- Source: Ronald Mlodzik
Ronald Mlodzik (sometimes credited as "Ron Mlodzik" and "Ronald Mlodzyk") is a Canadian character actor, Archdeacon and retired professor best known for his myriad appearances in the early films of body horror director David Cronenberg, including Stereo (1969), Crimes of the Future (1970), Secret Weapons (1972), Rabid (1977), and Shivers (1975), in which he played his most prominent role as Mr. Merrick, the building manager of the fictional Starliner Towers condominium complex. Mlodzik ceased to appear in any films or television post-1977.
Career
Ronald Mlodzik was a longtime collaborator and friend of David Cronenberg, and acted as the protagonist in both Stereo and Crimes of the Future, in which he played the lead character Adrian Tripod. He also starred as "the Inquisitor/Mr. Lee" in a lesser-known Cronenberg production titled Secret Weapons, completed in 1972 and part of a television series called Programme X. His most well-known role was as the character Mr. Ronald Merrick, a building manager for the fictional Starliner Towers condominium complex (filmed in the real-life Tourelle-Sur-Rive complex on Nuns' Island, Montreal, Quebec, Canada). The character, who is portrayed as a conservative and eccentric but benevolent man who is later poisoned by a parasite taking over Starliner Towers, received renewed attention in queer theory; "[Mr. Merrick] is the archetype of the stereotypically feminized nature of modern urban middle-class masculinity", according to Julian Petley in his 2021 book Shocking Cinema of the 70s, in which Petley also points out that Mlodzik is openly gay and compares Mr. Merrick's businessman personality in juxtaposition with the lack of privilege for LGBTQ+ people in the 1970s when Shivers was originally made. David Cronenberg addressed this himself in the Chris Rodley book Cronenberg On Cronenberg, referring to Ronald Mlodzik as "a very elegant gay scholar, an intellectual who was studying at Massey College... whose medieval gay sensibility" very directly connects to [Cronenberg's] aesthetic sense of [Mlodzik's] space...". Film critic Tim Robey echoed Cronenberg's sentiment in a modern reanalysis of body horror cinema, saying, "the choice of lead actor [in the film Stereo], the dapper, overtly gay Ron Mlodzik, whose debonair gait in a black cloak, and expansive facial manner, are its funniest and most idiosyncratic assets... starting with Mlodzik, who reappeared in Cronenberg’s follow-up Crimes of the Future (1970), you can trace a line through the director’s male protagonists to see them consistently positioned as outsider figures, uncanny presences and the lodes of an alien sexuality which isn’t necessarily homosexual (but can be)." Geoff Pevere of The Globe and Mail considered Mlodzik an "androgynous dead ringer" for fellow character actor Caleb Landry Jones, who appears in the 2012 film Antiviral, directed by David Cronenberg's son, Brandon Cronenberg, as an early project.
Personal life
Ronald Mlodzik has a sister, Arlene Mlodzik, who co-acted with him in Stereo (she is Dean of the American Business School in Paris). Post-1977, Mlodzik was employed as professor of English and Film Study at Champlain College, Lennoxville, Quebec, where he served terms as Coordinator of the Department of English, as well as the Creative Arts Program. He retired in 2001. Mlodzik is orthodox Catholic, and became a subdeacon in 1989. On the 19th of August, 2002, at the Divine Liturgy in St. Seraphim’s Church in Rawdon, Quebec, Subdeacon Monk Amvrosi (Mlodzik) was ordained to the Holy Diaconate. He was then assigned to the Communauté Monastique de St-Séraphim de Sarov à Rawdon QC. He attained the status of Archdeacon and has since retired.
Filmography
= Film
=References
External links
Ronald Mlodzik at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ronald Mlodzik
- Stereo (1969 film)
- Crimes of the Future (1970 film)
- Shivers (1975 film)
- List of science fiction films of the 1970s
- List of American films of 1970
- List of American films of 1975
- List of Canadian films of the 1960s
- List of Canadian films of 1970
- Mendel Lectures