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This is an archive article published on October 12, 2004

Superman actor Christopher Reeve dead

Actor Christopher Reeve, the star of the Superman movies who became even more famous as an advocate for the disabled after he was paralyzed ...

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Actor Christopher Reeve, the star of the Superman movies who became even more famous as an advocate for the disabled after he was paralyzed from the neck down in a 1995 horseback riding accident, died Sunday. He was 52.

Reeve went into a coma Saturday after suffering a cardiac arrest while at his New York home, his publicist, Wesley Combs told Associated Press on Sunday night. Reeve had recently been treated for a pressure wound, a common complication of paralysis, Combs said, but the wound became infected and led to a systemic infection.

Reeve was admitted to Northern Westchester Hospital on Saturday evening and never regained consciousness.

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A tall, dark-haired actor perfectly suited for the role of the Man of Steel, Reeve took on an even larger-than-life role in reality as a quadrapelegic who pledged he would one day walk again. After his accident, Reeve quickly became a powerful advocate for pushing the boundaries of modern medicine, frequently saying he believed that one day he would walk again.

His New Jersey-based Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation emerged under his star power and relentless fundraising as a leading source for research money, giving out more than $ 42.5 million to neuroscientists. In recent days, his struggle became a reference point for Democratic presidential candidate Sen. John F. Kerry, who said in Friday’s debate that he believed embryonic stem cell research should be expanded, saying it would be the best way to give Reeve and others like him the chance for a better life.

Reeve was a frequent and forceful advocate for expanding embryonic stem cell research and a critic of President Bush’s decision in 2001 to limit federal funding to existing lines. Even before that decision, Reeve, who could only speak briefly and haltingly because of his breathing tube, testified before the Senate on what he saw as perhaps his best hope for recovery.

In his statement to lawmakers he said: ‘‘While we prolong the stem cell debate, millions continue to suffer. We must harness the power of the government and go forward.’’

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Reeve, an accomplished horseman, broke the top two cervical vertebrae and injured his spinal cord when he was thrown from his horse and landed on his head during competitive trials Saturday in an event in Culpepper, Va., in 1995. At the time, doctors called the injury one of the worst possible. But Reeve, almost from the start, was determined to prove experts wrong.

A year after his accident, Reeve accepted an invitation to at the Academy Awards despite the dangers of airplane travel and his still-tenuous condition. He received a prolonged standing ovation from the gathered stars and brought many in the audience to tears with a plea for more films that address social problems. Born Sept. 25, 1952, in New York City to journalist Barbara Johnson and writer and professor Franklin Reeve, Reeve began acting as a child.

In 1974 he began playing the role of Ben Harper in the television soap opera Love of Life and in 1976 made his Broadway debut opposite Katherine Hepburn in A Matter of Gravity. While performing in another play in New York in 1976, Reeve auditioned for the role that would make him a star. With Marlon Brando playing his father and Gene Hackman as the evil Lex Luther, Reeve’s Superman became a blockbuster when it was released in 1978 and Reeve a household name.

Reeve is survived by his mother Barbara Johnson and his father Franklin Reeve, his brother Benjamin Reeve, his wife Dana, their 12-year-old son Will and his two children from his former relationship with Gae Exton, Matthew, 25, and Alexandra, 21. —LAT-WP

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