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Harold Ramis, Chicago actor, writer and director, dead at 69Best-known as an actor for 'Ghostbusters', 'Stripes', writer/director for 'Caddyshack', 'Groundhog Day'Mark Caro Chicago Tribune February 24, 2014 Harold Ramis was one of Hollywood’s most successful comedy filmmakers when he moved his family from Los Angeles back to the Chicago area in 1996. His career was still thriving, with "Groundhog Day" acquiring almost instant classic status upon its 1993 release and 1984's "Ghostbusters" ranking among the highest-grossing comedies of all time, but the writer-director wanted to return to the city where he’d launched his career as a Second City performer. "There's a pride in what I do that other people share because I'm local, which in L.A. is meaningless; no one's local," Ramis said upon the launch of the first movie he directed after his move, the 1999 mobster-in-therapy comedy "Analyze This," another hit. "It's a good thing. I feel like I represent the city in a certain way." Ramis, a longtime North Shore resident, was surrounded by family when he died at 12:53 a.m. from complications of autoimmune inflammatory vasculitis, a rare disease that involves swelling of the blood vessels, his wife Erica Mann Ramis said. He was 69. Ramis' serious health struggles began in May 2010 with an infection that led to complications related to the autoimmune disease, his wife said. Ramis had to relearn to walk but suffered a relapse of the vaculitis in late 2011, said Laurel Ward, vice president of development at Ramis' Ocean Pictures production company. Ramis leaves behind a formidable body of work, with writing credits on such enduring comedies as "National Lampoon's Animal House" (which upon its 1978 release catapulted the film career of John Belushi, with whom Ramis acted at Second City), "Stripes" (1981) and "Ghostbusters" (in which Ramis also co-starred) plus such directing efforts as "Caddyshack" (1980), "National Lampoon's Vacation" (1983), "Groundhog Day" and "Analyze This." Previously he was the first head writer (and a performer) on Second City's groundbreaking television series "Second City Television (SCTV)" (1976-79). More recently he directed episodes of NBC’s "The Office." Ramis' comedies were often wild, silly and tilting toward anarchy, but they also were cerebral and iconoclastic, with the filmmaker heeding the Second City edict to work at the top of one's intelligence. This combination of smart and gut-bustingly funny led a generation of comedic actors and filmmakers — including Judd Apatow ("The 40 Year Old Virgin," "Knocked Up," Jay Roach ("Meet the Parents," the "Austin Powers" movies), Peter Farrelly ("There's Something About Mary," "Dumb and Dumber"), Jake Kasdan ("Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story," "Orange County," both of which featured Ramis in small roles) and Adam Sandler (who starred in his own wacky golf comedy, "Happy Gilmore") — to cite him as a key inspiration. “When I was 15, I interviewed Harold for my high school radio station, and he was the person that I wanted to be when I was growing up," said Apatow, who later would cast Ramis as Seth Rogen’s father in "Knocked Up" and would produce Ramis' final movie, "Year One" (2009). "His work is the reason why so many of us got into comedy. We grew up on 'Second City TV' and 'Ghostbusters,' 'Vacation,' 'Animal House,' 'Stripes,' 'Meatballs' (which Ramis co-wrote); he literally made every single one of our favorite movies." Ramis also left behind a reputation as a mensch and all-around good guy. "He's the least changed by success of anyone I know in terms of sense of humor, of humility, sense of self," the late Second City founder Bernie Sahlins, who began working with Ramis in 1969, said of him in 1999. "He's the same Harold he was 30 years ago. He's had enormous success relatively, but none of it has gone to his head in any way." Laurel Ward, vice president of development for Ramis' Ocean Pictures production company, called him "the world's best mentor." She recalled that when she first began working for him 15 years ago as his assistant, he had to be in California for a month, and he told her that although he didn't need an assistant out there, she should go anyway because it would be a good experience for her, and he'd make sure her expenses were covered. "He just did it for me," she said. "He loved teaching people. He loved helping people. He loved seeing people succeed." The son of Ruth and Nathan Ramis, who owned Ace Food & Liquor Mart on the West Side before moving the store and family to Rogers Park, Ramis graduated from Senn High School and Washington University in St. Louis. For his first professional writing gig, he contributed freelance arts stories to the Chicago Daily News in the mid-1960s. He also wrote and edited Playboy magazine’s “Party Jokes” before and during his Second City days. When, after some time off, he returned to Second City in 1972 to act alongside a relative newcomer in the cast, Ramis said he came to a major realization. “The moment I knew I wouldn't be any huge comedy star was when I got on stage with John Belushi for the first time," he said in a 1999 Tribune interview. "When I saw how far he was willing to go to get a laugh or to make a point on stage, the language he would use, how physical he was, throwing himself literally off the stage, taking big falls, strangling other actors, I thought: I'm never going to be this big. How could I ever get enough attention on a stage with guys like this? "I stopped being the zany. I let John be the zany. I learned that my thing was lobbing in great lines here and there, which would score big and keep me there on the stage." With his round glasses lending a professorial air, Ramis would become the calm center of storms brewed by fellow actors, playing the bushy-haired, low-key