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        <title><![CDATA[Kurt Luedtke, Oscar-winning ‘Out Of Africa’ screenwriter, dies at 80]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">Kurt Luedtke, Oscar-winning ‘Out Of Africa’ screenwriter, dies at 80</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Screenwriter Kurt Luedtke, known for his Oscar-winning adapted screenplay &#8220;Out of Africa,&#8221; died on Sunday. He was 80. The <strong>Detroit Free Press</strong> reported that the Luedtke, who worked at the newspaper during the 1960s and ’70s, passed away after a long illness in a Michigan hospital.</p><p>Luedtke, a Michigan native, first worked in journalism before turning his attention to Hollywood in the 1980s with screenwriting credits that include &#8220;Absence of Malice&#8221; and &#8220;Random Hearts.&#8221; After graduating from Brown University, the reporter-turned-screenwriter pursued a law degree at the University of Michigan and took on journalism courses at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism.</p><p>After Medill, Luedtke went on to report for the Miami Herald as an intern. In 1965, Luedtke moved to the Free Press as a general reporter. During his time at the paper, he reported a number of stories including the Free Press’ Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the Detroit riots in 1968.</p><p>After rising up the ranks at the Free Press, Luedtke left the Michigan newspaper in 1978 and pivoted towards film work. His first Hollywood screenplay was &#8220;Absence of Malice,&#8221; the Paul Newman- and Sally Field-led drama directed by Sydney Pollack about a prosecutor’s plans to get back at a local paper for a seemingly false story.</p><p>His sophomore Hollywood project, &#8220;Out of Africa,&#8221; brought him the Oscar statuette in 1986. The screenwriter’s second venture with Pollack starred Meryl Streep and Robert Redford as lovers in 20th century colonial Kenya. Out of Africa won a total of seven Academy Awards in 1986, including the Best Picture prize.</p><p>Luedtke’s final writing project, once again with Pollack, was the Harrison Ford-starrer &#8220;Random Hearts.&#8221; The 1999 film features Ford and Kristin Scott Thomas as a man and woman whose love lives are more intertwined that they’d like.</p><p>Apart from his writing credits, Luedtke appeared as himself in &#8220;Naked Hollywood,&#8221; a documentary about Pollack’s 1968 film, and a documentary short for &#8220;Absence of Malice.&#8221;</p><p>He is survived by his wife Eleanor.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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