Wednesday, March 18, 2009

WSJ’s Tribute To Ron Silver

Tony Award winner Ron Silver died from cancer Sunday at age 62. Today the WSJ paid tribute to him noting:

... Silver's most notable legacy was his real-life political activism. A self-described life-long liberal, Silver rallied to the defense of his country and his hometown, New York City, after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

Three years later, he spoke at the Republican National Convention in New York, reminding his audience that "This is a war we did not seek. This is a war waged against us. This is a war to which we had to respond."

He had held similarly hawkish views during the Cold War, and he rebutted those who see America as little different than its enemies: "History shows that we are not imperialists."

By his own account, he suffered professionally for those convictions, but he sought no sympathy for whatever price he may have paid in Hollywood for his stand on the war on terror or his vocal criticism of the United Nations, about which he made a documentary in 2005.

In "Broken Promises," Silver held the U.N. to account for its failure to live up to its stated ideals, even as his acting colleagues derided President Bush for using military force against tyrants.
The entire tribute’s here.

I’m sure Silver paid a price in Hollywood where the bash-America first, most and always crowd dominates.

Ron Silver, RIP.

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

I saw Mr. Silver in Speed the Plow on Broadway, and a number of times in the law office where I worked, since the Creative Coalition had sublet office space from the firm. He worked diligently on behalf of pragmatice appraoches to real issues, unlike his overly romantic, knee-jerk peers. He will be missed.
NYEsquire83