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Douglas clearly enjoys the process of looking back at the people and projects of years long past. He notes in the interview that he's most proud of his work on 1960's "Spartacus," created during the anti-communist paranoia of the 1950s. "It was a low point in our history," Douglas said. "I hired Dalton Trumbo, who spent a year in jail, because he was blacklisted, and I hired him under the false name of Sam Jackson. ... Well, I was ashamed of myself for being such a hypocrite. And in the middle of shooting, I decided to use his correct name. And
'Spartacus' was the first movie to use the correct name of a blacklisted writer. And the blacklist was broken. That's something to be proud of." Douglas says his determined return to the stage -- where he got his start in show business
-- isn't intended to inspire others his age. He only wants to keep doing what he does best. "Basically, my job is to entertain people," he said. "And if they find my life interesting, and it takes their mind off the foreclosures, all the problems that we have, then I've done my job."
[Associated
Press;
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