Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Peter Boyle - RIP


Sure, he didn't die racing against time and the elements in the snow trying to rescue family members, but he did give us a deeply moving interpretation of one of the silver screen icons of all time: Frankenstein's monster in Young Frankenstein.

Peter Boyle, who died Tuesday at 71 after battling multiple myeloma and heart disease, was best-known for playing the grumpiest father in modern television in Everybody Loves Raymond, and for his classic scene in 1974’s Young Frankenstein, in which his melancholy monster broke into a tap-dance routine to the tune of “Puttin’ On The Ritz.”
Boyle was a complicated, fascinating man. Raymond may have made him rich and a household face, but he’d made his breakthrough decades earlier in the title role of Joe, the 1970 film in which he starred as a bigoted hard-hat construction worker who wreaked a murderous vengeance upon that era’s hippies. As was true of his committed performance as Frank Barone, Joe briefly stereotyped the prematurely-balding Boyle as a conservative icon, "It was a very strange experience,” Boyle once told The New York Times. “People coming up and saying, 'That's what they ought to do with all these hippies.' I was in an identity crisis." That’s because Joe’s opinions couldn’t have been further from Boyle’s own life and many of his acting choices, which tended to be leftist and countercultural. Let me just throw this fact out for a start: John Lennon was the best man at Boyle’s 1977 wedding to Laraine Alterman, one of the first prominent female rock-music writers. (They had two children.)
addCredit("Peter Boyle: Kevin Parry/WireImage.com")

Boyle was frequently at the center of tumultuous pop-culture moments. Born outside of Philadelphia in 1935, Boyle did brief stints in the Navy and then in a monastery in training as a monk. He drifted into acting, working with the Second City improvisational troupe, and was among those tear-gassed during Chicago’s 1968 Democratic Convention. (It was an experience he would relive, in a way, in two films: Haskell Wexler’s groundbreaking 1969 cinema vérité timebomb Medium Cool, and the 1987 HBO film Conspiracy: The Trial of the Chicago Eight.) With his friend Jane Fonda, with whom he costarred in the 1973 anti-Establishment comedy Steelyard Blues, he attended many anti-Vietnam War rallies. (I remember one night in the late ‘70s being in a restaurant interviewing Bonnie Raitt when she stopped talking, jumped up and hugged Boyle, who was passing our table. “Hey, you’re gonna be at the No Nukes rally, right?” she asked. “You know it, sweetie!” he said with a huge grin.)
As Boyle went into middle-age, he alternated jobs probably taken for money, such as piddly movies like Beyond The Poseidon Adventure (1979) and The In Crowd (1988), with riskier projects like the Hunter Thompson biopic Where The Buffalo Roam (1980) and the excellent, short-lived TV series Joe Bash (1986), in which he played a lonely, sensitive beat cop. And of course, anyone who’s seen Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver (1976) probably remembers Boyle’s turn as the hardbitten cabbie The Wizard.
Boyle’s occasional work on the stage was distinguished. In the early '80s, he co-starred with Tommy Lee Jones in the original New York Public Theater production of Sam Shepard’s knock-down, drag-out True West. In ’96, he won an Emmy for one of every sensible X Files-nut’s favorite episodes, taking the title role in “Clyde Bruckman’s Final Repose,” as a man who could see future deaths.
Even after he became a prime-time star in Raymond, it was great that Boyle still had the desire and skills to take a role such as the unforgivable racist in Monster’s Ball (2001). The next time you watch Frank Barone mutter and whine in an Everybody Loves Raymond rerun, remember that Peter Boyle was a very cool guy.
Posted by Ken Tucker 12.13.06, 03:01 PM

1 comment:

ARMontacruz said...

