Advertisement

Raul Julia; Actor Portrayed a Wide Array of Characters on Stage, Screen

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITER

Raul Julia, whose brooding, passionate features and multifarious talents enabled him to portray characters ranging from the ghoulish patriarch of “The Addams Family” to the persecuted political prisoner in “Kiss of the Spider Woman,” died Monday.

The Puerto Rican-born actor--famous in his early years for his Shakespearean characterizations--was 54 and died at North Shore University Hospital in the Long Island community of Manhasset, N.Y., where he was taken after a stroke a week ago. He slipped into a coma Thursday and never regained consciousness.

He had been in good health, said his agent, Jeff Hunter, adding that the stroke “was totally unexpected.”

Advertisement

Throughout his U.S. stage and film career (he came to the mainland from Puerto Rico in 1964) the urbane actor with the shrouded gray eyes and resonant voice remained a striking presence.

He starred in the New York Shakespeare Festival’s “Macbeth” (1966) and “Othello” (1979) and opposite Meryl Streep in “The Taming of the Shrew” (1978).

He also starred with Harrison Ford in the film thriller “Presumed Innocent” as attorney Sandy Stern and opposite Faye Dunaway in “The Eyes of Laura Mars.”

In one of his last appearances--a Home Box Office TV movie that was shown in September--Julia was the martyred Brazilian rain forest activist Chico Mendes.

He also was Don Quixote singing “The Impossible Dream” in a 1991 stage revival of “Man of La Mancha.” He was nominated for four Tony Awards (“The Two Gentlemen of Verona,” “The Threepenny Opera”--as Mack the Knife--”Where’s Charley” and “Nine”) and was the widely heralded Marxist revolutionary Valentin in Hector Babenco’s film version of “Spider Woman.”

The last was the major breakthrough in a film career that began with minor parts in “The Organization Man” and “Panic in Needle Park,” both in 1971.

Advertisement

And then there was Gomez Addams, a role that Julia brought to film after John Astin played the part in a highly successful two-year TV series of the mid-1960s.

“The Addams Family” was about a macabre but tightly knit clan headed by Gomez, the evil-eyed husband and father with the murderous mentality. His wife was the beautifully ominous Morticia (Anjelica Huston in the film) and with butler Lurch and befuddled brother Fester they existed in a cartoon-celluloid world first created by Charles Addams in the New Yorker magazine.

Their motto was “We gladly feast on those who would subdue us.”

The 1991 film produced a sequel--”Addams Family Values”--in 1993. In that picture Morticia bears a son, Pubert, who emerges complete with Gomez’s mustache. Many found it funnier than its predecessor.

Julia’s friends were as diverse as his characters.

They ranged from comedian Orson Bean to Joseph Papp, the innovative producer-director of the New York Shakespeare pageants with which Julia had a 16-year association, to Werner Erhard, founder of the mind-bending, self-improvement group est.

Papp, who died in 1991, once said of Julia: “He was always outrageous in his acting choices. He’s larger than life all the time when he’s on the stage. He doesn’t mind falling flat on his face doing something dangerous.”

Julia credited Bean, a stage actor later more closely associated with TV game shows, with sparking his interest in the American theater.

Advertisement

(Julia’s first stage exposure--as the devil in a first-grade play--had been the start of his intrigue with acting.)

“I was in college appearing in a variety show and Orson was in Puerto Rico on vacation,” Julia said. “He saw me and liked my performance. I told him that once I graduated I wanted to make acting my career and I was going to Europe.”

Instead Bean invited Julia, at 6 feet, 2 inches an imposing presence, to New York, where he saw his first Broadway plays.

“I thought,” Julia said in a 1991 interview, “ ‘My God, you can actually make a living. . . .’ ”

Julia’s interests were also widespread. Foremost among them for the past 15 years had been the Hunger Project, a charity that grew out of his experiences with est.

The project’s goal is to eradicate hunger by the year 2000, and Julia insisted that statements in its behalf be inserted into the programs that accompanied his stage performances.

Advertisement

Julia said his interest in the underfed needy began in Puerto Rico when his successful father--a restaurateur who reportedly introduced pizza to the island--and mother would take stray children into their home.

“When I found out in 1977 that we have the technology to end hunger on the planet, I had to get involved,” he told the Washington Post in 1992. “As Don Quixote says in the play, ‘Maddest of all is to see things as they are, not as they ought to be.’ ” Julia’s other offstage efforts included the Hispanic Organization of Latin Actors, which works to develop theater in Spanish.

After “Spider Woman,” the actor was able to partially cast off the hesitancy some producers and directors displayed in casting a Latino in a non-Latino role. Although the Latin influence was evident in “Moon Over Parador,” “Tequila Sunrise” and “Havana,” Julia was given the starring role of Cottard in a film version of Albert Camus’ “The Plague” that went straight to video.

Julia also was Jane Fonda’s sinister ex-husband in “The Morning After,” the smooth-talking waiter in “One From the Heart” and the lovelorn goatherd in “Tempest.”

On television he was featured in several miniseries, among them “Richest Man in the World: The Story of Aristotle Onassis,” “Mussolini: The Untold Story” and a 1974 special of “King Lear,” in which he played Edmund. In a lighter mode, the actor was a one-season regular on “Sesame Street” as Rafael the Fixit Man.

Julia considered his portrayal of the martyred Salvadoran archbishop Oscar Romero in the 1989 film “Romero” one of his most important accomplishments.

Advertisement

But he said that generally he preferred the stage to motion pictures and TV.

“To me the theater is like standing on top of the mountain and shouting your confession,” he said in a 1990 interview. “And film is like being in the confessional whispering, ‘I have done this, I have done this. . . .’ ”

Julia will be given a state funeral in San Juan, and memorial services will be held in New York and Los Angeles, said Susan Wright, his personal assistant.

Julia’s survivors include his wife, dancer Merel Poloway; two sons, Raul Sigmund and Benjamin Rafael; his mother, Olga Arcelay of Puerto Rico, and two sisters.

* AN APPRECIATION: Raul Julia was one of the first Puerto Ricans to star on the Broadway stage, but his talent was such that he was hardly ever typecast. F1

Advertisement