Marlon Brando, who revolutionized American acting with his Method performances in ''Streetcar Named Desire'' and ''On the Waterfront'' and went on to create the iconic characterization of Don Vito Corleone in ''The Godfather,'' has died. He was 80.
Brando died at an undisclosed Los Angeles hospital Thursday, attorney David J. Seeley said Friday. The cause of death was being withheld, Seeley said, noting the actor ''was a very private man.''
Brando, whose unpredictable behavior made him equally fascinating off the screen, was acclaimed the greatest actor of his generation, a two-time winner of the Academy Award who influenced some of the best actors of the generation that followed, among them Al Pacino, Robert De Niro and Jack Nicholson.
He was the unforgettable embodiment of the brutish Stanley Kowalski of ''A Streetcar Named Desire,'' the mixed up Terry Malloy of ''On the Waterfront'' (which won him his first Oscar) and the wily Corleone of ''The Godfather.''
Source: AP
Brando died at an undisclosed Los Angeles hospital Thursday, attorney David J. Seeley said Friday. The cause of death was being withheld, Seeley said, noting the actor ''was a very private man.''
Brando, whose unpredictable behavior made him equally fascinating off the screen, was acclaimed the greatest actor of his generation, a two-time winner of the Academy Award who influenced some of the best actors of the generation that followed, among them Al Pacino, Robert De Niro and Jack Nicholson.
He was the unforgettable embodiment of the brutish Stanley Kowalski of ''A Streetcar Named Desire,'' the mixed up Terry Malloy of ''On the Waterfront'' (which won him his first Oscar) and the wily Corleone of ''The Godfather.''
Source: AP
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