt-per) ’s 1950 
_“Panic in 
the Streets”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/37176/Panic-in-the-Streets/overview) ; that 
same year found him as a  racist street punk taunting a black 
doctor (_Sidney Poitier_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/531681/Sidney-Poitier?inline=nyt-per) ) in 
Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s _“No Way Out.”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/gst/movies/titlelist.html?v_idlist=104196;229344;35559&inline=nyt_ttl
)   
Mr. Widmark’s richest roles were those that placed him somewhere in the  
middle — in that great swamp of moral ambiguity that four years of active  
conflict and a shadowy new cold war had made Americans ready to acknowledge. 
In _Samuel Fuller_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/90748/Samuel-Fuller?inline=nyt-per) ’s 
_“Pickup on South Street”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/38080/Pickup-on-South-Street/overview)  (1953) 
Mr. Widmark is Skip  McCoy, a New 
York pickpocket who unknowingly lifts a microfilmed roll of  government 
secrets from a fallen woman (_Jean Peters_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/56278/Jean-Peters?inline=nyt-per) ) working 
for a cell of Soviet agents.  Smirkingly 
antisocial to the last (Skip has learned to taunt cops into hitting  him, as 
a way of invalidating arrests), he ends by lending his criminal skills  to the 
side of law and order, motivated less by patriotism than by a desire for  
revenge.  
In _“Hell and High Water”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/gst/movies/titlelist.html?v_idlist=94702;94701&inline=nyt_ttl)
  (1954) Mr. Widmark again worked  
with Mr. Fuller, and the film helped to move Mr. Widmark’s screen personality 
in  
a different direction. In this slightly mad cold war fantasy, he is a former  
Navy officer hired by a group of civic-minded scientists to pilot a submarine 
to  the Arctic Circle, where, they suspect, the Red Chinese are constructing 
a  nuclear missile base. The military lent a new context to Mr. Widmark’s 
moral  equivocality: in films like _“Halls of Montezuma,”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/21328/Halls-of-Montezuma/overview)  _“The 
Frogmen,”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/92401/The-Frogmen/overview)  “Take the High 
Ground!” and _
“Destination Gobi”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/89259/Destination-Gobi/overview)  Mr. Widmark 
played hard-bitten  commanders whose apparent coldness 
and cruelty masked a deeper concern with the  safety of their men.  
His psycho killers and military leaders shared one prominent character trait: 
 callousness, a quality Mr. Widmark portrayed with disdainful ease. From the  
mid-’50s on, his filmography was filled with colonels, captains, lieutenants 
and  even a couple of generals.  
In _Robert Aldrich_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/79278/Robert-Aldrich?inline=nyt-per) ’s 1977 
_“Twilight’s Last Gleaming”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/51337/Twilight-s-Last-Gleaming/overview)  Mr. 
Widmark had his last  
great role, as a senior officer whose job it is to persuade a renegade general  
(_Burt Lancaster_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/98588/Burt-Lancaster?inline=nyt-per) , Mr. 
Widmark’s contemporary and fellow  recovering gangster) to 
relinquish control of the nuclear missile silo he has  taken over as a 
political 
protest. The casting is impeccable: here are two  actors whose careers have 
run in parallel, just as their characters’ lives have.  
As an actor, Mr. Widmark fell between the presentational style of prewar  
filmmaking and the inner-directed, psychological focus of the Method actors, 
who  
came into vogue in the 1950s. With his prominent teeth and tight skin, his 
face  had a certain skull-like quality that suggested Conrad Veidt in the 
German 
 Expressionist films of the ’20s, yet there was a watery, vulnerable quality 
in  his large blue eyes that could sometimes make him seem almost childlike.  
The role that best combined these two sides of Mr. Widmark was, perhaps, that 
 of the naïve American boxing promoter, Harry Fabian, who is devoured by the  
London underworld in _Jules Dassin_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/person/86774/Jules-Dassin?inline=nyt-per) ’s 1950 
noir masterpiece, _“Night and the City.”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/gst/movies/titlelist.html?v_idlist=407617;35187;351
88&inline=nyt_ttl)   
It’s hard to imagine another tough-guy actor of the period allowing himself  
to come as close to tearful impotence as Mr. Widmark does at the end of that  
film, at the moment his character realizes that there is no escape from the  
vengeful associates he has betrayed. Running toward the camera, as well as  
toward his death, Mr. Widmark allows his face to go slack and his limbs to  
loosen; he seems to become a panicked child before our eyes, shrinking into  
infantile helplessness. A jump cut might take us to the opening scene of 
_“Rebel 
Without a Cause,”_ 
(http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/40604/Rebel-Without-a-Cause/overview)  when 
_James Dean_ (http://movies.nytimes.com/person/723022
/James-Dean?inline=nyt-per) ’s drunken teenager collapses on the  sidewalk, 
playing with 
a toy monkey.  
A great star, perhaps, is someone who embodies a cultural moment while  
nudging us on to something new, to feelings not yet explored and contradictions 
 
not yet expressed. By that definition, as well as by many others, Richard  
Widmark was a great star. 



















freeman  fisher
8601 west knoll drive #7
west hollywood,  ca
90069



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