Farrah Fawcett Tribute

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Farrah Fawcett
Farrah Fawcett

Farrah Fawcett, Kate Jackson, Jaclyn Smith in Charlie's AngelsUnlike Michael Jackson’s sudden death, Farrah Fawcett’s didn’t come as a surprise. For quite some time, Fawcett had been suffering from a rare form of cancer that had recently spread to her liver. The former television star and sex symbol (born in Corpus Christi, Texas, on Feb. 2, 1947) was 62.

But expected or no, Fawcett’s death truly saddened me. Once upon a time, I sat through those ridiculous Charlie’s Angels episodes mainly because of her — though, admittedly, I also liked both Jaclyn Smith and Kate Jackson. Once Cheryl Ladd replaced Fawcett, who by then had become too big for the small screen, the show — at least as far as I was concerned — lost all its fluffy charm.

It gets worse. I’m more than a little embarrassed to admit that on my bedroom wall hung that poster of a sparkingly toothed, blond-maned, red bathing-suit (not a bikini? What were they thinking??). I read everything I could about Farrah Fawcett-Majors — as she was known at the time — from a trashy biography that capitalized on her supernovaish fame to reports on her rocky marriage to The Six-Million Dollar Man star Lee Majors. I even kept an ad showing Fawcett as a poster girl for "golden faucet" bracelets or some such. In my heart, only she could get away with something that tacky.

Unfortunately, film stardom eluded her. No, those golden faucets had nothing to do with it. The problem was that Fawcett’s choice of star vehicles were, to put it mildly, even more inadequate than her choice of ad endorsements. There was the mystery-comedy Somebody Killed Her Husband (1978), opposite Jeff Bridges, which failed to click with audiences; the horrendous Sunburn (1979), which managed to waste not only Fawcett but also Charles Grodin, Art Carney, Joan Collins, Eleanor Parker, and Keenan Wynn; and the dismal sci-fi drama Saturn 3 (1980), in which she was mispaired with Kirk Douglas and Harvey Keitel.

The Cannonball Run (1981) was a major box-office hit, but that was seen as a Burt Reynolds flick. Fawcett served merely as decoration in a role that could have been played by any grinning, blond bimbo. But since it was Farrah Fawcett and not some grinning, blond bimbo, I actually bothered to watch that piece of trash. It’s strange that I still remember how luminously beautiful she looked, even if her acting left much to be desired.

Farrah Fawcett, James Russo in Extremities

Following Extremities (1986), basically a B revenge thriller in which Fawcett (above, with James Russo) displayed her maturing acting skills as an attempted-rape victim who turns the table on her assaulter (she’d already done the role on Broadway, having replaced Susan Sarandon), her film career all but stalled. I don’t believe age was an issue. Fawcett was about 40 then, but she looked a good ten years younger. In fact, most actresses half her age couldn’t hold a candle to her in the looks department.

Farrah Fawcett Tribute: Part II


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