الخميس، 6 فبراير 2020

Derek Mackay

Derek Mackay (born 30 July 1977) is a (suspended) Scottish National Party politician who served as Finance Secretary of Scotland from 2016 to 2020, and has served as Member of the Scottish Parliament for Renfrewshire North and West since 2011. Mackay previously served as Minister for Transport and Islands and Minister for Local Government and Planning.

Mackay was elected to Renfrewshire Council in 1999 at the age of 21. From 2007 to 2011 he was Leader of the Council.

On 6 February 2020 Mackay resigned as Finance Secretary after he was reported, in the Scottish Sun, as having messaged a 16-year-old school boy, over a six-month period, on social media
Mackay joined the SNP at 16 and was involved in both the youth, where he served as National Convener from 1998–2002, and student movements. He was first elected as a councillor for Renfrewshire Council at the age of 21 in 1999, making him at the time the youngest male councillor in Scotland.

Mackay attended Kirklandneuk Primary School and Renfrew High School. He later attended the University of Paisley, pursuing but ultimately abandoning a course in Shipping Management.

Political career
Mackay was first elected as a councillor in 1999, representing the Blythswood Ward on Renfrewshire Council. After his election in 1999, he won three successive ward elections and became leader of Renfrewshire Council in May 2007, taking the SNP from opposition to lead the administration for the first time. He became a national figure in local government, leading the SNP group in the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities (COSLA) from 2009 to 2011. He coordinated the SNP campaign in the 2012 Scottish local government elections and the 2017 UK General Election.

At the 2011, Mackay was adopted for the new constituency of Renfrewshire North and West while also being placed third on the SNP regional list for West Scotland region. Upon his election as the constituency MSP for Renfrewshire North and West, he was placed on the Finance Committee and also appointed as the SNP's Business Convener and Parliamentary Liaison Officer to the Cabinet Secretary for Parliamentary Business and Government Strategy Bruce Crawford MSP.

Following a mini-reshuffle Mackay replaced Aileen Campbell as Minister for Local Government and Planning on 7 December 2011. When Nicola Sturgeon became First Minister he was appointed as Minister for Transport and Islands.[3]

Following the Scottish Parliament election in 2016, Mackay was promoted to the Scottish Cabinet to serve as Cabinet Secretary for Finance and the Constitution. After a reshuffle in June 2018, Economy and Fair Work was added to his portfolio.

In June 2011, Mackay was appointed as the SNP's Business Convener (party chair), succeeding Bruce Crawford. The Business Convener is responsible for chairing the SNP's Party Conference and the National Executive Committee; overseeing the party's management, administration and operations, as well as the coordination of election campaigns; working with the Chief Executive of Headquarters in setting priorities. Mackay stepped down from the role in October 2018.

On 6 February 2020, after reports in the Scottish Sun, Mackay resigned just hours before the Scottish budget was due to be announced, after it was revealed he had sent a 16-year-old boy 270 messages over Facebook and Instagram.[2][4] First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said she had accepted Mackay's resignation, adding: "Derek has made a significant contribution to government, however he recognises that his behaviour has failed to meet the standards required." Scottish Conservative leader Jackson Carlaw called on Mackay to also resign from the Scottish Parliament, saying his behaviour could "constitute the grooming of a young individual".[2] The same day Mackay was suspended from the SNP.[5]

Personal life
Mackay lives in Renfrew. He came out as gay in 2013 and separated from his wife.[6] They have two sons together, born 2015 and 2011

Silent Witness

Silent Witness is a British television crime drama series, produced by the BBC, which focuses on a team of forensic pathology experts and their investigations into various crimes. First broadcast in 1996, the series was created by Nigel McCrery, a former murder squad detective based in Nottingham. (He later went on to create the series New Tricks, with writer Roy Mitchell.)[1] Twenty-three series of Silent Witness have been broadcast since 1996. Amanda Burton starred as primary character Dr. Sam Ryan before leaving the show during the eighth series. Since her departure the series has featured an ensemble cast, which consisted of Emilia Fox, David Caves, Liz Carr and Richard Lintern until the end of series 23, when Carr and Lintern both departed. The programme is broadcast in more than 235 territories,[2] including ABC in Australia,[3] Showcase and the Knowledge Network in Canada, KRO in the Netherlands, TV One[4] and Prime[5] in New Zealand, and BBC America in the United States. Silent Witness continues to achieve good audience ratings in the UK. In 2011, for example, Series 14 attracted an average audience of nine million viewers.
Background
The main character in the original series was based on Professor Helen Whitwell, a forensic pathologist based in Sheffield, whom McCrery had known while serving as a police officer. The programme followed the activities of pathologist Sam Ryan, played by Amanda Burton, until she departed early in the eighth series.

There was a succession of regular supporting characters, changing almost every series, but Dr Leo Dalton (William Gaminara) and Dr Harry Cunningham (Tom Ward), who were introduced in the sixth series, continued as lead characters following Ryan's departure, with Dalton replacing her as professor.

A new character, Dr Nikki Alexander (Emilia Fox), was introduced in the eighth series. While working as a forensic anthropologist, she appropriates facilities and software in the pathology department to analyse an Iron Age find, with the belated, bemused and begrudging approval of Dalton. Dr Alexander is able to assist in a set of cases being investigated by the team, as it turns out she has "worked in forensic pathology in Johannesburg for six months" and is certified by the Home Office to practise. She eventually overcomes Leo's reluctance and, with Harry's support, is offered and accepts a position on the team.

During the fifteenth series Dr Cunningham leaves to accept a position in New York City. He is replaced by forensics expert Jack Hodgson (David Caves) and his assistant Clarissa Mullery (Liz Carr). During the sixteenth series Dr Dalton is killed in an explosion. His replacement, Dr Thomas Chamberlain (Richard Lintern), is introduced at the start of the seventeenth series.

Although the show focuses heavily on areas of pathology, the police also have a presence in each case. During later series of the show detectives and investigators tend to differ from episode to episode, with guest artists appearing in these roles. However, during the early years of the show several characters appeared regularly to investigate each case.

The first three series were set in Cambridge. This changed to London from the start of the fourth series, following Sam as she took up an academic position.

Each series is typically made up of a series of two-part stories. The first nine series typically featured eight episodes (four two-part stories), increased to ten episodes (five two-part stories) from the tenth series onwards.

In 1998 the writer John Milne received an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for the second series episode "Blood, Sweat and Tears". In the United States the series airs during 'Mystery Monday' on BBC America.

The series airs in Norway under the title "Tause vitner" on the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation NRK[7] and in Sweden on TV4 under the name "Tyst vittne".[8] Both the Norwegian and Swedish titles are direct translations. The show is also broadcast in the Netherlands by public broadcaster KRO, Belgium on VRT channel Canvas and in Finland on the Finnish Broadcasting Company Yle using the name "Hiljainen todistaja", which is also a direct translation of the original title.[9]

The theme music featured in the series is entitled Silencium and is performed by John Harle. The arrangement, for chamber orchestra and soprano saxophone solo, was first performed as part of the Canterbury Festival on 22 October 2011.[10] The vocal section is performed by Sarah Leonard.[11]

The incidental music used in the series is written by the BAFTA-nominated composer Sheridan Tongue.

In August 2012 the series came under criticism for being "unduly gruesome". Controversy was specifically focused on the fifteenth-series episode Redhill, written by Ed Whitmore. The BBC responded with the following:

As programme makers we take our responsibility to the audience extremely seriously and try to make sure we strike the right balance between compelling drama without being unnecessarily graphic. Towards the end of the first episode, we had established that DI Bridges and Officer Kessler had previously worked together and that he was the one very much in control. The final scene was not an attempt to gratuitously shock the audience; it was rooted in character and research, showing just what DI Bridges was prepared to do for her colleague for the sake of her family, as well as the brutality that Kessler was capable of.

We acknowledge that certain scenes may have been challenging, but we filmed and presented them in such a way as to make sure that although as a viewer the implication was there, it was never actually shown.[12]

