Who Legally Owns This?? (Though...
Law0 min ago
By Steve Cunningham
�
HELL-RAISING actor Oliver Reed could win the film industry's rarest accolade - a posthumous Oscar.
�
The hard-drinking star, who died aged 61 while filming Gladiator, is likely to be to be nominated for a Best Supporting Actor award for his role in this epic as Proximor.
�
Reed never won an Academy Award in his 40-year career.� His 34-year-old widow Josephine, who lives in Ireland, said: 'An Oscar would be a wonderful tribute to him. He was such a rogue and the role was typically him.'
Oliver Reed in Gladiator
�
Reed died of a heart attack in Malta in 1999 as the film neared completion.
�
According to one obituary on Reed, his screen career often seemed like a mere rehearsal for the more important business of hell-raising. He once summed up his career as 'shafting the girlies and downing the sherbie'.
�
After a series of Hammer horrors, Reed became one of the highest-paid actors as Bill Sikes in the musical Oliver! He later went on to two Ken Russell projects, Women In Love and The Devils. In the first, Reed achieved the distinction of becoming the first actor to appear fully naked in a mainstream film.
�
The binges were legendary:
Posthumous Oscars are rare indeed. Only 10 have been awarded - and just one of them to a performer. That was Peter Finch in 1977 for his role as a deranged newscaster in Network.
�
Previous posthumous nominations in this category - Spencer Tracy for Guess Who's Coming to Dinner in 1967 and James Dean twice, for East of Eden in 1955 and Giant in 1956 - came long after the actors�had died.