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   » » Wiki: Rex Reed
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Rex Taylor Reed (born October 2, 1938) is an American film critic, journalist, actor, and media personality.

Raised throughout the American South and educated at Louisiana State University, Reed moved to New York City in the early 1960s to begin his career, writing about popular culture, art, and celebrities for a number of newspapers and magazines. He became a public figure in his own right, making regular appearances on television and occasionally acting in films throughout the 1970s and 1980s.

Reed has been a longtime writer for The New York Observer, where he authors the "Talk of the Town" column. He is known for his blunt style and contrarian tastes, and some of his writing has been criticized for containing factual errors or disparaging remarks about actors. Reed is the author of eight books, including Do You Sleep in the Nude?, Conversations in the Raw, People Are Crazy Here, and Valentines & Vitriol.


Early life
Reed was born on October 2, 1938, in Fort Worth, Texas, the son of Jewell (née Smith) and James M. Reed, an oil company supervisor."Rex Reed". Contemporary Authors Online. Gale, 2006. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2006. In an interview with The New York Times, Reed stated: "My mother came from a family of 10 in Oklahoma, her second cousins were the . And when my grandfather was a little boy, he was rocked by on his knee." Due to his father's profession, the family moved throughout the American South during Reed's childhood.

He earned his journalism degree from Louisiana State University in 1960. There, he began writing film and play reviews, not only for the university's newspaper, The Daily Reveille, but also for the Baton Rouge newspaper, The Morning Advocate.


Career
Reed moved to New York City after graduating from LSU, hoping to find success as an actor. Instead, he was hired to work at the publicity department of 20th Century Fox. In 1969, he said his job there was to "write those puffy things about and—you know—, and tell everybody how great they were when I wouldn't be caught dead seeing their movies myself. ... Cleopatra came along and rocked the company financially. We were saving on rubber bands and paying and to float down the Nile while everybody back at Fox was taking salary cuts, and I was the first one to go—the little guy at the $75 salary, the most dispensable item in the company. I was fired." Later in the decade, he provided many interviews for The New York Times and New York, which at the time was the Sunday magazine of the New York Herald Tribune. In 1966, the year in which the Herald Tribune folded, he was hired as one of the music critics for HiFi/Stereo Review (now Sound & Vision), where he remained until 1973.


Critic
Before becoming a film critic for The New York Observer, Reed was a film critic for Vogue, GQ, The New York Times, and Women's Wear Daily. For thirteen years, he was an arts critic for the New York Daily News, and for five years was the film critic for the New York Post. Reed served on the jury at the 21st Berlin International Film Festival in 1971, and the 33rd Venice International Film Festival in 1972. Reed was not given a ticket to the world premiere of Last Tango in Paris at the 1972 New York Film Festival as the festival considered him a columnist for the New York Daily News, rather than a regular film critic, as well as describing him as "not a friend of the festival".

On October 27, 1974, reviewing 's performance at Madison Square Garden, Reed called him "a Woolworth rhinestone" and wrote that "his public image is uglier than a first-degree burn, his appearance is sloppier than ; his manners are more appalling than a subway sandhog's and his ego bigger than the Sahara (the desert, not the hotel in Las Vegas, although either comparison applies). All of which might be tolerable if he could still sing. But the saddest part of all is the hardest part to face about this once-great idol now living on former glory: the grim truth is that Frank Sinatra has had it. His voice has been manhandled beyond recognition, bringing with its parched croak only a painful memory of burned-out yesterdays." Years later, Reed recalled that Sinatra "was sloppy" and "looked like he'd slept in his clothes. Sinatra was mad at me, but what did he do? He lost 25 pounds!"

In 1986, after won the Academy Award for Best Actress for Children of a Lesser God, Reed wrote that Matlin had won because of a "pity vote", and that a deaf person playing a deaf character was not really acting.

After won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress in 1992 for her work in My Cousin Vinny, Reed said publicly that she had not actually won the award, and that presenter Jack Palance had accidentally read the wrong name off the card he was reading. When it was pointed out that the card had only one name on it, Reed changed his theory to say that Palance had read the wrong name off the , and claimed (without evidence) that the Academy went along with it because they would have been embarrassed to admit that mistake in front of a huge viewing audience. Reed was publicly rebutted by the accounting firm , who said that if a presenter ever announced the wrong winner, a PwC representative would go on stage and state that the wrong result had been announced, before either stating the correct result or giving the information to someone on stage to correct it. This is what happened in 2017, when La La Land was mistakenly announced as winner of Best Picture instead of the true recipient, Moonlight. said that Reed's conspiracy theories were false and unfair to Tomei, and that Reed owed her an apology.