wisecracker to Bill Murray's troublemaker in "Stripes" and being the most scientific-minded "Ghostbuster." Later roles included the sympathetic doctor of James L. Brooks' "As Good as It Gets" (1997) and the "Knocked Up" (2007) dad, whose dialogue, Apatow said, was almost all improvised. Sahlins, who died last June, said he knew from the start that Ramis "would be an important factor in American comedy. He has all the skills and abilities to be funny and to write funny, but he also is a leader, a very nice guy. He was always looked up to, in Second City to being head writer at 'SCTV.' He was never separate from anybody. He was always one of the boys, but he was the best boy." Ramis followed Belushi from Second City to New York City to work with him plus fellow Second City cast member Murray (who would collaborate with Ramis on six movies) on "The National Lampoon Radio Hour." Those three plus Gilda Radner also performed in a National Lampoon stage show produced by Ivan Reitman, who went on to produce "National Lampoon's Animal House" and to direct such Ramis scripts as "Meatballs," "Stripes," "Ghostbusters" and "Ghostbusters II" (1989). "I always thought he was a very talented writer who always had a very perceptive and intelligent point of view about the material," Reitman told the Tribune in 1999. "He managed to get the people to speak in a realistic way but still found something funny in their voices." Apatow said he was captivated not just by the spirit of Ramis’ movies but also his frequent collaborations with a collective of funny people. "We noticed this group of friends who were making comedy together — all the 'SCTV' people and ‘Saturday Night Live' people and National Lampoon people — and that seemed the most wonderful community you could ever be a part of,” said Apatow, who has developed his own group of regular collaborators. "In addition to wanting to be comics, we also wanted to make comedies with our friends." As zany as Ramis' early comedies were, they rigorously pursued a theme close to the heart of someone who grew out of the 1960s counterculture: characters rebelling against institutions, be they authoritarian college administrators and pampered rich kids ("Animal House"), a stuffy golf club ("Caddyshack") or the military ("Stripes"). After the collapse of his first marriage and the flop of his 1986 comedy “Club Paradise” (with greedy developers as the institutional villain), the Jewish-raised Ramis immersed himself in Zen Buddhism. "It's my shield and my armor in the work I do," he said. "It's to keep a cheerful, Zen-like detachment from everything." Ramis’ later directorial efforts, starting with “Groundhog Day” and including "Stuart Saves His Family" (1995), "Multiplicity" (1996), "Analyze This" and his "Bedazzled" remake (2000), reflect a spiritual striving, exploring individuals' struggles with themselves more than outside forces. Comparing his later to earlier comedies, Ramis told the Tribune: "The content's different, but it comes from the same place in me, which is to try to point people at some reality or truth." He recalled that at the "Analyze This" junket, a writer told him his genre had become "goofy redemption comedy," to which Ramis responded, "OK, I'll take that." Ramis had been living in Los Angeles since late the '70s before he returned to Chicago, basing his production company in downtown Highland Park. "In L.A., you're much more aware of an artificial pressure, just that you're in a race of some kind," Ramis recalled one morning over a veggie egg-white omelet at the coffee shop downstairs from his office. "You know, if you're not moving forward, you're dead in the water, because everyone around you is scheming, planning and plotting to advance themselves, often at your expense. "I've compared it to high school: Am I popular? Am I cool? Am I in? Who's the in crowd? How do I get into that party? These are not things I ever wanted to worry about. Here I'm so liberated from that." After unsuccessfully lobbying Billy Crystal and Robert De Niro to film "Analyze This” in Chicago, Ramis finally got his wish to shoot a movie locally with the 2005 dark crime comedy "The Ice Harvest," which starred Evanston native John Cusack and Billy Bob Thornton. Until his illness Ramis was out around town a fair amount, whether cheering on the Cubs and leading the occasional "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" or attending theater or appearing at local organizations' fundraisers or collecting honors, such as an honorary Doctorate of Arts from Columbia College Chicago in 2001 and a lifetime achievement award from the Just for Laughs festival in 2009. And when Second City celebrated its 50th anniversary in December 2009, Ramis joined "SCTV" cast members Catherine O'Hara, Eugene Levy, Andrea Martin, Joe Flaherty, Dave Thomas and Martin Short in a Mainstage set that proved to be the weekend's hottest ticket. Ramis was quiet about his illness, but friends did visit, including brothers and Second City castmates Bill Murray, from whom he'd been estranged for years, and Brian Doyle-Murray, who appeared in seven Ramis movies. "He was like the campfire that we all gathered around for light and warmth and knowledge," his adult daughter Violet Stiel said. "And that's the truth," added Erica Ramis. He is survived by Erica Mann Ramis, Stiel, sons Julian and Daniel Ramis and two grandchildren. Erica Ramis said a private service is planned for this week with a public memorial in Chicago to take place probably in May. Copyright © 2014 Chicago Tribune Company, LLC http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/chi-harold-ramis-dead-20140224,0,4983189,full.story
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#GMSTRONG
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This has seriously bummed me out  We lost a true comedic genius today.
