September 15, 2009

Patrick Swayze, Star of ‘Dirty Dancing,’ Dies at 57
By ANITA GATES
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/15/movies/15swayze.html?hp=&pagewanted=print


Patrick Swayze, the balletically athletic actor who rose to stardom in 
the films “Dirty Dancing” and “Ghost” and whose 20-month battle with 
advanced pancreatic cancer drew wide attention, died Monday. He was 57.

His publicist, Annett Wolf, told The Associated Press in Los Angeles 
that Mr. Swayze had died with family members at his side.

Mr. Swayze’s cancer was diagnosed in January 2008. Six months later he 
had already outlived his prognosis and was filmed at an airport, smiling 
at photographers and calling himself, only half-facetiously, “a miracle 
dude.”

He even went through with plans to star in “The Beast,” a drama series 
for A&E. He filmed a complete season while undergoing treatment. Mr. 
Swayze insisted on continuing with the series. “How do you nurture a 
positive attitude when all the statistics say you’re a dead man?” he 
told The New York Times last October. “You go to work.”

The show, on which he played an undercover F.B.I. agent, had its 
premiere in January and earned him admiring reviews.

A week before the series began, Mr. Swayze was the subject of a one-hour 
“Barbara Walters Special” on ABC, in which he talked about his illness. 
“I keep my heart and my soul and my spirit open to miracles,” he told 
Ms. Walters. But he said he was not going to pursue every experimental 
treatment that came along. If he were to “spend so much time chasing 
staying alive,” he said, he wouldn’t be able to enjoy the time he had left.

“I want to live,” he said.

Shortly after the interview, he was hospitalized for pneumonia. At least 
one tabloid newspaper ran photographs of him in April with reports that 
the cancer had metastasized and that his weight had dropped to 105 pounds.

Mr. Swayze rose to stardom in 1987. He had received attention in several 
early movies and in the mini-series “North and South,” but the 
coming-of-age film “Dirty Dancing” established him as a romantic leading 
man. He starred opposite Jennifer Grey as a young working-class dance 
instructor at a Catskills resort who proved to have more heart, 
integrity and sex appeal than many of the wealthy guests with whom he 
was forbidden to fraternize.

He exhibited similar emotional intensity in the supernatural romance 
“Ghost” (1990), an enormous box-office hit. His character, a loft-living 
yuppie banker, is murdered early in the film and spends the rest of it 
as a spirit, desperately trying to communicate with his fiancée (Demi 
Moore) with the help of a psychic (Whoopi Goldberg). The film, which 
also showcased his physical grace, solidified his stardom.

Mr. Swayze was proud of “Ghost,” as he told The San Francisco Chronicle 
in 1990. “I needed to do something that will affect the audience in a 
positive way, make them feel better about their lives and appreciate 
what they have,” he said.

Patrick Wayne Swayze was born on Aug. 18, 1952, in Houston, the son of 
Jesse Wayne Swayze, an engineer and rodeo cowboy, and Patsy Swayze, a 
dance instructor and choreographer. He began dancing as a child and was 
often teased about it. But he was also a student athlete, and his 
dancing career was hampered by a football injury.

After attending San Jacinto, a community college in Texas, Mr. Swayze 
moved to New York to study dance, becoming a member of Eliot Feld 
Ballet. He made his Broadway debut in 1975 as a dancer in “Goodtime 
Charley” and was cast in the original Broadway production of “Grease,” 
taking over the lead role. (He returned to Broadway almost three decades 
later, filling in as the razzle-dazzle lawyer Billy Flynn in “Chicago” 
in 2003.)

He made his screen debut in “Skatetown, U.S.A.” (1979), a roller-disco 
movie starring Scott Baio. Looking back on that film, he told the 
Toronto newspaper The Globe and Mail in 1984, “I saw that with not too 
much trouble I could become a teenybopper star, but I knew if I accepted 
that, it would take years to win credibility as a serious actor.”

His first notable film was “The Outsiders” (1983), a drama about teenage 
gangs that starred other newcomers like Tom Cruise, Rob Lowe, Matt 
Dillon and Emilio Estevez. The same year he was cast in a short-lived 
television series, “Renegades,” a sort of updated “Mod Squad” about 
young gang leaders turned deputies.

His public profile grew steadily, especially with his appearances in 
“Red Dawn” (1984), a film about small-town high school students fighting 
the Soviets in World War III, and in “North and South” (1985), a 12-hour 
mini-series in which he played a conflicted Southern soldier.

“People don’t identify with victims,” he said in an interview with The 
Associated Press, discussing his “North and South” character, originally 
written as a more passive man. “They identify with people who have the 
world come down on their heads and who fight to survive.”

After that came “Dirty Dancing” and then, just three years later, 
“Ghost,” with a few largely forgotten movies in between.

During the 1990s he was a bank-robbing surfer in “Point Break” (1991) 
and a drag queen with the daunting name Vida Boheme in “To Wong Foo, 
Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar” (1995). “To Wong Foo” earned him 
his third Golden Globe nomination. (The others were for “Dirty Dancing” 
and “Ghost.”)

His portrayal of a noble doctor in Roland Joffé’s “City of Joy” (1992) 
was not well received. But then, critics rarely praised his acting 
ability. At best he was commended for his athletic presence and stalwart 
demeanor.

 From 1995 to 2007 he made more than a dozen feature films, including 
“Donnie Darko” (2001), in which he played an obnoxious motivational 
speaker. In 2006 he surprised many by starring in London as the 
streetwise gambler Nathan Detroit in the musical “Guys and Dolls.” His 
last film was “Powder Blue,” a drama with Lisa Kudrow that was released 
on DVD this year. As a young unknown, Mr. Swayze met Lisa Niemi, a 
fellow Houstonian, in one of his mother’s dance classes. They married in 
1975. She survives him, along with his mother; two brothers, Don and 
Sean; and a sister, Bambi. Another sister, Vicky, died in 1994.

Mr. Swayze said more than once that he was determined not to be 
typecast. In a 1989 interview with The Chicago Sun-Times, he said, “The 
only plan I have is that every time people think they have me pegged, 
I’m going to come out of left field and do something unexpected.”

He also expressed concern about the dangers of Hollywood superficiality. 
“One of the reasons I bought my ranch was because I didn’t want to hear 
the hype,” he told The A.P. in 1985, referring to his horse ranch in the 
San Gabriel Mountains. He added, “Your horses don’t lie to you.”

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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