Gene Hackman dead at 95

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • FORD
    ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

    • Jan 2004
    • 59657

    Gene Hackman dead at 95

    Gene Hackman, Oscar-Winning ‘Unforgiven’ and ‘French Connection’ Actor, Dead at 95

    The performer was found dead alongside his wife, Betsy Arakawa, in their Santa Fe, New Mexico, home

    February 27, 2025



    Gene Hackman Herbert Dorfman/Corbis via Getty Images

    Gene Hackman, a two-time Oscar-winning actor whose compelling gravitas and simple humanity made him an onscreen fixture for 40 years, has died at 95.

    The actor, his wife of 34 years, Betsy Arakawa, and their dog were found dead in their home in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Wednesday, according to Santa Fe County Sheriff Adan Mendoza. A cause of death was not immediately available, though authorities confirmed there was no indication of foul play.
    In a statement, Santa Fe County sheriff’s deputies added that “the bodies of Mr. Hackman and his wife were located in separate rooms” and that a cause of death will be determined by the Office of the Medical Investigator.
    “It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of our father, Gene Hackman and his wife, Betsy,” Hackman’s family said in a statement. “He was loved and admired by millions around the world for his brilliant acting career, but to us he was always just Dad and Grandpa. We will miss him sorely and are devastated by the loss.”

    After a career in which he played everyone from conflicted cops to inspirational basketball coaches to failed fathers to Lex Luthor, Hackman quietly retired from acting after the 2004 comedy Welcome to Mooseport, devoting his energies to writing novels and painting. Coming of age at the same time as other influential American actors, like Dustin Hoffman and Robert Duvall, the former Marine delivered his performances with a minimum of fuss, creating characters who, whether they were comedic or dramatic, always exuded an air of lived-in realism. “I feel like when I’m actually doing the work, I know what I’m doing and I feel good about most of the stuff that I do,” Hackman said in 2000. “But when I see it on the screen, I have no idea if it’s good, bad, or indifferent. I can’t be objective. I leave it up to other people to tell me.”
    Born on Jan. 30, 1930, in San Bernardino, California, Eugene Allen Hackman moved to Danville, Illinois, as a boy, developing a love for James Cagney at a young age. “There was a kind of energy about him, and he was totally different from anyone I’d ever seen in my life,” Hackman recalled of his idol in 2011. “Having been brought up in the Midwest, I didn’t know those New York people. I thought he was terrific. Everything he did had a life to it. He was a bad guy in most of the films, and yet there was something lovable about him and creative.”


    After serving in the Marines for four years, Hackman moved to New York, eventually traveling to Southern California to pursue acting. He met Hoffman at the Pasadena Playhouse, the two aspiring thespians bonding over what seemed to be a shared destiny of limited career possibilities. “We were constantly told by acting teachers and casting directors that we were ‘character’ actors,” Hackman told Film Comment. “The word ‘character’ denotes something less than attractive. This was drummed into us. I accepted the limitation, of always being the third or fourth guy down, and my goals were tiny. But I still wanted to be an actor.”
    Undeterred, Hackman grabbed roles on television and in New York theater, gaining acclaim for his appearance in the 1964 Broadway comedy Any Wednesday. Soon, that success was parlayed into Hackman being cast in the film drama Lilith, where he caught the eye of the movie’s star, Warren Beatty. A few years later, Beatty brought Hackman aboard his daring counterculture crime classic Bonnie and Clyde, in which Hackman played Clyde’s older brother, Buck. The role landed the actor his first Oscar nomination, for Best Supporting Actor, and a film career soon followed.


