NEW YORK – Christopher Plummer, the Oscar-winning acting legend whose storied career encompassed stage, television and film, and who was perhaps best-known for portraying Capt. Georg von Trapp in “The Sound of Music,” has died.
Plummer died “peacefully” at his home in Connecticut after suffering a fall two weeks ago, said his wife, Elaine Plummer. He was 91.
The actor went through a particularly fertile creative period in his golden years, receiving his first Academy Award at the age 82 for his heart-warming supporting turn as a widower who embraces his homosexuality in “Beginners.” The trophy made him the oldest-ever Oscar winner in an acting category.
“You’re only two years older than me darling, where have you been all my life?” Plummer said as he accepted the statuette to rapturous applause in 2012.
The Oscar came just two years after Plummer received his first Academy Award nomination for playing Russian writer Leo Tolstoy in “The Last Station.”
He also received a nomination in the supporting actor category in 2018 for “All The Money In the World,” a mere month after he’d replaced Kevin Spacey as billionaire J. Paul Getty in Ridley Scott’s biographical drama. Spacey was abruptly cut from the film in the wake of sexual assault allegations.
The “All the Money in the World” situation made Plummer a social media sensation, with fans heralding him for stepping in at the last minute. Plummer was also trending on Twitter when he turned 90 at the end of 2019 and appeared on the quiz show “Jeopardy!” shortly thereafter.
The more mature he got, the more the scripts improved and the more he learned about his craft, said Plummer, who scoffed at the wore “retire.”
“If you love your work, which I do — and I’ve grown to love it more and more as I get older and realize that I’ve got to cram a lot in before I croak — I wouldn’t think of stopping,” Plummer told The Canadian Press in December 2010.
Christopher Orme Plummer was born in Toronto in 1929 into a notable family.
His great-grandfather on his mother’s side was Prime Minister John Abbott. His parents divorced when he was a baby and Plummer was raised by his mother’s family in Montreal.
In his 2008 autobiography “In Spite of Myself,” he wrote that his first memory was of a “dear slobbering old Airedale” who was “christened after another shaggy old Airedale, Field Marshal Lord Byng of Vimy, whom my grandparents had known when he was governor general.”
Plummer’s upbringing in Montreal was culturally rich. He became acquainted with the theatre and ballet, and one of his school classmates was Oscar Peterson, who went on to become a Canadian jazz legend. He also developed a love of classic literature through childhood reading sessions with his family.
Plummer acted with the Montreal Repertory Theatre and made his professional debut in 1948 with Ottawa’s Stage Society, which later became the Canadian Repertory Theatre. He also worked at the CBC, in radio and television.
By his early 20s he was already touring the U.S. in plays. His Broadway debut came in 1954’s “The Starcross Story.” That was promptly followed by his film debut, Sidney Lumet’s “Stage Struck.”
Plummer made his debut at Ontario’s Stratford Festival in 1956, playing Henry V. It was one of most exciting theatrical experiences he’d ever had, he once told The Canadian Press, and it was at a festival he came to regard as a second home of sorts.
But it was in 1965, with the release of “The Sound of Music,” that Plummer would become forever known to moviegoers as a crusty Austrian widower whose frosty heart is melted by a young nun-turned-governess hired to care for his children.
The film, of course, has become a classic, but Plummer expressed disdain for the production, calling it “The Sound of Mucus.” He was careful to add, however, that he had “terrific memories” of making the movie, and forged a lifelong friendship with co-star Julie Andrews (he once said that working with her was like “getting hit over the head with a Valentine”). He also spoke at a memorial for “Sound of Music” director Robert Wise.
He continued to do strong and varied work throughout the 1970s, including “The Return of the Pink Panther” and “The Man Who Would Be King,” and played Sherlock Holmes in “Murder by Decree.”
One of his best-known roles in the 1980s came on television when he played Archbishop Vittorio Contini-Verchese in the epic miniseries “The Thorn Birds.”
Plummer worked steadily in the 1990s, in films including “Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country” and “Dolores Claiborne.”
In 1999, he was lavished with critical praise for portraying journalist Mike Wallace in Michael Mann’s “The Insider” alongside Al Pacino and Russell Crowe.
He was married three times. His first marriage in the 1950s, to actress Tammy Grimes, produced a daughter, Amanda, an accomplished actor whose film credits include “Pulp Fiction.” He married and divorced again in the 1960s — his second wife was journalist Patricia Lewis. Plummer married dancer/actress Elaine Regina Taylor in 1970.
And despite splitting his time between Palm Beach, Fla., and Connecticut, he never forgot his Canadian roots.
In 2002 he appeared in Toronto director Atom Egoyan’s film “Ararat.” In 2007 he did “Emotional Arithmetic,” based on a novel by Canadian author Matt Cohen and shot in Quebec. The film closed the Toronto International Film Festival that year. And in 2019 he shot the series “Departure” in Toronto.
Plummer spoke frequently of his love of theatre and the thrill of performing in front of a live audience.
The actor returned to the Stratford Shakespeare Festival numerous times, including in 2008 to play the lead role in Bernard Shaw’s “Caesar and Cleopatra.”
The year that followed was a particularly busy one. He voiced explorer Charles Muntz in the 2009 animated hit “Up” and played the titular character in “The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus,” released the same year.
A few months later, in January 2010, he was nominated for an Academy Award for “The Last Station,” in which he co-starred with Helen Mirren.
His other memorable roles include industrialist Henrik Vanger in 2011’s “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo” and the patriarch in the 2019 murder mystery “Knives Out.”
“You’ve got to keep going,” he told The Canadian Press in February 2010 when asked about his busy schedule. “I’m very happy that I seem to be getting more work as I get older. I seem to be doing more than less, which is fabulous, because it keeps one young. I look to balance it by always going back to the stage and then back to film, so it’s never boring. It isn’t. And I don’t hang around.”
The “celebrity” portion of his job, however, was not something he enjoyed. Plummer’s first trip to the Oscars was in 2010.
“I don’t like going unless one is up for an award. Why would one put oneself through that agony?” he asked.
“I’m not crazy about (the fanfare). It’s a business you know, it’s a flesh-peddling business, and I don’t always like the feeling on the red carpet. You feel like you’re pushing yourself, which I don’t do.”
And yet, he seemed to revel in the moment as he received an armful of trophies for his role in “Beginners,” culminating in the Oscar.
“I have a confession to make. When I first emerged from my mother’s womb, I was already rehearsing my Academy thank-you speech,” he said onstage at the awards show. “But it was so long ago, mercifully for you I’ve forgotten it. But I haven’t forgotten who to thank.”
He went on to express gratitude to his family, his fellow nominees, “Beginners” director Mike Mills and co-star Ewan McGregor.
Just weeks after the Oscar win, however, Plummer’s mind was on his next project, a one-man show at Stratford entitled “A Word or Two.”
He summed up his drive in the summer of 2010, when he was at Stratford to play Prospero in “The Tempest,” a role some actors see as a swan song.
Not so for Plummer, who told The Canadian Press: “I’m hoping to carry on forever.”
In addition to the Oscar, Plummer was a companion of the Order of Canada and a recipient of the Governor General’s Lifetime Achievement Award. He also won two Tonys, two Emmys and a Genie.
For all of his success, the on-set nerves never went away, he admitted.
“I usually walk on terrified that I’m going to not make it through the first take,” Plummer told The Canadian Press in January 2020.
“Without jitters, you’re no good, you’d be terrible. They supply all sorts of different colours.”
(The Canadian Press)