Reeve was real-life 'Superman'
克里斯托弗里夫永远的超人
导读:
据11日《娱乐在线》报道,美国著名电影《超人》的主演、好莱坞著名影星克里斯托夫-里夫于当地时间十月十日,因心力衰竭在纽约过世,享年52岁。
由于长年瘫痪在床,再加上患上并发症,在过去的一周里,里夫的病情日渐恶化,并开始昏迷不醒,在昨天晚上去世。 克里斯托弗里夫为中国观众所熟知的就是他主演的《超人》一片,那飞翔在蓝天、惩奸除恶的形象一直是无数影迷心中英雄的不二人选。虽然里夫在9年前的一次骑马比赛中摔伤颈椎,致使全身瘫痪,但受伤后的他意志依旧相当坚强,不只转而担任导演,而且还在1998年时重返荧屏,参加了西区柯克的名作《后窗》一片的演出。

Although he will always be remembered for portraying1 Superman, the greatest role of actor ChrisTOPher Reeve's life was as a champion of sufferers of spinal2 cord injuries and an advocate of stem cell research.
Unlike the man of steel, he wasn't faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive and he couldn't leap tall buildings in a single bound.
But the courage and determination Reeve displayed in trying to overcome his paralysis3 from a 1995 horse-riding accident far surpassed any of the feats4 of the comic book hero.
He became a real-life Superman. His heroism5, his courage was extraordinary, Colin Blakemore, the chief executive of Britain's Medical Research Council said.
Like many people who suffer some terrible injury, ChrisTOPher Reeve was reinvented by that experience and brought the kind of energy and enthusiasm that made him successful as a film star to an entirely6 different issue, with huge effect.
Reeve, 52, died on October 10 of heart failure after having treatment for an infected pressure wound without realizing his dream of walking again.
But in the nine years since his accident, he made personal progress to regain7 some feeling, established the ChrisTOPher Reeve Paralysis Foundation, a non-profit research organization, and used his fame to raise millions of dollars for research into spinal cord injuries.
He also provided hope and inspiration to other patients and lobbied for scientists to be allowed to conduct stem cell research in the hopes of eventually curing paralysis and other illnesses such as diabetes8 and Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease.
He has been our champion. If you think of spinal injuries you automatically conjure9 up a picture of ChrisTOPher Reeve, said Paul Smith, executive director of the Spinal Injuries Association in England.
It is because of Reeve that spinal cord injuries and stem cell research are so widely discussed, according to Smith. The fact that it happened to Reeve showed it can affect anyone, even Superman.
Reeve did not live long enough to see whether stem cell research could help restore movement to the paralyzed. The research is still in its early days and no one knows what advances it may bring.