    Like many actors of his generation, Hackman helped put a stamp on Hollywood’s creative renaissance of the 1970s. But unlike peers such as Jack Nicholson, who embodied the era’s rebellious, searching spirit, Hackman often played men who tried to work within the system, discovering the futility of such a stance. He received his second Oscar nomination for 1970’s I Never Sang for My Father, about a college professor confronting his overbearing father, and the following year, in The French Connection, he played Jimmy “Popeye” Doyle, a hard-nosed, bigoted New York detective who’s ruthlessly efficient at his job.
    The French Connection won Best Picture, and Hackman walked away with the Best Actor trophy, even though during filming he despaired that he was wrong for the role and considered quitting. “I’m not that kind of guy,” Hackman told Roger Ebert shortly after The French Connection opened. “He was a physical man. No second thoughts. No introspection. We had to go back and reshoot the first two days of scenes because I hadn’t gotten into the character enough. I wasn’t physical enough.”


    Hackman continued to essay iconic roles throughout the decade — including that of the doomed surveillance expert Harry Caul in Francis Ford Coppola’s 1974 paranoid thriller The Conversation — but this character actor also branched out into big studio productions like the celebrated disaster movie The Poseidon Adventure. As the 1970s came to a close, he portrayed the infamous Lex Luthor in Superman and Superman II, setting the template for sophisticated, haughty villains that have become commonplace in comic-book films.
    Despite being a movie star, Hackman never fully shed the tireless work ethic of an actor who just wants to dive into the next piece of material. His career was made up of two parallel strands: On one side, he pursued engaging roles that fed his artistic temperament, such as in Reds (which was directed by his old friend Warren Beatty), Mississippi Burning, and Another Woman. On the other, he became a reliable presence in studio films, adding a touch of class to Tony Scott thrillers such as Crimson Tide and Enemy of the State.

    At the same time, Hackman also demonstrated how art and commerce could mix, earning a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for playing the corrupt local sheriff Bill Daggett in Clint Eastwood’s 1992 revisionist Western Unforgiven. But as with The French Connection, Hackman had his doubts about being right for the role. “I swore I would never be involved in a picture with this much violence in it,” he once said. “But the more I read it and the more I came to understand the purpose of the film, the more fascinated I became.”
    Although he was an expert at conveying the darker side of humanity, he could also be counted on for a light touch. For many fans of inspirational sports movies, Hoosiers is an all-time great, with Hackman ably portraying the scrappy, tough-love coach Norman Dale, who guides his team of underdogs to the title. And his role as the frustratingly flaky patriarch of Wes Anderson’s 2001 comedy The Royal Tenenbaums introduced the respected “actor’s actor” to a new generation of filmgoers.
    Hackman’s notorious perfectionism and no-bullshit demeanor were apparently fully on display during the filming of Tenenbaums — legend has it that the actor called Anderson a “c-nt” on set and instructed him to “pull up your pants and act like a man” — but the director remained awed by Hackman’s portrayal of the complicated Royal Tenenbaum. “He was one of the things that pulled everybody into this movie,” Anderson said in 2011 during a 10th-anniversary screening that Hackman did not attend. “Anytime we are together and talk about the movie, we always talk about him. He’s a huge force and I really enjoyed working with him. Even though he was very challenging with me, it was very exciting seeing him launch into these scenes.”


    In his late seventies, Hackman retired from acting, explaining simply, “I feel comfortable with what I’ve done.” He pursued other interests, including writing historical fiction, saying in 2014, “In a sort of way, [writing] is liberating because you don’t have a director right there at your elbow giving you a little nudge now and then or telling you how he thinks you should pronounce a certain word or emphasize a certain phrase.” He later added, “I know that I’ll never be … as successful as I was as an actor, but in some ways it’s maybe more creative.”
    He ended his acting career with five Oscar nominations, three Golden Globes (as well as a Cecil B. DeMille Award), and two BAFTA awards. When a GQ writer asked him in 2011 if he’d ever consider going back to film, Hackman responded, “I don’t know. If I could do it in my own house, maybe, without them disturbing anything and just one or two people.” But he sounded fully content with his new artistic endeavors and the body of film work he had left behind.
    “You go through stages in your career that you feel very good about yourself,” he said. “Then you feel awful, like, ‘Why didn’t I choose something else?’ But overall, I’m pretty satisfied that I made the right choice when I decided to be an actor. I was lucky to find a few things that I could do well as an actor and that I could look at and say, ‘Yeah, that’s all right.’”





