The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Tuesday, May 21, 2013
 
Actor Peter Falk, TV's Rumpled Columbo and an Artist in His Own Right, has Died
In this May 5, 2002 file photo, actor Peter Falk, from "Columbo," arrives at NBC's 75th anniversary celebration at New York's Rockefeller Center. Falk, the stage and movie actor who became identified as the squinty, rumpled detective in "Columbo," died Thursday, June 23, 2011 at his Beverly Hills, Calif., home. He was 83. AP Photo/Ron Frehm.

By: Frazzier Moore, AP Television Writer

NEW YORK (AP).- The best way to celebrate Peter Falk's life is to savor how Columbo, his signature character, fortified our lives.

Thanks to Falk's affectionately genuine portrayal, Lt. Columbo established himself for all time as a champion of any viewer who ever felt less than graceful, elegant or well-spoken.

Falk died Thursday at age 83 in his Beverly Hills, Calif., home, according to a statement released Friday by family friend Larry Larson. But Columbo lives on as the shining ideal of anyone with a smudge on his tie, whose car isn't the sportiest, who often seems clueless, who gets dissed by fancy people.

As a police detective, Columbo's interview technique was famously disjointed, with his inevitable awkward afterthought ("Ahhh, there's just one more thing...") that tried the patience of his suspect as he was halfway out the door.

Columbo was underestimated, patronized or simply overlooked by nearly everyone he met — especially the culprit.

And yet Columbo, drawing on inner pluck for which only he (and an actor as skilled as Falk) could have accounted, always prevailed. Contrary to all evidence (that is, until he nailed the bad guy), Columbo always knew what he was doing.

Even more inspiring for viewers, he was unconcerned with how other people saw him. He seemed to be perfectly happy with himself, his life, his pet basset, Dog, his wheezing Peugeot, and his never-seen wife. A squat man chewing cigars in a rumpled raincoat, he stands tall among TV's most self-assured heroes.

What viewer won't take solace forever from the lessons Columbo taught us by his enduring example?

Columbo — he never had a first name — presented a refreshing contrast to other TV detectives. "He looks like a flood victim," Falk once said. "You feel sorry for him. He appears to be seeing nothing, but he's seeing everything. Underneath his dishevelment, a good mind is at work."

On another occasion, he described Columbo as "an ass-backwards Sherlock Holmes."

"As a person, he was like Columbo. He was exactly the same way: a great sense of humor, constantly forgetting things," said Charles Engel, an NBCUniversal executive who worked with Falk on "Columbo" and was his neighbor and longtime friend.

He remembered Falk as a "brilliant" actor and "an amazingly wonderful, crazy guy," and said a script was in place for a two-hour "Columbo" special, but Falk's illness made the project impossible. In a court document filed in December 2008, Falk's daughter Catherine Falk said her father was suffering from Alzheimer's disease.

Somehow fittingly, Falk — the perfect choice to play Columbo — failed to be the first choice. Instead, the role was offered to easygoing crooner Bing Crosby. Fortunately, he turned it down.

With Falk in place, "Columbo" began its run in 1971 as part of the NBC Sunday Mystery Movie series, appearing every third week. The show became by far the most popular of the three mysteries, the others being "McCloud" and "McMillan and Wife."

Falk was reportedly paid $250,000 a movie and could have made much more if he had accepted an offer to convert "Columbo" into a weekly series. He declined, reasoning that carrying a weekly detective series would be too great a burden.

NBC canceled the three series in 1977. In 1989 ABC offered "Columbo" in a two-hour format usually appearing once or twice a season. The movies continued into the 21st century. "Columbo" appeared in 26 foreign countries and was a particular favorite in France and Iran.

Columbo's trademark: an ancient raincoat Falk had once bought for himself. After 25 years on television, the coat became so tattered it had to be replaced.

Falk was already an experienced Broadway actor and two-time Oscar nominee when he began playing Columbo. And, long before then, he had demonstrated a bit of Columbo-worthy spunk: at 3, he had one eye removed because of cancer.

Then, when he was starting as an actor in New York, an agent told him, "Of course, you won't be able to work in movies or TV because of your eye." And after failing a screen test at Columbia Pictures, he was told by studio boss Harry Cohn that "for the same price I can get an actor with two eyes."

