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FORD
05-28-2010, 03:48 PM
May 28, 2010


Gary Coleman DEAD: 'Diff'rent Strokes' Actor Dies In Utah, Wife Shannon Price At His Side

First Posted: 05-28-10 02:35 PM

http://i.huffpost.com/gen/170011/thumbs/s-GARY-COLEMAN-DEAD-DIES-ACTOR-DIED-large.jpg

Gary Coleman is dead. He was taken off life support on Friday morning and passed away, both TMZ and Radaronline.com first reported. His wife Shannon Price and her father were at the hospital.

Coleman died Friday at 12: 05 PM MDT.

Coleman, 42, was best known for his role as Arnold Jackson on "Diff'rent Strokes." Word got out that he was hospitalized Thursday and in critical condition.

Below is the AP article and obituary:

PROVO, Utah -- Gary Coleman, the child star of the smash 1970s TV sitcom "Diff'rent Strokes" whose later career was marred by medical and legal problems, has died after suffering an intercranial hemorrhage. He was 42.

Utah Valley Regional Medical Center spokeswoman Janet Frank said life support was terminated and Coleman died at 12: 05 p.m. MDT.

Coleman, with his sparkling eyes and perfect comic timing, became a star after "Diff'rent Strokes" debuted in 1978. He played the younger brother in a pair of African-American siblings adopted by a wealthy white man.

His popularity faded when the show ended after six seasons on NBC and two on ABC.

Coleman suffered continuing ill health from the kidney disease that stunted his growth and had a host of legal problems in recent years.

Coleman suffered the hemorrhage Wednesday at his Santaquin home, 55 miles south of Salt Lake City.

A statement from the family said he was conscious and lucid until midday Thursday, when his condition worsened and he slipped into unconsciousness. Coleman was then placed on life support.

Diff'rent Strokes" debuted on NBC in 1978 drew most of its laughs from the tiny, 10-year-old Coleman.

Race and class relations became topics on the show as much as the typical trials of growing up.

Coleman was an immediate star, and his skeptical "Whatchu talkin' 'bout?" - usually aimed at his brother, Willis - became a catchphrase.

In a 1979 Los Angeles Times profile, his mother, Edmonia Sue Coleman, said her son had always been a ham as a small child. He acted in some commercials before he was signed by T.A.T., the production company that created "Diff'rent Strokes."

"Gary remembers everything. EVERYTHING," co-producer and director Herb Kenwith told the newspaper. "His power of concentration is unlike any adult's I know."

Asked by Ebony magazine in 1979 how he learned his lines so easily, young Gary replied, "It's easy!"

But the attention his starring role brought him could be a burden as well as a pleasure. Coleman told The Associated Press in 2001 that he would do a TV series again, but "only under the absolute condition that it be an ensemble cast and that everybody gets a chance to shine."

"I certainly am not going to be the only person on the show working," he said. "I've done that. I didn't like it."

The series lasted six seasons on NBC and two on ABC and lives on thanks to DVDs and YouTube. But its equally enduring legacy became the former child stars' troubles in adulthood, including the 1999 suicide of Dana Plato, who played the boys' white, teenage sister.

Todd Bridges, who played Coleman's brother, was tried and acquitted of attempted murder.

Coleman had financial and legal problems in addition to continuing ill health from the kidney disease that required dialysis and at least two transplants. As an adult, his height reached only 4 feet 8 inches.

He continued to get credits for TV guest shots and other small roles over the years. But he told the AP in 2001 that he preferred earning money from celebrity endorsements. "Now that I'm 33, I can call the shots. ... And if anybody has a problem with that, I guess they don't have to work with me."

Coleman was among 135 candidates who ran in California's bizarre 2003 recall election to replace then-Gov. Gray Davis, whom voters ousted in favor of Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Coleman, who advocated drastic steps for California's faltering economy such as lowering income taxes and raising sales tax, came in eighth place with 12,488 votes, or 0.2 percent, just behind Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt.

Running for office gave him a chance to show another side of himself, he told The Associated Press at the time.

"This is really interesting and cool and I've been enjoying the heck out of it because I get to be intelligent, which is something I don't get to do very often," he said.

Coleman told The New York Times at the time that "I want to escape that legacy of Arnold Jackson. I'm someone more. It would be nice if the world thought of me as something more."

But legal disputes dogged him repeatedly. In 1989, when Coleman was 21, his mother filed a court request trying to gain control of her son's $6 million fortune, saying he was incapable of handling his affairs. He said the move "obviously stems from her frustration at not being able to control my life."

In a 1993 television interview, he said he had twice tried to kill himself by overdosing on pills.

He moved to Utah in fall 2005, and according to a tally in early 2010, officers were called to assist or intervene with Coleman more than 20 times in the following years. They included a call where Coleman said he had taken dozens of Oxycontin pills and "wanted to die." Some of the disputes involved his wife, Shannon Price, whom he met on the set of the 2006 comedy "Church Ball" and married in 2007.

