Published
6 years agoon
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AP NewsLOS ANGELES — Sylvia Miles, an actress and Manhattan socialite whose brief, scene-stealing appearances in the films “Midnight Cowboy” and “Farewell, My Lovely” earned her two Academy Award nominations, died Wednesday.
Miles died in an ambulance in New York on the way to a hospital after complaining to a home health care worker that she wasn’t feeling well, her friend, fashion-industry publicist Mauricio Padilha, told The Associated Press. The cause is not yet clear.
The fleetingly brief roles both got her Oscar nominations.
Her appearances in real life were just as memorable for those who came across her.
“She was pretty much the same person off screen as she was on screen,” Padilha said. “She was quite a character.”
Miles was born in, and became a lifelong resident of, Manhattan, where she was married and divorced three times and had no children.
She studied at The Actors Studio, making her name in a series of Off-Broadway roles starting in the 1950s, and moving on to movies in the 1960s.
Her film credits included 1972’s Andy Warhol-produced “Heat,” 1987’s “Wall Street” and its 2010 sequel “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps,” and 1988’s “Crossing Delancey.”
Her TV roles included guest appearances on “Miami Vice,” ”One Life to Live” and “Sex in the City.”
Miles was a competitive chess player, according to the New York Times, which twice featured her in its coverage of the game.
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