Pages

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Charles Grodin Passed Away!

Charles Grodin, the veteran actor, talk radio host and writer passed away.

BLACK LIVES MATTER

PROTECT BLACK WOMEN! 

STOP ASIAN HATE!

PROTECT AAPI WOMEN!

FREE PALESTINE🇵🇸!

TRUST SCIENCE AND MEDICAL EXPERTS! THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC IS FUCKING REAL! MAKE SURE YOU ARE WEARING A MASK IF YOU'RE NOT VACCINATED!

GET VACCINATED! THE MEDICAL EXPERTS SAY THE VACCINES DO WORK AND IT REDUCES THE RISK OF CORONAVIRUS INFECTION.

HOLD THEM ACCOUNTABLE NOW! VOTE THESE DUMBASS LAWMAKERS OUT OF OFFICE! STOP SUPPORTING ALL FORMS OF EXTREMISM!

GIVE PUERTO RICO, GUAM, AMERICAN SAMOA, U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS AND NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS THE RIGHT TO VOTE IN THE U.S. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS! GRANT STATEHOOD TO THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. MAKE IT THE DOUGLASS COMMONWEALTH.

GOOGLE'S BLOGGER IS STRAIGHT UP TRASH! THE BLOGGER INTERFACE IS A TOTAL DISASTER AND IT'S RIDICULOUS!

WHITE PRIVILEGE IS REAL! IT'S "SUIT AND TIE" WHITE SUPREMACY ON TELEVISION, RADIO, THE INTERNET AND AMERICAN POLICY! THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS "WOKE SUPREMACY!"

YOU CAN'T FIX STUPID!

EXPECT MORE!

Veteran star of stage and screen Charles Grodin died Tuesday of bone marrow cancer at the age of 86 at his Wilton, Connecticut, home.

Actor Nick Grodin, the elder Grodin’s son, confirmed his father’s passing to The New York Times.

Charles Grodin’s career spanned more than six decades and included memorable roles in such popular movies as “Midnight Run,” “Beethoven” and “The Heartbreak Kid,” as well Broadway’s “Same Time, Next Year.”

According to the Times, Grodin also had his own talk show in the 1990s and became a popular fixture on the broader talk show circuit, appearing 36 times on “The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson” and 17 times on “Late Night With David Letterman.”

Grodin was also an Emmy Award-winning writer, sharing a 1977 statuette with six others for a 1977 Paul Simon television special, who penned numerous plays and books throughout his professional career. His published works include 1989′s “It Would Be So Nice If You Weren’t Here,” 1992′s “How I Get Through Life,” 1993′s “Freddie the Fly” and 2009′s “How I Got to Be Whoever It Is I Am,” according to The Hollywood Reporter.

The Pittsburgh native, who dropped out of the University of Miami to pursue acting, received his first big break in 1962, when he landed a part in Broadway’s “Tchin-Tchin,” starring Anthony Quinn and Margaret Leighton.

Other career highlights included quirky, often awkward, roles in Neil Simon’s “Seems Like Old Times;” Albert Brooks’ mockumentary of a typical American family, “Real Life;” “Heaven Can Wait,” opposite Warren Beatty; “Rosemary’s Baby” and “The Great Muppet Caper,” THR reported.

Grodin was born April 21, 1935, and studied acting on scholarship at the Pittsburgh Playhouse School of Theatre, before studying with Uta Hagen and Lee Strasberg in New York, the outlet reported.

One thing best known about Grodin was his passion to call out bullshit.

Sean "Softball" Hannity made a promise to Charles Grodin that he will be waterboarded for charity. Turns out that the annoying agitator never done it.

Remember back in the day, Grodin went to Fox News to debate Sean "Softball" Hannity over torture. The white nationalist claims "enhanced interrogation" saved lives. Gordin strongly disagreed with the assertion. He literally said to the agitator that torture is wrong. The softball said he would be waterboarded for charity.

Shame Gordin did live to see that happen. Obviously, the softball is a coward. That's why he is the most annoying media personality ever.

In August, I will make sure this will come up in the Sean Hannity Word Vomit.

I'll be doing it in my underwear (to paraphrase that agitator), watching Clifford and laughing at Charles Grodin and Martin Short.

No comments:

Post a Comment