In a 2005 review of the South Korean movie Oldboy, Reed wrote, "What else can you expect from a nation weaned on , a mixture of raw garlic and cabbage buried underground until it rots, dug up from the grave and then served in earthenware pots sold at the airport as souvenirs?" The Village Voice, which reported that "online forums erupted in protest" at the review, then mocked Reed by imagining him applying similar logic to films from other countries.

In a 2013 review of , Reed made several references to 's weight, referring to her as "tractor-sized", "humongous", "obese", and a "hippo". Film critic said, "This just smacks of mean-spirited name-calling in lieu of genuine criticism." The review was referenced at the 85th Academy Awards in February 2013 by host , who joked that Reed would review for singing "Skyfall" at the ceremony. In a column for , likened Reed's review to bullying. Reed stood by his comments and stated his objection to the use of serious health problems such as obesity as comedy talking points. He dismissed the outrage as being orchestrated for publicity, but praised McCarthy for not getting involved in the matter, calling her "completely classy".

In a 2017 review of The Shape of Water, he referred to people with disabilities as "defective creatures".

Reed is a member of the New York Film Critics Circle and, because his reviews appear on the Internet, a member of New York Film Critics Online.


Factual errors in reviews
Reed's 2012 review for The Cabin in the Woods contained significant factual inaccuracies in his summary of the film, and exhibited a dismissive attitude towards anyone who disagreed with his negative opinion. 's Henry Stewart noted: "his review is literally about 50 percent inaccurate—factually, objectively wrong." His professionalism was also called into question when, in addition to the factual inaccuracies, some felt he was needlessly insulting and mean-spirited towards those who enjoyed the film.

In 2013, Reed reviewed V/H/S/2, despite walking out of the film within its first 20 minutes. As a result, his review was brief and incorrectly summarized 's segment of the horror anthology. Some felt that Reed was unprofessional, and journalist Sam Adams stated that Reed was "making a mockery of a noble profession while intelligent critics scramble for crumbs all around him".

In 2017, Reed's review of The Shape of Water incorrectly referred to writer and director Guillermo del Toro as "Benecio del Toro" (apparently both confusing the director with actor Benicio del Toro, and failing to spell the latter's name correctly), and wrote that he was from Spain; the director is from Mexico and the actor is from Puerto Rico.

The same year he included the film on his list of 10 Worst Films of 2017, and later sardonically stated in a CBS Sunday Morning interview, "I didn't care if all the black men are turned into robots." A writer on Sunday Mornings website noted that there were no actual robots in the film.


Acting career
Reed has acted occasionally, such as in the movie version of 's Myra Breckinridge (1970). Reed also appeared in the films Superman (1978, as himself), Inchon (1981) and Irreconcilable Differences (1984). He appeared frequently as a judge on the TV game show The Gong Show in the late 1970s. Reed guest-voiced as himself on the animated series .

Reed appeared in the 2009 documentary explaining how important film critics were in the 1970s, and complaining about the proliferation of unqualified critical voices on the internet.


Personal life
Reed lives in a two-bedroom apartment at apartment building in New York City, which he bought for $30,000 in 1969.

Reed is openly gay. In 2018, he stated, "Love is not something that I've been really good at. I think people are intimidated by people with opinions. How do you go start looking for a wife or a boyfriend or a significant other? It's too late. It would be nice, though, to find somebody who's really handy with a wheelchair, because that day is coming".


Shoplifting arrest and disposition
In February 2000, Reed was arrested for after leaving a in with compact discs by Mel Tormé, , and in his jacket pockets. Reed, who had just purchased two other CDs, says he forgot about the other three CDs and his offer to pay for them was refused. According to Reed, several days after the arrest, Peggy Lee sent him her entire catalog of CDs, because "she was so thrilled I wanted one of her CDs enough to put myself through so much hell". The charges were later dropped.


Bibliography


Filmography
1967Hurry SundownFarmerUncredited
1970Myra BreckinridgeMyron Breckinridge
1972The ABC Comedy Hour Episode: Hellzapoppin
1974The RehearsalActor
1978SupermanHimself
1979An Almost Perfect AffairHimselfUncredited
1981InchonLongfellow
1984Irreconcilable DifferencesEntertainment Editor
1994-1995HimselfVoice, 2 episodes


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