and

Silent Witness is now in its fifteenth series, and we believe the general tone and content is widely recognised by its regular audience. It’s fair to say the show is known for tackling challenging stories and exploring adult themes and we don’t feel the content of these episodes would have gone beyond viewers' expectations. As well as scheduling the series after the watershed, we made sure the content was widely publicised and gave a warning before both episodes
Main
Sam Ryan (Amanda Burton) – Series 1–8. Sam originally lived and worked in Cambridge, but moved to London at the end of series three after she was offered the job of professor at a university. Sam departed and returned home to Ireland in the second episode of series eight, "A Time To Heal" in which a member of her family became a suspect in a murder case.
Leo Dalton (William Gaminara) – Series 6–16. Leo first appeared in the episode "The Fall Out", where he was a doctor. However, he was promoted to professor after former professor Sam Ryan left. In the episode "Ghosts", both his wife, Theresa, and his daughter, Cassie, are killed in a car accident. He began a relationship with fellow professor Janet Mander in "Death's Door", but ended their relationship in the episode "Redhill". Leo often took a strong opinion on cases and became emotionally involved. He died in the series 16 finale "Greater Love", when he sacrificed himself to save many others from a terrorist bomb explosion. He briefly appeared in a flashback in the last episode of series 20.
Harry Cunningham (Tom Ward) – Series 6–15. Harry started out life as a junior doctor, who worked as an apprentice alongside Sam and Leo. However, he soon qualified as a pathologist, and has worked on equal footing with the team for a number of years. Harry was single, and lived alone, but has had several romantic relationships, including an ongoing 'will they-won't they' relationship with his colleague Nikki. Harry left the team to accept a professorship in New York at the end of series 15. As this was decided after filming was completed, and the stories were reordered, with "And Then I Fell in Love" airing last, where it was originally scheduled as the second episode, his departure was never on screen.
Nikki Alexander (Emilia Fox) – since Series 8. Originally appearing in the episode "Nowhere Fast", Nikki was originally assigned to the Lyell Centre to defuse the tension between Harry and Leo after Sam's departure. However, Nikki soon became a permanent fixture within the team, and although she features more prominently in the series, holds a lower rank in pathology than Leo. Despite her native home being South Africa, Nikki regards the United Kingdom as her second home, as the reason for her departure from the country lies solely in the hands of her father, Victor, as explained in the episode "Double Dare". Nikki often flirted with colleague Harry, and even invited him to stay at her house after his flat blew up in an explosion. Nikki and Harry were in an ongoing 'will they-won't they' relationship until he left in Series 15. As well as this, she developed a close relationship with Leo and looked up to him as a father figure.
Jack Hodgson (David Caves) – since Series 16. Before his arrival at the Lyell Centre, Jack was a forensic scientist for the police, working on regular murder investigations. However, when he is called out to the scene of a man's suspicious death in "Change", both Nikki and Leo spot his potential, and looking for a senior colleague to replace Harry, decide to offer Jack a job as the centre's forensic expert. Jack is close friends with colleague Clarissa Mullery, whom he invites to work with him at the Lyell Centre, much to Leo's surprise. In his spare time, Jack is a cage fighter, and splits his home life between forensic research and training for his next fight.
Clarissa Mullery (Liz Carr) – Series 16–23[15] . Clarissa is Jack's personal lab assistant, who first appears in the episode "Change", when Jack invites her to work at the Lyell Centre with him, much to Leo's surprise. She is a disabled by an unspecified condition and uses an electric wheelchair. She has a very cheeky side, making a quip at Leo after he fails to recognise who she is on her first arrival. Clarissa had clearly worked for Jack for a long period before his appointment at the Lyell Centre, but the exact period of time is unknown.
Thomas Chamberlain (Richard Lintern) – Series 17–23. Thomas Chamberlain took over as head of the Lyell Centre from Leo who died at the end of series 16. He was an experienced forensic pathologist with a renowned reputation in toxicology and is described as charming, charismatic and socially shrewd. His first encounters with Jack, Nikki and Clarissa did not go well but they were gradually warmed to him. It is revealed in the last episode of his first series that his wife has left him just before he started working at the Lyell Centre, and has taken their daughter with her. He died in the series 23 finale "The Greater Good" whilst investigating a nerve agent in the pathology suite of the Lyell Centre.
Recurring
Trevor Stewart (William Armstrong) – Series 1–3. As well as being a pathologist in his own right, Trevor was Sam's business partner, owning half of the morgue and its facilities. Trevor decided to stay in Cambridge with his friends and family when Sam accepted the professorship position at a university in London and moved away at the end of series three.
Fred Dale (Sam Parks) – Series 1–3. Fred was Sam's main assistant during post mortems and on visits to crime scenes, often identifying DNA samples at the scene of the crime, and linking them to those responsible. He was also notable for not having many speaking lines, and regularly appearing without speaking. His fate at the end of series three was not revealed.
Janet Mander (Jaye Griffiths) – Series 12–15. Janet is a psychological profiler who assists the police in cases of serial offences. She began a relationship with Leo in the episode "Death's Door", and they lived together as partners until Leo ended the relationship in "Redhill". She recurringly worked alongside the team to provide them with information in order to get an idea of the suspect they are looking for. Janet decided to move away from London after Leo ended their relationship.
Charlie Gibbs (Wunmi Mosaku) – Series 13. A junior doctor and lab technician, who was appointed to work with the team by Professor Dalton.
Zak Khan (Arsher Ali) – Series 14. A junior doctor who worked his forensic science apprenticeship with the team, to learn the ropes of the profession.[16]
Wyn Ryan (Ruth McCabe) – Series 1–3. Professor Ryan's sister, who, after coming over to visit her from her home in Ireland, ended up living with her on a permanent basis.
Ricky Ryan (Matthew Steer) – Series 1. Wyn's son and Sam's nephew, who regularly got into trouble and was expelled from school for very poor behaviour.
Rosemary Mason (Jane Hazlegrove) – Series 6–7. The main receptionist at the Lyell Centre, before the change in focus from university department to purely commercial pathology.
Max Thorndyke (Daniel Weyman) – Series 20–22 Max is Clarissa's husband, a forensic data analyst originally called in by the Lyell team to help solve a case in series 20 but returning in 2 further episodes in series 21.
Police
Superintendent Helen Farmer (Clare Higgins) – Series 1. A superintendent, and Tom Adams' boss and mentor, who accompanied him on investigating several cases during his time in the force.
Detective Chief Inspector Tom Adams (John McGlynn) – Series 1. An investigator with the Cambridgeshire police force, who had an affair with Kerry Cox, before her death.
Detective Constable Kerry Cox (Ruth Gemmell) – Series 1. A junior trainee detective who had an affair with Tom Adams, but was later killed in a freak accident in a hospital basement.
Detective Constable Marcia Evans (Janice Acquah) – Series 1. A fellow junior trainee detective for the Cambridgeshire police force, who resigned after Kerry Cox's death.
Superintendent Peter Ross (Mick Ford) – Series 2. A superintendent, and an ex-boyfriend of Sam's, who believed in a strong relationship between the police and the pathology lab.
Detective Chief Inspector Rachel Selway (Nicola Redmond) – Series 2. Tom Adams' replacement, following his resignation from the force. She joined the team alongside junior sergeant Tony Speed.
Detective Sergeant Tony Speed (Richard Huw) – Series 2. A junior sergeant, who joined the team alongside his superior officer, Rachel Selway. He knew Peter Ross from a previous posting.
Detective Chief Inspector Michael Connor (Nick Reding) – Series 3–4. A detective chief inspector, and old friend of Sam's, whom she met during her junior years at university.
Detective Sergeant Rob Bradley (Mark Letheren) – Series 3. A detective sergeant, who as Connor's junior officer, accompanied him with the investigating in the cases which he was assigned to.

قوميز

بافيتيمبي غوميز ( تنطق بالفرنسية: [bafetimbi ɡɔmis] ؛ مواليد 6 أغسطس 1985) هو لاعب كرة قدم فرنسي محترف يلعب في مركز الهجوم مع نادي الهلال في دوري المحترفين السعودي.

لعب كرة القدم للشباب مع سانت إتيان قبل أن يبدأ مشواره الاحترافي مع النادي في عام 2004، كما قضى بعض الوقت على سبيل الإعارة في تروي في دوري الدرجة الثانية. في عام 2009، انضم إلى نادي سانت إتيين ديربي دو رون ليون مقابل 13 مليون يورو. خلال أكثر من خمسة مواسم في ستاد جيرلان، لعب 239 مباراة رسمية وسجل 91 هدفاً، وفاز في كأس دو فرانس وكأس أبطال أوروبا في عام 2012. في عام 2014، انتقل إلى نادي سوانزي سيتي الإنجليزي الممتاز في صفقة انتقال مجاني. بعد إعارته إلى فرنسا في مرسيليا، وقع مع غلطة سراي، حيث كان هداف الدوري بعد فوزهم بلقب الدوري التركي في عام 2018. وفي عام 2018 انتقل إلى نادي الهلال السعودي مقابل 7 مليون يورو.

شارك غوميز في 12 مباراة مع المنتخب الفرنسي في الفترة ما بين 2008 إلى 2013، وسجل ثلاثة أهداف. كان جزءًا من منتخب فرنسا المشارك في بطولة أمم أوروبا 2008.
وُلد غوميز في مدينة لا سين سور مير، حيث شارك في ثلاث عشرة مباراة مع سانت إتيان في أول موسم له مع النادي، حيث سجل هدفين في الدوري. في الموسم الذي يليه قدم ست مباريات بدون أهداف مع النادي قبل أن يقدم على إعارة إلى ترويز AC في صفقة إعارة ناجحة لمدة ستة أشهر، حيث سجل ستة أهداف في 13 مباراة. لم يكن موسم 2005–06 ناجحًا كما كان في الموسم السابق حيث لعب 24 مباراة في الدوري مع سانت إتيان، حيث سجل هدفين فقط في الدوري.

كان موسم 2006–07 عندما أسس غوميز نفسه مع سانت إتيان، وسجل 10 أهداف في 30 مباراة. واصل غوميز بهذا الشكل في موسم 2007–08 حيث سجل 16 هدفاً رائعاً في 34 مباراة.

في فترة الانتقالات الصيفية لعام 2008، ورد أن مدير نيوكاسل يونايتد تحت إدارة كيفن كيجان قدّم رسم تحويل بقيمة 10 ملايين جنيه إسترليني لخدمات غوميز. ومع ذلك لم تتحقق خطوة وبقي غوميز في سانت إتيان.

في مقابلة مع صحيفة ليكيب الفرنسية، ذكر غوميز أنه كان منجذباً إلى انتقال محتمل إلى إنجلترا، لكنه كشف أن الدوري الإيطالي (الدرجة الأولى) سيكون تفضيله. في الأسابيع التي سبقت فترة الانتقالات في شهر كانون الثاني (يناير) 2009، كان اسمه مرة أخرى يتم وصفه في تكهنات حول مختلف منافسات الدوري الممتاز، على الرغم من أنه تحرك لتهدئة الشائعات مشيرًا إلى رغبته في رؤية موسم دوري الدرجة الأولى مع ناديه الحالي.

تم التدقيق في غوميز في موسم 2008–09 بشكل أكبر مما كان عليه في الموسم السابق. على الرغم من هذا، نجح غوميز في تسجيل خمسة أهداف في 17 مباراة في الدوري، وتفوق مع أدائه في كأس الاتحاد الأوروبي، وسجل ثلاث مرات في أربع مباريات.

ليون
في 29 يوليو 2009، أعلن نادي أولمبيك ليونيون أنه قد وقع على المهاجم مقابل 13 مليون يورو ووافق اللاعب على عقد لمدة خمس سنوات. مع هذه الخطوة أصبح غوميز اللاعب السادس في تاريخ كرة القدم الفرنسية ينتقل مباشرة من سانت إتيان إلى غريمه اللدود ديربي ليون.

في المباراة الأولى من موسم الدوري الفرنسي الدرجة الأولى 2011–12، سجل غوميز هدف الفوز 3–1 عندما فاز فريقه على نيس في 6 أغسطس 2011. في 24 سبتمبر، سجل هدفًا في الشوط الأول ضد جيروندان دي بوردو ليحقق فريقه من الفوز 3–1.