But Falk prevailed, even before "Columbo," picking up back-to-back Oscar nominations as best supporting actor for the 1960 mob drama "Murder, Inc." and Frank Capra's last film, the 1961 comedy-drama "Pocketful of Miracles."

Paying tribute, actor-comedian Michael McKean said, "Peter Falk's assault on conventional stardom went like this: You're not conventionally handsome, you're missing an eye and you have a speech impediment. Should you become a movie star? Peter's correct answer: Absolutely.

"I got to hang with him a few times and later worked a day with him on a forgettable TV movie," McKean went on, calling Falk "a sweet, sharp and funny man with a great soul. Wim Wenders called it correctly in 'Wings of Desire': He was an angel if there ever was one on Earth."

"There is literally nobody you could compare him to. He was a completely unique actor," said Rob Reiner, who directed Falk in "The Princess Bride."

"His personality was really what drew people to him. ... He had this great sense of humor and this great natural quality nobody could come close to," Reiner said. Falk's work with Alan Arkin in "The In-Laws" represents "one of the most brilliant comedy pairings we've seen on screen."

Peter Michael Falk was born in 1927, in New York City and grew up in Ossining, N.Y., where his parents ran a clothing store.

After serving as a cook in the merchant marine and receiving a master's degree in public administration from Syracuse University, Falk worked as an efficiency expert for the budget bureau of the state of Connecticut.

He also acted in amateur theater and was encouraged to become a professional by actress-teacher Eva Le Gallienne.

An appearance in "The Iceman Cometh" off-Broadway led to other parts, among them Josef Stalin in Paddy Chayefsky's 1964 "The Passion of Josef D." In 1971, Falk scored a hit in Neil Simon's "The Prisoner of Second Avenue," Tony-nominated for best play.

Falk made his film debut in 1958 with "Wind Across the Everglades" and established himself as a talented character actor with his performance as the vicious killer Abe Reles in "Murder, Inc."

Among his other movies: "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World," ''Robin and the Seven Hoods," ''The Great Race," ''Luv," ''Castle Keep," ''The Cheap Detective" and "The Brinks Job."

Falk also appeared in a number of art-house favorites, including "Wings of Desire" (in which he played himself as a former angel), and the semi-improvisational films "Husbands" and "A Woman Under the Influence," directed by his friend John Cassavetes.

"Today we lost someone who is very special and dear to my heart. Not only a wonderful actor but a very great friend," said Gena Rowlands, who co-starred with Falk in the latter film, and was married to the late Cassavetes.

Falk became prominent in television movies, beginning with his first Emmy for "The Price of Tomatoes" in 1961. His four other Emmys were for "Columbo."

He was married to pianist Alyce Mayo in 1960; they had two daughters, Jackie and Catherine, and divorced in 1976. The following year he married actress Shera Danese. They filed for divorce twice and reconciled each time.

When not working, Falk spent time in the garage of his Beverly Hills home. He had converted it into a studio where he created charcoal drawings. He took up art in New York when he was in the Simon play and one day happened into the Art Students League.

He recalled: "I opened a door and there she was, a nude model, shoulders back, a light from above, buck-ass naked. The female body is awesome. Believe me, I signed up right away."

Falk is survived by his wife Shera and his two daughters.

___

Associated Press Television Writers Lynn Elber and David Bauder, Entertainment Writer Anthony McCartney and former writer Bob Thomas in Los Angeles contributed to this report.


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.



Last Week News

June 25, 2011

Sotheby's Auction Features Important Example of Miquel Barceló's Bullfighting Paintings

Most Comprehensive Exhibition Ever Staged in the UK of René Magritte's Work Opens

Archaeologists Lower Small, Remote-Controlled Camera Into Early Mayan Tomb

BBC Uploads 63,000 Paintings Online as It Launches Your Paintings; Aims for 200,000 Works

RM Auctions Posts Over £5.1 Million at Debut 'Quintessentially English' Salon Privé

Researchers from California Institute of Technology Take Dinosaurs Temperature with Teeth

Twelve British Artists Selected to Design a Set of Posters for Olympic and Paralympic Games

Economist John S. Tamagni Elected Chair of Brooklyn Museum Board of Trustees

Art Gallery Unveils One of the World's Largest Public Collections of Motherwell Drawings

Rijksmuseum Exhibits Rare 17th Century Masterpiece by Caesar van Everdingen

Van Gogh Museum Announces Renovation, Art Temporarily on View in the Hermitage Amsterdam

Multi-Sensory Exhibition at the Frist Center for the Visual Arts Features 220 Works by Warhol

Bulgarian Artist Plamen Dejanoff's The Bronze House at Hamburg's Kunstverein

Sotheby's London Impressionist & Modern Art Sale Series Achieves Total of $181,028,706

Fotofocus Announces 2012 Month-Long Celebration of Photography in Cincinnati

Two Important Contemporary Art Collections Brought Together at Deichtorhallen

Art Antiques London Consolidates Success with Strong Sales and Increased Visitor Numbers

AIA Issues Statement on Passing of Former Architect of the Capitol George M. White, FAIA

Getty Research Institute Welcomes Exceptional Group of Scholars this September

Bell Made by Paul Revere's Company Moves to Boston

June 24, 2011

Van Gogh, Bonnard, Vallotton: The Hahnloser Collection at Fondation de l'Hermitage

Most Comprehensive Exhibition Ever Staged in the UK of René Magritte's Work Opens in Liverpool

Archaeologists Lower Small, Remote-Controlled Camera Into Early Mayan Tomb

BBC Uploads 63,000 Paintings Online as It Launches Your Paintings; Aims for 200,000 Works

Exhibition of Artists that Reframe Photography Opens at Marlborough Chelsea

Clock Designed for Napoleon's 1801 Exposition, Lost for Two Centuries, to Sell at Bonhams

National Portrait Gallery to Unveil New Portrait Photograph of the Queen and Prince Philip

Economist John S. Tamagni Elected Chair of Brooklyn Museum Board of Trustees

Art Gallery of Ontario Unveils One of the World's Largest Public Collections of Motherwell Drawings

Rijksmuseum Exhibits Rare 17th Century Masterpiece by Caesar van Everdingen

Van Gogh Museum Announces Renovation, Masterpieces Temporarily on View in the Hermitage Amsterdam

Multi-Sensory Exhibition at the Frist Center for the Visual Arts Features 220 Works by Andy Warhol

Bulgarian Artist Plamen Dejanoff's The Bronze House at Hamburg's Kunstverein

Treasures of Heaven: Saints, Relics and Devotion in Medieval Europe at the British Museum

Cantor Arts Center to Exhibit Richard Serra's Monumental Sculpture "Sequence"

Artworks that Challenge the Viewer through their Visual Intensity at Paul Kasmin Gallery

Exhibition at Galerie Lelong in New York Explores Interventions in the Landscape

350 Year Old Tapestries Cleaned in View of Public at Nelson-Atkins

Morris Museum Opens Visual Thoughts: The Art Quilts of Fiber Revolution Exhibition

Huanghuali Chairs Lead Stellar $11.5 Million Fine Asian Works of Art Sale at Bonhams & Butterfields

Whatami by Rome Studio stARTT Transforms the Maxxi Piazza into a Green Archipelago

Millionaires Invested More in Art, Luxury in 2010 Says World Wealth Report

Lisson Gallery Milan to Open September 2011

Outspoken Chinese Artist Ai Weiwei: Free in Body, Said Little in First Day Out of Detention

Egyptian Archaeologists to Restore Ancient Boat Found Near Pyramid of Giza

Mexican Archaeologists Discover a Second Ballgame Player at Court in Cerro del Teul, Zacatecas

Major Retrospective of Israeli Artist Micha Ullman on View at the Israel Museum

Florence Wants Mona Lisa Back for a Visit

June 23, 2011

Sotheby's London Establishes World Record Price at Auction For Egon Schiele in Sale

Outspoken Chinese Artist Ai Weiwei: Free in Body, Said Little in First Day Out of Detention

Egyptian Archaeologists to Restore Ancient Boat Found Near Pyramid of Giza

Mexican Archaeologists Discover a Second Ballgame Player at Court in Cerro del Teul, Zacatecas

Macedonia Erects Alexander the Great Statue, Further Inflaming Long-Running Row with Greece

Rare 16th Century Helmet Used by Opera House as a Stage Prop for Sale at Bonhams

Iron Age Gold Hoard, The Wickham Market Hoard, Saved for Ipswich Museum

Exhibition of Artists that Reframe Photography Opens at Marlborough Chelsea

Clock Designed for Napoleon's 1801 Exposition, Lost for Two Centuries, to Sell at Bonhams

National Portrait Gallery to Unveil New Portrait Photograph of the Queen and Prince Philip

