Mood:
Topic: Personal
Christopher Reeves' death has put me in an odd state of melancholy. Clearly I didn't know the man personally, but I admired him as an actor. Not too many people would have the guts to play both Superman and a gay writer, and I respected that. Kinda fits in with the admiration I've always had for performers who take risks and stretch themselves in their roles instead of taking the safe route, people like Johnny Depp, Brad Pitt, Viggo Mortensen, Emma Thompson, even Meryl Streep.
And his injury came while horseback riding. I love horses and riding, and like any real rider I know that it's a dangerous thing to do. Any time you put yourself atop a ton of nervous energy and dance together, sometimes at great speeds and sometimes over high objects, you're asking for trouble. Skill and trust are your allies. Random chance is your enemy. Chris Reeve was jumping fences and his number came up in the random chance lottery. Any rider knows it could have been her, or him.
But he didn't give up. That's the thing. Total paralysis. That had to be the harshest diagnosis of them all for an actor and an athlete. What could have been easier than to just crawl inside that welcoming hole that's always there, in the background, and never come out again. But he didn't. He fought the thing. Eventually he started making public appearances. The first time I saw that commercial that showed him, benefit of CGI, walking again, I cried. I'm not ashamed to admit it. He was a fighter. A purveyor of hope. A real super man.
And a bedsore killed him. A bedsore. The final indignity.
Bon voyage, Christopher Reeve. Thanks for everything. And may your star shine bright the next time around, Superman.


