Oscar Winner Christopher Plummer Dies At 91
Veteran Canadian actor Christopher Plummer, whose decades-long career featured a star turn in “The Sound of Music” and an Oscar win late in life, has died, his manager said Friday. The deceased was 91.
His longtime friend and manager, Lou Pitt said Plummer died at his home in Connecticut with his wife Elaine Taylor at his side.
“Chris was an extraordinary man who deeply loved and respected his profession with great old fashion manners, self-deprecating humour and the music of words,” Pitt announced.
“He was a national treasure who deeply relished his Canadian roots. Through his art and humanity, he touched all of our hearts and his legendary life will endure for all generations to come.”
Plummer starred as the aristocratic widower Captain Georg von Trapp opposite Julie Andrews in “The Sound of Music,” the beloved cinematic tale of a musical family and their mischievous governess in Austria on the eve of World War II.
Despite its large worldwide success, Plummer publicly despised the film, calling his role “gooey” in The Hollywood Reporter in 2011.
But he later softened, telling the same publication in 2015 that the production was “the last bastion of peace and innocence in a very cynical time.”
So far, he was one of the most recognizable and admired character actors in Hollywood, with about 100 movies under his belt.