Browns is the Browns
... there goes Joe Thomas, the best there ever was in this game.
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RIP. Very talented and funny guy.
Micah 6:8; He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.
John 14:19 Jesus said: Because I live, you also will live.
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RIP This guy has brought me so many laughs.
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I used to be anxious for Saturday Night Live to be over so I could watch SCTV. It was a better show, I thought. Ramis, John Candy, Joe Flaherty, Catherine O'Hara, Andrea Martin, Eugene Levy, Rick Moranis, Dave Thomas, Martin Short ... what a great cast. Great sketch comedy.
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"First down inside the 10. A score here will put us in the Super Bowl. Cooper is far to the left as Njoku settles into the slot. Moore is flanked out wide to the right. Chubb and Ford are split in the backfield as Watson takes the snap ... Here we go."
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Quote:
I used to be anxious for Saturday Night Live to be over so I could watch SCTV. It was a better show, I thought. Ramis, John Candy, Joe Flaherty, Catherine O'Hara, Andrea Martin, Eugene Levy, Rick Moranis, Dave Thomas, Martin Short ... what a great cast. Great sketch comedy.
Wow, that brings back memories. It also makes me realize how lucky we were to grow up at that time with SCTV and the original casts of SNL... so many truly GREAT comedians between those casts. Amazing.
What does today give us?? "Reality" (which is scripted and heavily edited) TV.
Browns is the Browns
... there goes Joe Thomas, the best there ever was in this game.
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I have a hard time believing I ever stayed up that late. I'm lucky to make it to 11PM these days. Makes me feel old, as does seeing entertainers from my time dying. The first thing I thought was "Holy bleep, Harold Ramis was 69?".
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RIP Harold, or as I will always remember you... Egon.
"I collect spores, molds, and fungus" - Egon
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RIP Harold, or as I will always remember you... Egon.
"I collect spores, molds, and fungus" - Egon
Even more so, now.
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That ain't funny - Mantis
#gmstrong
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Very saddening news. Feel like I grew up w/ the guy. Held his own as an actor for sure. But for him to have Caddyshack, Vacation, & Groundhog Day alone on his directing resume??? Man, that's 3 must-see classics in my library.
Rest in peace, Mr. Ramis.
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I have probably watched Groundhog Day 100+ times, and it still makes me laugh every time I see it. Same with the other 2 you mentioned ...... but Groundhog Day just really gets me for some reason.
Micah 6:8; He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.
John 14:19 Jesus said: Because I live, you also will live.
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Quote:
Very saddening news. Feel like I grew up w/ the guy. Held his own as an actor for sure. But for him to have Caddyshack, Vacation, & Groundhog Day alone on his directing resume??? Man, that's 3 must-see classics in my library.
Rest in peace, Mr. Ramis.
Don't forget Meatballs, Animal House, & Stripes!
Seriously, he's nearly a one-man Top 5 list for funniest movies of All-Time.
Browns is the Browns
... there goes Joe Thomas, the best there ever was in this game.
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Quote:
Quote:
Very saddening news. Feel like I grew up w/ the guy. Held his own as an actor for sure. But for him to have Caddyshack, Vacation, & Groundhog Day alone on his directing resume??? Man, that's 3 must-see classics in my library.
Rest in peace, Mr. Ramis.
Don't forget Meatballs, Animal House, & Stripes!
Seriously, he's nearly a one-man Top 5 list for funniest movies of All-Time.
True. Was only specifically mentioning my 3 favorites that he actually directed.
Being a writer on Animal House, Stripes, & Ghostbusters is a LOT to be proud of too. Absolute Classics!
I'll be honest. I've never seen Meatballs.
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I saw the Director specifier after I had responded  If you haven't seen Meatballs, do so. It's not Stripes-level, but it was definitely underrated in its time. Very funny stuff!
Browns is the Browns
... there goes Joe Thomas, the best there ever was in this game.
