This story will resonate with ladies of a certain era. A woman from Michigan and her family were vacationing in a quaint New England town that the legendary Paul Newman and his family had visited.

After waking up bright and early one Sunday, she decided to go for an energizing five-mile hike! Feeling pumped after her power walk, she rewarded herself with an epic double-dipped chocolate ice cream cone.

She hopped in her car and drove to the town square, heading straight for the bakery/ice cream shop. Lo and behold, Paul Newman was the only one there, enjoying some coffee and a donut at the counter.

Her heart skipped a beat when their eyes met – those iconic baby blues! The iconic actor gave a gracious nod, and she smiled back, starstruck. Get it together lady! She thought to herself. You’re a happily married mom with three kids, not a teenager anymore at 45 years old!

She took her double chocolate ice cream in one hand and her change in the other as the clerk prepared her order. Then she walked out without even glancing at Paul Newman.

When she got to her car, she realized she had some change but no ice cream! Where did it go? Did she leave it inside? She rushed back inside, expecting to see it in the clerk’s hand or on the counter. But no ice cream to be found!

That’s when she looked over at Paul Newman, and his face lit up with his signature warm grin. “You put it in your purse,” he said with a chuckle.
Sadly, Paul Newman’s passing wasn’t unexpected given rumors about his health the prior six months, but it was still so sad. He was one of my all-time favorite actors, a true cinema legend, and a lifelong Democrat. (Not to mention an amazing husband, philanthropist, and more. His star power blazed brightly in Hollywood for 50 amazing years – almost unheard of in the film industry. All of his iconic roles truly touched us.
From the very beginning, it was clear Paul Newman would be unlike any other actor or celebrity. His first movie, a Biblical epic called The Silver Chalice, wasn’t well received. But Newman owned up to it, taking out ads apologizing for the film and his performance! You’d think this would hurt his career, but it didn’t at all.

His next role in Somebody Up There Likes Me, about boxer Rocky Graziano, totally launched him to stardom. The part was meant for James Dean originally, but sadly after his passing, Newman stepped in and crushed it. By the late 50s, with wins for Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and The Long, Hot Summer under his belt, Newman’s career was in full swing! (It was on the set of Long, Hot Summer that he met his wife Joanne Woodward, starting one of Hollywood’s most iconic love stories.

In the 1982 classic The Verdict, Newman delivered one of his greatest performances as a washed-up, ambulance-chasing lawyer. But as usual, he lost the Oscar. He finally won for his role as Fast Eddie Felson in The Color of Money, Martin Scorsese’s sequel to The Hustler. As Newman got older, the only thing changing was his hair turning gray.

“I’m just skimming over Newman’s epic career here, but his last role should have been as the Hudson Hornet in Cars. Newman’s life and career were incredible; he was a brilliant actor and a truly amazing human. He gave so much to the world.

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