I am crying at 7:00 a.m. as I read this wonderful man's obit pasted below. He was the writer and director of "Still Alice," a film about the ravages of Alzheimer's for which Julianne Moore won the Best Actress Oscar. What a beautiful mind, heart and what a beautiful relationship he had. The will to live is perhaps man's strongest instinct and Richard Glatzer had that, too, in triplicate.
We humans are in one way blessed because we get to see and appreciate this beautiful planet but cursed in that we understand death both our own and loss of those we love so much. It is perhaps the price we pay for our big brain ensuring our survival. We see the glories of existence and its ugliness -- the brutality of man against himself and against the nature that brought him into the world in the first place. It is the conundrum of our life.
Voting and voting Democrat is the only hope for our survival and the survival of our nation and our planet!
| By LINDSEY BAHR
We humans are in one way blessed because we get to see and appreciate this beautiful planet but cursed in that we understand death both our own and loss of those we love so much. It is perhaps the price we pay for our big brain ensuring our survival. We see the glories of existence and its ugliness -- the brutality of man against himself and against the nature that brought him into the world in the first place. It is the conundrum of our life.
Voting and voting Democrat is the only hope for our survival and the survival of our nation and our planet!
| By LINDSEY BAHR
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Richard Glatzer, who co-wrote and directed the
Alzheimer's drama "Still Alice" alongside his husband, Wash
Westmoreland, while battling ALS, died Tuesday in Los Angeles. He was
63.
Diagnosed in 2011 with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease, the
pair took on the project of "Still Alice" in a very early stage of
Glatzer's disease.
During the 23-day shoot, Glatzer communicated with one finger using a
text-to-speech app on his iPad. By the time of the press tour for the
film in late 2014, Glatzer was only able to communicate by typing on the
device with his big toe.
Their film earned star Julianne Moore her first Oscar for her portrayal
of an academic suffering from early onset Alzheimer's. Unable to attend
the ceremony, Glatzer watched Moore's win Feb. 22 from a hospital,
where he had been taken two days prior for respiratory problems.
Westmoreland watched by his side.
"I am devastated. Rich was my soul mate, my collaborator, my best
friend and my life," Westmoreland said in a statement Wednesday. He
added that he takes consolation in the fact that Glatzer saw "Still
Alice" delivered to the world.
"Richard was a unique guy— opinionated, funny, caring, gregarious,
generous, and so, so smart. A true artist and a brilliant man. I
treasure every day of the short twenty years we had together," he said.
"I cannot believe he has gone. But in my heart and the hearts of those
who loved him he will always be alive."
A New York native, Glatzer started out his career in academia, earning a
doctorate in English from the University of Virginia before turning his
attentions entirely to film and television.
He met Westmoreland in 1995. The couple collaborated on four films as
co-writers and directors, including the 2006 Sundance Grand Jury Prize
and Audience winner "Quinceañera."
Glatzer also worked on a number of television shows including "Road Rules," ''Divorce Court" and "America's Next Top Model."
But it was "Still Alice" that seemed to be Glatzer's crowning achievement.
"It's ironic that in my deteriorated state I'd be able to make a film
that was creatively everything I'd ever wished for," Glatzer reflected
to The Associated Press in late 2014 while promoting the film.
The parallels between Glatzer and their lead character's degenerative
diseases helped to inform the adaptation of author Lisa Genova's
best-seller.
"Many of the neurological appointments that Alice had in the book
echoed appointments that Richard had had when they were testing to see
if he'd had a stroke — like what's today's date, where are we, all that
stuff. It was eerily similar," Westmoreland said during the same
interview.
"Rich is an incredibly strong person, and never let the disease get him
down. He always wanted to keep life as normal as possible," he added.
Moore was particularly moved by the similarities and how Glatzer's condition made the story much more personal and emotional.
"It's about the universality of our own experience and what we care
about and that we all live and we all love and we all are going to go
away some day. To look at that and to really examine that, but to also
be present in it, is kind of an extraordinary thing to do. I think
that's what Wash and Rich are doing with this movie," she said.
While the logistics of co-directing a film while suffering from ALS
proved challenging, the entire production was committed to supporting
Glatzer throughout.
"We had a little personal agreement that Richard has to be heard, even
if it's inconvenient, even if it's longer to wait," Westmoreland said.
Glatzer, who was in good spirits sitting next to Westmoreland, also weighed in.
"I felt very much heard by everyone, every day. And it's so very
important if you're struggling with a disease like this to feel you
still matter," Glatzer said.
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