Albuquerque Journal

Norman Jewison, acclaimed director, has died at age 97

- BY HILLEL ITALIE AP NATIONAL WRITER

NEW YORK — Norman Jewison, the acclaimed and versatile Canadian-born director whose Hollywood films ranged from Doris Day comedies and “Moonstruck” to such social dramas as the Oscar-winning “In the Heat of the Night,” has died at age 97.

Jewison, a three-time Oscar nominee who in 1999 received an Academy Award for lifetime achievemen­t, died “peacefully” Saturday, according to publicist Jeff Sanderson. Additional details were not immediatel­y available.

Throughout his long career, Jewison combined light entertainm­ent with topical films that appealed to him on a deeply personal level. As Jewison was ending his military service in the Canadian navy during World War II, he hitchhiked through the American South and had a close-up view of Jim Crow segregatio­n. In his autobiogra­phy “This Terrible Business Has Been Good to Me,” he noted that racism and injustice became his most common themes.

“Every time a film deals with racism, many Americans feel uncomforta­ble,” he wrote. “Yet it has to be confronted. We have to deal with prejudice and injustice or we will never understand what is good and evil, right and wrong; we need to feel how ‘the other’ feels.”

He drew upon his experience­s for 1967’s “In the Heat of the Night,” starring Rod Steiger as a white racist small-town sheriff and Sidney Poitier as a Black detective from Philadelph­ia trying to help solve a murder and eventually forming a working relationsh­ip with the hostile local lawman.

James Baldwin condemned the film’s “appalling distance from reality,” and thought the director trapped in a fantasy of racial harmony that would only heighten “Black rage and despair.” But The New York Times’ Bosley Crowther was among the critics who found the movie powerful and inspiring and in a year featuring such landmarks as “The Graduate” and “Bonnie and Clyde,” Jewison’s production won the Academy Award for best picture while Steiger took home the best actor Oscar. (Jewison lost out for best director to Mike Nichols of “The Graduate”).

Among those who encouraged Jewison while making “In the Heat of the Night”: Robert F. Kennedy, whom the director met during a ski trip in Sun Valley, Idaho.

“I told him I made films and he asked what kind I make,” he recalled in a 2011 interview with The Hollywood Reporter. “So I told him that I was working on ‘In the Heat of the Night’ and that it’s about two cops: one a white sheriff from Mississipp­i and the other a black detective from Philadelph­ia. I told him it was a film about tolerance. So he listened and nodded and said ‘You know, Norman, timing is everything. In politics, in art, in life itself.’ I never forgot that.”

He received two other Oscar nomination­s: For “Moonstruck,” the beloved romantic comedy for which Cher won an Academy Award, and “Fiddler on the Roof,” the classic musical about a Jewish village in Russia that Jewison has said was offered to him under the mistaken belief he was Jewish.

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Norman Jewison, a three-time Oscar nominee who in 1999 received an Academy Award for lifetime achievemen­t, died “peacefully” on Saturday, according to publicist Jeff Sanderson. He was 97.
CHRIS PIZZELLO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Norman Jewison, a three-time Oscar nominee who in 1999 received an Academy Award for lifetime achievemen­t, died “peacefully” on Saturday, according to publicist Jeff Sanderson. He was 97.

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