    Eat Us And Smile

    Cenk For America 2024!!

    Justice Democrats


    "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992
  • Seshmeister
    ROTH ARMY WEBMASTER

    • Oct 2003
    • 35764

    #2
    An amazing actor. Kind of weird how some articles led with him being in Superman, hardly the highlight of his career.

    I think when they were both unknown struggling actors he shared an apartment in NYC with Danny DeVito which sounds like it would have been a real life Odd Couple movie.

    Comment

    • Nitro Express
      DIAMOND STATUS
      • Aug 2004
      • 32942

      #3
      Gene, his wife and dog all found dead. Sounds like asphyxiation. I had a friend instal a water heater himself but he didn’t upgrade the venting to the specs of the new heater and ended up killing himself and his whole family. Everyone in the house died. I had another friend die running a propane heater in a cabin. Both her and her friend died.
      No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

      Comment

      • Nickdfresh
        SUPER MODERATOR

        • Oct 2004
        • 49570

        #4
        I was never his biggest fan but sorry this happened to his family....

        Comment

        • Terry
          DIAMOND STATUS
          • Jan 2004
          • 12143

          #5
          I wouldn't say I was his biggest fan, either.

          However, from The French Connection to Mississippi Burning to Hoosiers to Unforgiven to The Poseidon Adventure to Crimson Tide to Absolute Power to No Way Out ...I mean, shit, the amount of movies he either starred in or co-starred in that still hold up (doubtless more than just the ones I listed by name off the top of my head) ...great fuckin' actor who retired before making TOO many movies that were subpar and clearly him coasting for a paycheck (vs. say, Pacino or DeNiro).

          Not sure exactly what happened there in terms of the particulars of his passing. Not really something I want to know, truth be told. But living to 95 isn't a bad deal if the quality of life was decent through to the end.
          Scramby eggs and bacon.

          Comment

          • Jérôme Frenchise
            ROTH ARMY SUPREME
            • Nov 2004
            • 7219

            #6
            One of the very best actors ever. He had no equal as far as playing bad, bad guys. I first think of Absolute Power, but he did many others.

            R.I.P.
            posted by Ellyllions Men say, "I'll never understand women." That's a very lonely place to be if you're a woman because we don't understand half of what we do either.
            posted by ALinChainz Katy, Pipe down, pump off, and fly back to your cave you old bat.

            Comment

            • FORD
              ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

              • Jan 2004
              • 59657

              #7


              U.S. News
              Gene Hackman died at home a week after wife Betsy Arakawa died from hantavirus, authorities say

              By MORGAN LEE, SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN and LISA BAUMANN
              Updated 7:24 PM PST, March 7, 2025



              SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Forensic experts came to a heartrending conclusion Friday about the manner of death for actor Gene Hackman — heart failure with complications from Alzheimer’s disease on an empty stomach a week after a rare, rodent-borne disease took the life of his wife at their home in Santa Fe.
              The partially mummified remains of Hackman, 95, and Betsy Arakawa, 65, were discovered Feb. 26 when maintenance and security workers showed up at the home and alerted police.
              Authorities unraveled the mysterious circumstances and revealed that Arakawa likely died Feb. 11 at home from hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, a rare but potentially fatal disease spread by infected rodent droppings.

              Hackman, in the advanced stages of Alzheimer’s, apparently was unaware that his wife was dead.
              “He was in a very poor state of health. He had significant heart disease, and I think ultimately that’s what resulted in his death,” chief medical investigator Dr. Heather Jarrell said. “It’s quite possible he was not aware she was deceased.”
              Both deaths were ruled to be from natural causes.


              Santa Fe County Sheriff Adan Mendoza said Arakawa’s last known outing was a round of errands and shopping Feb. 11. She visited a pharmacy, pet store and grocery before returning to the couple’s gated neighborhood that evening. