Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Oscar-nominated actress Sondra Locke dies at 74

Best known for work in six Eastwood films

- By Andrew Dalton

LOS ANGELES — Actress and director Sondra Locke, who was nominated for an Academy Award for her first film role in 1968’s “The Heart is a Lonely Hunter” and went on to co-star in six films with Clint Eastwood, has died.

Locke died Nov. 3 at her Los Angeles home of cardiac arrest stemming from breast and bone cancer, according to a death certificat­e obtained by The Associated Press. She was 74. Authoritie­s were promptly notified at the time, but her death was not publicized until RadarOnlin­e first reported it Thursday. It is not clear why it took nearly six weeks to come to light.

Locke was best known for the six films she made with Eastwood — whom she dated for 13 years — starting with the Western “The Outlaw Josey Wales” in 1976 and ending with the Dirty Harry movie “Sudden Impact” in 1983.

Born Sandra Louise Smith — she would later take on a stepfather’s last name and take on the stage name Sondra — Locke grew up in Tennessee, where she worked at a radio station and appeared in a handful of plays before winning a nationwide talent search in 1967 to be cast opposite leading man Alan Arkin in the movie adaptation of Carson McCullers’ 1940 novel “The Heart is a Lonely Hunter.”

She would win raves for the role along with nomination­s for a Golden Globe and an Oscar. Both awards went to Ruth Gordon for “Rosemary’s Baby.”

She had a run of unmemorabl­e film and TV roles until meeting Eastwood on the set of “Josey Wales,” which he both directed and starred in.

Her career would mirror his for the next several years. The pair’s hit films also included the 1978 street-fighting and orangutan comedy “Every Which Way But Loose” and its 1980 sequel “Any Which Way You Can.”

In 1989, Locke’s charmed life came to an end as Eastwood broke up with her, she later wrote.

She sued Eastwood for palimony then later sued him for fraud saying a movie developmen­t deal he arranged for her was a sham to get her to drop the palimony suit. They settled the highly publicized lawsuit for an undisclose­d amount during jury deliberati­ons in 1996.

The following year she released her memoir, titled “The Good, the Bad and the Very Ugly: A Hollywood Journey,” which also detailed the double mastectomy and chemothera­py that came with her first bout with breast cancer.

She said at the time that the title, a play on an Eastwood film, was “applicable to the story.”

Locke had married actor Gordon Anderson in 1967. According to her death certificat­e, the two were still legally married when she died, and he reported her death.

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Sondra Locke

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