LYCOS RETRIEVER
Jack Warden
built 632 days ago
Jack Warden was better than great because his acting was so unnoticeable: he never stumbled, he always added to the scenes. Never the lead, always the character actor who added so much to a movie. He was the uncle you always looked forward to visiting. The older friend of the family who was always there. He was wonderful.... See "Used Cars," "Shampoo," "While you were Sleeping," to see evidences of his work.
Source:
An old friend Morrissey, (played by Jack Warden) has offered him an easy, medical malpractice suit ? the kind that the defendants? insurance company should settle readily out of court for a tidy sum; no publicity, damage limitation, job done. Only, the case is due in court in less than a week, Galvin?s forgotten all about it, and not even looked at the brief. When Morrissey turns up at Galvin?s offices to find out what?s happening, it looks like Galvin has blown his last friendship?.
Source:
Actor Jack Warden is shown in character as Washington Post editor Harry M. Rosenfeld in 'All the President's Men', in this 1975 file photo. Warden, an Emmy-winning and Academy Award-nominated actor who played gruff cops, coaches and soldiers in a career that spanned five decades, has died. He was 85. Warden, who lived in Manhattan, died Wednesday, July 19, 2006, at a hospital in New York, Sidney Pazoff, his longtime business manager, said here Friday. (AP Photo/HO, file)
Source:
Veteran actor Jack Warden, who often played grumpy grunts, cops, coaches or hot heads in more than 100 feature films, is dead at age 85, his publicitst said today. Warden had been in poor health for some time and died Wednesday in a New York hospital. "Everything gave out. Old age," said his longtime business manager, Sidney Pazoff. "He really had turned downhill in the past month; heart and then kidney and then all kinds of stuff."
Source: