By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN, Associated Press Writer Susan Montoya Bryan
RANCHOS DE TAOS, N.M. – Jack Nicholson and Val Kilmer were among the actors who joined dozens of Dennis Hopper's relatives, friends and Taos locals to remember the two-time Oscar nominee at a memorial Mass on Wednesday in New Mexico. Hopper's simple wooden coffin was ushered into the adobe chapel at historic San Francisco de Asis church.
Hopper, who was twice nominated for Oscars and received a star this year on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, died Saturday at age 74 at his home in Los Angeles. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2009. Nicholson, cast alongside Hopper in "Easy Rider" as a drunken young lawyer in a breakout role, described Hopper as "an all-around guy." "It was a very singular relationship I had with him, like nobody else. We were soul mates in a way. I really miss him," Nicholson said.
During the service, Hopper's son, Henry Lee Hopper, drew tears from many in the crowd as he read from Walt Whitman's collection of poems, "Leaves of Grass." Other relatives also spoke. Many said the Mass gave them a sense of Hopper's spirit, and stories of his early days as a Kansas farm boy, his wild side and the time he spent in Taos making films and art continued to be shared after the memorial at a gathering of his friends and family.
"You find something that you believe in and you really realize you've got to fight for it. Some people fight for a minute, but there are very, very few people in this world who fight from the day they're born to the day they go out. I would say Dennis was undoubtedly one of these people," the younger Hopper told The Associated Press. Jina Brenneman, curator of the Harwood Museum of Art in Taos, where Hopper's work has been showcased, remembered Hopper as a fighter for the creative process.
"Every ounce of his being was focused on doing or promoting creativity and imagination and not letting any naysayer get in the way. He wasn't afraid of bucking the system," she said. Lisa Law, a photographer and longtime friend of Hopper, remembered his keen photographic eye and his sense of adventure. "There wasn't a minute that wasn't interesting being with him," she said. "He was very open to all sorts of different experiences, and that's what made him such a rich fellow. To have Dennis gone, it leaves a hole."
Before the service, Kilmer, who lives near Pecos in northern New Mexico, said the last conversation he had with Hopper was on an airplane flight, recalling that Hopper could always make him laugh. Even Wednesday, there were plenty of smiles as Hopper was remembered.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100603/ap_en_ce/us_dennis_hopper_funeral
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