This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/film/2023/jun/27/human-remains-found-in-california-mountains-confirmed-as-julian-sands

The article has changed 10 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Human remains found in California mountains confirmed as Julian Sands Julian Sands confirmed dead after human remains identified
(32 minutes later)
British actor, 65, had been missing since January after going hiking in Mount Baldy areaBritish actor, 65, had been missing since January after going hiking in Mount Baldy area
Human remains found in the San Gabriel mountains in southern California have been confirmed to be those of Julian Sands. The British actor Julian Sands has been found dead after going missing on a hiking trip on Mount Baldy in California, it has been reported. Sands was 65.
The British actor, 65, had been missing for more than five months, after failing to return from a hike in the Mount Baldy area on 13 January. The body had been discovered in wilderness near the peak on Saturday morning and was transported to the coroner’s office for identification.
The remains were found in the same area on Saturday by civilian hikers, with a coroner later confirming them to be those of Sands. The news was shared with PA by the San Bernardino County sheriff’s department on Tuesday. “The identification process for the body located on Mt. Baldy on June 24, 2023, has been completed and was positively identified as 65-year-old Julian Sands of North Hollywood,” the San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department said in a statement. “The manner of death is still under investigation, pending further test results. We would like to extend our gratitude to all the volunteers that worked tirelessly to locate Mr. Sands.”
“The identification process for the body located on Mt Baldy on June 24, 2023, has been completed and was positively identified as 65-year-old Julian Sands of North Hollywood,” said a department statement. “The manner of death is still under investigation, pending further test results. San Bernardino county sheriff’s department had been co-ordinating a search for the actor.Bad weather hampered rescuers as they tried to find Sands, preventing ground searches for long periods. Last week, the sheriff’s office said they were scaling back the search after a renewed effort involving more than 80 people on 17 June proved unsuccessful.
“We would like to extend our gratitude to all the volunteers that worked tirelessly to try to locate Mr Sands.” A few days later, Sands’s family issued their first statement in four months, saying they were “deeply grateful” to the search teams and that they continued to hold the actor “in our hearts “with bright memories of him as a wonderful father, husband, explorer, lover of the natural world and the arts, and as an original and collaborative performer.”
Last week Sands’ family released a statement saying they were continuing to keep him “in our hearts with bright memories”. John Malkovich, a friend of Sands for 40 years after meeting on the set of The Killing Fields in 1983, paid tribute to him as Seneca On the Creation of Earthquakes, the film they made together, premiered at the Berlin film festival in February. Malkovich said: “I love Jules. He was someone who was very, very clever It’s a great loss.” He added: “He was such a terrific storyteller and so, so funny. Since the day we met, I could talk to him about anything, and he could talk to me about anything.”
“We are deeply grateful to the search teams and co-ordinators who have worked tirelessly to find Julian,” read a family statement, issued on Wednesday by the sheriff’s department. Born in 1958, Sands acquired a reputation as a fearless and eccentric actor, as much in love with outdoor life as performing. “I was looking for something exotic, things that took me out of myself,” he told the Guardian in 2018. “I think I found myself a little boring.”
Sign up to Film WeeklySign up to Film Weekly
Take a front seat at the cinema with our weekly email filled with all the latest news and all the movie action that mattersTake a front seat at the cinema with our weekly email filled with all the latest news and all the movie action that matters
after newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotion
“We continue to hold Julian in our hearts with bright memories of him as a wonderful father, husband, explorer, lover of the natural world and the arts, and as an original and collaborative performer.” Sands might have made his name by playing Lord Greystoke AKA Tarzan in the 1980s after being a leading contender for the central role, but eventually Christopher Lambert was cast. Instead, Sands made his breakthrough playing photographer Jon Swain in Oscar-winning epic The Killing Fields in 1984 and with an uninhibited performance as George Emerson, Helena Bonham Carter’s love interest in the 1986 EM Forster adaptation A Room With a View. He subsequently consolidated his out-there reputation with the role of Percy Shelley in Ken Russell’s crazed literary horror Gothic.
Sands then moved to Los Angeles, but by his own admission “didn’t want to be a Hollywood actor”. His choice of roles was by any standards unconventional: he starred in the satanic horror Warlock, played shape-shifting alien Yves Cloquet in David Cronenberg’s phantasmagoric Naked Lunch and a limb-amputating surgeon in Jennifer Lynch’s controversial Boxing Helena.
More conventional films followed: he played the spider-expert scientist in hit thriller Arachnophobia, and an association with British director Mike Figgis led to roles in The Browning Version (as a teacher) and Leaving Las Vegas (somewhat improbably as a violent east European pimp). However, Sands clearly preferred to work outside the mainstream, joining Figgis in more experimental fare (The Loss of Sexual Innocence, Timecode) and playing the title role in Dario Argento’s 1998 horror film Phantom of the Opera.
His subsequent career saw him take an amazingly eclectic path: from small roles in Ocean’s Thirteen and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo to gruesome Czech war epic The Painted Bird and his most recent credited role in Siegfried Sassoon biopic Benediction.
Sands’ love of mountain climbing and hiking was well known, telling the Guardian he was happiest when he was “close to a mountain summit on a glorious cold morning”. He was married twice: to journalist Sarah Sands between 1984-87, and in 1990 to journalist Evgenia Citkowitz.