“”
It’s hard not to think that the one-time gymnast who vaulted to stardom in 1987’s “”Dirty Dancing”” had rehearsed his premature exit in the 1990 blockbuster “”Ghost.””
As the banker who solves his own murder mystery, he speaks from the dead to his living sweetheart,
That’s a reassuring thought for
There are great actors and there are great screen personalities. Swayze was the latter. His reputation rests on “”Dirty Dancing”” and “”Ghost,”” and what made them beloved was his gallantry. Quite simply, he radiated Galahad-like honor. “”Patrick possessed a depth of nobility,”” said his “”Point Break”” director
Even while undergoing chemotherapy, Swayze put in long hours on the television cable drama “”The Beast”” on A&E. When well-wishers inquired how he nurtured such a positive attitude despite a prognosis that claims 75 percent of patients within a year, the consummate professional crisply replied, “”When the statistics say you’re a dead man? You go to work.””
To quote the phrase made famous by his distant relative,
Along with
Even as a teenager, this firstborn son of a cowboy and a choreographer boasted a rugged grace, excelling both on the football gridiron and at the ballet barre. Like
But he wasn’t one for locker-room bragging, which he disdained as “”kill-that-guy”” talk. Between that and the ballet lessons, he was frequently roughed up by the local bullies for being a sissy. Swayze followed the counsel of his mother, Patsy: “”Take your ballet slippers outta your pocket and beat the stuffin’ out of them”” — “”them”” being the bullies.
In 1970 the aspiring dancer was awarded a gymnastics scholarship at
When he returned to his native
A muscular dancer of the Gene Kelly sort, Swayze stuck out like a cactus among the jonquils. “”I had 19-inch arms,”” he recalled. “”I was the Godzilla of ballet.”” When an old football injury flared up, he found it increasingly hard to pirouette. Doctors told him he would be crippled, but he defied them and his balky knee by submitting to five surgeries.
As Feld planned a ballet for Swayze and Mikhail Baryshnikov, the future actor had knee reconstruction that nipped his ballet career in the bud. His fortitude throughout was a preview of the stoicism and resolve he brought to his fight against cancer.
That fortitude, however, had a dare-devil downside. In his early years, Swayze was a reckless motorcycle driver and problem drinker. By all accounts, what kept him from spinning out was Niemi. He was 23, she was 19. Because dancing didn’t pay the rent, and his role as
The leap from from ballet corps to screen was, as he was the first to admit, shaky. Swayze was a throwback to the 1950s, a looker who could dance. But in the 1970s
Though he didn’t have much training as an actor, he registered as the stoic teenagers of “”The Outsiders”” and “”Red Dawn”” (1984). In the latter, made shortly after his father had died of a massive stroke at age 56, Swayze first wed physical strength with emotional sensitivity, the secret sauce in his best-loved roles. This hunk of beefcake was unusually tender.
Just as he was on the brink of a breakout role, the guy with the secret sauce was hitting the bottle and trashing hotel rooms. At first, he bucked his wife’s efforts to steer him into
Who could forget his
There are good movies and there are bad movies, and he made quite a few in each category. But he carved a unique niche in what might be called good-bad movies: films enjoyable despite their preposterousness. Flicks such as “”Road House”” (as a bar bouncer with a Ph.D!). And “”To Wong Foo Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar”” (as
After he turned his life around, the actor many called
A longtime student of Buddhism, Swayze was drawn to “”City of Joy”” (1992), the
He often delivered dialogue guru-style, and with his passing, some of his oracular lines seem eerily prescient. Swayze’s family and fans (and who is not?) might find comfort in remembering “”Point Break,”” in which he says, “”It’s not tragic to die doing what you love.”” Or “”The Outsiders,”” where as the big brother counseling his baby bro, he says, “”Just because you lose somebody, you don’t stop living.””
Besides his wife Lisa, he is survived by his mother, Patsy, and siblings Don, Sean and Bambi.
———
———
(c) 2009, The Philadelphia Inquirer.
Visit Philadelphia Online, the Inquirer’s World Wide Web site, at http://www.philly.com/
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.