Sam Shepard appreciation: The Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and Oscar-nominated ‘The Right Stuff’ actor wore many hats in theater, on screen
A taciturn, Marlboro Man-type demeanor defined Shepard as an actor, including what’s likely his most iconic performance as test pilot Chuck Yeager in «The Right Stuff, » the 1983 movie that earned him an Academy Award nomination. The shot of Shepard as a bloodied Yeager, walking away from a crash, remains perhaps the film’s most indelible image.
«Is that a man?» a medic asks as they spot a silhouette driving toward the scene, to which his superior replies, «You’re damn right it is.»
Shepard’s writing — which explored dark issues surrounding American family life, in plays like «Buried Child» (his Pulitzer winner) and «True West» — didn’t completely mesh with the persona he projected on screen. After a splashy start in director Terrence Malick’s «Days of Heaven, » his good looks frequently cast him as a romantic interest for leading actresses, including Julia Roberts in «The Pelican Brief» and Jessica Lange in the 1982 movie «Frances, » which kicked off a long romance between them.
A number of Shepard’s plays were adapted either as movies or for television, and he even tried his hand at directing with «Far North, » which starred Lange; and «Silent Tongue, » a grim 1993 western.
Still, Shepard seemed to draw a fairly stark line between his prolific output for the theater and his equally busy calendar as an actor. Asked if he was good on stage in a New York Times interview last year, Shepard said, «Not as good as I am in the movies. You don’t have to do anything in the movies. You just sit there. Well, that’s not entirely true. You do less. I find the whole situation of confronting an audience terrifying.»
In truth, Shepard confronted audiences through different media over a career that spanned 50 years. And if the process wasn’t always easy for him, in terms of managing to make it look that way, you’re damn right he did.