In September 2008, a dustup with a fan at a Utah bowling alley led Coleman to plead no contest to disorderly conduct. The fan also sued him, claiming the actor punched him and ran into him with his truck.

Coleman was born Feb. 8, 1968, in Zion, Ill., near Chicago. His mother told Ebony his kidney disease was diagnosed when he was 2. He underwent his first transplant at age 5.

He attracted attention when he took part in some local fashion shows and people suggested he should get work performing in commercials, which he then did, she said.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/05/28/gary-coleman-dead-diffren_n_593120.html?view=print

bueno bob
05-28-2010, 04:24 PM
Was it a different stroke that killed him?

Hardrock69
05-28-2010, 04:34 PM
:lmao:

That's too bad though. He got fame, a little fortune, both when he was young, and then it all went downhill from there.

I saw last night that he had been admitted to the hospital, but nothing had yet been said about him dying.
Time lag between what was happening, and what was being reported.

fryingdutchman
05-28-2010, 04:51 PM
And somewhere, Todd Bridges is standing in utter bewilderment at being the last surviving "Diff'rent Strokes kid."

R.I.P. Gary....you had a pretty rough paper route after an early rise to stardom.

If you see Dana Plato turning tricks for meth on some street corner in the great beyond, tell her "hi" for us...

Nitro Express
05-28-2010, 05:40 PM
Living in Utah would make anybody want to take fist fulls of Oxycontin pills and want to die.

ThrillsNSpills
05-28-2010, 05:52 PM
Art Linkletter left us too. Wonder who the 3rd will be.......

FORD
05-28-2010, 06:16 PM
Art Linkletter left us too. Wonder who the 3rd will be.......

I thought Gary WAS the third? (Dio being the first, and Linkletter the second)

Dan
05-28-2010, 07:48 PM
RIP Gary Coleman.:(

Seshmeister
05-28-2010, 09:42 PM
Was it a different stroke that killed him?

BOOO!

TOO SOON! :biggrin:

Seshmeister
05-28-2010, 09:51 PM
Art Linkletter left us too. Wonder who the 3rd will be.......

Why group them into threes?

Why not sixes or 28s?

155 000 people died today.

6700 of them were Americans.

I'm not being a dick but it makes you think.

Diamondjimi
05-28-2010, 11:59 PM
<object width="480" height="385"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Qw9oX-kZ_9k&hl=en_US&fs=1&"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Qw9oX-kZ_9k&hl=en_US&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="480" height="385"></embed></object>


R.I.P.

VanHalener
05-29-2010, 12:19 AM
Art Linkletter left us too. Wonder who the 3rd will be.......

Al Sharpton
http://i481.photobucket.com/albums/rr177/raku89/al_sharpton.jpg
http://i227.photobucket.com/albums/dd232/logwell/crossed-fingers.jpg

Is that wrong? :)


Rest in Peace Gary. You had so little of that in your life.

:cato2::daisy::cato2:

Hardrock69
05-29-2010, 12:37 AM
Paul Gray.

GAR
05-29-2010, 01:33 AM
Watch your mouth!

Blaze
05-29-2010, 02:08 AM
Al Sharpton

Rest in Peace Gary. You had so little of that in your life.

:cato2::daisy::cato2:
Indeed! Maybe , now you can exorcise the demons you knew to exposure.
Take care.

VanHalenFan5150
05-29-2010, 10:50 AM
RIP Gary

GAR
05-31-2010, 02:09 AM
Thanks, man. I appreciate that.

I have been dead twenty times this past year already!

GAR
05-31-2010, 02:10 AM
oh
you meant Coleman.. huh

I hope he gets a cremation, so I can sell fake Gary Coleman ashes online to idiots.

Steve Savicki
05-31-2010, 02:26 AM
http://sc.tri-bit.com/images/f/f7/Whofuckincares.jpg

Panamark
05-31-2010, 02:55 AM
Loved Diff'rent Strokes as a kid. Thought Kimberley (Dana Plato) was hot
when I was 8.. Didn't know she would go onto be a crack whore.
Poor Gary Coleman, its almost the same situation as Verne Troyer (Mini Me)
typecast to the point of the original character, or nothing. (And both vertically challenged)

Diff'rent strokes has turned out to be another "cursed" production that once ruled
the world.


RIP Mr Coleman.

lesfunk
05-31-2010, 11:42 AM
Rest in Peace Mr. Coleman. I love your camp stoves.

GAR
05-31-2010, 12:11 PM
rest in peace mr. Coleman. I love your camp stoves.

hahahaha~!!

PETE'S BROTHER
06-05-2010, 12:27 PM
couldn't help it, his coffin...

3561

Grant
06-06-2010, 04:06 AM
Never seen an episode of Diff'rent Strokes in my life. But I remember one of my early childhood movies I'd watch starring Mr Coleman (I think it was called 'Scout's Honour'), basically the typical story of an outsider kid eager to join a scouts group but doesn't fit in, and ends up rescuing the group after getting trapped in a cave when a camping trip goes wrong, or something like that.

RIP