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That ain't funny - Mantis
I'm sure Ramis would have chuckled over that one. You have to watch Graham Chapman's funeral. That's the way to send off a comedian.
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That ain't funny - Mantis
....but that sure is! 
And into the forest I go, to lose my mind and find my soul. - John Muir
#GMSTRONG
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Wow....................he had an impressive list of accomplishments.
Another note...........we all have heard and know that having good health is important. We nod our heads in agreement. We pay it lip service. We continue on our merry way.
But until something life threatening actually slaps us in the face, we really do not realize just how utterly important good health is.
Take care of your bodies, dawgs.
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Last edited by tastybrownies; 02/25/14 12:11 AM.
Find what you love and let it kill you.
-Charles Bukowski
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'We had a slinky, I straightened it'.
RIP Harold!
WE DON'T NEED A QB BEFORE WE GET A LINE THAT CAN PROTECT HIM my two cents...
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This is sad news.
I think the world is at least a slightly better place because Ramis stopped in for a while. Thanks for that, Harold. You will be missed.
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I have a type of Vasculitis myself. Unfortunately there is no cure, so there really is no way to take care of your health with this. Eventually the disease or the treatment will get you.
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Quote:
I have probably watched Groundhog Day 100+ times, and it still makes me laugh every time I see it. Same with the other 2 you mentioned ...... but Groundhog Day just really gets me for some reason.
Me too. I have probably watched Groundhog Day 100+ times, and it still makes me laugh every time I see it. Same with the other 2 you mentioned ...... but Groundhog Day just really gets me for some reason. 
"My signature line goes here."
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Am I the only one that pronounces hyperbole "Hyper-bowl" instead of "hy-per-bo-le"?
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wow... incredibly poor form.
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wow... incredibly poor form.
Why? I think it's a fine tribute to his work.
Micah 6:8; He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.
John 14:19 Jesus said: Because I live, you also will live.
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Just my opinion. Nothing more, nothing less.
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Dang man. I am so sorry to hear that.
I was speaking in general terms and not specifically about any certain condition or illness. I am sorry. I hope I didn't upset you. Let me know if I can help out in any way.
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Quote:
I have a type of Vasculitis myself. Unfortunately there is no cure, so there really is no way to take care of your health with this. Eventually the disease or the treatment will get you.
Wow, I missed this post. I don't know a lot about the disease, but hopefully you will find help for your condition. Just reading a little about the disease and it seems like it can take a huge number of different forms under one broad heading. Just looking at some of the drugs used to treat it I can see why you would say that the treatment is as tough as the disease.
I pray that they can find a cure for this condition.
Micah 6:8; He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.
John 14:19 Jesus said: Because I live, you also will live.
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Dang man. I am so sorry to hear that.
I was speaking in general terms and not specifically about any certain condition or illness. I am sorry. I hope I didn't upset you. Let me know if I can help out in any way.
No worries. I'm doing ok myself. Thankfully I respond pretty well to the treatment, and they figured mine out pretty quick. I'd guess based on the story about Harold that it took them a bit to figure it out. Just an opportunity to share some information about the disease and I wanted to get that out there 
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Quote:
I have a type of Vasculitis myself. Unfortunately there is no cure, so there really is no way to take care of your health with this. Eventually the disease or the treatment will get you.
Wow, I missed this post. I don't know a lot about the disease, but hopefully you will find help for your condition. Just reading a little about the disease and it seems like it can take a huge number of different forms under one broad heading. Just looking at some of the drugs used to treat it I can see why you would say that the treatment is as tough as the disease.
I pray that they can find a cure for this condition.
I have Wegener's myself. From his symptoms that's the one I believe he probably had, but I haven't seen the actual variety listed anywhere. And the treatment is certainly not pleasant at times. Most doctors have difficulty identifying it because the symptoms match so many different diseases. They thought I had malaria at one point trying to figure out what was wrong.
For anyone curious the Vasculitis Foundation has great information about the whole family of vasculitis diseases. Vasculitis Foundation
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I read that they use Prednisone as one treatment, and can be nasty stuff.
I truly hope that they find a treatment that is less brutal (for lack of a better word) to your body. I'll definitely say a prayer for you.
Micah 6:8; He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.
John 14:19 Jesus said: Because I live, you also will live.
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I read that they use Prednisone as one treatment, and can be nasty stuff.
I truly hope that they find a treatment that is less brutal (for lack of a better word) to your body. I'll definitely say a prayer for you.
I appreciate that:) The prednisone does kinda suck.. But when things are in control it gets lower on the dosage.
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DawgTalkers.net
Forums DawgTalk Everything Else... Writer, actor, director Harold
Ramis dead at 69
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