Last night, amidst a mass of
social media and internet rumours - news was being bounded around that Clint's one
time partner and regular co-star Sondra Locke had died. Regrettably, I can now
confirm this is in fact true. It would have been all too easy to jump on the
sensationalising band wagon, but to be honest, the source of the story simply
wasn't a reliable one, and I don't run the Archive like that. Instead, I would
rather take a step back and choose the more reliable path. It was hard to
understand why none of the 'reliable' sources had reported this? I ended up
contacting Variety, and asked them if they could either confirm or deny the story - as
absolutely nothing had been reported.
A few hours later, I woke up this morning to find
that Variety had run the story within their obituaries column. I know a lot of
us still had a great deal of respect for Sondra, she was such an integral part
of Clint's movie career and I couldn't imagine anyone else doing a better job in
her place. I can't help feeling a little saddened by this story. Sondra was after
all a huge part of the Eastwood legacy. As we all know, it all became a little
messy between Clint and Sondra, but I don’t want to focus on that, it was a
private matter between two people, and frankly, none of our business.
RIP Gus
I have posted the obituary from
Variety below, as written by Dave McNary.
Oscar Nominee Sondra Locke Dies
at 74
Actress and director Sondra
Locke, who received a supporting actress Oscar nomination in her first movie
role for “The Heart is a Lonely Hunter,” died Nov. 3 at 74. The Los Angeles
County Public Health Department confirmed her death.
She died due to breast and bone
cancer, according to Radar Online, which reported that she was laid to rest at
Pierce Brothers Westwood Village Memorial Park & Mortuary.
Locke had a contentious
relationship of more than a decade with Clint Eastwood, who first cast her in
“The Outlaw Josey Wales.”
Locke was born in 1944 as Sandra
Louise Smith and raised in Shelbyville, Tenn. She changed her named to Sondra
in her early 20s and won a nationwide talent search in 1967 for the part of
teenager Mick Kelly in the movie adaptation of Carson McCullers’ novel “The
Heart Is a Lonely Hunter.” Locke starred opposite Alan Arkin, who was nominated
for a Best Actor Oscar. She also received Golden Globe nominations for Best
Supporting Actress and Most Promising Newcomer.
Locke then starred in “Cover Me
Babe,” “Willard,” “A Reflection of Fear,” and “The Second Coming of Suzanne”
and took TV roles in “The F.B.I.,” “Cannon,” “Barnaby Jones,” “Kung Fu,” “A
Feast of Blood” and “Gondola.” She started working with Eastwood in “The Outlaw
Josey Wales” in 1976, followed by “The Gauntlet,” “Every Which Way But Loose,”
“Any Which Way You Can,” “Bronco Billy” and “Sudden Impact,” in which she
murders the men who had raped her and her sister.
Turning to directing, she helmed
1986’s “Ratboy,” 1990’s “Impulse,” 1995’s TV movie “Death in Small Doses” and
the independent film “Do Me a Favor,” starring Rosanna Arquette.
She sued Eastwood for palimony in
1989 and for fraud in 1995 and brought a separate action against Warner Bros.
for allegedly conspiring with Eastwood to sabotage her directorial career. She
settled the three cases out of court.
Locke underwent a double
mastectomy in 1990. Her autobiography “The Good, the Bad, and the Very Ugly – A
Hollywood Journey,” was published in 1997.
Locke starred recently with Keith
Carradine in Alan Rudolph’s drama “Ray Meets Helen.”
She is survived by her husband
Gordon Anderson.
So sad.
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