The rugged leading man and 1968 Best Actor Oscar winner for Charly passed away today after a career that began as a handsome young thesp and continued well into his dotage. He was 88. But Cliff Robertson may well be remembered for bringing down one of the most powerful Hollywood moguls, David Begelman. In 1977, Robertson discovered that his name had been forged on a $10,000 check which he realized he had not earned. He soon discovered it was a forgery carried out of Begelman and triggered one of the biggest studio scandals of the 1970s. Begelman resigned, and Robertson couldn’t get acting work until the early 1980s. Robertson’s long movie career began with Picnic in 1955 and continued through Spider-Man and its first two sequels as Uncle Ben Parker. But he may be best remembered for playing John F Kennedy in the biopic PT 109 and was chosen personally by the president. He was also a familiar face in television dramas from the earliest days of the small screen.
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He was truly a class act as well as a fine actor. PT-109, Three Days of the Condor, Charly, De Palma’s Obsession. Never phoned in a performance; I remember as a kid how funny he was on Batman. And he stood by his principles during the Begelman scandal, even though it nearly ruined his career. Hollywood has such big egos, yet such short memories. Let us not forget this gentleman.
He was great in Spider-man. I know he has a great resume.
The article neglects to mention that Cliff Robertson also won an EMMY for “The Game,” a 1965 drama on “Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre”. In 1961 he was also nominated for an EMMY on the “U.S. Steel Hour”. Although he was known as a movie star, he did always worked in television as well. Having roles in many of the early dramas like “Hallmark Hall of Fame”, “Kraft Theater”, “Playhouse 90″ and “U.S. Steel Hour”, in later years, Robertson also appeared in “Falcon Crest”, “Batman” and “Bracken’s World”.
Loved him in Autumn Leaves and Picnic, too
Cliff Robertson was indeed a fine actor… From PT 109, 633 SQUADRON to THREE DAYS OF THE CONDOR, he was equally at home playing the lead or just being a damn good character actor. In THE BEST MAN he played that Presidential candidate who would stop at nothing. And then just a few years later, Cliff was playing the guest villian “Shame” on TV’s BATMAN.
It took guts to take on a powerful Hollywood agent who had even more powerful friends. But then Cliff Robertson always had that too along with his talent!
He was something rare in Hollywood – a class act.
R.I.P. Cliff Robertson
You will be missed.
As for the Begelman scandal, how typical of Hollywood to hire an embezzler to run a major motion picture studio. That’s Hollywood!
Even after all these years, “Indecent Exposure” (David McClintock’s classic expose on the Begelman check forgery scandal) remains one of the best books anyone has ever written about power in Hollywood. I recently pulled it off the shelf just to check a fact, and ended up re-reading the whole damned thing. What a page turner.
The gold standard for class acts. I represented him when I was at ICM. God, I wish every client could’ve been like him. Even after I quit, he insisted on treating me to lunch on several occasions at his favorite place in New York, Doubles–and would always insist on discussing my career, not his.
My heartfelt condolences to his family. Wonderful man who will be missed by all those who were blessed to know him.