I ARTS Tuesday, August 7, 1984 Page 10 The Michigan Daily Reactions vary to Burton's death HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Richard Bur- ton's sudden death shocked friends and colleagues in the movie industry, where he was remembered as wild, charming, driven and-above all-a "born actor." But Elizabeth Taylor, Burton's par- tner in a stormy, headline-making love affair that saw them married and divorced twice, was too distressed te issue any statement after learning of his death Sunday in Switzerland. He died at 58 of a cerebral hemorrhage. "I just got off the phone with Liz and the kids," Miss Taylor's spokeswoman,_ Chen Sam, said in New York. "Of cour- se it's a schock." Burton and Taylor divorced their respective spouses to marry in 1964 af. ter falling in love while making the 1962 epic Cleopatra. The scandal surrounding their romance-and Burton's bouts with alcohol-may have prevented him from fulfilling his promise as a stage legend, said Sir John Gielgud, who last worked with Burton two years ago on the film, Wagner. "He was a born actor," Gielgud said. "He chose a rather mad way of throwing away his theater career, but obviously he became very famous and a world figure through being a film star." Wildness is not necessarily a bad quality in an actor, Gielgud said, "but he was very wild and had scandal around him all the time, and I think in theater circles that would not be ap- proved of." But, Gielgud added, "He was serious, charming, with tremendous skill. He was awfully good to people and generous." Richard Harris was too stunned to speak of the death of his longtime friend. "It's terrible, it's shattering," said Harris, starring ina stage production of Camelot in San Diego. Turning away from reporters, Harris waved his hands across his face and said, "I can't," and quickly walked downstairs to a stage door. "He had a most original gift," said actress Olivia DeHavilland from her home in Paris. "I'm awfully sorry he's gone. He was a remarkable person, a splendid actor, but a rather troubled spirit." During the making of My Cousin Rachel in 1952, "he would lose patience with himself and a lot of ex- traordinary words would come out of him," she said. "Then he would turn around and say, 'Oh, I beg your par- don,' and I would say, 'Richard, that's all right. I don't understand Welsh.' " But Burton had been speaking English, Ms. DeHavilland said. "We lost one of our greatest actors," said Victor Mature, who appeared with Burton ip 1953's The Robe. "Henhad charisma, charm, tone.... He was an ultra-professional at all times....A monstrous- perfectionist. He wanted everything to be completely perfect or else he would be annoyed at himself and nobody else." Charlton Heston said he met Burton 35 years ago when they were appearing in separate shows on Broadway. They never worked together, "but I was a longtime fan of his enormous gifts," Heston said. "He was a marvelously gifted actor," Heston said. "He was perhaps rightly regarded the heir to Laurence Olivier and John Gielgud among the British actors of his generation." Lord Olivier called Burton "a very fine actor," said his "early death is a great tragedy to the theater world, the film world and the public. "I was looking forward to working with him again on his next film," Olivier said from his home in Sussex, England. He and Burton were planning to collaborate on The Wild Geese II, in which Olivier was to play Rudolph Hess and Burton a mercenary involved in the rescue of the Nazi leader from Spandau Prison. In the original Wild Geese, Bur- ton rescued an African leader. Hal Wallis, who produced Becket and Anne of the Thousand Days-which both earned nominations for best-actor Oscars-said Burton's death was "a very untimely and sad thing to hear." "I was very fond of him," Wallis said. "He was a most professional performer during our association. He was always on the job, always there no matter what went on the day before or the night The films of Richard Burton LOS ANGELES (AP) - Here is a The Tamingafthe Shew, 1967. selection of feature films inrwhich Dr. Faust, 1967. actor Richard Burton appeared: TheComedians, 1967. The LastDays of Dowlyn, 1948. Boom,, 1968. Now Barabbas Was a Robber, 1949. Whee Eagles Dare, 198 My Cousin Rachel, 1952. Aneathe Thousand Days, 1970. The Robe, 1953. Raid on Rommel, 1971. The DesertRats, 1953. The Assassinationof Trotsky, 1972. Alexander the Great, 1956. Blueeerd, 1972. The Longest Day, 1962. Exorcist 11: ThelHeretic, 1977. Cleopatra, 1962. Equus, 1977. Becket, 1%4. The Medusa Touch, 1978. The Night of theIguana, 1%4. The Wild Geese, 1978. The Sandpiper-s, 1965. Tristan &Iseult, 1981. The Spy WhoCamei efrom the Cold, 1%5. Wagner, 1983. Who's Afraid of virginia Woolf?, 196. Nineteen Eighty-four, 1984. SHORT OR LONG H airs tyles f or GUM N ew s in Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS y Liberty off State .668-9329 764-0552 Maple Village . . . 761-2733 ANN ARBOR DAILY MATINEES 2 I DUALTHEATRESENIORS EVERY EVENING $3.00 DAILY FIRST MATINEE $2.00 JAMIE LEE CURTIS @ C. THOMAS HOWELL F Burton ... dead at 58 N - Where dreams have a funny way of coming true. A selection of campus film highlights Picnic at Hanging Rock (Peter Weir, 1975) Peter Weir's haunting cinematic tour de force about a day trip to a campus films shady mountain spot in the Australian Outback. When several schoolgirls go for a walk, the suspense becomes mesmerizing and deliciously unner- ving. Don't go for a walk in the Arb af- terwards. (Wednesday and Thursday, 9:30 at the Michigan Theatre.) An American in Paris (Vincente Minnelli, 1951) The French and the Americans have never been so firmly allied than in this post-war musical classic starring Gene Kelly, Leslie Caron, and the music of George and Ira. The dancing is divine, the sets elaborate, and the spirits high. (Friday,'9:35 at MLB 4) Eraserhead (David Lynch, 1977) Sometimes revolting, sometimes eloquent, often absurd, Eraserhead has something for everybody. Lynch's black and white cinematography is steep with Caligari expressionism, making even the Cornish hen scene look artful. (Friday at 7:30, 9:10 and 10:50 at the Michigan Theatre.) Monty Python and the Holy Grail (Terry Gilliam and Terry Jones, 1975) So what if you've already seen this one, see it again. Coveted memories will be rejuvenated: The knights who say "ni", the search for the shrub- bery, the exploits in the castle An- thrax, and of course that nice little bunny. (Saturday, 7, 8:40 and 10:20, at Nat. Sci.) Unfaithfully Yours (Preston Sturges, 1948) Rex Harrison stars as a symphony conductor who thinks his wife is cheating on him. The recent remake starring Dudley Moore doesn't come close to Harrison's relentless drive of dialogue. (Saturday, 9:30 at MLB 4). -Compiled by Deborah Lewis (R) DAILY 1:00, 7:00, 9:00 Q ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S 3Nl'I p$ "THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH" DAILY 1:00, 7:30, 9:40 (PG) . .