Treasures of Heaven: Saints, Relics and Devotion in Medieval Europe at the British Museum

Artworks that Challenge the Viewer through their Visual Intensity at Paul Kasmin Gallery

Exhibition at Galerie Lelong in New York Explores Interventions in the Landscape

Portraits of Major Artists by Important Italian Photographers at the Estorick Collection

Frieze Projects 2011: Programme of Eight Artists' Commissions Announced in London

Some September 11 Families Angered by Museum Entry Fee

Prized Nobel Blades Highlight Bonhams & Butterfields' $1.2 Million Arms & Armor Sale

Mining Heiress, Huguette Clark, Leaves Fortune to Arts, Monet to Washington's Corcoran

Exceptional Drawing by Francisco de Goya y Lucientes to Be Offered at Christie's

Delft: Johannes Vermeer, Porcelain, Bridges and Canals in Quaint Dutch City

Haunch of Venison to Open New Chelsea Location With Dynamic Group Show

Shining Stars Grace Gala at New Mercedes-Benz Manhattan Flagship Store

A Crusader Town Emerges Under an Old Israeli Port, Workers Prepare to Open It to the Public

Renowned Chinese Artist Ai Weiwei Free After Confessing to Tax Evasion, Stays Quiet

New Study Says Image of Ancient Mammoth or Mastodon Found on 13,000 Year-Old Bone

California's Surfing Madonna Mosaic to Come Down

Temporary Installation of Paul McCarthy's Work "Henry Moore Bound to Fail" in Vienna

VMFA Presents Scraps: British Sporting Drawings from the Paul Mellon Collection

June 22, 2011

Pablo Picasso Lovers Win Hearts at Christie's Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale

A Crusader Town Emerges Under an Old Israeli Port, Workers Prepare to Open It to the Public

Artist Ai Weiwei Free After Confessing to Tax Evasion Says Chinese Official Media

New Study Says Image of Ancient Mammoth or Mastodon Found on Bone

Macedonia Erects Alexander the Great Statue, Further Inflaming Long-Running Row with Greece

Rare 16th Century Helmet Used by Opera House as a Stage Prop for Sale at Bonhams

Iron Age Gold Hoard, The Wickham Market Hoard, Saved for Ipswich Museum

Original Emancipation Proclamation Displayed at The Henry Ford Museum in Michigan

Recently Discovered Masterpiece of Islamic Art to Go on View at the Pergamon Museum

Research Shows One of Vincent van Gogh's Self-Portraits is in Fact His Brother Theo

The Autry Surveys the Significance of Bonanza by Displaying Iconic Ponderosa Map

Urban Scrawl: Graffiti and Street Art in Special Sale Presented by artnet Auctions

Brooklyn Museum Withdraws from Spring 2012 Presentation of "Art in the Streets" Exhibition

"Scooters: Size Doesn't Always Matter" Opens at the Petersen Automotive Museum

Power by BMW: Bonhams Teams Up with BMW Museum for Sale at Munich Headquarters

Stradivarius Violin Sold for $16 Million for Japan Relief

Impressive Prices at Bonhams Impressionist & Modern Art Sale

Sotheby's to Offer an Important Oil Study by Sir Anthony Van Dyck in Its Old Masters Sale

Mexican Archaeologists Find Ancient Staircase at Tlatelolco, May Confirm First Building

Caravaggio's St Augustine: Whitfield Fine Art Research the Discovery of Caravaggio's Original

British Library, Google in Deal to Digitize Books Published between 1700 and 1870

Kunsthalle Offers a Fascinating Dialogue between Modernism and Present-Day Art

St Paul's Completes £40 Million Restoration Project and Celebrates 300th Anniversary

Library of Congress to Get Rare Map of Flat World

18th-Century Cannons Retrieved from Baltic

June 21, 2011

Pablo Picasso Work Loaned to West Bank Goes on Display at Palestinian Art Academy

Sotheby's to Offer an Important Oil Study by Sir Anthony Van Dyck in Its Old Masters Sale

Mexican Archaeologists Find Ancient Staircase at Tlatelolco, May Confirm First Building

Caravaggio's St Augustine: Whitfield Fine Art Research the Discovery of Caravaggio's Original

British Library, Google in Deal to Digitize Books Published between 1700 and 1870

