Saturday, March 7, 2026

RIP Alan Trustman

 

Alan Trustman, Screenwriter on ‘The Thomas Crown Affair’ and ‘Bullitt,’ Dies at 95

After working on the Steve McQueen classics, the former attorney penned ‘They Call Me Mister Tibbs!’

The Hollywood Reporter

By Mike Barnes

March 6, 2026

 

Alan Trustman, who wrote the screenplays for The Thomas Crown Affair and Bullitt, back-to-back 1968 films that starred Steve McQueen in two of his most memorable roles, has died. He was 95.

Trustman died Feb. 5 in a Miami nursing home, his son, John Trustman, told The New York Times.

Trustman also co-wrote They Call Me Mister Tibbs! (1970), the crime drama that was directed by Gordon Douglas and starred Sidney Poitier as police detective Virgil Tibbs in the sequel to the Oscar best picture winner In the Heat of the Night (1967).

Trustman was working as a Harvard-trained corporate lawyer at a large law firm in Boston in 1967 when he acted on an idea to write a film about a bank heist. “I knew I could never write a book. But maybe I could write a movie,” he told author John Spooner years ago.

Through his college connections, Trustman found the name of a New York literary agent and pitched him his story, and it wound up becoming The Thomas Crown Affair. Directed by Norman Jewison and produced by Walter Mirisch, the movie shot primarily in Boston and starred McQueen as the dashing millionaire title character and Faye Dunaway as insurance investigator Vicki Anderson.

Five months after The Thomas Crown Affair premiered, Bullitt hit theaters, with Trustman and Harry Kleiner receiving screenplay credit for their adaptation of a 1963 novel by Robert L. Fish.

It was Trustman who suggested that Englishman Peter Yates make his U.S. directing debut on the thriller that features McQueen as San Francisco cop Frank Bullitt and one of the great car chases in cinema. (Trustman had admired Yates’ work on a chase scene in the 1967 film Robbery.)

Born on Dec. 16, 1930, in Brookline, Massachusetts, Alan Robert Trustman attended the Boston Latin School and The Phillips Exeter Academy and got a summer job at the First National Bank of Boston at age 15.

He graduated from Harvard in 1952 and Harvard Law School in 1955 and eventually went to work for the Boston law firm Nutter McClennen & Fish, where his father, Benjamin A. Trustman, was a partner. (His dad would serve as a director of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington.)

Trustman told Spooner that he pursued a career in the movies out of the boredom that resulted when his favorite NFL player, New York Giants quarterback Y.A. Tittle, retired. “Suddenly, I have nothing to do on Sunday afternoons,” he said. “But I’ve had an idea for a long time about how to rob the First National Bank of Boston.”

He convinced Jewison to make the movie after taking him on a tour of the bank and showing him just how a robbery would work.

In a 2014 interview, Trustman said he “originally wrote Bullitt for New York City. But when producers Philip D’Antoni and Robert Relyea and McQueen wanted to shift it to San Francisco, I was ecstatic. I told them that back in the summer of 1954, I had worked there at the law firm of Pillsbury, Madison & Sutro and was familiar with the city.

“I learned that when you drove a light car like a Ford downhill in San Francisco, as we often did at 2 a.m., it would take off and fly through the air as you crossed some of the intersections. When we were discussing Bullitt, I suggested a Mustang, which was still quite a new car model in 1968. Steve was ecstatic. He couldn’t wait to try it.”

Trustman retired from the law after Bullitt and was handpicked by Mirisch to write They Call Me Mr. Tibbs. He also was hired for the McQueen-starring Le Mans (1971) but got into a disagreement with the actor and was replaced by Kleiner.

He then co-wrote the screenplays for Lady Ice (1973), starring Donald Sutherland and Jennifer O’Neill, and Hit! (1973), starring Billy Dee Williams and Richard Pryor; wrote on two 1976 films, Crime and Passion and The Next Man; was a executive producer on The Tracker (1988); and adapted a Raymond Chandler story for a 1995 episode of the Showtime anthology series Fallen Angels.

He also wrote novels, taught screenwriting at Harvard, NYU and the University of Miami and traded currency.

In addition to his son, survivors include his fourth wife, Barbara, a psychiatrist whom he married in 2008; his daughter, Laurie; his sister, Patty; and 11 grandchildren. His third wife was Playboy magazine cartoons editor Michelle Urry; they were married from 1989 until her death in 2006.

TRUSTMAN, Alan

Born: 12/16/1930, Brookline, Massachusetts, U.S.A.

Died: 2/5/2026, Miami, Florida, U.S.A

 

Alan Trustman’s western – screenwriter:

The Tracker (TV) - 1988

RIP Antonio Marsina

 

Cinema, actor Tony Marsina has died: his "villain" roles from Dino Risi to Ursula Andress

Cinema, actor Tony Marsina has died: his "villain" roles from Dino Risi to Ursula Andress

He died at the age of eighty in his Nardò, as a boy he moved to Rome where he caused a sensation first with photonovels and then with genre films

la Repubblica

by Biagio Valerio

March 6, 2026

 

He had a face and a look that Luchino Visconti would have liked. Antonio Marsina, known by his many friends as Tony, died today at the age of eighty. Blond, light eyes, tall, handsome and with a stately and even aristocratic bearing. Uncommon physical characteristics in those years and in the deep Salento that led him to move to Rome and become the protagonist of photo-novels that, at the time, were all the rage.

But it is as a film actor who also achieves great success in the roles of the "villain", as could happen especially in the very well-characterized films of the Sixties and Seventies. The trend of the so-called "genre films" welcomes him and makes him debut everywhere: the so-called "detectives", comedies, espionage and even westerns. Italian-style, of course, as per the great tradition of those years.

Some films see him as the protagonist and present on posters and flans. Small cult films are remembered among fans of "cinema bis" such as Keoma, with Franco Nero, or The Mountain of the Cannibal God, with a splendid Ursula Andress.

And then The Boy Who Knew How to Love, The Great Racket, Rolf, Unscrupulous, A Woman to Discover, Great Boiled Meat, Dagobert. Appreciated by directors who form the backbone of Italian genre cinema, think of Enzo G. Castellari and Antonio Margheriti, he has also worked with masters such as Mauro Bolognini, Pasquale Festa Campanile, Dino Risi

In more recent years, TV has rediscovered him by calling him into successful series but it is with thirty episodes of Vento di Ponente, from 2002 to 2004, that he has experienced a second artistic youth thanks to the role of Sebastiano Ghiglione, alongside Serena Autieri and Anna Kanakis.

Memorable, in the seventies, were the invitations to the Modern Cinema to the elderly mother who was reserved a place of honor in the gallery. And often the woman ended the vision in tears precisely because the role of the son foresaw a bloody end. But the historic manager of the theater, Luciano Leonardo, did not fail to celebrate the release of the new film with a specially printed poster: "with the participation of our fellow citizen Antonio Marsina".

In recent years, the actor had decided to return to his land to live in his most beautiful places, first the historic center of Nardò and then the Ionian coast, inseparable from his wife Lucia Bruni, who passed away only three months ago. Tomorrow morning at 10.30 am, in the city's cemetery, the blessing of the body and burial.

MARSINA, Antonio

Born: 1/12/1946, Nardò, Puglia, Italy

Died: 3/6/2026, Gallipoli, Puglia, Italy

 

Antonio Marsina’s westerns – actor:

My Name is Pecos - 1966

A Stranger in Town – 1966 (Aguila henchman)

Keoma – 1975 (Lenny Shannon)

 

RIP James G. Robinson

 

James G. Robinson, Producer and Morgan Creek Co-Founder, Dies at 90

The Baltimore native spearheaded such films as 'Young Guns,' 'Major League,' 'Ace Ventura: Pet Detective' and 'The Last of the Mohicans.'

The Hollywood Reporter

By Chris Koseluk

March 6, 2026

 

James G. Robinson, the producer and co-founder of Morgan Creek Productions who was behind such films as Major League, Dead Ringers, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, True Romance and Ace Ventura: Pet Detective, died Feb. 15, his family announced. He was 90.

Robinson, who had made his fortune in the auto import industry, and producer Joe Roth launched Morgan Creek in 1988, with Robinson staking $80 million of his own money to get things started. (The company also secured a $126 million line of credit from Signet Bank-Maryland.)

In the wake of the demise of such independent studios as the Cannon Group, New World Entertainment and De Laurentiis Entertainment Group, the partners agreed they would not distribute their films. They would fully finance the movies they produced, cover advertising costs, presell foreign video and television rights and leave it to others to get their films into U.S. theaters.

Morgan Creek had a hit right out of the gate with Young Guns (1988), about the early days of Billy the Kid. Starring Emilio Estevez, Charlie Sheen, Kiefer Sutherland, Lou Diamond Phillips and Dermot Mulroney and directed by Christopher Cain, the Fox-distributed film was made for about $11 million — it was classified as a nonunion shoot — and returned $45 million at the box office.

The son of a professional golfer, Robinson was born in Baltimore on Dec. 16, 1935. At age 5, he and his family moved to Dundalk, Maryland. He attended Dundalk High School and then the University of Maryland in College Park.

Following a stint in the U.S. Army in Germany, Robinson returned in 1963 to Baltimore, where fate pointed him toward an opportunity. He had bought a used car overseas, and when it arrived, it was coated with what only can be described as a protective grunge. After futilely trying to remove the substance, he found a local business that specialized in this type of car cleaning.

With a partner, he bought the company and opened shop at Dundalk Marine Terminal to offer cleaning services for imported automobiles. Business boomed when auto importers started requesting additional services such as undercoating and retrofits of sunroofs and moldings.

In the mid-1970s, Robinson purchased a Subaru distributorship that was going bankrupt and built it into Subaru Mid-America Inc., a Chicago-based outfit that ultimately supplied the Japanese brand’s cars and parts to 94 dealerships throughout the Midwest.

He came to Hollywood in the late ’70s by orchestrating bridge financing for independent films. “There were people out there who had deals with the studios but didn’t have any immediate financing, and I would finance [their films],” Robinson told The Hollywood Reporter in 2007. “I didn’t come walking into town and say, ‘I want to be in this business.'”

Eventually, he began looking for movies of his own to finance, and Roth, then an up-and-coming producer, approached him with The Stone Boy. Robinson signed on as an executive producer, and the family drama, directed by Cain, hit theaters in 1984 with a cast that included Robert Duvall, Glenn Close and Frederic Forrest.

“He’s a risk-taker, but an intelligent one who takes calculated risks, most of which have paid off,” Marvin Riesenbach, an auto industry colleague of Robinson’s, said in a 1991 Baltimore Sun profile.

Robinson continued to dabble in Hollywood, putting money into the 1985 comedies Girls Just Want to Have Fun and Grunt! The Wrestling Movie. He joined forces again with Roth for the 1986 adventure film Where the River Runs Black, also helmed by Cain.

The Morgan Creek moniker was inspired by the great Preston Sturges comedy The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek (1943). “We wanted an American name,” Robinson told the Sun in 1999. “Something that was very American and something that involved a well-known American director. ‘Morgan Creek’ is as American as you can get. … You never hear the word ‘creek’ anywhere else in the world.”

Roth departed in 1989 to become chairman of 20th Century Fox, but Robinson kept the momentum going with the quintessential baseball comedy Major League (1989), starring Sheen; David Cronenberg’s intricate thriller Dead Ringers (1988), starring Jeremy Irons; the Kevin Costner-starring Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991); True Romance (1993), written by Quentin Tarantino, just off Reservoir Dogs; and Ace Ventura: Pet Detective (1994); which made Jim Carrey a movie star.

In 1996, Robinson was named ShoWest Producer of the Year.

“There’s a lot of things for me that go into choosing a movie. From the top: Is it a good script? Because if it’s not a good script, why don’t we just stop right here?” Robinson told THR in 2007. “I sit down with a lot of people. I don’t isolate myself in a vacuum. There is no simplistic formula. Let’s just say I think we’ll do fine around the world. OK, now can we cast it? Can we get the right director? Is the budget the right budget for this film? Everything is fluid. It’s story, director, cast.”

The Paul Mazursky-directed Enemies, A Love Story (1989) brought Morgan Creek three Academy Award nominations, and Michael Mann’s The Last of the Mohicans (1992), starring Daniel Day-Lewis, won an Oscar for best sound.

Maximizing product potential, Robinson generated several sequels to Young Guns, Major League and Ace Ventura and in 1990 revived a fabled spooky franchise with The Exorcist III, followed by three other films and a Fox series reboot.

O ther features Robinson ushered to the big screen included Skin Deep (1989), Pacific Heights (1990), Freejack (1992), White Sands (1992), Diabolique (1996), Soldier (1998), American Outlaws (2001), The Good Shepherd (2006) and Georgia Rule (2007), on which he sparred with Lindsay Lohan, calling her a “spoiled child” who had “endangered the quality of this picture” in a letter.

In 2014, Morgan Creek struck a deal with the Roth-founded Revolution Studios to sell international distribution rights and copyrights to its film library for $36.75 million.

Survivors include his wife of 61 years, Barbara; children Michael, Patrick, Brian, David, Thomas and Beth; and grandchildren Blake, Meghan, Kaitlin, Aidan, Cali, Campbell, David Cameron and David Henry.

His son David, married to actress Susan Ward, followed in his father’s footsteps as a producer and eventually as president of Morgan Creek Entertainment Group.

Robinson never lost his love of Baltimore, raising his family in Lutherville, just north of the city. Though Morgan Creek had a Los Angeles headquarters, more often than not, he operated out of offices in his hometown.

“I love Baltimore,” he said. “I’d make all my movies here if I could. It all comes down to a matter of cost. If it was close, maybe a difference of a million between filming here and somewhere else, I would always choose Baltimore.”

ROBINSON, James G.

Born: 12/16/1935, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.

Died: 2/15/2026, Lutherville, Maryland, U.S.A.

 

James G. Robinson’s westerns – producer:

Young Guns – 1988

Young Guns II – 1990

The Lasto of the Mohicans - 1992

American Outlaws – 2001

Young Guns: Dead or Alice - 2026

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

RIP Maria O’Brien

 

Maria O’Brien, ‘Protocol’ and ‘Matlock’ Actress, Dies at 75

The daughter of Oscar-winning actor Edmond O'Brien also worked as an acting coach on 'Days of Our Lives' for 15 years.

The Hollywood Reporter

By Carly Thomas

March 3, 2026

 

Maria O’Brien, an actress in Protocol and Matlock who also worked as an acting coach on Days of Our Lives, died Feb. 24. She was 75.

Her cause of death wasn’t immediately available.

Born in Los Angeles on Aug. 14, 1950, O’Brien grew up in a Hollywood family, as her father was Oscar-winning actor Edmond O’Brien and her mother was musical comedy star Olga San Juan. Following in her parents’ footsteps, she landed her first onscreen credit in 1963 on the TV series Sam Benedict.

She also appeared in the 1984 film Protocol, starring Goldie Hawn and Chris Sarandon, as well as Smile, Good Luck, Promised a Miracle, The Incredible Shrinking Woman, Table for Five, False Arrest and In Sickness and in Health.

O’Brien’s television credits included Viva Valdez, The Love Boat, How the West Was Won, The Life and Times of Eddie Roberts, CHiPs, Quincy, M.E., Magnum, P.I., Good Morning, Miss Bliss, L.A. Law, Matlock, Jake and the Fatman, Murder, She Wrote, Nash Bridges, Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction, Suddenly Susan, Jack & Jill, Spyder Games and For the People.

Throughout her time in the industry, she acted alongside Melanie Griffith, Lily Tomlin, Angela Lansbury, Tom Selleck and many others.

Aside from her time onscreen, O’Brien also worked as an acting coach on the daytime dramas Sunset Beach and Passions. This led her to serve as an acting coach on Days of Our Lives for 15 years, a job she held until her retirement in 2022.

O’Brien also won a Drama-Logue award for The Maids by Jean Genet, which was performed at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles.

Her father was one of the first celebrities to be diagnosed publicly with Alzheimer’s disease, and in 1983, she testified before Congress about the devastation of the disease. Her advocacy was instrumental in securing government funding for Alzheimer’s research at the time.

O’Brien is survived by her brother, actor Brendan O’Brien; three children, James Anderson, Danica Anderson and Sean Anderson; and her sister, Bridget O’Brien Adelman.

O’BRIEN, Maria (Maria Mercedes O’Brien)

Born: 8/14/1950, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Died: 2/24/2026, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.


Maria O’Brien’s western – actress:

How the West Was Won (TV) – 1976 (Luisa)

RIP Ana Luisa Peluffo

 

Ana Luisa Peluffo, Mexican Actress of Golden Cinema and Telenovelas, dies

This Wednesday, March 4, 2026, the death of actress Ana Luisa Peluffo was announced

N+

March 4, 2026

 

This Wednesday, March 4, 2026, the death of Ana Luisa Peluffo, aMexican actress of the Golden Cinema and telenovelas, was announced.

Through a press release, the actress's family confirmed the death:

(Ana Luisa Peluffo) She passed away peacefully, at her ranch in Jalisco, accompanied by her loved ones.

It was indicated that during her last days, Ana Luisa Peluffo lived with serenity surrounded by care and closeness to her son.

It was reported that the funeral services will be carried out in an intimate and private way, in accordance with her will and they thanked the signs of affection for the actress.

We deeply appreciate the affection of all the people who, over the years, appreciated his career and enjoyed his work and his company and we ask for respect and understanding at this time. Her memory will remain alive in those who knew her and valued her presence and her artistic legacy.

PELUFFO, Ana Luisa (Ana Luisa Quintana)

Born: 10/9/1929, Queretaro, Queretaro, Mexico

Died: 4/4/2026, Jalisco, Mexico

 

Ana Luisa Peluffo’s westerns – actress:

El último pistolero – 1969 (Clarence Gaynor)

El Cain del bajio – 1981

Aquel famoso Remington – 1982 (Coneja)

Por un vestido de novia – 1983

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

RIP Jaime Pérez Cubero

 

Production and costume designer, set decorator and art director Jaime Pérez Cubero died in Madrid, Spain on June 24, 2025. He was a month shy of turning 93. Born Jaime Pérez-Fogón Cubero in Madrid on July 25, 1932. He was the son of director, writer, cinematographer Andrés Pérez Cubero and the brother of cameraman, cinematographer Raúl Pérez Cubero who also died in 2025.

Jaime began working in the art department of various studios beginning in 1956 on the film “Tarde de toros” and worked in various capacities until 1999. Jaime worked along with his fellow artist José Luis Galicia on many films. Coincidentally José died the month before.

Jaime Pérez Cubero worked on 47 westerns beginning with “The Shadow of Zorro” in 1962 as a set decorator and finished with “Tequila” as a costume designer in 1973.

CUBERO, Jaime Pérez (Jaime Pérez-Fogón Cubero)

Born: 7/25/1932, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

Died: 6/24/2025, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

 

Jaime Pérez Cubero’s westerns – art director, set decorator, costume designer, production designer:

The Shadow of Zorro – 1962 [set decorator]

Terrible Sheriff – 1962 [art director]

Gunfight at High Noon – 1963 [set decorator]

The Implacable Three – 1963 [production designer]

The Sign of the Coyote – 1963 [set decorator]

Ride and Kill – 1964 [set decorator]

Seven Guns from Texas – 1964 [art director]

Tomb of the Pistolero – 1964 [set decorator]

Welcome Padre Murray – 1964 [production designer]

A Coffin for the Sheriff – 1965 [production designer]

Fistful of Knuckles – 1965 production designer]

Gunman’s Hands – 1965 [set decorator]

The Outlaw of Red River – 1965 [production designer]

The Relentless Four – 1965 [set decorator]

Seven Hours of Gunfire – 1965 [set decorator]

Dollars for a Fast Gun – 1966 [set decorator]

Kid Rodelo – 1966 [art director]

Mutiny at Fort Sharp – 1966 [art department]

Ringo and Gringo Against All – 1966 production designer]

Ringo the Face of Revenge – 1966 [set decorator]

Seven Guns for the MacGregors – 1966 [art director]

Vengeance Ranch – 1966 [set decorator]

Adios, Hombre – 1967 [production designer]

Bandidos – 1967 [production designer]

Django Kill – 1967 [art director]

The Hellbenders – 1967 [art director]

Rattler Kid – 1967 [production designer]

Two Crosses at Danger Pass – 1967 [set decorator]

Death Knows No Time – 1968 [set decorator]

Go for Broke – 1968 [set decorator]

Kill Them All and Come Back Alone – 1968 [art department]

Killer Adios – 1968 [production designer]

One by One – 1968 [production designer]

Ringo the Lone Rider – 1968 [set decorator]

A Stranger in Paso Bravo – 1968 [set decorator]

The Taste of Vengeance – 1968 [set decorator]

Death on High Mountain – 1969 [production designer]

$20,000 for Seven – 1969 [production designer]

Gunman in Town – 1970 [set decorator]

Matalo! – 1970 [art director]

Santana Kills Them All – 1970 [set decorator]

The Bandit Malpelo – 1971 [set decorator]

Dead Men Ride – 1971 [production designer]

Cut-Throats Nine – 1972 [set decorator]

His Name was Holy Ghost – 1972 [production designer]

Fast Hand is Still My Name – 1973 [set decorator]

Tequila – 1973 [costume designer]

 

RIP José Luis Galicia

 

Farewell to José Luis Galicia: Picasso reunites with his Spanish friend

The painter, poet and film decorator who was instrumental in the return of 'Guernica' to Spain dies in Madrid at the age of 95

El Pais

By Borja Hermoso

June 6, 2025

 

Galicia died, that man of the suburbs and a helmet with white hair crouching between brushes and canvases, there in his little apartment in Ciudad Lineal, always ready to receive and to speak, mother of God, what this man liked to speak, and rightly so, he had a conversation that looked like a movie. His life was.

José Luis Galicia (Madrid, 1930) was several and successive things: poet, cartoonist, engraver (he sent non-stop, by post, delicious folders with drawings edited by himself or related people who wanted him), film decorator (120 films to his credit and the creation in 1962, in the Madrid town of Hoyo de Manzanares, in Golden City, a personal madness in the form of a false town in the far-west where Sergio Leone and Clint Eastwood filmed For a handful of dollars, that's nothing), grandson and son of artists (his father was the painter Francisco Galicia), nephew of the writer León Felipe and cousin and friend of the bullfighter Carlos Arruza. And, of course, a painter himself with more than 60 individual exhibitions in his backpack.

Part of the frescoes in the cathedral of La Almudena are his, although we didn't talk much about that because he, intuitive and clever like the old fox he was, sensed what his colleague thought. Much more interesting, and unknown or poorly known to the general public, was his graphic and pictorial work on paper and canvas.

His house was not a museum, although it would have deserved to be. In that huge triplex and so 70s in the northwest of Madrid, mountains of books, tottering columns of art magazines, paintings and photos, lithographs and silkscreens, jars with brushes, furniture, easels and tons of souvenirs were piled up – they will continue to be piled up, we suppose: what a task lies ahead of the family. The most persistent and profound of them all marks the other thing, which was José Luis Galicia.

