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Christopher Plummer lived ninety-one years with the particular fullness and the particular honesty of someone who understood from very early on that the only life worth examining was the one actually being lived — not the performance of it, not the managed version of it, but the complete and sometimes uncomfortable and always instructive reality of what it actually feels like to move through the world as the specific and irreplaceable person you happen to be.
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He was married three times, loved with the intensity that characterizes people who bring everything they have to everything they do, and spoke about the women in his life across decades of interviews with the literary precision and the emotional directness of a man trained in the classical tradition of saying exactly what needs to be said and trusting the words to carry their own weight. His third wife Elaine Taylor, whom he married in 1970 and remained married to for more than fifty years until his death in February 2021, was the constant — the woman who outlasted everything, who was there through the Iago and the Prospero and the Lear and the late-career renaissance that brought him the Academy Award for Beginners at eighty-one and made the industry finally reckon properly with what it had been watching for six decades. What Christopher Plummer revealed in the final years of his life about Elaine Taylor — about what fifty years of marriage to the same woman had taught him, about what she had given him and what he understood he had come closest to losing and had been given back, about the specific and irreplaceable quality of a love that had survived everything that time and temperament and the theatrical life can throw at a marriage — is the kind of testimony that arrives from a man who has done the full accounting of his own life and arrived, with something close to wonder, at the understanding of what mattered most. The fans who loved him are in tears not because it is sad but because it is so completely, so purely, so unmistakably true.