Kunsthalle Offers a Fascinating Dialogue between Modernism and Present-Day Art

St Paul's Completes £40 Million Restoration Project and Celebrates 300th Anniversary

Original Emancipation Proclamation Displayed at The Henry Ford Museum in Michigan

Recently Discovered Masterpiece of Islamic Art to Go on View at the Pergamon Museum

Research Shows One of Vincent van Gogh's Self-Portraits is in Fact His Brother Theo

Sotheby's Offers Furniture & Works of Art from the Collections of Lily & Edmond J. Safra

Picasso at Work: Through the Lens of David Douglas Duncan at Museo Picasso Málaga

Marilyn Monroe "Subway" Dress Sells for $4.6 Million at Profiles in History Auction House

World Monuments Fund Announces Sustainable Tourism Effort at the Alhambra

Dayton Art Institute Director Janice Driesbach to Retire, Interim Director Appointed

Street Cred: Graffiti Art from Concrete to Canvas at the Pasadena Museum of California Art

Jared French, Mary Nimmo Moran and Thomas Hart Benton Bring Strong Prices at Swann Galleries

Robert A. Pruzan Elected Chairman of the Board of Trustees of The Jewish Museum

Magic of Ancient Egypt to Transform the Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg, Florida

National Portrait Gallery Unveils New Portrait of Nobel Prize Winning Scientist Sir Martin Evans

20 Years of Presence: The Big Anniversary Exhibition at MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst

New Permanent Work by Olafur Eliasson is Now on the Roof of Danish Art Museum

Bristol's New £27 Million City History Museum "M Shed" Opened to the Public

Robust Selection of Art from the Middle East Featured in The Beirut Sale at Ayyam Gallery

Art Fund Opens £600,000 Funding Scheme to Build New Collections of Art throughout the UK

Caroline Kerrigan Lerch Named Metropolitan Show Director

Peter Halley "Judgment Day": An Installation in Personal Structures at the Venice Biennale

Dürer and Hirst Visions of Mortality Lead Bonhams Sale

Peabody Essex Museum's New Exhibition Makes a Splash

Yale Center Premieres Companion Exhibition to Online Catalogue

Soviet Pink Tank Returns to Prague

June 20, 2011

Sotheby's Sale of Contemporary Art to Be Led by a Stunning Work by Francis Bacon

Brueghel, Rubens, Jordaens... Exhibition of European Paintings from the Hohenbuchau Collection

Comprehensive Presentation of the Makart Phenomenon at the Belvedere in Vienna

An Exceptional Marble by Rodin to Be Auctioned at Cornette de Saint Cyr on July 6th

Art & Stars & Cars: The Daimler Art Collection at the Mercedes-Benz Museum Stuttgart

Pandora's Box: Joseph Cornell Unlocks the Museum of Contemporary Art Collection

Setting Sail: Images of the Sea from the Collection on View at the Walters Art Museum

National Portrait Gallery Unveils New Portrait of Nobel Prize Winning Scientist Sir Martin Evans

20 Years of Presence: The Big Anniversary Exhibition at MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst

New Permanent Work by Olafur Eliasson is Now on the Roof of Danish Art Museum

Bristol's New £27 Million City History Museum "M Shed" Opened to the Public this Weekend

Robust Selection of Art from the Middle East Featured in The Beirut Sale at Ayyam Gallery

Art Fund Opens £600,000 Funding Scheme to Build New Collections of Art throughout the UK

Picasso's Vollard Suite: The Sculptor's Studio at the Bruce Museum in Greenwich

Gustav Stickley and the American Arts & Crafts Movement at The San Diego Museum of Art

Artist and Filmmaker Martha Colburn Presents Topic of War through Animation

United States Museum to Display Remnants of September 11 Attacks on World Trade Center

Conversations with Wood: Selections from the Waterbury Collection at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts

Art Basel 42: Extraordinary Quality, Strong Results and New Attendance Record

DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum Presents Ursula von Rydingsvard: Sculpture

Emails Rebuke Maine Governor for Labor Mural Removal

Watch Me Move: The Animation Show on View at the Barbican Art Gallery in London

Important Works of Art to Be Featured at 20/21 British Art Fair

Army Approves Site for National Museum

The Guerrilla Girls Talk Back Exhibited by the National Museum of Women in the Arts

Akron Art Museum Presents The Dorothy and Herbert Vogel Collection: Fifty Works for Ohio

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site