China Daily (Hong Kong)

Stars pay tribute to Silence of the Lambs director

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NEW YORK — Jonathan Demme, the Oscar-winning director of The Silence of the Lambs whose four-decade career spanned a staggering array of work from romantic comedy and rock music to hard-hitting documentar­ies, died on Wednesday. He was 73.

Demme passed away in New York surrounded by his family after a battle with cancer, his publicist announced. He will be laid to rest in a private funeral.

He remains best known for the smash-hit 1991 horrorthri­ller starring Anthony Hopkins as serial killer Hannibal Lecter and Jodie Foster as FBI agent Clarice Starling. The movie was box office gold and a dazzling critical success.

It swept the 1992 Academy Awards, winning five Oscars including best picture, best actor for Hopkins and best actress for Foster.

“I am heartbroke­n to lose a friend, a mentor, a guy so singular and dynamic you’d have to design a hurricane to contain him,” Foster wrote in a statement.

Hopkins said he was shocked. “He was one of the best, and a really nice guy as well who had such a great spirit. Every day being with him was a high-five.”

The director’s success with Silence of the Lambs gave Demme the commercial springboar­d to direct Philadelph­ia in 1993, a groundbrea­king Hollywood blockbuste­r that won Tom Hanks his first Academy Award for playing a gay lawyer fired for contractin­g HIV and fighting for justice.

Demme’s death prompted warm tributes for a deeply respected director, praised for his compassion and creativity, as well as recognized for highlighti­ng causes such as the plight of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, and impoverish­ed Haiti.

“Jonathan taught us how big a heart a person can have, and how it will guide how we live and what we do for a living,” Hanks said. “He was the grandest of men.”

Demme directed a total of 20 feature films and 12 documentar­ies, not to mention innovative concert movie Stop Making Sense and music videos.

However, his main love was documentar­ies. Subjects included Nelson Mandela, former US president Jimmy Carter and Bruce Springstee­n.

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