Surprised so-n-so was Catholic

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From what I understand…Olivia Hussey is Catholic…

She claimed that before wanting to be an actress she wanted to be a nun, and her mother was a devout Catholic. Reading an interview she said “Every morning when I wake up, I give the day to God.” And of course she played Mary and Mother Teresa.
 
John Kennedy O’Toole, the author of the classic southern comic novel, “A Confederacy of Dunces.” Sadly, he committed suicide (he was deeply depressed over his failure to find a publisher for his novel, over the assassinations of the Kennedys and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, and apparently was showing some signs of clinical mental illness, so perhaps he was forgiven), and his mother spent 5 years trying to find someone to publish his novel. She more-or-less forced Walker Percy, the great Catholic novelist, to read the novel, and he was surprised to find how good it was. He eventually helped get it published.
 
Darren Criss of Glee is a Catholic, I see him at mass occasionally.

The important thing to remember when discussing these famous Catholic is charity. We do not know what is in their hearts. One of the most beautiful things to me about Catholic culture is how a person can struggle with the faith and with immoral acts and remain a Catholic. We are a Church of sinners, and simply because a person has played roles or writes songs tinged with immorality does not allow us to condemn them.

Artists are often tortured and conflicted people, feeling pulled in one direction while yearning to be moved in another. God understands and God forgives.
 
Comedian Jim Gaffigan talks about his Catholic upbringing in his acts like many comedians do but I didn’t know if he was practicing. Well, I saw him at Mass today.

Here’s a short clip of him: comedycentral.com/video-clips/c8h4tv/comedy-central-presents-no-brothas-in-movies
An article about the Catholic outlook of Gaffigan’s new book, “Dad is Fat.”

catholicworldreport.com/Item/2489/jim_gaffigan_on_fatherhood_for_the_recovering_narcissist.aspx#.UgLtxI7iZMJ
 
Tim Conway: Catholic.
During his high school years, Tim was playing in a football game when he got hit full force in the center of his back. He writes in his book that he lay on the ground for quite some time, unable to talk or “feel anything below my neck let alone move.” Nobody seemed too concerned about him, though, since they told him to just “walk it off.”
When he was unable to stand up without collapsing, his team members grabbed his arms and legs and carried him off the field (“no stretchers in those days”). A doctor eventually took an X-ray, found nothing broken, and put him in a neck brace for a few weeks.
Many years later, when Tim was already living in California, he visited a doctor due to back spasms. Tim was “dumbstruck” when the doctor told him his “spasms were a residual effect stemming from a broken vertebra.” Tim insisted he’d never broken a vertebra, so the doctor asked him if he ever had a sports injury. Tim told him about the football incident in high school.
The doctor replied, “You may not realize it, but you are one lucky man. Here’s what I think. Your vertebra probably was broken when you were hit, but when they picked you up and carried you to the locker room, your back got stretched out. I’d guess that the vertebra went back into place. The X-ray may not have shown anything at the time but, I assure you, you came very, very close to being permanently disabled. If they hadn’t moved you, it might have been a different story.”
That was a watershed moment for Tim, spiritually speaking. He writes, “Ever since that incident on the football field, which might have altered the course of my life, Jesus and I have stayed in constant touch. I never stop saying thank you.”
Though Tim, who converted to Catholicism in college because of a girl he liked, doesn’t wear his faith on his sleeve, his relationship with God remains important to him. He admits that his journey of faith hasn’t always been a straight line, but adds, “All straight lines get a little crooked from time to time, but I tried to maintain a decent life.”
Read more, and see some classic sketch comedy: patheos.com/blogs/christophers/2013/11/tim-conways-hilarious-and-spiritual-life/
 
Obi Wan is a great one. Especially since I just watched the original SW trilogy over the past week-ish. “Obi Wan has taught you well”

Some old school ones… Perry Como was very religious. I believe he even got to meet with the Pope.
Frank Sinatra born Catholic, fell away and then came back in his later years.
Dean Martin, but IDK if he practiced or not.
 
