CLICK HERE TO READ MONTHLY HERALD CLICK HERE TO READ Herald Monthly Magazine CLICK HERE TO READ THE WEEKEND PAPER CLICK HERE TO READ WORLD ARTS & CULTURE MAGAZINE CLICK HERE TO READ HERALD TIMES PARADE CLICK HERE TO READ THE ATLANTIC HERALD TRIBUNE
62
CINEMA. Cont'd.
|
VERONICA
GUERIN: AMAZING WOMAN!! |
|
WHO IS VERONICA
GUERIN? A fearless investigative reporter, Veronica Guerin’s daring coverage of Dublin’s criminal underworld exposed corruption, angered organized crime figures and led to her eventual assassination. Her death caused national outrage and led to a government crackdown on organized crime that netted more than 150 arrests. |
|
|
Veronica
Guerin covered organized crime for Ireland’s best-selling newspaper,
the Sunday Independent. A household name, she was famous not only for
her fearless reporting about the murderers and drug lords of Dublin’s
criminal underworld but for her commitment to defending the public’s
right to know. As a result of her work, she received numerous death
threats, was attacked numerous times and ultimately killed
|
|
Karl Malden
to receive lifetime achievement honor
Karl Malden, an Academy Award winner for A Streetcar Named Desire, received a lifetime achievement honor from the Screen Actors Guild. The award, given for career accomplishments and humanitarian efforts, was presented to the 91-year-old Malden at the guild's annual acting honors. "In a career spanning six decades, Karl Malden has superbly achieved the goal of every actor, to bring an extraordinarily rich range of iconic characters to the screen and stage," Guild President Melissa Gilbert said in announcing the award Tuesday. The pug-faced Malden won the supporting-actor Oscar for 1951's A Streetcar Named Desire, in which he played Blanche DuBois' suitor. He also won the New York Drama Critics Circle award for playing the role on Broadway. On the Waterfront earned Malden another Oscar nomination three years later. Other films include Patton, Gypsy, How the West Was Won and Birdman of Alcatraz. Malden won an Emmy for the 1985 miniseries Fatal Vision, and he was nominated for Emmys four straight years for his 1970s police drama The Streets of San Francisco. From 1989 to 1991, Malden was president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and served on its board from 1984-92 and 1994-99. Malden also served on the actors guild board from 1963-72.
End of the article.
CLICK HERE TO READ MONTHLY HERALD CLICK HERE TO READ Herald Monthly Magazine CLICK HERE TO READ THE WEEKEND PAPER CLICK HERE TO READ WORLD ARTS & CULTURE MAGAZINE CLICK HERE TO READ HERALD TIMES PARADE CLICK HERE TO READ THE ATLANTIC HERALD TRIBUNE