About a month or so ago, I wrote an article for my monthly newsletter dedicated to Paul Newman. Because my newsletter is for a special niche of collectors such as rare celebrity autographs, original vintage movie posters, historical & sports memorabilia and antique oil paintings I didn’t think it would be popular among general blog readers. However, since it was picked up by a number of national media outlets including About.com, I thought maybe there are some special collectors out there who might like to read how Paul Newman was so admired not only by the general public but by movie memorabilia collectors all over the world.
So, enjoy!
Paul Newman Tribute
(1925-2008)

September 28, 2008
Today I was reminded about what a gift it is to have the passion of a collector. Whether you collect art, vintage
Hollywood, sports or comic books, we Collectors know we always have a “special place” we can go when the world seems so dark, depressed and doomed. Over the past week (or several months come to think of it) I find the media to be a reliable source of misery. I would never have believed that CNN and Fox news would become my last choice for evening Television. Yet, not even the persistent, gloomy economic and political news can dampen the excitement of collecting. That’s what makes collecting more then just a hobby. It’s an escape to a better, healthier state of mind. To me that is priceless. I call it “the Collector High”. It ‘s unfortunate there are so many good folks that have no “better place” to go to as these ominous clouds shower us with this temporary dismal and pessimistic economic storm.
So, I was saddened this past week, on another dimension, while reading my email. I see a news report that one of our most beloved movie actors Paul Newman had succumbed to cancer. I didn’t know Paul Newman, never met him. I only knew the public, bigger then life persona. But, he played an important role in my early life. When I was about ten years old, I acquired a love for old movies and in particular three movie legends, namely James Stewart, John Wayne and Paul Newman.
Because there is also a very public side of this man, who exhibited an authenticity, a pureness that is about as contrary to typical Hollywood fame as Freddy Krugger helping an old lady across the street, we all got to know him a little bit. His philanthropy, his one-in-ten-thousand long term, loyal Hollywood marriage, and his numerous charitable contributions, that didn’t require photo ops and career boosting propaganda are well known. This was regardless of how hard he tried to live an anonymous life on the opposite side of the “elite coast”. In a Hollywood culture where reality is disguised by vanity, materialistic wealth and endless symbolic identity, here was an actor who achieved Hollywood’s highest fame, but turned his backed on the dark, ugly side of movie stardom. He was a self proclaimed “anti-celebrity” and often referred to acts of “celebrity” as offensive.
Here is an excerpt from USA Today.
“Now this rare breed of handsome rascal who connected with audiences across five decades is gone. The screen legend died Friday after a long battle with cancer at his farmhouse near
Westport, Conn., publicist Jeff Sanderson said. He was 83. The actor was surrounded by his family and close friends, including his wife of 50 years, actress Joanne Woodward.
Not even a Brad Pitt or a George Clooney could take Newman’s place. You would have to mix the DNA of both Clint Eastwood (the steely toughness) and Robert Redford (the manly allure) to come close to duplicating him.
As Clooney himself told Men’s Journal in 2000, “Nobody gets to be famous as long as Paul Newman. You can’t take your eyes off of him. He’s always interested in the scene, as opposed to trying to be interesting.”
The blue-eyed devil considered himself more lucky than talented to have the career he achieved. “
So, this afternoon, with anxiety about this financial crisis we face and little comfort from Washington, I am distracting by comforting thoughts about a memorable actor whose performances never failed to take me to a better place. I recall as a ten year old, in the fifth grade, reciting that unforgettable, scolding quote “what we have here is a failure to communicate”.
Why my heroes were James Stewart, John Wayne and Paul Newman, I can’t explain, but in hindsight, not bad judgment for a 10 year old boy. Whether it was Hud Bannon in “Hud” or Luke in “Cool Hand Luke”, Paul Newman never “had a failure to communicate”. Thanks Paul for the memories and allowing us to go to a “better place” when the media and politicians are trying to convince us that money is the end of the world.
I found a lot of self made Paul Newman tributes on YouTube with background music. But, I don’t think there is a more striking and memorable example then the very end of “Cool Hand Luke”, in George Kennedy’s own words.
Kevin Conway
Conway’s Vintage Treasures
www.cvtreasures.com
Tags: autographs, cool hand luke, movie memorabilia, paul newman, paul newman films, paul newman movies, tribute to paul newman, vintage movie posters