Just learned recently that Harry Connick Jr. was Catholic. Thought that was cool, I like his music.
 
An actor who I always noted as a child was Michael Dunn, a 3’ 6" man who won an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor in “Ship of Fools,” and was best known to many who grew up in the 1960s for his recurring role as the criminal mastermind Dr. Miguelito Loveless in the steampunk/SF western “The Wild, Wild West,” as well as many other roles in TV, film, and the stage. He died from medical complications relating to his dwarfism in 1973, but his example led many other little people to choose acting as a career.



I just learned he was a Catholic convert, and had planned on entering a monastic order, per Wikipedia:
Dunn had converted to Catholicism (probably from Methodism-Episcopalianism, judging by his parents’ marriage certificate) and was baptized on September 25, 1954, by Rev. J. M. O’Sullivan at Church of the Little Flower in Coral Gables, Florida. He was living in Ann Arbor with his parents, working as a professional singer, at the time he entered St. Bonaventure Monastery in Detroit, on February 25, 1958. According to a Capuchin Provincial Archivist, Dunn entered with the intention of becoming a Capuchin non-ordained Brother. He was known by his given name, Gary, since he never became a novice. A testimonial from John F. Bradley, Catholic Chaplain, University of Michigan, states: “He has always been interested in Catholic activities and was president of the Newman Club in another school.” In response to a question on the monastery application asking: “How long have you been thinking of entering religious life?” Dunn wrote, “More than three years.” Dunn was later quoted in the New York Post explaining that he had wanted to be of service, since he was unfit for the military: "Everyone my age was going to Korea and I had this feeling that singing wasn’t exactly doing my part."However, monastery records entered by the Master of Novices show that the physical demands of monastic life in a huge, 19th-century building with no elevator proved too strenuous. Dunn left of his own accord on May 8, 1958, in order to pursue a stage career in New York.
God bless the soul of your servant, Michael Dunn.
 
Paul Morphy (1837-1844), the first American world chess champion (unofficially - they didn’t have the title back then) - we would not have another until Bobby Fischer. Born and raised in New Orleans, Morphy used to play and win matches against 8 opponents at once while he wore a blindfold. After defeating all serious competition in the world, he refused to play any game without giving odds of pawn and move, then finally retired undefeated.

 
An actor who I always noted as a child was Michael Dunn, a 3’ 6" man who won an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor in “Ship of Fools,” and was best known to many who grew up in the 1960s for his recurring role as the criminal mastermind Dr. Miguelito Loveless in the steampunk/SF western “The Wild, Wild West,” as well as many other roles in TV, film, and the stage. He died from medical complications relating to his dwarfism in 1973, but his example led many other little people to choose acting as a career.

I just learned he was a Catholic convert, and had planned on entering a monastic order, per Wikipedia:

I always enjoyed Michael’s work…he was a very talented man. St. Bonaventure’s in Detroit was where Father Solanus Casey lived and worked a good portion of his life. I wonder if they ever met?
 
Don’t know if anyone mentioned this, bu I just found out that Darren Burrows (Ed Chigliak on “Northern Exposure”) is a Catholic. My sil sent me his fan page and I just saw for Easter he put up this pure

and wrote
“Christus vincit, Christus regnat, Christus imperat”

and then for Christmas, wrote this:

“Wow, December already?!? Whoa! o.0 -For me Sunday began Advent (derived from Latin word adventus, meaning “coming.”) and the new Liturgical year in my Roman Catholic world, traditionally (and I’m nothing if not traditional 😉 a time of fasting and joyful penance, of expectant waiting and preparation culminating Dec. 25th in the of the Nativity of the Christ and the celebration and feasting of the 12 days of Christmas ^^ …weird how I never seem to be that hungry 'til I’m fasting o.0”

