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  1. Apr 4, 2013 · Roger Ebert Was Open About His Illness Until The End Legendary film critic Roger Ebert died Thursday at the age of 70. Melissa Block interviewed Ebert in 2011 — this is a partial rebroadcast of ...

  2. Roger Ebert. Film Critic, Columnist. Roger Ebert is an American film critic born on June 18, 1942, in Urbana, Illinois. His career began in 1966, writing for the Chicago Sun-Times ‘ Sunday magazine. In 1975, he became the first film critic to win a Pulitzer Prize. That same year Ebert teamed up with fellow movie critic Gene Siskel on a ...

  3. Dec 21, 2012 · Ebert, 70, has dealt with health issues in recent years, fighting cancer in his thyroid and salivary glands and losing the ability to speak because of the cancer.

  4. Mar 23, 2011 · Roger Ebert. Elizabeth Taylor, who was a great actress and a greater star, has died at age 79. Of few deaths can it be said that they end an era, but hers does. No other actress commanded more attention for longer, for her work, her beauty, her private life, and a series of health problems that brought her near death more than once.

  5. Alongside Gene Siskel, a film critic for the Chicago Tribune, their show “Siskel & Ebert” became an immediate hit. Though Siskel passed away in 2004 to cancer, his replacement Richard Roeper continued a successful show with Roger. While Ebert struggled with health issues, his love for writing and film never wavered.

  6. Jun 16, 2010 · There is a hazard of caricature here. Granik avoids it. Her film doesn't live above these people, but among them. Ree herself has lived as one of them and doesn't see them as inferior, only ungiving and disappointing. In her father's world, everyone is a criminal, depends on a criminal or sells to criminals.

  7. Aug 10, 2022 · The late Roger Joseph Ebert is among the most famous film critics who ever lived. He was also one of the most talented - a Pulitzer Prize confirms that.He spent decades reviewing movies for the Chicago Sun-Times; he also worked in television, joining Chicago Tribune film critic Gene Siskel for a show that was first called At the Movies, then Siskel & Ebert & the Movies, and then, appropriately ...

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