Oscar-winning documentary filmmaker John Zaritsky died of heart failure in a Vancouver hospital last Wednesday, according to a statement from his family and friends.
He was 79.Hollywood & Media Deaths In 2022: Photo GalleryThe St. Catharines, Ontario native earned an Academy Award in 1983 for Just Another Missing Kid, a film that told the story of a Canadian college student who disappeared during a trip to the United States and his parents’ effort to track him down.
The film aired originally on the Canadian TV series The Fifth Estate.During a career that spanned 40 years, Zaritsky also directed a trilogy of documentaries on thalidomide, the notorious drug introduced in Europe in the late 1950s.
Thousands of pregnant women prescribed thalidomide gave birth to babies with severe deformities.“Entrusted to document raw and vulnerable moments in life,” his family and friends wrote, “Zaritsky did so with an insightful heart for families considering genetic testing for Huntington’s disease [in] Do You Really Want to Know?, a vibrant performer who vowed to get the last laugh over Lou Gehrig’s disease [in] Leave Them Laughing, and men facing their greatest fears in Men Don’t Cry: Prostate Cancer Stories, which he shot shortly before discovering his own diagnosis with the disease.”The family statement added, “With subjects as diverse and controversial as war, Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo, assisted suicide, The Suicide Tourist, and criminals, Rapists: Can They Be Stopped; The Wild Horse Redemption, to name only a few, Zaritsky shared complex stories that most filmmakers steered clear of.”Zaritsky also directed eight episodes of the Emmy-winning PBS series Frontline between 1987 and 2007 (one of which was Romeo and Juliet in
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