
Sidney Lumet, June 25, 1924 - April 9, 2011
Sidney Lumet, probably the greatest director of the American crime drama, has died Saturday night at the age of 86 in his home in Manhattan.
Lumet, who  was nominated for the best director Oscar on four separate occasions  between the late 50s and early 80s and who received an honorary Academy  Award in 2005, suffered from lymphoma. 
Born in Philadelphia to two Yiddish stage  performers, Lumet served as a radar repair man in the second world war  before directing theater productions in New York. This apprenticeship  would form the basis for his later screen career. Lumet typically  corralled his actors through a lengthy rehearsal period and then shot  the film at speed. He made his feature debut with the acclaimed 12 Angry  Men , a claustrophobic courtroom drama that starred Henry Fonda as a  rogue juror.
, a claustrophobic courtroom drama that starred Henry Fonda as a  rogue juror.
Lumet's preferred location was the cauldron of  inner-city New York and his favored subject matter tended to be the  porous line between order and criminality. Many of his most famous movies - The Pawnbroker , Serpico
, Serpico , Dog Day Afternoon
, Dog Day Afternoon , and The Verdict
, and The Verdict -  stand as tense, earthy morality plays. But the director also took the  occasional detour along the way, as evidenced by his plush version of  Murder on the Orient Express
 -  stand as tense, earthy morality plays. But the director also took the  occasional detour along the way, as evidenced by his plush version of  Murder on the Orient Express , his Oscar-winning media satire Network
, his Oscar-winning media satire Network , or  1978's The Wiz
, or  1978's The Wiz , a Motown musical update of The Wizard of Oz, starring  Michael Jackson and Diana Ross.
, a Motown musical update of The Wizard of Oz, starring  Michael Jackson and Diana Ross.
Lumet, whose career spanned six decades and more than 50 films, never won ans Oscar, although he was nominated four times as best director. 
"All I want is  to get better and quantity can help me solve my problems," he once  admitted. "I'm thrilled by the idea that I'm not even sure how many  films I've done. If I don't have a script I adore, I do the one I like.  If I don't have one I like, I do one that has an actor I like or that  presents some technical challenge." 
Along the way, he worked with the  likes of Marlon Brando, Katharine Hepburn, Paul Newman, Sean Connery,  Albert Finney, Ingrid Bergman and Al Pacino.
Lumet took a  memorable final bow with "Before the Devil Knows You're Dead " - an  acclaimed crime saga that proved its creator was still a force to be  reckoned with. "The veteran director Sidney Lumet may be 84 years old,"  wrote Guardian film critic Peter Bradshaw in January 2008. "But in this  superb heist thriller, he breaks out the shocks - and the twists - with  the ferocity of a hungry youngster."
" - an  acclaimed crime saga that proved its creator was still a force to be  reckoned with. "The veteran director Sidney Lumet may be 84 years old,"  wrote Guardian film critic Peter Bradshaw in January 2008. "But in this  superb heist thriller, he breaks out the shocks - and the twists - with  the ferocity of a hungry youngster."
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