Rash's Surname Index
Notes for Vincent CANBY
New York Times Arts Reviewer Dies
06:03EDT 10/16/00
NEW YORK (AP) -- Vincent Canby, who delivered trenchant insights, sober judgments and wry humor in film and theater reviews in The New York Times for more than 35 years, died of cancer on Sunday. He was 76.
Canby began reviewing films for the Times in 1965 and was its senior film critic from 1969 to 1993 before turning his attention to theater. In addition to his reviews in the daily newspaper, he wrote longer analyses for the Arts & Leisure section on Sundays.
Canby's thousands of articles and essays covered a broad swath of the cinematic arts, from the French New Wave to the rise of American independent filmmaking, big-budget Hollywood blockbusters and the introduction of videocassette recorders and multiplex movie houses.
He heralded filmmakers such as Woody Allen, Jane Campion, Spike Lee, Ismail Merchant and James Ivory.
His writing, often more entertaining than the works he reviewed, was a conversational prose conveying a disdain for sentiment and a fine-tuned praise for artistry. Sometimes he employed a dialogue with an invented character he called Stanley.
In a review of Steven Spielberg's "E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial,'' Canby wrote that the 1982 film freely recycles elements from earlier children's works, including "Peter Pan'' and "The Wizard of Oz.'' "Dorothy has become E.T., Kansas is outer space, and Oz is a modern, middle-class real estate development in California,'' Canby wrote.
In reviewing Spielberg's "Jaws'' in 1975, he wrote: "If you are what you eat, then one of the sharks in 'Jaws' is a beer can, half a mackerel and a Louisiana license plate. ... The other characters in the film are nowhere nearly so fully packed.'' Later in Canby's career, when he turned to theater criticism, he praised the plays of Horton Foote, David Mamet and Sam Shepard while deploring the ballyhoo of pompous stage effects and overamplified singers' and actors' voices.
He was as enthusiastic about modest efforts from promising new writers as about mammoth Broadway productions such as the revival of "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying.''
Canby, who was also a playwright and novelist, worked as a reporter and critic at the show business journal Variety for six years before joining the Times Among his works are the novels "Living Quarters'' (1975) and "Unnatural Scenery'' (1979) and the plays "End of the War'' (1978), "After All'' (1981) and "The Old Flag'' (1984).
Canby was born in Chicago July 27, 1924. He spent his formative years in Lake Forest, Illinois, and his high school years at the private Christchurch School in Alexandria, Virginia. During World War Two, he served as a Navy officer on a landing craft in the Pacific.
The New York Times said that although Canby never married, writer and fellow film critic Penelope Gilliatt, who died in 1993, was his companion for many years. Canby is survived by a first cousin, Ann Barker Trufant of Cincinnati and her daughter Ridgely, of New York, the paper said.
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