حصل غوميز على أربعة أهداف في الجولة الأخيرة من مرحلة المجموعات في دوري أبطال أوروبا 2011–12، مما ساعد ليون على الفوز 7–1 على نادي دينامو زغرب والتقدم إلى دور الستة عشر بفارق الأهداف. كما سجل رقمًا قياسيًا جديدًا ليسجل أسرع ثلاثية (هاتريك) في دوري أبطال أوروبا على الإطلاق متخطيًا الرقم القياسي الذي يملكه مايك نيويل.

في 25 فبراير 2012، سجل غوميز هدفًا في كرة أرضية ليحقق فريقه التعادل مع متصدر الدوري باريس سان جيرمان 1–1؛ انتهت المباراة بالتعادل 4–4، بعد فوز ليون 4–2. استبدل ألكسندر لاكازيت في الدقيقة 70 في مباراة دربي ضد النادي السابق سانت إتيان في 17 مارس، وبعد عشر دقائق سجل هدفه في 30 ياردة لكسب فريقه الفوز 1–0. واصل مسيرته الشديدة ضد سوشو المهدد بالهبوط في 24 مارس عندما حول كرة عرضية من أنتوني ريفيلير ليحقق فوزه 2–1.

سوانزي سيتي
في 27 يونيو 2014، وقع غوميز عقدًا مدته أربع سنوات مع سوانسي سيتي بعد أن غادر ليون في نهاية موسم دوري الدرجة الأولى 2013–14 على خدمة نقل مجانية. بدأ أول مباراة تنافسية له في المباراة الافتتاحية للموسم في 16 أغسطس، ليحل محل ويلفريد بوني في الدقائق الـ 13 الأخيرة من الفوز في نهاية المطاف 2–1 على مانشستر يونايتد في أولد ترافورد. في 26 أغسطس، سجل أول هدف تنافسي له مع النادي حيث فازوا 1–0 على روذرهام يونايتد في الجولة الثانية من كأس رابطة المحترفين. سجل غوميز هدفه الأول في الدوري الممتاز في 9 نوفمبر 2014 وسجل هدف الفوز بعد مرور أقل من دقيقة على دخوله الملعب، حيث جاء فريقه من الخلف ليفوز على آرسنال 2–1.

في بداية عام 2015، ومع مغادرة بوني إلى كأس الأمم الأفريقية عام 2015، أصبح غوميز اللاعب الرئيسي في فريق سوانزي، ابتدأ العام مع هدفين على ترانمير روفرز في برينتون بارك و فوزهم 2–6 في كأس الاتحاد الإنجليزي. في 10 يناير، بعد التعادل في أرضه 1–1 ضد وست هام يونايتد عرض العلم الفرنسي لدعم ضحايا إطلاق النار الأخير في باريس. في 4 أبريل 2015، سجل غوميز هدفًا في الدقيقة 38 ضد هال سيتي بملعبه وأكمل الانتصار عن طريق تمرير الكرة فوق حارس هال سيتي ليعطيه أول هدفين في الدوري الممتاز وسوانسي سيتي بفوز 3–1.

مارسيليا (إعارة)
في 29 يوليو 2016، وقع غوميز على سبيل الإعارة إلى مرسيليا لموسم 2016–17. في 14 أغسطس، ظهر لأول مرة في تعادل 0–0 ضد تولوز في ملعب فيلودروم. في 21 نوفمبر، جعله المدرب رودي جارسيا قائد الفريق خلال الفترة المتبقية من الموسم.

في جميع المسابقات، سجل غوميز 21 هدفاً في 33 مباراة لـ l'om. تضمن هذا ثلاثية يوم 27 يناير 2017 في الفوز 5–1 على مونبلييه.

غلطة سراي
في 28 يونيو 2017، انضم غوميز إلى نادي غلطة سراي التركي مقابل رسم لم يكشف عنه. كان مقتنعًا بالانضمام إلى لاعبيه السابقين وأصدقاؤه ديدييه دروغبا وأوريليان تشيدجو. ظهر لأول مرة مع النادي الذي يتخذ من إسطنبول مقراً له في 13 يوليو / تموز في مباراة الذهاب من الدور الثاني من الدوري الأوروبي أمام مضيفه أوسترسوندز 2–0. في 14 أغسطس، ظهر لأول مرة مع فريقه دوري السوبر التركي حيث افتتح فريقه الموسم مع الفوز 4–1 على كايسري سبور. سجل غوميز هدفين وساعد يونس بلهندة. في مباراة ضد نادي أخيسار بيليديا في 9 ديسمبر، تعادل غوميز في الفوز 4–2 في تورك تليكوم أرينا ولكن في وقت لاحق حصل على بطاقة حمراء.

في 23 فبراير 2018، سجل غوميز أول ثلاثية له في تركيا، وانتهت بفوزه 5–0 على بورصا سبور. وأضاف أربعة أهداف أخرى في 3 مارس في الفوز 7–0 في كارديمير كارابوكسبور، بين 17 و33 دقيقة. أنهى الموسم بـ29 هدف من 33 مباراة، بما في ذلك الهدف الوحيد خارج أرضه أمام نادي جوزتيبي. ليفوز بلقب الدوري في اليوم الأخير، مما جعله الهدّاف.

الهلال
في 24 أغسطس 2018، وقع غوميز مع بطل الدوري السعودي الهلال على صفقة لمدة عامين مقابل 7 مليون يورو.

مسيرته الدولية
في 18 مايو 2008، استدعي غوميز لتشكيلة المنتخب الفرنسي في كأس الأمم الأوروبية 2008.

حياته الشخصية
يعاني غوميز من حالة طبية، ويشتبه في أن تكون استجابة وعائية مبهمية؛ وهذا يعني أنه عرضة للإغماء أثناء أوقات الشدة (التوتر) وهذه تسببت في إصابته بالإغماء خلال عدد من المباريات.

غوميز هو ابن عم زملائه (في كرة القدم) نامباليس ميندي وألكسندري مندي.

الكونفدرالية

الاتحاد الكونفدرالي أو الكونفدرالية (بالإنجليزية: Confederation) هو رابطة أعضاؤها دول مستقلة ذات سيادة والتي تفوض بموجب اتفاق مسبق بعض الصلاحيات لهيئة أو هيئات مشتركة لتنسيق سياساتها في عدد من المجالات وذلك دون أن يشكل هذا التجمع دولة أو كيانا وإلا أصبح شكلا آخرا يسمى بالفدرالية.

الكنفدرالية تحترم مبدأ السيادة الدولية لأعضائها وفي نظر القانون الدولي تتشكل عبر اتفاقية لا تعدل إلا بإجماع أعضائها.

وفي السياسة الحديثة، فالكنفدرالية هي اتحاد دائم للدول ذات السيادة للعمل المشترك فيما يتعلق بالدول الأخرى. عادة ما تبدأ بمعاهدة ولكنها غالبا ما تلجأ في وقت لاحق لاعتماد دستور مشترك، غالبا ما تنشأ الكنفدراليات للتعامل مع القضايا الحساسة مثل الدفاع والشؤون الخارجية أو العملة المشتركة، حيث يتعين على الحكومة المركزية لتوفير الدعم لجميع الأعضاء.

وفي سياق اخر تستعمل كلمة الكنفدرالية لوصف نوع من الهيئات التي يكون أحد مكوناتها شبه مستقل مثل الكنفدراليات الرياضية أو النقابية.

تختلف طبيعة العلاقة بين الدول التي تشكل الكنفدرالية بشكل كبير، وبالمثل، فإن العلاقة بين الدول الأعضاء والحكومة المركزية فيما يختص بتوزيع السلطات فيما بينها متغير بدرجة كبيرة أيضا. بعض الكنفدراليات تتمتع بمرونة مماثلة للمنظمات الحكومية الدولية، في حين أن الكنفدراليات المتشددة قد تشبه الاتحادات الفدرالية.

ومن أبرز الكنفدراليات الحديثة الاتحاد الأوروبي أما كندا، وسويسرا، وبلجيكا، فتعتبر فدراليات

Birds of Prey

Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), or simply Birds of Prey, is a 2020 American superhero film based on the DC Comics team Birds of Prey. It is the eighth film in the DC Extended Universe, and a follow-up to Suicide Squad (2016). It was directed by Cathy Yan and written by Christina Hodson, and stars Margot Robbie, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Jurnee Smollett-Bell, Rosie Perez, Chris Messina, Ella Jay Basco, Ali Wong, and Ewan McGregor. The film follows Harley Quinn as she joins forces with Black Canary, Helena Bertinelli, and Renee Montoya to save Cassandra Cain from Gotham City crime lord Black Mask.

Robbie, who also serves as producer, pitched the idea for Birds of Prey to Warner Bros. in 2015. The film was announced in May 2016, with Hodson being hired to write the script that November, while Yan signed on to direct in April 2018. The majority of the cast and crew were confirmed by December 2018. Principal photography lasted from January to April 2019 in Downtown Los Angeles, parts of the Arts District, Los Angeles, and soundstages at Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, California. Additional filming took place in September 2019.

Birds of Prey is the first DCEU film and the second DC Films production to be rated R by the Motion Picture Association of America. The film had its world premiere in Mexico City on January 25, 2020, and is scheduled to be theatrically released in the United States in IMAX, Dolby Cinema and 4DX on February 7, 2020. The film received praise from critics for its visual style, humor, and the performances of Robbie and McGregor, but criticism for the perceived lack of depth
Some time after the Enchantress' defeat, the Joker and Harley Quinn have fled back to Gotham. In the midst of their abusive relationship, the Joker breaks up with Harley and kicks her out of their house. Eventually, Harley is taken in by an old man named Doc who owns a Chinese restaurant in the city.

After recovering emotionally, Harley goes out clubbing where she spends the night at a club owned by Roman Sionis, a sadistic gangster with cruel tendencies who masquerades as a bubbly nightclub owner. While at the club, Harley meets Dinah Lance, a burlesque singer who works for Roman. Harley becomes intoxicated and acts rowdy in the club, which results in her injuring Roman's driver. Roman's thugs drag Harley outside as a consequence, but Dinah saves her before violence can occur. Impressed by Dinah's skills, Roman appoints her as his new driver.

