|
A Legendary
Actor's Expressions on Canvas by Kaya Morgan
As featured
in Millionaire the ultimate luxury shopping magazine 
Everyone has their favorite Tony Curtis film,
whether it be Some Like it Hot with Marilyn Monroe and Jack Lemon,
The Boston Strangler with Henry Fonda, Trapeze with Burt Lancaster
and Gina Lolobrigida, or The Great Race with Natalie Wood. After
106 movies, it's no surprise that this Hollywood legend has been
honored with Lifetime Achievement awards in Italy, France, Hungary,
the UK, America, and been knighted in France.
The oldest of three sons of Hungarian immigrants
who arrived in America with literally nothing, Tony became the
member of a street gang in the Bronx by age 11. After serving
a tour in the U.S. Navy, he attended City College of New York
and the Dramatic Workshop in Greenwich Village where he got his
first taste of acting.
Thanks to his extreme good looks as a true American Dreamboat,
he was immediately offered a Universal Pictures contract and quickly
became one of the biggest silver screen idols of all time. But
unlike his mentor, Cary Grant, Curtis often played the character
he created for himself. His well-documented life as an actor has
become film legend, as they say.
The same creative talent that has helped capture on film the subtle
nuances of daily life has spent the last several decades storing
the sights and memories of his incredible experiences directly
to canvas, in collages and
constructing assemblages. Now in his second career, Tony is having
more fun expressing himself than he ever thought was possible.
Painting has become a way of life, “I am so pleased that
I have the advantage of doing something I really love,”
he says. When at his home overlooking the Las Vegas Valley with
spectacular views of the Strip, he now gets to paint almost every
day.
His paintings address a broad range of subjects with lush, pattern-filled,
multi-colored still-lifes being a personal favorite. “Sometimes
I am inspired by things in my past, while other days it can be
whatever pops into my mind at the time,” he goes on to say.
“But it's the colors that really move me to where the piece
is going. I will begin with a color, and lay that color in all
the right places, then moving to the next color almost like the
pieces of a puzzle. And, I can see all the pieces perfectly fall
into place on the canvas in my mind's eye.” 
There's little doubt that the glitz and glamour of the movie world
has left its mark on his visual images. Many of his Van Gogh-ish
still life images seem larger than life and encompass great visual
concepts within the confines of the canvas making a powerful statement
of the artist's skill. Painted with great spontaneity, they reflect
the underlying discipline that is the source of his confidence
in his true artistic gift.
He has said that he wishes he had a cigar box of memories for
every day of his life. And true to that theme, he has been creating
mysterious little assemblages inside found containers - a crate,
a shipping box, an old silverware drawer, anything that could
be used to "freeze time" under glass. "Not an hour
of any day goes by that I'm not finding something new to use,"
he says. In one box was the striking image of a hand gripping
the image of an old clock thereby stopping time. Other boxes contained
old snapshots or letters, rosary beads, golf balls and even shot
glasses. "I've got boxes I've started years ago that are
not finished yet. One day, I know I'll come across that last object
that will spring out at me and say, 'Aha!' to finally make it
complete."
Tony's bright acrylic canvasses have been favorably compared to
those of Matisse. His assemblages, collages and boxes have been
exhibited all over North America, Europe, Asia and will soon tour
South America. This highly sought after artist remains prominently
displayed in the private collections of Billy Wilder, Arnold Schwarzenegger
and Maria Scriver, Kathy Lee Gifford, Lew Wasserman, Frank Sinatra,
Arsenio Hall, Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas. His spectacular
originals can be found on display at the Butler Institute of American
Art, the Naval Base at Pearl Harbor, the Toronto Museum, National
Hungarian Museum, Harrods Department Store, Spago Restaurant,
and the Mirgage in Las Vegas.
These days, with his Gauguin-like appearance and silver-white
shock of hair, Tony is still an active and energetic man. He recently
celebrated his 80th Birthday with a feature layout in Vanity Fair
followed by an unprecedented Fifty Year Retrospective of his art
unveiled for sale to collectors at an over-the-top event at the
MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas attended by the rich and famous from
all over the world..
|