This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-21123532
The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Michael Winner: Death Wish director dies aged 77 | Michael Winner: Death Wish director dies aged 77 |
(35 minutes later) | |
Film director and newspaper columnist Michael Winner has died, aged 77, his wife Geraldine has confirmed. | Film director and newspaper columnist Michael Winner has died, aged 77, his wife Geraldine has confirmed. |
Born in Hampstead, London in 1935, he directed more than 30 films, including Death Wish and Scorpio. | |
He was also famous for his barbed restaurant reviews, written for The Sunday Times under the banner "Winner's Dinners". | He was also famous for his barbed restaurant reviews, written for The Sunday Times under the banner "Winner's Dinners". |
Winner had been ill for some time. Last summer, he said liver specialists had given him 18 months to live. | Winner had been ill for some time. Last summer, he said liver specialists had given him 18 months to live. |
Paying tribute to her husband, Mrs Winner said: "Michael was a wonderful man, brilliant, funny and generous. | |
"A light has gone out in my life." | "A light has gone out in my life." |
Ill health | |
Winner was born to to Jewish expatriate parents in London. His mother was Polish and his father Russian. | |
He attended St Christopher's School in Letchworth and went on to study law and economics at Cambridge University. | |
According to his official website, he was, at 17, the youngest student there and graduated aged 20. | |
He was enamoured with the film industry, and would often blag his way onto film sets and interviews. This led to work as a journalist and film critic, before he joined Motion Pictures Limited as a writer and editor in 1956. | |
By 1962, he had directed his first movie, Play it Cool, a pop musical starring Billy Fury. | |
With his own film company, Scimitar, established in the mid-60s, he made a number of satirical films starring Oliver Reed, including The System and I'll Never Forget What's 'Is Name. | |
But he became more well-known for his action films, especially the violent Death Wish series, starring Charles Bronson as an architect who turns vigilante after his wife and daughter are murdered. | |
In later years, Winner also directed a series of commercials for an insurance company featuring the catchphrase: "Calm down dear!" | |
For his entry in the 2012 edition of Who's Who, the director listed his interests as "eating, being difficult, making table mats, washing silk shirts" and "doing Pilates badly". | For his entry in the 2012 edition of Who's Who, the director listed his interests as "eating, being difficult, making table mats, washing silk shirts" and "doing Pilates badly". |
He had experienced a run of ill-health since eating a bad oyster on holiday in Barbados in 2007. He later picked up the E coli virus from a steak tartare, and was hospitalised eight times in the last few months of his life. | |
But he continued to write his weekly column for The Sunday Times until 2 December, 2012, signing off with the headline: "Geraldine says it's time to get down from the table. Goodbye." | |
Winner met his wife 56 years ago, but did not marry until 2011 in a small ceremony witnessed by actor Michael Caine and his wife Shakira. | |
Mrs Winner said her husband had died on Monday at his home in Kensington, London, where she had been nursing him. |