Dinah drops Harley off at the latter's house and Harley decides to remodel her life in many ways, including cutting her hair and adopting a hyena from an exotic pet shop (who she names after Bruce Wayne). Harley also destroys Ace Chemicals, the place where she had pledged herself to Joker before truly becoming Harley Quinn.

Meanwhile, Renee Montoya, a police detective in the GCPD, arrives at the scene of Ace Chemicals and determines that because Joker and Harley have broken up, the latter will be easy to arrest. At the same time, Cassandra Cain, a young orphan, pickpockets Zsasz and steals a diamond which has very important information. Cass is subsequently arrested and, out of desperation, swallows the diamond.

The following day, Harley is intercepted by Montoya as she walks through Gotham. Harley flees the scene before being captured by Roman's men. Zsasz and Dinah tell Roman about Cassandra's status. It is shown that Roman likes to wear a black mask – which is an art piece – while torturing people as an intimidation tactic. Dinah and Zsasz also inform him that they captured Harley, and as a result, they have decided to not anticipate retaliation from the Joker, citing Harley's destruction of Ace Chemicals as proof the two have parted ways.

Dinah texts Montoya about the situation with Cass, revealing in the process that she is a mole in Roman's organization. Breaking the fourth wall once more, Harley discloses to the audience that they are up-to-date on the events in the film. Harley overhears Roman talking about the diamond and offers to retrieve it from Cass if he spares her life. Roman agrees and allots Harley one day.

Later, he puts a bounty on Cass's head "to make it more 'fun'". Harley disguises herself and breaks into the GCPD to retrieve Cass. Harley breaks Cass out of the holding cells and the two flee to an abandoned warehouse. However, they are ambushed by armed goons who are motivated by the bounty on Cass. Harley proceeds to battle and kills them after inhaling cocaine from a damaged bag.

The bounty also attracts Helena Bertinelli, a vigilante known as the "crossbow killer". Helena targets mobsters in the hope of avenging her murdered family and also plans to use Cass with the intent to lure Roman out. Meanwhile, Dinah discovers that she has the metahuman ability to scream at a supersonic level. Dinah texts Montoya about the bounty on Cass, but the text is discovered by Zsasz, who informs Roman. Roman flies into a rage, as he strongly dislikes a subordinate not following orders, and he scratches and damages his face in the process.

Harley and Cass decide to hide out at Harley's apartment. However, the apartment is bombed by people looking for Cass and it is revealed that Doc sold Harley out to Roman. Harley calls Roman and agrees to turn Cass over in exchange for protection from the bounty as a result of the lack of trust.

Roman sends Zsasz and Dinah to retrieve Cass. Zsasz drugs Harley, showing that Roman didn't honor their deal, and Dinah tries to free Cass. However, Zsasz, having already known about Dinah's treachery, attacks her but is unexpectedly killed by Helena, who arrives at the amusement park. The women are all placed under arrest by Montoya, who Dinah had texted with regard to the situation. Harley manages to convince the women to work together to fight off Roman, even though the others were initially reluctant.

The women use Harley's old gear and weapons to attack arriving hordes of Roman's goons, eventually emerging victorious. Cass is captured by Roman and Harley pursues them to a nearby pier. Once Harley catches up with them, Cassandra puts a grenade in Roman's suit, killing him. In the aftermath of destroying Roman's empire, Montoya, Dinah and Helena start the Birds of Prey with the money from the accounts of the diamond while Harley and Cassandra pawn it and start their own company together.

In a post-credits audio scene, Harley is about to revealed to the audience a secret about Batman but before she finished her sentence, the movie ends.

Cast
Margot Robbie as Harleen Quinzel / Harley Quinn:
A former psychiatrist who became a crazed criminal and Joker's accomplice and girlfriend, but has since broken up with him and become a solo vigilante. She is part of the Suicide Squad.[4] Screenwriter Christina Hodson sought to reinvent Harley, wanting to expand on the character following her departure from the Joker.[5] Hodson called Harley the character she enjoyed developing most due to her unpredictable personality.[6]
Mary Elizabeth Winstead as Helena Bertinelli / Huntress:
A vigilante who is the orphaned daughter of mafia syndicate gangster, Franco Bertinelli.[7][8][9] Ella Mika portrays a young Helena Bertinelli, during flashback scenes.[10]
Jurnee Smollett-Bell as Dinah Laurel Lance / Black Canary[7][8][11]
A vigilante with the metahuman ability of hypersonic screams, who is also a singer in a club that Sionis owns.[12]
Rosie Perez as Renee Montoya[13][14]
A Gotham City Police Detective (GCPD), who is building a case against Sionis.
Chris Messina as Victor Zsasz:
A deranged serial killer and henchman of Sionis who carves a tally mark on his skin for each victim he claims.[15]
Ella Jay Basco as Cassandra Cain:
A young girl who has a contract killing placed upon her head by Sionis, after she steals a valuable diamond from him.[13][16]
Ali Wong as Ellen Yee:
Montoya's ex-girlfriend and a district attorney.[17][15]
Ewan McGregor as Roman Sionis / Black Mask:
A brutal and iron-fisted crime lord who threatens Cassandra.[18][19] McGregor described the character as "an absolute narcissist".[20]
Additionally, Steven Williams portrays Captain Patrick Erickson, Montoya's superior at the GCPD; Dana Lee portrays Doc, Quinn's friend who owns a Chinese restaurant; François Chau portrays Mr. Keo, a rival crime boss of Sionis; Derek Wilson portrays Tim Evans; Matt Willig portrays Happy; and Bojana Novakovic portrays as Erika, a night club patron who gets harrassed by Sionis. Charlene Amoia and Paul Lasa portray Maria and Franco Bertinelli, the mother and father of Helena, respectively, while Robert Catrini portrays Stefano Galante, the mob boss who killed the Bertinelli family.[9][21]. Talon Reid portrays one of Black Mask's henchmen.[22]

Production
Development
In May 2016, ahead of the release of Suicide Squad, Warner Bros. Pictures announced a spinoff film focusing on Harley Quinn and several other female DC Comics heroes and villains, such as Batgirl and the Birds of Prey. Margot Robbie was attached to reprise her role as Harley Quinn, and would also serve as producer.[4][23] British screenwriter Christina Hodson was announced to be writing the film in November.[24] Robbie pitched the film to Warner Bros. in 2015 as "an R-rated girl gang film including Harley, because I was like, 'Harley needs friends.' Harley loves interacting with people, so don't ever make her do a standalone film". Robbie felt it was important for the film to have a female director. While Warner Bros. and DC Films had various other Harley Quinn-oriented films in development, Birds of Prey was the only one in which Robbie was directly involved with its development.[25]

Robbie spent three years working on Birds of Prey and continued to present it to Warner Bros. until the studio felt the project was at the point it could be made.[25] By April 2018, Warner Bros. and DC Films had finalized a deal with Cathy Yan to direct, making her the first female Asian director to direct a superhero film.[26] Robbie was confirmed to be producing the film under her LuckyChap Entertainment banner, as part of a first look deal she has with the studio; Sue Kroll and Bryan Unkless were also announced to serve as producers through their companies Kroll & Co. Entertainment and Clubhouse Pictures, respectively. Production was scheduled to begin by late 2018 or early 2019.[27] The Penguin was intended to appear in the script at one point, but was dropped to preserve his DC Extended Universe debut in The Batman.[28]

Pre-production
By July 2018, the film was entering pre-production.[29] Robbie confirmed the film would be titled Birds of Prey, describing it as "different" from the other DC films featuring Harley Quinn, and said it would be produced on a relatively small budget compared to other superhero films.[30][31] She also stated that Harley Quinn would receive a new costume, and teased the casting of diverse actors.[32] The line-up for the Birds of Prey team was revealed to include Black Canary, Huntress, Cassandra Cain, and Renee Montoya, with the villain set to be a Batman adversary who had not yet been seen in film.[13] Casting began in August,[33] with Warner Bros. considering a number of actresses to be cast as Huntress and Black Canary. Alexandra Daddario, Jodie Comer, Blake Lively, and Vanessa Kirby expressed interest.[34][35] Roman Sionis / Black Mask was revealed to be the film's antagonist.[36] Janelle Monáe, Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Jurnee Smollett-Bell were under consideration for Black Canary by September, while Sofia Boutella, Margaret Qualley, Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Cristin Milioti were being considered to play Huntress.[37] Justina Machado and Roberta Colindrez tested for Renee Montoya, while Warner Bros. began seeking a 12-year-old Asian actress to play Cassandra Cain.[38]

In late September, Smollett-Bell and Winstead were respectively cast as Black Canary and Huntress,[7] Warner Bros. scheduled a February 7, 2020 release date,[39] and Ewan McGregor and Sharlto Copley were under consideration for the role of Black Mask.[40] During the U.S.-China Entertainment Summit in October, Yan confirmed the cast and that the film would be R-rated. She said that she "could not put the script down, it had so much dark humor to it which a lot of my work does, and there are themes of female empowerment which are so strong and relateable".[41] Cinematographer Matthew Libatique joined the film that month,[42] as did Rosie Perez as Renee Montoya.[14] Stunt coordinator Jonathan Eusebio and fight coordinator Jon Valera joined in November[43] along with McGregor as Black Mask[18] and Ella Jay Basco as Cassandra Cain.[16] Robbie revealed that the full title would be Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn),[44] and that the subtitle reflects the humorous and unserious tone of the film.[45] Production designer K. K. Barrett joined in December,[46] as did Chris Messina as Victor Zsasz.[15] Steven Williams, Derek Wilson, Dana Lee, François Chau, Matthew Willig, Robert Catrini, and Ali Wong also joined the film's cast.[17][15]

Filming
Principal photography began in Los Angeles, California in January 2019 under the working title Fox Force Five.[47][48][49] Although filming was expected to also take place in Atlanta and Savannah, Georgia,[50] the entire shoot took place in Los Angeles after the production received a tax credit from the state of California.[51] Filming was expected to be completed by mid-April 2019.[52] In February, Charlene Amoia joined the cast.[9] Filming wrapped on April 15, 2019.[53]

