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June 4, 2001

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He was larger than life

Anthony Quinn, the barrel-chested Oscar winner remembered for his roles as the earthy hero of Zorba The Greek and the fierce Bedouin leader in Lawrence Of Arabia, is no more. He was 86.

Quinn's death was reported by Vincent 'Buddy' Cianci, a friend of the actor and mayor of Providence, Rhode Island. Quinn is reported to have died of respiratory failure at a Boston hospital.

"He was larger than life," Cianci said. "I am proud to call him a friend."

Quinn lived in Bristol, near Providence. Quinn, who appeared in more than 100 feature films, won an Academy Awards for Best Supporting actor in Viva Zapata! and Lust For Life.

Born in Mexico and raised in poverty in East Los Angeles, Quinn went from stage and B-movie roles to become an international leading man renowned for his big-man sensitivity and honest acting style.

In a film career that spanned almost 30 years, Quinn portrayed characters ranging from kings to Indians, including a pope, a boxer and an artist.

"I never get the girl," Quinn once joked in an interview. "I wind up with a country instead."

He won his first Oscar for his work in the 1952 film, Viva Zapata!, as the brother of Mexican revolutionary leader, Emiliano Zapata.

To many, Quinn's Oscar-nominated characterisation of the Greek peasant, Zorba, from the Nikos Kazantzakis novel, remained his most memorable role.

The Ouzo-drinking and bouzouki-dancing Zorba was his favourite role, so much so that he returned to the stage in 1983 in a revival of the musical that inspired the 1965 film. A real-life artist, sculptor and author, his role as painter Paul Gauguin in the 1956 film Lust For Life earned him his second Oscar.

He left Hollywood for Italy, as leading roles became fewer: "What could I play there? They only think of me as a Mexican Indian or a Mafia don," he told AP in 1977.

He was divorced from Katherine in 1965, after he fathered two children with Italian costume designer Yolanda Addolari.

In 1972, Quinn wrote his autobiography, The Original Sin, which has been translated into over 18 languages.

He followed with a second volume, Suddenly Sunset.

The straightforward actor shunned the use of ghostwriters, favouring blunt honesty over Hollywood image-making. "I could either lie or tell the truth," he said. "I figured the only value in such a book would be to describe my life as I lived it."

Quinn said in a 1987 interview that he reached most of the goals he set for himself as a young boy. "I never satisfied that kid but I think he and I have made a deal now," he said, referring to his younger self.

"It's like climbing a mountain: I didn't take him up Mount Everest, but I took him up Mount Whitney. And I think that's not bad."

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