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  1. Cliff Robertson, de son vrai nom Clifford Parker Robertson III, né le 9 septembre 1923 à La Jolla, en Californie, et mort le 10 septembre 2011 à Stony Brook, dans le Grand New York 1, est un acteur, scénariste, réalisateur et producteur américain . Il obtient en 1969, l' Oscar du meilleur acteur pour son rôle dans le film Charly de Ralph ...

  2. Oscar-Winning Actor Cliff Robertson Dies at 88 Cliff Robertson, who won an Oscar for playing mentally disabled man in the 1968 film Charly and later played Ben Parker in the Spider-Man films, has ...

  3. 11 de sept. de 2011 · Robertson, who went on to win an Oscar for his portrayal of a mentally disabled man in "Charly", died of natural causes Saturday afternoon in Stony Brook, a day after his 88th birthday, according ...

  4. 22 de feb. de 2018 · The film begins with a credit sequence as Charlie Gordon (Cliff Robertson, “Spider-Man (2002)”) wanders around a playground, slack jawed and vacant-eyed, monkeying around with children, swinging on swings, climbing on jungle gyms, and looking utterly happy.

  5. 12 de sept. de 2011 · Cliff Robertson, an actor whose career spanned more than 50 years, during which he won both a Primetime Emmy and an Oscar, died September 10, 2011, a day after his 88th birthday, in Stony Brook, New York. According to news reports, Robertson died of natural causes. In addition to his distinguished career as a performer — which extended into ...

  6. Algernon es un ratón de laboratorio con el que Charly, que padece una enfermedad mental, compite sin poder vencerlo. La actuación de Cliff Robertson es magistral, su gesto de concentración, tozudez, desconcierto o contrariedad cada vez que es derrotado por el animal, su transformación paulatina, superando con creces a los que han hecho después papeles similares.

  7. Cliff Robertson is at the top of his game as the eponymous character who has learning difficulties. He has been attending night classes under "Dr. Kilman" (Claire Bloom) for almost two years, determined to improve his reading and writing, and it is she who thinks it might be possible to get him onto a scientifically-backed course that could ultimately result in profoundly correctional surgery.