Current:Home > FinanceWilliam Friedkin, Oscar-winning director of ‘The Exorcist’ and The French Connection,’ dead at 87 -FinTechWorld
William Friedkin, Oscar-winning director of ‘The Exorcist’ and The French Connection,’ dead at 87
View
Date:2025-04-14 04:46:51
LOS ANGELES (AP) — William Friedkin, the Oscar winning director who became a top filmmaker in his 30s with the gripping “The French Connection” and the horrifying “The Exorcist” and struggled in the following decades to match his early success has died. He was 87.
Friedkin, who won the best director Oscar for “The French Connection,” died Monday in Los Angeles, Marcia Franklin, his executive assistant for 24 years, told The Associated Press on behalf of his family and wife, former studio head Sherry Lansing.
“The French Connection,” based on a true story, deals with the efforts of maverick New York City police Detective James “Popeye” Doyle to track down Frenchman Fernando Rey, mastermind of a large drug pipeline funneling heroin into the United States. It contains one of the most thrilling chase scenes ever filmed.
Doyle, played by Gene Hackman in an Oscar-winning performance, barely misses making the arrest on a subway train, then hurries to his police car to follow the train as it emerges on an elevated railway. He races underneath, dodging cars, trucks and pedestrians, including a woman pushing a baby buggy, before abandoning the pursuit.
The movie also won Academy Awards for best picture, screenplay and film editing and led critics to hail Friedkin, then just 32, as a leading member of a new generation of filmmakers.
He followed with an even bigger blockbuster, “The Exorcist,” based on William Peter Blatty’s best-selling novel about a 12-year-old girl possessed by the devil.
The harrowing scenes of the girl’s possession and a splendid cast, including Linda Blair as the girl, Ellen Burstyn as her mother and Max Von Sydow and Jason Miller as the priests who try to exorcise the devil from her, helped make the film a box-office sensation. It was so scary for its era that many viewers fled the theater before it was over and some reported being unable to sleep for days afterward.
It received 10 Oscar nominations, including one for Friedkin as director, and won two, for Blatty’s script and for sound.
With that second success, Friedkin would go on to direct movies and TV shows well into the 21st century. But he would never again come close to matching the success of those early works.
Other film credits included “To Live and Die in L.A.,” “Cruising,” “Rules of Engagement” and a TV remake of the classic play and Sidney Lumet movie “12 Angry Men.” Friedkin also directed episodes for such TV shows as “The Twilight Zone,” “Rebel Highway” and “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.”
Born in Chicago on Aug. 29, 1939, he began working in local TV productions as a teenager. By age 16 he was directing live shows.
“My main influence was dramatic radio when I was a kid,” he said in a 2001 interview. “I remember listening to it in the dark, Everything was left to the imagination. It was just sound. I think of the sounds first and then the images.”
He moved from live shows to documentaries, making “The People Versus Paul Crump,” in 1962. It was the story of a prison inmate who rehabilitates himself on Death Row after being sentenced for the murder of a guard during a botched robbery at a Chicago food plant.
Producer David Wolper was so impressed with it that he brought Friedkin to Hollywood to direct network TV shows.
After working on such shows as “The Bold Ones,” “The Alfred Hitchcock Hour” and the documentary “The Thin Blue Line,” Friedkin landed his first film, 1967’s “Good Times.” It was a lighthearted musical romp headlined by the pop duo Sonny and Cher in what would be their only movie appearance together.
He followed that with “The Night They Raided Minsky’s,” about backstage life at a burlesque theater, and “The Birthday Party,” from a Harold Pinter play. He then gained critical attention with 1970’s “The Boys in the Band,” a landmark film about gay men.
Friedkin had three brief marriages in the 1970s and ’80s, to French actress Jeanne Moreau; British actress Lesley-Anne Down, with whom he had a son; and longtime Los Angeles TV news anchor Kelly Lange. In 1991 he married Paramount studio executive Lansing.
In recent years, Friedkin was often called on to reflect on his career around the 50th anniversaries of his classics and was always candid. He also wrote a memoir, “The Friedkin Connection,” which came out in 2012. And he wasn’t done working yet: A new film, “The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial,” starring Kiefer Sutherland, is set to premiere at the Venice Film Festival next month.
Thinking back to the iconic car chase sequence in “The French Connection,” Friedkin told NBC News in 2021 that it was legitimately life-threatening and that he’d never do it again.
“Everything you see, we actually did. There was no CGI then. There was no way to fake it. I just put the pedal to the metal, and we went 90 miles an hour in city traffic,” he said. “The fact that nobody got hurt is a miracle. The fact that I didn’t get killed, the fact that some of the crew members didn’t get hurt or killed. That’s a chance I would never take again. I was young and I didn’t give a damn. I just went out and did it. I set out to make a great chase scene and I didn’t care about the consequences, and now I do.”
—-
The late Associated Press Correspondent Bob Thomas was the primary writer of this obituary.
veryGood! (718)
Related
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Lawmakers in Thailand overwhelmingly approve a bill to legalize same-sex marriage
- Lawsuit accuses George Floyd scholarship of discriminating against non-Black students
- Trendy & Affordable Dresses From Amazon You’ll Want To Wear All Spring/Summer Long
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Are these killer whales actually two separate species? New research calls for distinction
- After 34 years, girlfriend charged in man's D.C. murder
- Patchwork international regulations govern cargo ships like the one that toppled Baltimore bridge
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Book made with dead woman's skin removed from Harvard Library amid probe of human remains found at school
Ranking
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- No, NASA doesn't certify solar eclipse glasses. Don't trust products that claim otherwise
- Orlando city commissioner charged with spending 96-year-old woman’s money on a home, personal items
- Terrence Shannon Jr. leads Illinois past Iowa State 72-69 for first Elite Eight trip since 2005
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- South Dakota officials to investigate state prison ‘disturbance’ in Sioux Falls
- Sawfish are spinning, and dying, in Florida waters as rescue effort begins
- Florida latest state to target squatters after DeSantis signs 'Property Rights' law
Recommendation
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Arizona ends March Madness with another disappointment and falls short of Final Four again
California proposal would change how power bills are calculated, aiming to relieve summer spikes
Beyoncé and Miley Cyrus duet on 'Cowboy Carter' track: What to know about 'II Most Wanted'
Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
The Bachelor's Kelsey Anderson Explains How That Limo Moment Went Down
Search efforts paused after 2 bodies found in Baltimore bridge collapse, focus turns to clearing debris
Biochar Is ‘Low-Hanging Fruit’ for Sequestering Carbon and Combating Climate Change