Actor Karl Malden was supporter of theater at ESU
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Karl Malden, the Academy Award-winning actor with close ties to Emporia State University, died Wednesday, his family said. He was 97.
Malden died of natural causes surrounded by his family at his Brentwood home, they told the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences.
Malden’s connection with Emporia came through his wife, Mona, the former Mildred Greenberg, who is a graduate of Roosevelt High School and attended Kansas State Teachers College, now Emporia State University. He first visited the campus with her in 1959 and was impressed by the ESU Summer Theatre. He returned in the summer of 1964 to teach, working with the actors in the company.
Charles R. Hill, who was then on the theater faculty, recalled Malden’s time on campus in an e-mail Wednesday afternoon.
“... Karl was rather impressed with the work we were doing in the theater department and our Summer Theatre program,” Hill wrote.
“He had been doing a few workshops around at the time, so eventually we convinced him to come do one for us. He came for the last show one Summer Theatre and stayed for two weeks. He worked with half the students in the morning, the other half in the afternoon. ...
“I was honored to be his assistant and stay by his side, absorbing his wisdom and experience. He was very good with the students, and we all learned a lot from him. We stayed in touch for several years following that.
“When he left, he gave his honorarium as seed money to establish a theater scholarship and the Karl Malden award is still being given today.”
ESU theater student Lindsday Roland is the 2009 recipient of the Karl Malden Theater Scholarship.
In 1985, Malden was awarded an honorary doctor of fine arts degree by the university.
Malden was a versatile actor on stage and screen and tackled a variety of characters over the years. He was often seen in working-class garb or military uniform. His authenticity in grittier roles came naturally: He was the son of a Czech mother and a Serbian father, and worked for a time in the steel mills of Gary, Ind., after dropping out of college.
Malden said he got his celebrated bulbous nose when he broke it a couple of times playing basketball or football, joking that he was “the only actor in Hollywood whose nose qualifies him for handicapped parking.” He liked to say he had “an open-hearth face.”
Malden won a supporting actor Oscar in 1951 for his role as Blanche DuBois’ naive suitor Mitch in “A Streetcar Named Desire” — a role he also played on Broadway.
He was nominated again as best supporting actor in 1954 for his performance as Father Corrigan, a fearless, friend-of-the-workingman priest in “On the Waterfront.” In both movies, he costarred with Marlon Brando.
“When you worked with him, he was the character,” said Eva Marie Saint, who garnered a supporting actress Oscar for her role in “Waterfront.” “He was the consummate actor and he loved acting. He was dear and smart. Whatever he did he enjoyed life.”
Among his other memorable roles were: “Birdman of Alcatraz” opposite Burt Lancaster; “I Confess” with Montgomery Clift; “How the West Was Won;” and “The Cincinnati Kid” opposite Steve McQueen and Edward G. Robinson.
His more than 50 credits included “Patton,” in which he played Gen. Omar Bradley, “Pollyanna,” “Fear Strikes Out,” “Cheyenne Autumn” and “All Fall Down.”
One of his most controversial films was “Baby Doll” in 1956, in which he played a dullard husband whose child bride is exploited by a businessman. It was condemned by the Catholic Legion of Decency for what was termed its “carnal suggestiveness.” The story was by “Streetcar” author Tennessee Williams.
Malden gained perhaps his greatest fame as Lt. Mike Stone in the 1970s television show “The Streets of San Francisco,” in which Michael Douglas played the veteran detective’s junior partner.
Douglas was 28 when he earned his first major break on the detective series with Malden, who was 60. Douglas saluted Malden last month as a key mentor when the older actor received the American Film Institute’s Lifetime Achievement Award, an event to be televised July 19 on the TV Land channel.
“He was fantastic. He just had a tremendous discipline, tremendous ethics,” Douglas told AP Television News about a month before the ceremony. “He insisted that next’s week’s script would be there when we were shooting that week’s script. Every time between setups, between breaks, we’d go in the trailer and run lines for the next’s week’s show. That’s the kind of discipline, training I got from Karl.”
In the ’70s, Malden gained a lucrative 21-year sideline and a place in pop culture with his “Don’t leave home without them” ads for American Express travelers checks.
“The Streets of San Francisco” earned him five Emmy nominations. He won one for his role as a murder victim’s father out to bring his former son-in-law to justice in the 1985 miniseries “Fatal Vision.” He and Saint played husband and wife.
He acted sparingly in recent years, appearing in 2000 in a small role on TV’s “The West Wing.”
In 2004, Malden received the Screen Actors Guild’s Lifetime Achievement Award, telling the group in his acceptance speech that “this is the peak for me.” He served on the acting union’s national board from 1963-72.
Malden first gained prominence on Broadway in the late 1930s, making his debut in “Golden Boy” by Clifford Odets. It was during this time that he met Elia Kazan, who later was to direct him in “Streetcar” and “Waterfront.”
He steadily gained more prominent roles, with time out for service in the Army in World War II.
“A Streetcar Named Desire” opened on Broadway in 1947 and went on to win the Pulitzer Prize and New York Drama Critics Circle awards. Brando’s breakthrough performance might have gotten most of the attention, but Malden did not want for praise. Once critic called him “one of the ablest young actors extant.”
Among his other stage appearances were “Key Largo,” “Winged Victory,” Arthur Miller’s “All My Sons,” “The Desperate Hours” and “The Egghead.”
He was born Mladen Sekulovich in Chicago on March 22, 1912. Malden regretted that in order to become an actor he had to change his name. He insisted that Fred Gwynne’s character in “On the Waterfront” be named Sekulovich to honor his heritage.
The family moved to Gary, Ind., when he was small. He quit his steel job in 1934 to study acting at Chicago’s Goodman Theatre “because I wasn’t getting anywhere in the mills,” he recalled.
It was at the Goodman Theatre that he met a fellow student from Emporia, Mona Greenberg. They were married in 1938 and celebrated their 70th wedding anniversary in December.
“That was sort of the last goodbye,” said Saint, who attended a party in the couple’s honor. “His wish was, ‘After I die, I don’t want you to do anything but have a party.’ So another party is coming up.”
Besides his wife, Malden is survived by daughters Mila and Cara, his sons-in-law, three granddaughters, and four great grandchildren.
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