Sept, 2009 |
Cooper, Gary, 1901-61, American film actor, b. Helena,
Mont., as Frank James Cooper. His first important starring role
in A Farewell to Arms (1933) was followed by such films
as Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936), Pride of the Yankees
(1942), For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943), and Saratoga
Trunk (1944). Best known to his public as the shy, lanky man
of the West, he won Academy Awards for his performances in
Sergeant York (1941) and High Noon (1952), in which
his portrayal of the strong, silent sheriff became emblematic of
the Western hero. His later films include Vera Cruz
(1954), Friendly Persuasion (1956), and They Came to
Cordura (1959). Before the camera he epitomized what one
writer called "our pioneer belief in the triumph of good
over evil." Actor in many western and war movies 1925
- 1960 |
His physical maladies and weariness,
*
* which so hampered his
later performances, worked to his advantage in High Noon |
| Too old for World War II service, Cooper gave tirelessly of his time
in hazardous South Pacific personal-appearance tours. (Second Hand
exposure?) |
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| into the 1950s he was wracked by an unhappy personal life and ill
health (a painful back and ulcers), which often
prevented him from selecting good scripts and delivering able
performances.
middle-aged gauntness
he was plagued with painful, recurring illnesses, and one of them
developed into lung cancer.
As Cooper lay dying of cancer, Pope John XXIII,
President John F. Kennedy, and Queen Elizabeth II sent get-well
messages, which demonstrated Cooper's position as a beloved modern folk
hero, and also the industry's mythmaking capacity. He died at Los
Angeles on May 13, 1961 |
Death from Cancer
In April 1960, Cooper underwent surgery for
prostate cancer after it had spread to his
colon. It then spread to his lungs and
bones shortly thereafter.
ANY Cancer is possible with exposure to the 'flu symptom'
causing chemical, glycol ether ... such as 2-butoxyethanol
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Maybe not a metastasizing issue!
*
This
is the 'shrapnel' chemical exposure
*
Where it shows up first is irrelevant |
These are the kinds of things that
exposure to gun fumes / glycol ether would do
I wonder if he had 'the sniffles' a lot? .... or
episodes of 'the flu?'
I
suspect his digestive problems, bone problems could be
autoimmune issues
|
Just as Annie Oakley had an autoimmune issue ...
Annie Oakley
(born Phoebe Ann Mosey August 13, 1860 – Her
health declined in 1925.
On November 3,
1926 Annie Oakley died of pernicious anemia,
in Greenville, Ohio, at the age of 66. Her
husband died on November 21, just three weeks
later.
Annie
Oakley ... eyes too close to gun fumes?
Her shooting
expertise never faltered and she continued to
set records. In 1922, in a shooting contest in
Pinehurst, North Carolina, Oakley hit 100 clay
targets straight from 16 yards — she was 62 at
the time. |
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All the westerns & war movies
could have put glycol ether fumes in his eyes ...
and flu like symptoms would be signs of 'exposure'
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http://www.valdezlink.com/gwv/10-14-09editor.htm
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Ever
Have one of These Days? |
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Poem - "No Regrets" |
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