Comments
Oh my gosh, I can't believe this amazing man is gone. This seriously upsets me.The chemistry this man had with actors was out of this world; his instincts were unforgettable, with timing that was second to none. God rest his soul, as we will all miss him. Regards to his family and friends. I respected and admired this man very much.
Shannon | Dec 13, 2006 6:12:47 PM
Wow, just off of Everybody Loves Raymond and he's gone, makes me sad.
Ed | Dec 13, 2006 5:55:51 PM
Thanks for making me smile.Holy Crap. I will miss you. We went to the same parochial school. You in the boys section . Me in the Girls. West Catholic in Phila. Sorry we never met.
Rose Murdoch | Dec 13, 2006 5:52:04 PM
wow! what a great guy! he was an amazing man that had a lot of talent. i really wish i could have met him. god rest his soul.
ash dav | Dec 13, 2006 5:50:59 PM
Prayers and sympathies for his family and friends, including his many fans. He was truly an excellent craftsman.
Mark | Dec 13, 2006 5:49:37 PM
Holy Crap Marie! I can't believe he's gone. What a wonderful man and actor.
Don | Dec 13, 2006 5:40:38 PM
Wow, it is hard to believe that peter boyle passed away, he was truley an extrordanary person and actor, and he will be missed a great deal...
Matthew Kincaid | Dec 13, 2006 5:30:47 PM
Like everybody else I knew Mr Boyle was sick but thought he was getting over it .. I was really blown away to hear that he passed away .. my condolences to his family and friends of which Im sure he had many I just loved his Frank Barone character and in the many parts he has played especially in Young Frankenstein..Wow is all I can say he actually had John Lennon as his best man . it just goes to show how diverse he was in his beliefs and freindships what a dark horse he was and a wondeful man and humanitarian .. You will be sadly missed Mr Boyle.. give em all "Holy Crap" up there, Frank wherever you are
Zee | Dec 13, 2006 5:24:29 PM
What a loss to the acting industry. Rest in peace, Mr. Boyle and thanks for the wonderful laughs and memories. I, for one, will miss you greatly.
Dot | Dec 13, 2006 5:24:04 PM
I'll remember him for his appearance with Sean Connery in the Peter Hyams sci-fi flick "Outland" (1981). God Bless!
Dave | Dec 13, 2006 5:23:33 PM
Peter...you left the entertainment field with bigger shoes to fill than "Young Frankenstein." You will soon live again when Mel Books premieres his new musical, of the same name, on Broadway to sold out audiences.
Get your top hat and cane ready!
R.I.P.
Marc LeVine | Dec 13, 2006 5:19:11 PM
is one off my favorite actor,he make me laught,R I P WE all love you
ELIAS | Dec 13, 2006 5:17:01 PM
An excellent character actor, elevated the role to prominence. I loved watching "Joe." What a brilliant role by an actor who remained truly wonderful to watch. No one will ever duplicate the magic of his "Younfg Frankenstein." Yes, let's not forget Frank Barone. Magic! Absolute magic. He will be missed and always remembered!
Patrick | Dec 13, 2006 5:12:54 PM
My husband and I will be watching 'Young Frankenstein', one of our favorite films, tonight. Not just anyone can hold their own in a Mel Brooks flick opposite the likes of Gene Wilder and Madeline Kahn. Peter will be missed.
Kana | Dec 13, 2006 5:07:30 PM
Peter was a fellow graduate of the West Philadelphia Catholic High School for Boys. I am saddened with his passing. RIP Peter.
Philly refugee | Dec 13, 2006 5:07:24 PM
From Young Frank to Dream Team, he was one of the best. I was telling that scene in the hospital to my friend the other day. Sad to think he is not going to be around.
To his family and friends, as sad as a day it is remember that he has touched so many lives without ever meeting most of them. He has made me laugh to no end and I will always be greatful to him and his family for allowing me to enjoy a piece of his life.
Brian | Dec 13, 2006 5:06:45 PM
On The Passing Of A Monster.Mario Grillo December 2006 Grilloink@yahoo.com
Scene: The lobby of the Sunset Marquis hotel in Los Angeles. The time: A few weeks after Everybody Loves Raymond hit the airwaves. After a few cocktails I spied Peter Boyle sitting with a woman on a sofa in the lobby outside the Whiskey Bar’s front door. I had been a fan of Peter Boyle as the Wizard in Taxi Driver. Jeez, what kid from Brooklyn wasn’t? He also played Joe Gallo, the Umberto’s Clam Bar-assassinated, Dylan-folk hero gangster in the 70s classic Crazy Joe. Since my father introducing me to the real Joe Gallo down at the Brooklyn waterfront where he toiled as a longshoreman has always been one of my very first memories, I also felt a unique kinship with the man.And let’s not forget he was Young Frankenstein, after all.As I allowed the liquid courage to well up inside me and began meandering towards the man, I decided to skip the Taxi Driver Crazy Joe Young Frankenstein chit chat and compliment him on his new project—the very funny new show Everybody Loves Raymond. I figured for a guy that’s probably had more than a few drunks croon Putting On The Ritz to him while he is out, he’d genuinely enjoy hearing someone compliment his latest project.I tapped him on the shoulder, apologized for interrupting his conversation, and told him with a smile and in a goofy-way, that I … I did love Raymond, where as my girlfriend at the time did not love Raymond. It was true. Recently she and I had had differing views on the brand new television show. I thought it was hilarious and promising, she did not.After I told Mr. Boyle about our conflicting viewpoints, I politely said thank you and began to walk away. My thought process being, don’t bother the guy anymore. You have your little story of speaking to the Wizard, be nice now and leave the man alone. So to say I was surprised when Young Frankenstein himself reached out and grabbed my arm spinning me around in order to continue our little exchange is an understatement.“Lemme get this right,” he said to me. “You Love Raymond and she doesn’t?”“Uhm, that’s right I managed to sputter.“Hmmm… I’ll tell you what to do…” he continued, with a stern glare and a small smile. “You grab the remote control, whack her over the head with it…then she’ll love Raymond!” His face exploded in a wide grin and a laugh. No malice in the words, it was a joke plain and simple. And a friggin’ hilarious one at that.We laughed a bit more over small talk, shook hands and I walked back in the bar for another round. As I ordered, I glanced over my shoulder. I was going to have two drinks delivered to Mr. Boyle and his friend. Only he was gone.And I was left with a story that always makes me smile when I think of it. Peter Boyle came across like a truly nice guy, genuine and sweet.Television will miss him.
Mario Grillo, Brooklyn, NY | Dec 13, 2006 5:01:30 PM