Natural Facade
by VonBatCat
This was a natural rock formation in Heraklleia. Just a fun photo. But who is it? Answers on a post card.
Uploaded25/01/2011 - 20:59
CategoryLandscape / Travel
Views/Likes73/0
Posted 25/01/2011 - 21:21
Link
Walter Matthow was a small child in New York city when his father left his family on their own. Instead of letting this experience destroy him, he turned to stage acting. In 1951 he won a New York Drama Critics Award. He moved on to television, and then to movies. In his early roles he played mostly bad guys, including memorable parts in Charade (1963) and Fail-Safe (1966). But when Billy Wilder finally recognized his great talent for comedy, he turned in an unbroken string of truly memorable comic performances in The Fortune Cookie (1966), A Guide for the Married Man (1967), and The Odd Couple (196. His partnership and lifelong friendship with Jack Lemmon was formed at that time. They made 13 films together -- some more memorable than others, to be sure -- but all entertaining in the end.
One measure of Matthau's greatness was that he seemed born to play many of the roles he was given. It's hard to imagine anybody else as Henry Graham or Whiplash Willie. And even though Jack Klugman did a fine job as TV's Oscar Madison, it was Matthau who made the role his own.
As for his supposed "real" last name, according to his son Charlie, "Walter loved to trick the media, and using the last name Matasschanskayasky was one of them. He used it as a credit in one of his movies where he played a drunk. And the media ate it up in an interview. Their questions never changed, but his answers did, only very few caught on."
Unfortunately, he experienced health problems during most of his career, including a heart attack in 1966 and bypass surgery in 1976, as well as two major bouts of pneumonia in the 90s. He died of a heart attack on July 1, 2000.
DINT HAVE A POST CARD LOL
One measure of Matthau's greatness was that he seemed born to play many of the roles he was given. It's hard to imagine anybody else as Henry Graham or Whiplash Willie. And even though Jack Klugman did a fine job as TV's Oscar Madison, it was Matthau who made the role his own.
As for his supposed "real" last name, according to his son Charlie, "Walter loved to trick the media, and using the last name Matasschanskayasky was one of them. He used it as a credit in one of his movies where he played a drunk. And the media ate it up in an interview. Their questions never changed, but his answers did, only very few caught on."
Unfortunately, he experienced health problems during most of his career, including a heart attack in 1966 and bypass surgery in 1976, as well as two major bouts of pneumonia in the 90s. He died of a heart attack on July 1, 2000.
DINT HAVE A POST CARD LOL
PPG link
Posted 25/01/2011 - 23:23
Link
My first thought was Richard Nixon
Tim
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Feel free to edit any of my posted photos! If I post a photo for critique, I want brutal honesty. If you don't like it, please say so and tell me why!
AF - Pentax K5, Sigma 10-20/4-5.6, Tamron 17-50/2.8, Sigma 30/1.4, Sigma 70-200/2.8, Tamron 70-300/4-5.6
MF - Vivitar CF 28/2.8, Tamron AD2 90/2.5, MTO 1000/11
Stuff - Metz 58 AF1, Cactus v4, Nikon SB24, Raynox 150, Sigma 1.4x TC, Sigma 2x TC, Kenko 2x macro TC, Redsnapper 283 tripod, iMac 27”, Macbook Pro 17”, iPad, iPhone 3G
Flickr • Fluidr • PPG • Street • Portfolio site
Feel free to edit any of my posted photos! If I post a photo for critique, I want brutal honesty. If you don't like it, please say so and tell me why!
Posted 26/01/2011 - 00:07
Link
puma wrote:
Walter Matthow was a small child in New York city when his father left his family on their own. Instead of letting this experience destroy him, he turned to stage acting. In 1951 he won a New York Drama Critics Award. He moved on to television, and then to movies. In his early roles he played mostly bad guys, including memorable parts in Charade (1963) and Fail-Safe (1966). But when Billy Wilder finally recognized his great talent for comedy, he turned in an unbroken string of truly memorable comic performances in The Fortune Cookie (1966), A Guide for the Married Man (1967), and The Odd Couple (196. His partnership and lifelong friendship with Jack Lemmon was formed at that time. They made 13 films together -- some more memorable than others, to be sure -- but all entertaining in the end.
One measure of Matthau's greatness was that he seemed born to play many of the roles he was given. It's hard to imagine anybody else as Henry Graham or Whiplash Willie. And even though Jack Klugman did a fine job as TV's Oscar Madison, it was Matthau who made the role his own.
As for his supposed "real" last name, according to his son Charlie, "Walter loved to trick the media, and using the last name Matasschanskayasky was one of them. He used it as a credit in one of his movies where he played a drunk. And the media ate it up in an interview. Their questions never changed, but his answers did, only very few caught on."
Unfortunately, he experienced health problems during most of his career, including a heart attack in 1966 and bypass surgery in 1976, as well as two major bouts of pneumonia in the 90s. He died of a heart attack on July 1, 2000.
DINT HAVE A POST CARD LOL
Walter Matthow was a small child in New York city when his father left his family on their own. Instead of letting this experience destroy him, he turned to stage acting. In 1951 he won a New York Drama Critics Award. He moved on to television, and then to movies. In his early roles he played mostly bad guys, including memorable parts in Charade (1963) and Fail-Safe (1966). But when Billy Wilder finally recognized his great talent for comedy, he turned in an unbroken string of truly memorable comic performances in The Fortune Cookie (1966), A Guide for the Married Man (1967), and The Odd Couple (196. His partnership and lifelong friendship with Jack Lemmon was formed at that time. They made 13 films together -- some more memorable than others, to be sure -- but all entertaining in the end.
One measure of Matthau's greatness was that he seemed born to play many of the roles he was given. It's hard to imagine anybody else as Henry Graham or Whiplash Willie. And even though Jack Klugman did a fine job as TV's Oscar Madison, it was Matthau who made the role his own.
As for his supposed "real" last name, according to his son Charlie, "Walter loved to trick the media, and using the last name Matasschanskayasky was one of them. He used it as a credit in one of his movies where he played a drunk. And the media ate it up in an interview. Their questions never changed, but his answers did, only very few caught on."
Unfortunately, he experienced health problems during most of his career, including a heart attack in 1966 and bypass surgery in 1976, as well as two major bouts of pneumonia in the 90s. He died of a heart attack on July 1, 2000.
DINT HAVE A POST CARD LOL
Puma, so you thought it looked like Walter? Or Is the smoking, drinking and sharing women with Timbo having an effect?
Posted 26/01/2011 - 17:59
Link
Thoughton wrote:
Great minds, Tim - great minds
Jon
Quote:
My first thought was Richard Nixon
My first thought was Richard Nixon
Great minds, Tim - great minds
Jon
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