Post-production
Jay Cassidy and Evan Schiff will serve as editors. Method Studios, Weta Digital, Luma Pictures, Image Engine and Crafty Apes will provide the visual effects for the film.[54][55][56][57] In August 2019, Chad Stahelski joined as a second unit director for reshoots.[58] Photography for the additional footage began on September 3, 2019.[59]

Music
Main article: Birds of Prey: The Album
In September 2019, Daniel Pemberton was announced to serve as composer for the film's score.[60] The Original Motion Picture Scores album will be released by WaterTower Music on February 7, to coincides with the film’s release.[61]

A soundtrack album for the film, titled Birds of Prey: The Album, was announced in January 2020 and is also scheduled to be released on February 7 by Atlantic Records. To promote the album, a single was released every Friday before the film’s release.[62] "Diamonds" by Megan Thee Stallion and Normani was released on January 10,[63] "Joke's On You" by Charlotte Lawrence was released on January 17,[64], "Boss Bitch" by Doja Cat was released on January 24 and "Sway with Me" by Saweetie and GALXARA was released on January 31.[65]

Marketing
Marketing began on the January 21, 2019, when a first-look production video of the characters and costumes titled "See You Soon", was released by Warner Bros. via YouTube.[66] DC Comics published a promotional trade paperback anthology featuring stories based on the film on November 12, 2019.[67] The first teaser debuted exclusively in theatres on September 5, 2019, in front of screenings for It: Chapter Two, with Quinn stating that she is "over clowns" while popping a red balloon, in a collective reference to It / Pennywise the Dancing Clown and the Joker.[68]

A short teaser was released on the film's social media pages, announcing the first official trailer would be released on October 1, 2019. A series of posters, which also announced the trailer debut, was released the same day.[69] On December 5, 2019, Birds of Prey held a panel at the annual CCXP in Brazil. They showed the first 5 minutes of the film and the second official trailer, which was released online on January 9, 2020.

A three-days pop-up events named Harleywood was also organized at the Hollywood and Highland Center with the presence of the cast on the launch day. Artists from the soundtrack where also present to promote the album, with Charlotte Lawrence and Doja Cat performing their songs.[70]

Release
Birds of Prey is scheduled to be theatrically released by Warner Bros. Pictures in the United States on February 7, 2020 in standard, IMAX, Dolby Cinema, 4DX and ScreenX formats.[39][71][72] The film had its world premiere on January 25, 2020 at the Proyecto Publico Prim in Mexico City.[73] It also screened on January 29 at the BFI IMAX in London, and on January 30 at the Palais des Festivals in Cannes during a special event named Le Festival de Quinn (The Quinn's Festival) in reference to the Cannes Film Festival.[74][75]

Reception
Box office
In the United States and Canada, Birds of Prey is projected to gross $50–55 million from 4,200 theaters in its opening weekend.[2]

Critical response
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 88% based on 99 reviews, with an average rating of 7.06/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "With a fresh perspective, some new friends, and loads of fast-paced action, Birds of Prey captures the colorfully anarchic spirit of Margot Robbie's Harley Quinn."[76] On Metacritic, it has a weighted average score of 59 out of 100, based on 33 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews

كيرك دوغلاس

كيرك دوغلاس (09 ديسمبر 1916 - 05 فبراير 2020) (بالإنجليزية: Kirk Douglas) ممثل أمريكي من أصل روسي، ولد في 9 ديسمبر 1916 وهو والد الممثل مايكل دوغلاس. اسمه عند الولادة إيسور دانيالوفيتش وقضى طفولته الفقيرة مع والدين مهاجرين وست أخوات، وكان أول فيلم له هو الحب الغريب لمارثا آيفرز (1946) مع باربارا ستانويك. تطور دوغلاس بسرعة لتتصدر أفلامه شباك التذاكر في الخمسينات والستينات، وعرف بأدوار الدراما الخطيرة، بما في ذلك أفلام الغرب والأفلام الحربية. وخلال مسيرته التي استمرت ستة عقود ظهر في أكثر من 90 فيلما، وفي عام 1960 ساعد في إنهاء القائمة السوداء في هوليوود.

أصبح دوغلاس نجما عالميا بعد دوره البارز كبطل ملاكمة عديم الضمير في فيلم "البطل" (1949) ولقي استقبالا إيجابيا وحصد منه أول ترشيح له على جائزة الأوسكار لأفضل ممثل. ومن بين أفلامه المبكرة الأخرى "شاب مع بوق" (1950) مع لورين باكال ودوريس داي؛ "أيس إن ذا هول" أمام جان سترلينغ (1951)؛ "قصة بوليسية" (1951). وتحصل على ترشيح أوسكار ثاني لدوره الكبير في السيء والجميلة (1952) أمام لانا تيرنر، وترشيح ثالث لتصويره فينسنت فان جوخ في رغبة في الحياة (1956). وهو من بين آخر النجوم الباقين على قيد الحياة من عصر هوليوود الذهبي.

في عام 1955، أسس دوغلاس شركة برينا للإنتاج، والتي بدأت بإنتاج أفلام متنوعة مثل دروب المجد (1957) وسبارتاكوس (1960). وقام ببطولة هذين الفيلمين وتعاون مع المخرج ستانلي كوبريك الذي لم يكن مشهورا كثيرا وقتها. وساهم دوغلاس بكسر القائمة السوداء في هوليوود بجعل دالتون ترامبو مسؤولا عن كتابة فيلم سبارتاكوس ووضع اسمه على الشاشة، رغم أن أسرة ترامبو زعمت أن دوره كان مبالغا فيه. أنتج ومثل فيلم "لونلي أر ذا بريف" (1962)، والذي جمع طائفة من المعجبين، وفيلم "سبعة أيام في مايو" (1964)، أمام برت لانكستر، والذي مثل معه في سبعة أفلام. في عام 1963، لعب دور البطولة في مسرحية برودواي "أحدهم طار فوق عش الوقواق"، وهي قصة قام بشرائها، والتي منحها لاحقا لابنه مايكل دوغلاس، الذي حولها إلى فيلم حاز على جائزة الأوسكار.

تلقى دوغلاس ثلاثة ترشيحات لجائزة الأوسكار، وجائزة أوسكار عن مجمل أعماله، ووسام الحرية الرئاسي. وكتب عشر روايات ومذكرات. حاليا، وهو في المرتبة 17 على قائمة معهد الفيلم الأمريكي بين أعظم أساطير سينما هوليوود الكلاسيكية، ونجا بالكاد من حادث تحطم طائرة هليكوبتر في عام 1991 ومن ثم أصيب بجلطة في عام 1996، فركز بعدها على تجديد حياته الروحية والدينية. وعاش مع زوجته الثانية، وهي منتجة تدعى آن دوغلاس، وظل معها لأكثر من 60 عاما حتى وفاته في 6 فبراير/شباط 2020 عن عمر 103 عام.

أفلامه
رسالة لثلاث زوجات
قصة محقق
السيئ والجميلة
20.000 فرسخ تحت الماء
رغبة في الحياة
النزاع المسلح في أو كيه كورال
دروب المجد
سبارتاكوس
الضوء في إحاطة العالم
ممسوس بملاك

Kirk douglas

Kirk Douglas (born Issur Danielovitch; December 9, 1916 – February 5, 2020) was an American actor, producer, director, philanthropist and author. After an impoverished childhood with immigrant parents and six sisters, he made his film debut in The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) with Barbara Stanwyck. Douglas soon developed into a leading box-office star throughout the 1950s, known for serious dramas, including westerns and war films. During his career, he appeared in more than 90 films. Douglas was known for his explosive acting style, which he displayed as a criminal defense attorney in Town Without Pity (1961).

Douglas became an international star through positive reception for his leading role as an unscrupulous boxing hero in Champion (1949), which brought him his first nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor. His other early films include Young Man with a Horn (1950), playing opposite Lauren Bacall and Doris Day, Ace in the Hole opposite Jan Sterling (1951), and Detective Story (1951), for which he received a Golden Globe nomination as Best Actor in a Drama. He received a second Oscar nomination for his dramatic role in The Bad and the Beautiful (1952), opposite Lana Turner, and his third nomination for portraying Vincent van Gogh in Lust for Life (1956), which landed him a second Golden Globe nomination.

In 1955, he established Bryna Productions, which began producing films as varied as Paths of Glory (1957) and Spartacus (1960). In those two films, he collaborated with the then-relatively-unknown director Stanley Kubrick, taking lead roles in both films. Douglas has been praised for helping to break the Hollywood blacklist by having Dalton Trumbo write Spartacus with an official on-screen credit.[2] He produced and starred in Lonely Are the Brave (1962), considered a classic, and Seven Days in May (1964), opposite Burt Lancaster, with whom he made seven films. In 1963, he starred in the Broadway play One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, a story that he purchased and later gave to his son Michael Douglas, who turned it into an Oscar-winning film.

