Legendary film critic, Roger Ebert, died Thursday, two days after revealing cancer returned to his body.
“We
were getting ready to go home today for hospice care, when he looked at
us, smiled, and passed away. No struggle, no pain, just a quiet,
dignified transition,” his wife, Chaz Ebert, said in a statement
Thursday.
“I’ll
see you at the movies,” were the last words Ebert wrote to his readers.
They were published in an essay titled “Leave of Presence” on his blog
Tuesday, in which he explained he was planning to slow down and reduce
the number of movie reviews he wrote.
“My
intent is to continue to write selected reviews but to leave the rest
to a talented team of writers handpicked and greatly admired by me,”
Ebert wrote. “What’s more, I’ll be able at last to do what I’ve always
fantasized about doing: reviewing only the movies I want to review.”
Ebert had already lost his voice and much of his jaw after battling thyroid and salivary gland cancer.
He suffered a hip fracture in December, and it recently led to the revelations about cancer, he said.
Ebert
started as the Sun-Times film critic on April 3, 1967, writing about
200 reviews each of those 46 years, he said. The last year however, was
his most prolific.
“Last
year, I wrote the most of my career, including 306 movie reviews, a
blog post or two a week, and assorted other articles,” he said. “I must
slow down now, which is why I’m taking what I like to call ‘a leave of
presence.”
Ebert, who won a Pulitzer Prize for film criticism in 1975, had a way with words and a sharp wit that is not easily matched.
–
About Rob Schneider’s “Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo” in 2005: “If
he’s going to persist in making bad movies, he’s going to — have to grow
accustomed to reading bad reviews.”
Ebert: Remembered
–Wife
Chaz Ebert: “I am devastated by the loss of my love, Roger — my
husband, my friend, my confidante and oh-so-brilliant partner of over 20
years. He fought a courageous fight. I’ve lost the love of my life and
the world has lost a visionary and a creative and generous spirit who
touched so many people all over the world. We had a lovely, lovely life
together, more beautiful and epic than a movie. It had its highs and the
lows, but was always experienced with good humor, grace and a deep
abiding love for each other.
“Roger
was a beloved husband, stepfather to Sonia and Jay, and grandfather to
Raven, Emil, Mark and Joseph. Just yesterday he was saying how his
grandchildren were ‘the best things in my life.’ He was happy and
radiating satisfaction over the outpouring of responses to his blog
about his 46th year as a film critic. But he was also getting tired of
his fight with cancer, and said if this takes him, he has lived a great
and full life.”
May his soul rest in peace, Amen!!!
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