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Director Tony Scott lived like his alpha-male action heroes

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LOS ANGELES (MCT) — With films such as “Unstoppable” and “Man on Fire,” Tony Scott told adrenaline-filled stories about fearless men — spies and cops, race car drivers and fighter pilots — who live by a code and face death on their own terms.

He filled his cinematic landscape with intrigue and action, avoiding computer effects in favor of real-life stunts with speeding trains and screaming jets, even once shutting down the Mississippi River to blow up a ferryboat.

In life, the British director-producer shared many characteristics with his alpha-male action heroes. At age 68, the avid rock climber was planning an ascent on Yosemite’s El Capitan and barreling ahead with a slew of film and TV projects, including doing research last week in Nevada for a “Top Gun” sequel with Tom Cruise and Jerry Bruckheimer.

As recently as a few weeks ago, he was busily crafting miniature submersibles in his West Hollywood office for the planned film “Narco Sub” and was actively casting another drug-trafficking movie, “Lucky Strike.”

So when Scott leaped off the Vincent Thomas Bridge in Los Angeles’ San Pedro section on Sunday, the fatal plunge shocked colleagues who regarded him as a man with few problems and many stories still to tell. Yet some friends also saw the dramatic act as in keeping with Scott’s on-my-own-terms approach to work and life that had propelled him from the ranks of TV commercial directors into a central figure in Hollywood’s blockbuster economy, with his movies taking in more than $1 billion at the domestic box office alone.

Scott may have been troubled by an illness that few associates knew about. Two people close to the filmmaker said he was suffering from a serious physical ailment at the time of his apparent suicide. The two, who asked not to be identified because of the personal nature of their relationships, said they did not know the exact nature of his illness. One said Scott had undergone chemotherapy for cancer.

Although several associates interviewed Monday said that Scott in recent months had mentioned back or hip problems, many said they had no indication it was anything other than business as normal for the director-producer.

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