As an actor and philanthropist, Douglas received three Academy Award nominations, an Oscar for Lifetime Achievement, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. As an author, he wrote ten novels and memoirs. He is No. 17 on the American Film Institute's list of the greatest male screen legends of classic Hollywood cinema, the highest-ranked living person on the list until his death. After barely surviving a helicopter crash in 1991 and then suffering a stroke in 1996, he focused on renewing his spiritual and religious life. He lived with his second wife (of 65 years), Anne Buydens, a producer, until his death on February 5, 2020, at age 103. A centenarian, he was one of the last surviving stars of the film industry's Golden Age.
Early life and education
Douglas was born Issur Danielovitch (Yiddish: איסר דניאלאָוויטש‎; Belarusian: Ісур Данілавіч) in Amsterdam, New York, the son of Bryna "Bertha" (née Sanglel; 1884–1958) and Herschel "Harry" Danielovitch (c. 1884–1950; citations regarding his exact year of birth differ).[4][5][6] His parents were Jewish immigrants from Chavusy, Mogilev Region, in the Russian Empire (present-day Belarus),[7][8][9][10][11][12] and the family spoke Yiddish at home.[13][14][15]

His father's brother, who immigrated earlier, used the surname Demsky, which Douglas's family adopted in the United States.[16]:2 Douglas grew up as Izzy Demsky and legally changed his name to Kirk Douglas before entering the United States Navy during World War II.[17][a]

In his 1988 autobiography, The Ragman's Son, Douglas notes the hardships that he, along with six sisters and his parents, endured during their early years in Amsterdam, New York:

My father, who had been a horse trader in Russia, got himself a horse and a small wagon, and became a ragman, buying old rags, pieces of metal, and junk for pennies, nickels, and dimes.... Even on Eagle Street, in the poorest section of town, where all the families were struggling, the ragman was on the lowest rung on the ladder. And I was the ragman's son
Douglas first wanted to be an actor after he recited the poem The Red Robin of Spring while in kindergarten and received applause.[18]

Growing up, Douglas sold snacks to mill workers to earn enough to buy milk and bread to help his family. Later, he delivered newspapers and during his youth he had more than forty jobs before becoming an actor.[19] He found living in a family with six sisters to be stifling: "I was dying to get out. In a sense, it lit a fire under me." After appearing in plays at Amsterdam High School, from which he was graduated in 1934,[20] he knew he wanted to become a professional actor.[21] Unable to afford the tuition, Douglas talked his way into the dean's office at St. Lawrence University and showed him a list of his high school honors. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1939. He received a loan which he paid back by working part-time as a gardener and a janitor. He was a standout on the wrestling team and wrestled one summer in a carnival to make money.[22]

Douglas's acting talents were noticed at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City, which gave him a special scholarship. One of his classmates was Betty Joan Perske (later known as Lauren Bacall), who would play an important role in launching his film career.[23] Bacall wrote that she "had a wild crush on Kirk,"[24] and they dated casually. Another classmate, and a friend of Bacall's, was aspiring actress Diana Dill, who would later become Douglas's first wife.[25]

During their time together, Bacall learned Douglas had no money, and that he once spent the night in jail since he had no place to sleep. She once gave him her uncle's old coat to keep warm: "I thought he must be frozen in the winter . ... He was thrilled and grateful." Sometimes, just to see him, she would drag a friend or her mother to the restaurant where he worked as a busboy and waiter. He told her his dream was to someday bring his family to New York to see him on stage. During that period she fantasized about someday sharing her personal and stage lives with Douglas, but would later be disappointed: "Kirk did not really pursue me. He was friendly and sweet—enjoyed my company—but I was clearly too young for him," the eight-years-younger Bacall later wrote.[24]

Career
1940s
Douglas joined the United States Navy in 1941, shortly after the United States entered World War II, where he served as a communications officer in anti-submarine warfare aboard USS PC-1139.[1] He was medically discharged in 1944 for war injuries sustained from the accidental dropping of a depth charge.[26]

After the war, Douglas returned to New York City and found work in radio, theater and commercials. In his radio work, he acted in network soap operas, and saw those experiences as being especially valuable, as skill in using one's voice is important for aspiring actors; he regretted that the same avenues are no longer available. His stage break occurred when he took over the role played by Richard Widmark in Kiss and Tell (1943), which then led to other offers.[23]

Douglas had planned to remain a stage actor, until his friend, Lauren Bacall, helped him get his first film role by recommending him to producer Hal B. Wallis, who was looking for a new male talent.[27] Wallis's film, The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946), with Barbara Stanwyck, became Douglas's debut screen appearance. He played a young, insecure man, stung with jealousy, whose life was dominated by his ruthless wife, and he hid his feelings with alcohol. It would be the last time that Douglas portrayed a weakling in a film role.[28][29] Reviewers of the film noted that Douglas already projected qualities of a "natural film actor", with the similarity of this role with later ones explained by biographer Tony Thomas:

His style and his personality came across on the screen, something that does not always happen, even with the finest actors. Douglas had, and has, a distinctly individual manner. He radiates a certain inexplicable quality, and it is this, as much as talent, that accounts for his success in films.[30]

In 1947, Douglas made Out of the Past (UK: Build My Gallows High). He starred in this film with Robert Mitchum and Jane Greer. Douglas made his Broadway debut in 1949 in Three Sisters, produced by Katharine Cornell.[31]

Douglas's image as a tough guy was established in his eighth film, Champion (1949), after producer Stanley Kramer chose him to play a selfish boxer. In accepting the role, he took a gamble, however, since he had to turn down an offer to star in a big-budget MGM film, The Great Sinner, which would have earned him three times the income.[32]

Film historian Ray Didinger says "he saw Champion as a greater risk, but also a greater opportunity ... Douglas took the part and absolutely nailed it." Frederick Romano, another sports film historian, described Douglas's acting as "alarmingly authentic":

Douglas shows great concentration in the ring. His intense focus on his opponent draws the viewer into the ring. Perhaps his best characteristic is his patented snarl and grimace ... he leaves no doubt that he is a man on a mission
Douglas received his first Academy Award nomination and the film earned six nominations in all. Variety magazine called it "a stark, realistic study of the boxing rackets."[32]

From that film on, he decided that to succeed as a star, he needed to ramp up his intensity, overcome his natural shyness, and choose stronger roles. He later stated, "I don't think I'd be much of an actor without vanity. And I'm not interested in being a 'modest actor'".[34] Early in his Hollywood career, he demonstrated his independent streak and broke his studio contracts to gain total control over his projects, forming his own movie company, Bryna Productions, named after his mother.[21]

1950s
Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Douglas was a major box-office star, playing opposite some of the leading actresses of that era. He played a frontier peace officer in his first western Along the Great Divide (1951). He quickly became very comfortable with riding horses and playing gunslingers, and appeared in many westerns. He considers Lonely Are the Brave (1962), in which he plays a cowboy trying to live by his own code, as his personal favorite.[35] The film, written by Dalton Trumbo, was respected by critics, but did not do well at the box office due to poor marketing and distribution.[34][36]

In 1950, Douglas played Rick Martin in Young Man with a Horn, based on a novel of the same name by Dorothy Baker inspired by the life of Bix Beiderbecke, the jazz cornetist. Composer-pianist Hoagy Carmichael, playing the sidekick role, added realism to the film and gave Douglas insight into the role, being a friend of the real Beiderbecke.[37] Doris Day starred as Jo, a young woman who was infatuated with the struggling jazz musician. This was strikingly opposite of the real-life account in Doris Day's autobiography, which described Douglas as "civil but self-centered" and the film as "utterly joyless".[38] During filming, bit actress Jean Spangler disappeared and her case remains unsolved. On October 9, 1949, Spangler's purse was found near the Fern Dell entrance to Griffith Park in Los Angeles. There was an unfinished note in the purse addressed to a "Kirk," which read: "Can't wait any longer, Going to see Dr. Scott. It will work best this way while mother is away". Douglas, married at the time, called the police and told them he was not the Kirk mentioned in the note. When interviewed via telephone by the head of the investigating team, Douglas stated that he had "talked and kidded with her a bit" on set,[39][40] but that he had never been out with her.[41] Spangler's girlfriends told police that she was three months pregnant when she disappeared,[42] and scholars such as Jon Lewis of Oregon State University have speculated that she may have been considering an illegal abortion, based on a note which was found in her purse.[43]

In 1951, Douglas starred as a newspaper reporter anxiously looking for a big story in Ace in the Hole, director Billy Wilder's first effort as both writer and producer. The subject and story was controversial at the time, and U.S. audiences stayed away. Some reviews saw it as "ruthless and cynical ... a distorted study of corruption, mob psychology and the free press."[44] Possibly it "hit too close to home", says Douglas.[45] It won a best foreign film award at the Venice Film Festival. The film's stature has increased in recent years, with some surveys placing it in their top 500 films list.[46] Woody Allen considers it one of his favorite films.[47] As the film's star and protagonist, Douglas is credited for the intensity of his acting. Roger Ebert described "Douglas's focus and energy ... as almost scary. There is nothing dated about [his] performance. It's as right now as a sharpened knife."[48] Biographer Gene Philips notes that Wilder's story was "galvanized" by Douglas's "astounding performance", and no doubt was a factor when George Stevens, who presented Douglas with the AFI Life Achievement Award in 1991, said of him: "No other leading actor was ever more ready to tap the dark, desperate side of the soul and thus to reveal the complexity of human nature."[49]

Also in 1951, Douglas starred in Detective Story, nominated for four Academy Awards, including one for Lee Grant in her debut film. Grant said Douglas was "dazzling, both personally and in the part. ... He was a big, big star. Gorgeous. Intense. Amazing."[50] To prepare for the role, he spent days with the New York police department and sat in on interrogations.[51] Reviewers recognized Douglas's acting qualities, with Bosley Crowther describing Douglas as "forceful and aggressive as the detective
In The Bad and the Beautiful (1952), another of his three Oscar-nominated roles, Douglas plays a hard-nosed film producer who manipulates and uses his actors, writers, and directors. Bacall and Doris Day played two very different types of women in his life.[53] In 1954 Douglas starred in Ulysses from Homer's epic poem Odyssey, with Silvana Mangano as Penelope and Circe, and Anthony Quinn playing Antinous.[54]

In 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954), Douglas showed that in addition to serious, driven characters, he was adept at roles requiring a lighter, comic touch. In this adaptation of the Jules Verne novel, he played a happy-go-lucky sailor who was the opposite in every way to the brooding Captain Nemo (James Mason). The film was one of Walt Disney's most successful live-action movies and a major box-office hit.[55] He managed a similar comic turn in the western Man Without a Star (1955) and in For Love or Money (1963). He showed further diversity in one of his earliest television appearances. He was a musical guest (as himself) on The Jack Benny Program (1954).[56]

In 1955, Douglas formed his own movie company, Bryna Productions, named after his mother.[21] To do so, he had to break contracts with Hal B. Wallis and Warner Bros., but began to produce and star in his own films, starting with The Indian Fighter in 1955.[57] Through Bryna, he produced and starred in the films Paths of Glory (1957), The Vikings (1958), Spartacus (1960), Lonely are the Brave (1962) and Seven Days in May (1964).[58]

