The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Hollywood icon Kirk Douglas reaches 100

FILM: Legend celebrates milestone birthday with tea party... and new book

- michael alexander malexander@thecourier.co.uk

He was a Hollywood icon – a major box office star who, in the 1950s and ’60s, played opposite some of the leading actresses of that era.

Kirk Douglas is best known for his leading roles in films like Paths of Glory (1957), Spartacus (1960) and Lonely Are The Brave (1962).

But as he celebrates his 100th birthday today with a Beverly Hills tea party hosted by his eldest son Michael and daughter-in-law Catherine Zeta Jones, the legendary screen icon isn’t letting age define him.

It was confirmed this week that early next year he will be publishing his 12th book, written with his Belgian-American actress second wife of 62 years, Anne Buydens Douglas, called Kirk and Anne: Letters of Love, Laughter, and a Lifetime in Hollywood.

As one of the last actors from Hollywood’s Golden Age, he attributes his longevity to Anne – his “soulmate” – who he met in 1953 while filming Act of Love in Paris.

Born Issur Danielovit­ch in New York on December 9 1916, Douglas was the son of impoverish­ed Jewish immigrants from what is now Belarus, and during a 60-year acting career he appeared in more than 90 movies including westerns and war films.

In 1960 he helped end the Hollywood Blacklist – the practice of denying employment to screenwrit­ers, actors, directors, musicians, and other American entertainm­ent profession­als during the mid-20th Century because they were accused of having communist ties or sympathies.

It has not all been plain sailing, however. In 1991 he narrowly avoided death in a plane crash and then suffered a stroke in 1996.

But from this he simply focused more on his spiritual and religious life.

A dedicated philanthro­pist, he has donated $40 million in his lifetime to the Motion Picture & Television Fund – most recently for the developmen­t of an Alzheimer’s facility.

His greatest legacy, however, is his films.

It is little wonder he is the highest ranked living member of the American Film Institute’s list of the greatest male screen legends of classic Hollywood cinema. Clockwise from main picture: Douglas in Spartacus; all smiles on his 85th birthday in 2001; a scene from Spartacus; celebratin­g the completion of The Sign Of The Ram with ex-wife Diana in 1948 and with Diana, their son Michael and grandson Cameron in 2003.

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Pictures: Allstar/Universal/AP/Getty.
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