The condition that, perhaps beyond all the others, personal, professional and artistic, he had embedded in his head and took for a walk again and again, in a way between obsessive and nostalgic. Galicia was Picasso's friend. Picasso's Spanish friend. Pablo Picasso's last Spanish friend. And not only: the Spanish friend of Pablo Picasso who convinced Pablo Picasso that one of his greatest works and undoubtedly the most symbolically charged, Guernica, had to leave the MoMA in New York and come to Spain at once.

The French poet Paul Éluard was to blame for that friendship. It was 1952, the author of Capital of Pain had just died in Paris and José Luis Galicia, then a 22-year-old Spanish student who was seeking artistic fortune on the banks of the Seine, attended the tribute to Éluard that a group of intellectuals had organized at the Maison de la Pensée Française (House of French Thought). A visit that, without a doubt, was going to be decisive in his life.

He told it like this, as if it were such a thing, sitting between cushions in his hall-tower in Babel: "There, in a large room, they were all gathered, whether Aragon, what if the surrealists, what if those of the Communist Party, and in another room there was an exhibition with all the paintings that Picasso had given to Paul Éluard". Galicia went from the opening cocktail and entered the room directly to see the paintings. "Suddenly, Picasso enters that little room. I approached him and said: 'You are Pablo Picasso'. And he said to me: 'Yes, who are you?!' 'Well, a Spanish painter who has just arrived in Paris'. And he answers: 'Well, let's see this together.' I was quite cheeky at the time and I made a small criticism of one of the paintings. Then another from someone else, and on the third he began to discuss the painting with me. I told him the truth, and I think he liked that. When he finished, he told me that he would like to see what I painted and asked me if I knew where I lived. 'Yes, of course, on the Rue des Grands Augustins [where Picasso painted Guernica]', I told him. 'Well, come and see me tomorrow and bring me something of yours'.

The next day, the beardless and emboldened Spanish painter appeared at Grands Augustins with his folders of drawings. Jaume Sabartés, perennial secretary, and more than that, the keeper of genius, opened the door for him. "But who are you, Picasso is not here, he has gone to the Côte d'Azur," the dry and stern man snapped. It was the beginning of not one, but two great friendships. Jaume Sabartés and José Luis Galicia would end up becoming intimate. In 2018, the small publishing house Ars Valle published the delicious Correspondence of Jaime Sabartés with José Luis Galicia. "That way no one will be able to say that this Galicia invented everything," Galicia said proudly when he handed you a copy. Other books published by him are My friend Picasso, Poems, Toroafición and Hojas sueltas.

Galicia and Picasso established a relationship of trust in which the young painter entered the master's domains as Pedro did through his house. For quite some time, he went two or three times a year to visit him at his mansions on the Côte d'Azur, La Californie, in Cannes, where Picasso lived with his wife Jacqueline Roque, and Notre-Dame-de-Vie, in Mougins. He remembered it like this: "When I went I stayed for several days. And I can say that he was a simple and affectionate man with me, and that nothing I have read in the thousand books that have been written about him and his character has anything to do with what he was like, or at least I did not know that Picasso. He was someone of great sensitivity and very easy emotion, although perhaps a little difficult to understand and to bear. I have come to think that when he received people in his house he felt obliged to change, to transform himself into a character, just like the actors. We started talking at six in the evening, always after taking a nap, because he didn't forgive that, and maybe they would give us 11 at night. And I said to myself: 'Maybe I'm stealing this man's time to paint a masterpiece'.

In one of the endless conversations between the god of modern art and the daring sorcerer's apprentice, the subject of Guernica came up one day. A masterpiece about which, by the way, Galicia always defended the thesis that it was actually a bullfighting painting that Picasso later retouched on the fly to satisfy the wishes of the Republic. "Every time Guernica came up in conversation," Galicia said, "I always told Pablo that the painting had to end up in Spain, but he replied that the painting belonged to the Spanish Republic, which was the one that had commissioned it for the Spanish Pavilion at the 1937 Paris International Exposition. I was tired of those explanations and one day I told him: 'Look, Pablo, when Michelangelo painted the Sistine Chapel he also had a tremendous fuss with the popes and with other artists..., and that... Now... who remembers? People today look at the Sistine Chapel and marvel, period!' I told him that he had to forget a little about politics, that politics was a one-off thing, but that Guernica was forever."