While Paths of Glory did not do well at the box office, it has since become one of the great anti-war films, and one of early films by director Stanley Kubrick. Douglas, a fluent French speaker,[59] plays a sympathetic French officer during World War I who tries to save three soldiers from the firing squad.[60] Biographer Vincent LoBrutto describes Douglas's "seething but controlled portrayal exploding with the passion of his convictions at the injustice leveled at his men."[61] The film was banned in France until 1976. Before production of the film began, however, Douglas and Kubrick had to work out some major issues, one of which was Kubrick's rewriting the screenplay without informing Douglas first. It led to their first major argument: "I called Stanley to my room ... I hit the ceiling. I called him every four-letter word I could think of ... 'I got the money, based on that [original] script. Not this shit!' I threw the script across the room. 'We're going back to the original script, or we're not making the picture.' Stanley never blinked an eye. We shot the original script. I think the movie is a classic, one of the most important pictures—possibly the most important picture—Stanley Kubrick has ever made."[61]

Douglas played military men in numerous films, with varying nuance, including Top Secret Affair (1957), Town Without Pity (1961), The Hook (1963), Seven Days in May (1964), Heroes of Telemark (1965), In Harm's Way (1965), Cast a Giant Shadow (1966), Is Paris Burning (1966), The Final Countdown (1980) and Saturn 3 (1980). His acting style and delivery made him a favorite with television impersonators such as Frank Gorshin, Rich Little and David Frye.
His role as Vincent van Gogh in Lust for Life (1956), directed by Vincente Minnelli and based on Irving Stone's best-seller, was filmed mostly on location in France. Douglas was noted not only for the veracity of van Gogh's appearance but for how he conveyed the painter's internal turmoil. Some reviewers consider it the most famous example of the "tortured artist" who seeks solace from life's pain through his work.[65] Others see it as a portrayal not only of the "painter-as-hero," but a unique presentation of the "action painter," with Douglas expressing the physicality and emotion of painting, as he uses the canvas to capture a moment in time.[66][67]

Douglas was nominated for an Academy Award for the role, with his co-star Anthony Quinn winning the Best Supporting Actor Oscar as Paul Gauguin, van Gogh's friend. Douglas won a Golden Globe award, although Minnelli said Douglas should have won an Oscar: "He achieved a moving and memorable portrait of the artist—a man of massive creative power, triggered by severe emotional stress, the fear and horror of madness."[55] Douglas himself called his acting role as Van Gogh a painful experience: "Not only did I look like Van Gogh, I was the same age he was when he committed suicide."[4] His wife said he often remained in character in his personal life: "When he was doing Lust for Life, he came home in that red beard of Van Gogh's, wearing those big boots, stomping around the house—it was frightening."[68]

In general, however, Douglas's acting style fit well with Minnelli's preference for "melodrama and neurotic-artist roles," writes film historian, James Naremore. He adds that Minnelli had his "richest, most impressive collaborations" with Douglas, and for Minnelli, no other actor portrayed his level of "cool": "A robust, athletic, sometimes explosive player, Douglas loved stagy rhetoric, and he did everything passionately."[69] Douglas had also starred in Minnelli's film The Bad and the Beautiful four years earlier, for which he received a Best Actor Oscar nomination.[70]

1960s
In 1960, Douglas played the title role in what many consider his career defining appearance[71] as the Thracian slave rebel Spartacus with an all-star cast in Spartacus (1960). He was the executive producer as well, which raised the $12 million production cost and made it one of the most expensive films up to that time.[72] Douglas initially selected Anthony Mann to direct, but replaced him early on with Stanley Kubrick, with whom he previously collaborated in Paths of Glory.[73]

When the film was released, Douglas gave full credit to its screenwriter, Dalton Trumbo, who was on the Hollywood blacklist, and thereby effectively ended it.[16]:81 About that event, he said, "I've made over 85 pictures, but the thing I'm most proud of is breaking the blacklist."[74] However the film's producer Edward Lewis and the family of Dalton Trumbo publicly disputed Douglas's claim.[75] In the film Trumbo (2015), Douglas is portrayed by Dean O'Gorman
Douglas bought the rights to the novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest from its author, Ken Kesey. He turned it into a play in 1963 in which he starred, and it ran on Broadway for five months. Reviews were mixed. Douglas retained the movie rights, but after a decade of being unable to find a producer, gave the rights to his son, Michael. In 1975, the film version was produced by Michael Douglas and Saul Zaentz, and starred Jack Nicholson, as Douglas was then considered too old to play the character as written.[3] It won all five major Academy Awards, only the second to achieve that, including one for Nicholson.[77]

Douglas made seven films over the decades with Burt Lancaster: I Walk Alone (1948), Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957), The Devil's Disciple (1959), The List of Adrian Messenger (1963), Seven Days in May (1964), Victory at Entebbe (1976) and Tough Guys (1986), which fixed the notion of the pair as something of a team in the public imagination. Douglas was always second-billed under Lancaster in these movies but, with the exception of I Walk Alone, in which Douglas played a villain, their roles were more or less the same size. Both actors arrived in Hollywood at the same time, and first appeared together in the fourth film for each, albeit with Douglas in a supporting role. They both became actor-producers who sought out independent Hollywood careers.[68]

John Frankenheimer, who directed the political thriller Seven Days in May in 1964, had not worked well with Lancaster in the past, and originally did not want him in this film. However Douglas thought Lancaster would fit the part and "begged me to reconsider," said Frankenheimer, and he then gave Lancaster the most colorful role. "It turns out that Burt Lancaster and I got along magnificently well on the picture," he later said.[78]

In 1967 Douglas starred with John Wayne in the western film directed by Burt Kennedy titled The War Wagon.[79]

In The Arrangement (1969), a drama directed by Elia Kazan, based upon his novel of the same title, Douglas starred as a tormented advertising executive, with Faye Dunaway as costar. The film did poorly at the box office, receiving mostly negative reviews, while Dunaway felt many of the reviews were unfair, writing in her biography, "I can't understand it when people knock Kirk's performance, because I think he's terrific in the picture," adding that "he's as bright a person as I've met in the acting profession."[80] She says that his "pragmatic approach to acting" would later be a "philosophy that ended up rubbing off on me."[81]

1970s–2010s
Between 1970 and 2008, Douglas made nearly 40 movies and appeared on various television shows. He starred in a western, There Was a Crooked Man... (1970), alongside Henry Fonda. The film was produced and directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz. In 1972, he was a guest in David Winters' television special The Special London Bridge Special, starring Tom Jones.[82][83] In 1973, he directed his first film, Scalawag. That same year, Douglas reunited with director David Winters and appeared in the made-for-TV musical version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (nominated for three Emmys) alongside Stanley Holloway, and Donald Pleasence.[84][85][86]

He returned to the director's chair for Posse (1975), in which he starred alongside Bruce Dern. In 1978, he costarred with John Cassavetes and Amy Irving in a horror film, The Fury, directed by Brian De Palma. In 1980, he starred in The Final Countdown, playing the commanding officer of the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz, which travels through time to the day before the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. It was produced by his son Peter Douglas. In 1982, he starred in The Man from Snowy River, an Australian film which received critical acclaim and numerous awards. In 1986, he reunited with his longtime costar, Burt Lancaster, in a crime comedy, Tough Guys, which included Charles Durning and Eli Wallach. It marked the final collaboration between Douglas and Lancaster, completing a partnership of more than 40 years.[87]

In 1986, he co-hosted (with Angela Lansbury) the New York Philharmonic's tribute to the 100th anniversary of the Statue of Liberty. The symphony was conducted by Zubin Mehta.[88]

In 1988, Douglas starred in a television adaptation of Inherit the Wind, opposite Jason Robards and Jean Simmons. The film won two Emmy Awards. In the 1990s, Douglas continued starring in various features. Among them was The Secret in 1992, a television movie about a grandfather and his grandson who both struggle with dyslexia. That same year, he played the uncle of Michael J. Fox in a comedy, Greedy. He appeared as the Devil in the video for the Don Henley song "The Garden of Allah". In 1996, after suffering a severe stroke which impaired his ability to speak, Douglas still wanted to make movies. He underwent years of voice therapy and made Diamonds in 1999, in which he played an old prizefighter who was recovering from a stroke. It costarred his longtime friend from his early years, Lauren Bacall.[citation needed]

In 2003, Michael and Joel Douglas produced It Runs in the Family, which along with Kirk starred various family members, including Michael, Michael's son, and his wife from 50 years earlier, Diana Dill, playing his wife. His final feature-film appearance was in the 2004 Michael Goorjian film Illusion, in which he depicts a dying film director forced to watch episodes from the life of a son he had refused to acknowledge.[89][90][91] His last screen role was the TV movie Empire State Building Murders, which was released in 2008.[89] In March 2009, Douglas did an autobiographical one-man show, Before I Forget, at the Center Theatre Group's Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City, California. The four performances were filmed and turned into a documentary that was first screened in January 2010.[92]

Douglas appeared at the 2018 Golden Globes at the age of 101 with his daughter-in-law Catherine Zeta-Jones, a rare public appearance in the final decade of his life.[93] He received a standing ovation and helped to present the award for "Best Screenplay – Motion Picture".[94]

Style and philosophy of acting
Douglas stated that the keys to acting success are determination and application: "You must know how to function and how to maintain yourself, and you must have a love of what you do. But an actor also needs great good luck. I have had that luck."[95] Douglas had great vitality and explained that "it takes a lot out of you to work in this business. Many people fall by the wayside because they don't have the energy to sustain their talent."[96]

That attitude toward acting became evident with Champion (1949). From that one role, writes biographer John Parker, he went from stardom and entered the "superleague," where his style was in "marked contrast to Hollywood's other leading men at the time."[27] His sudden rise to prominence is explained and compared to that of Jack Nicholson's:

He virtually ignored interventionist directors. He prepared himself privately for each role he played, so that when the cameras were ready to roll he was suitably, and some would say egotistically and even selfishly, inspired to steal every scene in a manner comparable in modern times to Jack Nicholson's modus operandi.[27]

As a producer, Douglas had a reputation of being a compulsively hard worker who expected others to exude the same level of energy. As such, he was typically demanding and direct in his dealing with people who worked on his projects, with his intensity spilling over into all elements of his film-making.[30] This was partly due to his high opinion of actors, movies, and moviemaking: "To me it is the most important art form—it is an art, and it includes all the elements of the modern age." He also stressed prioritizing the entertainment goal of films over any messages, "You can make a statement, you can say something, but it must be entertaining."[34]

