Burt Reynolds

ClassyCo

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I've always liked Burt Reynolds, without having anything specifically tying me to him. I remember seeing him in THE CANNONBALL RUN and SMOKY AND THE BANDIT on TV when I was just a kid, and then there's the cameo he did on THE GOLDEN GIRLS, but outside of that, I don't know if I've seen him in anything. Even so, I've always enjoyed him when I've come across his work. While opinions differ on his talent, I've always found him to be funny, easygoing, and genuine.

I've recently started watching the I AM BURT REYNOLDS documentary that's currently You-Know-Where. For me, it offers some new information, considering I'm not terribly well-versed on Burt's personal and professional lives. One thing that did stick out to me as odd concerning the contents of the documentary was there has been no mentioning of Burt's being on GUNSMOKE. They make mention of other shows he was a part of, even short-lived ones, but GUNSMOKE is left by the wayside.

Anyhoo, any Burt Reynolds fans out there?

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Crimson

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If it's possible to like and dislike an actor at the same time, that's my reaction to Reynolds. He was charming and easy going on screen, but I also found him too self-aware and a bit smug. He reminded me of a handsomer but less funny Bob Hope. In fairness, I've never seen any of his early work when I think he was more serious. By the late 70s and into the 80s, he was a cheesy persona. I do have a little bit of a soft spot for THE CANNONBALL RUN.

He turned down or missed out on some movies along the way that could really have changed the course of his career: STAR WARS, THE GODFATHER, TERMS OF ENDEARMENT, MASH and CALIFORNIA SUITE.
 
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ClassyCo

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If it's possible to like and dislike an actor at the same time, that's my reaction to Reynolds. He was charming and easy going on screen, but I also found him too self-aware and a bit smug. He reminded me of a handsomer but less funny Bob Hope. In fairness, I've never seen any of his early work when I think he was more serious. By the late 70s and into the 80s, he was a cheesy persona. I do have a little bit of a soft spot for THE CANNONBALL RUN.
I can understand what you're saying here. I can't say I share your feelings on Burt Reynolds, but I can say I have a similar reaction to someone like Kim Novak. As much as I like her, she sometimes ends up disappointing me so bad when I see her in a film.

As for Reynolds, I've always liked him, but can see the "cheesy persona" that you speak of. If I'm being honest, I typically think of that superstar era for him, where he was one of the most famous men in the world, dated/married Loni Anderson, and walked through multiple cheesy, corny movies, mostly because of how he had let the seriousness go out of fear and out semi-frustration.
 

Snarky Oracle!

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Didn't Burt Reynolds attend one of those Actors' Studio things in his youth? John Forsythe, who was in there with him, once said Reynolds had considerable potential but "we don't know what happened to him" (as Reynolds became a top box office star) because Burt's "serious actor" credentials had been tossed away long ago.

Burt's early, seething Brando-y quality was pretty short-lived. Replaced by the relatively-benign silly a**hole persona he slipped into and seemed to prefer. He used to beat Judy Carne (according to Judy Carne) and he always struck me (not physically, as I'd never meet him) as a selective abuser -- one who knew whom he could hit and whom he couldn't.... I'd be surprised if he slapped up Dinah Shore, but ya never knew. (Later in life, he acknowledged two of his most stalwart friends as Jon Voight and Angie Dickinson, probably because they patiently put up with his behavior and didn't abandon him for it).

Reynolds had a 40 years "feud" with Marlon Brando (as one would expect), and later admitted he'd steered Sally Field into doing POSEIDON ADVENTURE 2 in order to sabotage her career momentum after winning her first Oscar for NORMA RAE (Lord Olivier did the same thing to Vivien Leigh whenever she got an Oscar, encouraging her to promptly return to the stage to refine her craft). Reynolds eventually cited Sally Field as 'the love of his life', while Field (after Burt had died) snickered that that was "maybe in retrospect" and added "I don't think he was good for me."

LOL. Well, of course.

In the '80s when AIDS-rumors swirled around him (he began to look ill in a distinctly emaciated way) Sally Field was asked in an interview (in Playboy??) if he'd ever had any same-sex activities. Sally answered not to her knowledge. But that defense was too tepid for Reynolds, angered that his ex had not defended his heterosexuality more vehemently. (In fact, with that moustache, Reynolds had begun to look like an aging, late-'70s/early-'80s gay -- and one who might have caught something). Burt once said he would never get into a public "pissing contest with Sally because Sally would win". A questionable assertion, especially since she tended to avoid talking about him after their breakup.

Ugh, quite frankly.

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I've recently started watching the I AM BURT REYNOLDS documentary that's currently You-Know-Where. For me, it offers some new information, considering I'm not terribly well-versed on Burt's personal and professional lives. One thing that did stick out to me as odd concerning the contents of the documentary was there has been no mentioning of Burt's being on GUNSMOKE. They make mention of other shows he was a part of, even short-lived ones, but GUNSMOKE is left by the wayside.

I think even GUNSMOKE fans forget he was on GUNSMOKE. He was in the B&W hour-long installments, which have been the least seen in syndication because they're B&W and an hour-long. But Reynolds says his GUNSMOKE years, 1962 to 1965, were the happiest of his career, for some reason. (They had a nice mood on the set, thanks to Jim Arness, who made sure of it).

But Burt's ultimate just-hangin'-out-with-his-dudes screen identity was, yes, cheesy, defensive, and got awfully tiresome awfully quickly.

He also turned down his role in BOOGIE NIGHTS nine times before accepting it. (Getting an Academy Award nomination for it).

Lots of people are 'messes' but Burt Reynolds' messiness became part of his image which eventually upstaged everything else. At least, that's how it seemed to me.

Here, he looks a little like Brando, Heston and even Joe Don Baker.
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Crimson

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Lots of people are 'messes' but Burt Reynolds' messiness became part of his image which eventually upstaged everything else.

It seems like his scandals and controversies were ... dull. I recall his split from Loni Anderson dragged on forever without ever being interesting or dramatic. Some celebrities are enhanced by their controversies but being tabloid fodder made Reynolds seem small.

I will say that he was well suited to sitcomland, with his cheesy 80s persona mellowed a bit. I don't think EVENING SHADE was more than mildly pleasant though, despite an impressive cast.
 

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If @ClassyCo is serious about exploring his filmography, I would suggest you read a synopsis of Deliverance before you decide on watching. You might want to skip that one on Family Movie NIght.

Trivia: BR was from Jupiter, Florida. In his semi-retired years he sponsored an acting workshop for aspiring actors and stuntmen in this area. Every time they had a "graduation" they would do a performance/recital-type event at the Lyric Theater here in Stuart, attended by both the public and show business scouts/agents. It would be a chance for the wannabe performers to be seen by a lot of connected people and Reynolds would be a host/master of ceremonies.

Shortly before he died, he contracted pneumonia. His publicist got ahead of the story by releasing that he was "recuperating at an undisclosed location" leading people to think he was in LA....but it was the Worst Kept Secret in Town that he was recovering right here in Martin Memorial Hospital.
 
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