Monday, April 7, 2014

THE GREAT HOLLYWOOD ICON....MICKEY ROONEY DIES!


Hollywood Icon Mickey Rooney Dead at 93

THE   GREAT   ICON  AND  TALENTED  MICKEY  ROONEY  DIES.

I  HAVE  A  LOT  OF  MICKEY  ROONEY  AND  JUDY  GARLAND   MOVIES.

TOGETHER  THEY  WERE  SUPER  GOOD  ENTERTAINERS.  MICKEY  WAS  SUPER  TALENTED  IN  MANY  WAYS  AS  THE  MOVIES  BRING  OUT.

A  SMALL  GUY  BUT  MIGHTY  BIG....... IN  HIS  TOP  DAYS  HE  WAS  NUMBER  ONE  FOR  SOME  YEARS  IN  BOX  OFFICE  DRAW.

TOO  BAD  HIS  PERSONAL  LIFE  WAS  OFTEN  A  MESS  AND  A  SCANDAL.
BUT  HIS  MOVIES  WITH  GARLAND  WERE  JUST  FANTASTIC.  MICKEY  WAS  ALWAYS  VERY  PROUD  THAT  WHEN  ONE  INTERVIEWER  ASKED  JUDY  GARLAND  WHO  HER  FAVORITE  MOVIE  PARTNER  WAS,  SHE  SAID......  MICKEY  RONNEY.

ON  THE  COWBOY  SCENE  OF  HOLLYWOOD  IT  WAS  ROY  ROGERS  AND  TRIGGER  WHO  HELD  THE  BOX-OFFICE  RECORD  FOR  12  STRAIGHT  YEARS;  BUT ON  THE  OTHER  SIDE  OF  HOLLYWOOD,  TO  THE  SURPRISE  MAYBE  OF  MANY,    IT  WAS  MICKEY  ROONEY  WHO  HELD  THE  BOX-OFFICE.



Mickey Rooney, a Hollywood legend with one of the longest careers of any actor in American film, has died. He was 93.

Born Joe Yule Jr. in Brooklyn to two vaudeville veterans, Rooney debuted on the silver screen aged six and appeared in more than 300 films. The irrepressible showman's prolific career on stage and screen spanned eight decades and earned him four Academy Award nominations and two special Oscars.
"He was undoubtedly the most talented actor that ever lived. There was nothing he couldn't do," actress Margaret O'Brien said in a statement. O'Brien recently worked with Rooney on "The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr. Hyde."
"I always say, 'Don't retire — inspire,'" Rooney said in an interview with The Associated Press in March 2008. "There's a lot to be done."
At the peak of his fame in the early 1940s, Rooney was Hollywood's biggest box-office draw. The cherubic, diminutive young performer skyrocketed to national fame after starring as all-American teenager Andy Hardy in "A Family Affair," which spawned nearly 20 sequels over three decades.
Widely beloved for a string of high-energy musicals with longtime friend Judy Garland, Rooney was the first teen nominated for an Oscar for his performance in their classic song-and-dance picture "Babes in Arms."
Rooney also scored plaudits for an early dramatic turn as a delinquent youth in the Spencer Tracy film "Boys Town." The role earned him a special Juvenile Academy Award in 1939.
His fame, money, gambling, lust and mercurial nature were problems for the MGM studio, which did not like seeing its young star sully his reputation and box-office potential. The studio assigned a full-time staffer to keep Rooney out of trouble but his antics still frequently ended up in gossip columns."
Image: Mickey RooneyNBC VIA GETTY IMAGES, FILE
Mickey Rooney as Lefty Duncan in an episode of "Kicks" aired in 1965.
As the pint-sized Rooney grew older, he remained a ubiquitous presence on numerous television shows and as a character player in scores of Hollywood titles, from Francis Ford Coppola's "The Black Stallion" to 2011's "The Muppets."
Rooney also won an Emmy for his TV movie "Bill" and had a Tony nomination for his Broadway smash "Sugar Babies."
Rooney was married eight times -- including a year of matrimony with the 19-year-old Ava Gardner. He had 11 children.
"The American public is my family," Rooney once said. "I've had fun with them all my life."
Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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