As an actor, he dived into every role, dissecting not only his own lines but all the parts in the script to measure the rightness of the role, and he was willing to fight with a director if he felt justified.[96] Melville Shavelson, who produced and directed Cast a Giant Shadow (1966), said that it didn't take him long to discover what his main problem was going to be in directing Douglas:

Kirk Douglas was intelligent. When discussing a script with actors, I have always found it necessary to remember that they never read the other actors' lines, so their concept of the story is somewhat hazy. Kirk had not only read the lines of everyone in the picture, he had also read the stage directions ... Kirk, I was to discover, always read every word, discussed every word, always argued every scene, until he was convinced of its correctness. ... He listened, so it was necessary to fight every minute

For most of his career, Douglas enjoyed good health and what seemed like an inexhaustible supply of energy. He attributed much of that vitality to his childhood and pre-acting years: "The drive that got me out of my hometown and through college is part of the makeup that I utilize in my work. It's a constant fight, and it's tough."[96] His demands on others, however, were an expression of the demands he placed on himself, rooted in his youth. "It took me years to concentrate on being a human being—I was too busy scrounging for money and food, and struggling to better myself."[97]

Actress Lee Grant, who acted with him and later filmed a documentary about him and his family, notes that even after he achieved worldwide stardom, his father would not acknowledge his success. He said "nothing. Ever."[50] Douglas's wife, Anne, similarly attributes the energy he devotes to acting to his tough childhood:

He was reared by his mother and his sisters and as a schoolboy he had to work to help support the family. I think part of Kirk's life has been a monstrous effort to prove himself and gain recognition in the eyes of his father ... Not even four years of psychoanalysis could alter the drives that began as a desire to prove himself.[62]

Douglas has credited his mother, Bryna, for instilling in him the importance of "gambling on yourself", and he kept her advice in mind when making films.[30] Bryna Productions was named in her honor. Douglas realized that his intense style of acting was something of a shield: "Acting is the most direct way of escaping reality, and in my case it was a means of escaping a drab and dismal background."[98]

Personal life
Personality
In The Ragman's Son, Douglas described himself as a "son of a bitch", adding, "I’m probably the most disliked actor in Hollywood. And I feel pretty good about it. Because that’s me…. I was born aggressive, and I guess I’ll die aggressive."[99] Co-workers and associates alike noted similar traits, with Burt Lancaster once remarking, "Kirk would be the first to tell you that he is a very difficult man. And I would be the second."[99] Douglas's brash personality is attributed to his difficult upbringing living in poverty and his aggressive alcoholic father who was neglectful of Kirk as a young child.[99][100] According to Douglas, "there was an awful lot of rage churning around inside me, rage that I was afraid to reveal because there was so much more of it, and so much stronger, in my father."[100] Douglas's discipline, wit, and sense of humor were also often recognized.[99]

Marriages and children
Douglas and his first wife, Diana Dill, married on November 2, 1943. They had two sons, actor Michael Douglas and producer Joel Douglas, before divorcing in 1951. Afterwards, in Paris, he met producer Anne Buydens (born Hannelore Marx; April 23, 1919, Hanover, Germany) while acting on location in Lust for Life.[101][102] She originally fled from Germany to escape Nazism and survived by putting her multilingual skills to work at a film studio, doing translations for subtitles.[103] They married on May 29, 1954. In 2014, they celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary at the Greystone Mansion in Beverly Hills.[104] They had two sons, Peter, a producer, and Eric, an actor who died on July 6, 2004, from an overdose of alcohol and drugs.[105] In 2017, the couple released a book, Kirk and Anne: Letters of Love, Laughter and a Lifetime in Hollywood, that revealed intimate letters they shared through the years.[106] Throughout their marriage, Douglas had affairs with other women including several Hollywood starlets, though he never hid his infidelities from his wife who was accepting of them and explained, "as a European, I understood it was unrealistic to expect total fidelity in a marriage."[107]

Religion
In February 1991, Douglas was in a helicopter and was injured when the aircraft collided with a small plane above Santa Paula Airport. Two other people were also injured; two people in the plane were killed.[108] This near-death experience sparked a search for meaning by Douglas, which led him, after much study, to embrace the Judaism in which he had been raised. He documented this spiritual journey in his book, Climbing the Mountain: My Search for Meaning (1997).[109]

In his earlier autobiography, The Ragman's Son, he recalled, "years back, I tried to forget that I was a Jew," but later in his career he began "coming to grips with what it means to be a Jew," which became a theme in his life.[4] In an interview in 2000, he explained this transition:[110]

Judaism and I parted ways a long time ago, when I was a poor kid growing up in Amsterdam, N.Y. Back then, I was pretty good in cheder, so the Jews of our community thought they would do a wonderful thing and collect enough money to send me to a yeshiva to become a rabbi. Holy Moses! That scared the hell out of me. I didn't want to be a rabbi. I wanted to be an actor. Believe me, the members of the Sons of Israel were persistent. I had nightmares – wearing long payos and a black hat. I had to work very hard to get out of it. But it took me a long time to learn that you don't have to be a rabbi to be a Jew.
Douglas noted that the underlying theme of some of his films, including The Juggler (1953), Cast a Giant Shadow (1966), and Remembrance of Love (1982), was about "a Jew who doesn't think of himself as one, and eventually finds his Jewishness."[4] The Juggler was the first Hollywood feature to be filmed in the newly established state of Israel. Douglas recalls that while there, he saw "extreme poverty and food being rationed." But he found it "wonderful, finally, to be in the majority." Its producer, Stanley Kramer, tried to portray "Israel as the Jews' heroic response to Hitler's destruction."[111]

Although his children had non-Jewish mothers, Douglas stated that they were "aware culturally" of his "deep convictions" and he never tried to influence their own religious decisions.[4] Douglas's wife, Anne, converted to Judaism before they renewed their wedding vows in 2004.[112] Douglas celebrated a second Bar-Mitzvah ceremony in 1999, aged 83.[16]:125

Philanthropy
Douglas and his wife donated to various non-profit causes during his career, and planned on donating most of their $80 million net worth.[113] Among the donations have been those to his former high school and college. In September 2001, he helped fund his high school's musical, Amsterdam Oratorio, composed by Maria Riccio Bryce, who won the school Thespian Society's Kirk Douglas Award in 1968.[114] In 2012 he donated $5 million to St. Lawrence University, his alma mater. The college used the donation for the scholarship fund he began in 1999.[115][116]

He donated to various schools, medical facilities and other non-profit organizations in southern California. These have included the rebuilding of over 400 Los Angeles Unified School District playgrounds that were aged and in need of restoration. They established the Anne Douglas Center for Homeless Women at the Los Angeles Mission, which has helped hundreds of women turn their lives around. In Culver City, they opened the Kirk Douglas Theatre in 2004.[104] They supported the Anne Douglas Childhood Center at the Sinai Temple of Westwood.[116] In March 2015, Kirk and his wife donated $2.3 million to the Children's Hospital Los Angeles.[117]

Since the early 1990s Kirk and Anne Douglas donated up to $40 million to Harry's Haven, an Alzheimer's treatment facility in Woodland Hills, to care for patients at the Motion Picture Home.[74] To celebrate his 99th birthday in December 2015, they donated another $15 million to help expand the facility with a new two-story Kirk Douglas Care Pavilion.[118]

Douglas donated a number of playgrounds in Jerusalem, and donated the Kirk Douglas Theater at the Aish Center across from the Western Wall.[119]

Affiliations
Douglas and his wife were involved in numerous volunteer and philanthropic activities. They traveled to more than 40 countries, at their own expense, to act as goodwill ambassadors for the U.S. Information Agency, speaking to audiences about why democracy works and what freedom means.[103] In 1980, Douglas flew to Cairo to talk with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. For all his goodwill efforts, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Jimmy Carter in 1981.[104] At the ceremony, Carter said that Douglas had "done this in a sacrificial way, almost invariably without fanfare and without claiming any personal credit or acclaim for himself."[120] In subsequent years, Douglas testified before Congress about elder abuse.[74]

Douglas was a lifelong member of the Democratic Party.[121] He wrote letters to politicians who were friends. He noted in his memoir, Let's Face It (2007), that he felt compelled to write to former president Jimmy Carter in 2006 in order to stress that "Israel is the only successful democracy in the Middle East ... [and] has had to endure many wars against overwhelming odds. If Israel loses one war, they lose Israel."[16]:226

Douglas recalled an incident involving his son Eric, who at the time was a friend of Ronald Reagan's son Ron. When the younger Douglas saw a Barry Goldwater bumper sticker on the Reagans' car, he shouted "Boo Goldwater!". In response, Nancy Reagan telephoned the elder Douglas and said, "Come pick up this boy at once." Kirk said of this that it was "a sentiment I confess he picked up from me."[122]

Hobbies
Douglas blogged from time to time. Originally hosted on Myspace,[123] his posts have been hosted by the Huffington Post since 2012.[124] As of 2008, he was believed to be the oldest celebrity blogger in the world.[125]

Health issues and death
On January 28, 1996, he suffered a severe stroke, which impaired his ability to speak.[126] Doctors told his wife that unless there was rapid improvement, the loss of the ability to speak was likely permanent. After a regime of daily speech-language therapy that lasted several months, his ability to speak returned, although it was still limited. He was able to accept an honorary Academy Award two months later in March and thanked the audience.[127][128] He wrote about this experience in his 2002 book, My Stroke of Luck, which he hoped would be an "operating manual" for others on how to handle a stroke victim in their own family.[128][129]

In 2016 he celebrated his 100th birthday at the Beverly Hills Hotel, joined by several of his friends and family, including Don Rickles, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Steven Spielberg, his wife Anne, his son Michael and his daughter-in-law Catherine Zeta-Jones. Douglas was described by his guests as being still in good shape, able to walk with confidence into the Sunset Room for the celebration.[130]

Douglas died at his home in Beverly Hills, California, on February 5, 2020, at age 103 from natural causes.



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