I was just surprised when I saw this as I was not expecting his page to have any religious information.
Cynthia Geary,
of Northern Exposure fame, was raised by a devout Catholic father, and a very faithful Chrisian Mother. One brother is a Protestan Minister, and the other a a devout Catholic. That leaves Cynthia as raised a Catholic with the very possible latent ribbon of Protestant worship.
Not sure what, if anything Wiki has to say about the matter, but that is from a friend of the family. I could not conceive the young lady anything but a devoted follower of Christ. GBY
 
Spike Milligan (1918-2002), a comic genius and one of the greatest influences on modern British comedy, described himself as a lifelong Roman Catholic, albeit of a troubled sort. He wrote that he had trouble believing in God, but still considered himself a Catholic. “Being a Catholic,” he maintained, “is like a blood group - you can’t change it…” He described his wavering, tenuous, but still real relationship with his Catholicism in this article: archive.catholicherald.co.uk/article/26th-march-1981/5/spike-milligan-and-my-part-in-his-uplift



Born in British India but later claiming Irish citizenship after he was declared stateless by the British government, he co-created and starred in “The Goon Show,” (with Peter Sellers, among others) an anarchic comedy radio show, and the bizarre BBC TV show Q5, that was a model for Monty Python. He wrote a 7-volume comic autobiography of his experiences as a soldier in WWII, with what I feel is the greatest book title of all time: “Adolph Hitler: My Part in His Downfall,” as well as a great deal of poetry, both comic and serious. He wrote and starred in the post-apocalytic comedy “The Bed-Sitting Room,” adapted into one of my favorite films. (Has anyone else ever seen this?).

Milligan campaigned strongly against vivisection, animal cruelty, noise pollution (especially Muzak) and domestic violence against women.

Despite disagreeing publicly with the Church’s teachings on contraception, he was also strongly anti-abortion, and wrote the very moving poem below.

(For non-British readers, “Wimpole Street” is a street in London where offices of high-priced private medical specialists are located. “Queens Counsel,” refers to senior members of the Bar. And Danny La Rue was a very funny and popular female impersonator, sort of the Milton Berle of his age.)

UNTO US . . .

Somewhere at some time
They committed themselves to me
And so, I was!
Small, but I WAS!
Tiny, in shape
Lusting to live
I hung in my pulsing cave.
Soon they knew of me
My mother — my father.
I had no say in my being
I lived on trust
And love
Tho’ I couldn’t think
Each part of me was saying
A silent “Wait for me
I will bring you love!”
I was taken
Blind, naked, defenseless
By the hand of one
Whose good name
Was graven on a brass plate
In Wimpole Street,
And dropped on the sterile floor
Of a foot-operated plastic waste bucket.
There was no Queens Counsel
To take my brief.
The cot I might have warmed
Stood in Harrod’s shop window.
When my passing was told
My father smiled.
No grief filled my empty space.
My death was celebrated
With tickets to see Danny La Rue
Who was pretending to be a woman
Like my mother was.

~ Spike Milligan
 
Found this really interesting as well as surprising…dont know about how devout many listed here are but a fun springboard to research from…Lil Wayne???

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_American_Catholics
Highly doubt most aren’t. From my own personal experience, people get baptized but as a family, fall out of doing much Catholic early on.

However, I was surprised to learn that a fair number of celebrity Catholics considered religious vocations before going on to do what they’re famous for.
 
This might be a slight change of topic, but I read the late actor Phillip Seymour Hoffman’s funeral service was at a Catholic Church in New York? Was he a practicing Catholic? Could somebody shed some light on this?
 
Highly doubt most aren’t. From my own personal experience, people get baptized but as a family, fall out of doing much Catholic early on.

However, I was surprised to learn that a fair number of celebrity Catholics considered religious vocations before going on to do what they’re famous for.
Yea, thats my general thought as well. Heck I fell away in my devotion for a while there and am surely not quite as surrounded by the immense temptations of celebrities.
 
This is slightly off-topic, but heavy metal/shock rock singers Alice Cooper and Blackie Lawless are practicing, born-again Christians. In fact, the former has been for decades, and has been married to the same woman since the seventies.
 
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