On the anniversary of actor Sal Mineo’s killing at the hands of a random mugger in the parking lot of his West Hollywood apartment building, we return to Poseidon Underworld’s considered tribute to the career and romantic interests within the movie industry of this critically acclaimed, twice Oscar-nominated individual who tried to escape filmmakers who typecast him either as punk, victim or ethnic underdog.
Perhaps most recognised for his role of John “Plato” Crawford in Rebel Without a Cause, the second of the cast principles to die a violent death after James Dean in an auto accident and then Natalie Wood’s drowning, Mineo was mentored by Yul Brynner in the stage musical The King and I and while still a teenager had supporting parts with Tony Curtis and Charlton Heston before the breakout appearance. After Exodus and The Longest Day, executives, in combination with rumours circulating about his personal life, thought Mineo had aged out by the mid 1960s and pivoted towards television and a brief stint as a musician. His final role, unrecognisable in prosthetic makeup, was Dr Milo in Escape from the Planet of the Apes in 1973. Mineo was thirty-seven and in rehearsals for a theatre-piece, PS Your Cat is Dead, with Keir Dullea.
synchronoptica
one year ago: St Julian the Hospitaller (with synchronopticรฆ) plus assorted links to revisit
twelve years ago: stock market instability
fourteen years ago: graffiti stencils plus RIP Whitney Houston
fifteen years ago: the Egyptian government overthrown by the people
sixteen years ago: mass surveillance in the name of security