So that day, he assured, he convinced him to change the clause "when there is a Republic in Spain" to "when there is a democratic State". "Pablo called Jacqueline and told her: 'Call Dumas [Roland Dumas, the French lawyer Picasso's executor] and let him come as soon as possible because I am going to change this.' So no, I didn't bring Guernica to Spain in 1981, Javier Tussell and the Spanish government brought it..., but of course I convinced him to change that clause. And, if it hadn't been like that, who knows, maybe the painting would still be in the MoMA in New York."

Only one thorn was left in José Luis Galicia's side. He tried to convince his friend to donate his famous Meninas to the Prado Museum, so that they would be next to Velázquez's, instead of sending them to the Picasso Museum in Barcelona. "He was silent for about a quarter of an hour, thinking. And suddenly he shouted angrily: 'No! With those of Velázquez, the Prado already has enough." Word from Galicia, which has now gone to sleep for a while to dream placidly about its things. His bulls and his bullfighters, his easels, his adored family, his folders of poems. His Picasso.

GALICIA, José Luis

Born: 6/1/1930, Argüelles, Madrid, Spain

Died: 6/5/2025, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

 

José Luis Galicia’s westerns – art department, art director, set designer, production designer, costume designer:

The Shadow of Zorro – 1962 [set decorator]

The Terrible Sheriff – 1962 [art director]

Zorro the Avenger – 1962 [art department]

Gunfight at High Noon – 1963 [art department]

Implacable Three – 1963 [production designer]

The Sign of the Coyote – 1963 [set decorator]

Ride and Kill – 1964 [set decorator]

Seven from Texas – 1964 [art director]

Tomb of the Pistolero – 1964 [set decorator]

Welcome Padre Murray – 1964 [production designer]

A Coffin for the Sheriff – 1965 [production designer]

A Fistful of Knuckles – 1965 [production designer]

Outlaw of Red River – 1965 [production designer]

Kid Rodelo – 1966 [art director]

Mutiny at Fort Sharp – 1966 [art department]

Ringo and Gringo Against All – 1966 [production designer]

Ringo the Face of Revenge – 1966 [set decorator]

Seven Guns for the MacGregors – 1966 [set decorator]

Sugar Colt – 1966 [production designer]

Vengeance Ranch – 1966 [set decorator]

Adios, Hombre – 1967 [production designer]

Django Kill – 1967 [art director]

For a Few Bullets More – 1967 [art director]

Rattler Kid – 1967 [costume designer]

Two Crosses at Danger Pas – 1967 [set decorator]

Death Knows No Time – 1968 [set decorator]

Fedra West – 1968 [set decorator]

Go for Broke – 1968 [set decorator]

Killer Adios – 1968 [production designer]

One by One – 1968 [set decorator]

A Pistol for 100 Coffins – 1968 [production designer]

Ringo the Lone Rider – 1968 [set decorator]

A Taste of Vengeance – 1968 [set decorator]

Death on High Mountain – 1969 [production designer]

$20,000 for Seven – 1969 [costume designer]

Apocalypse Joe – 1970 [production designer]

Arizona Colt Returns – 1970 [production designer]

Gunman in Town – 1970 [set decorator]

Matalo! – 1970 [art director]

Reverend Colt – 1970 [set decorator]

Bad Man’s River – 1971 [production designer]

The Bandit Malpelo – 1971 [set decorator]

Dead Men Ride – 1971 [production designer]

In the Name of the Father, of the Son and of the Colt – 1971 [production designer]

Cut Throats Nine – 1972 [set decorator]

His Name was Holy Ghost – 1972 [costume designer]

Kill the Poker Player – 1972 [set decorator]

Fast Hand is Still My Name – 1973 [set decorator]

Tequila – 1973 [production designer]

Stop Over in Hell – 2016 [art department]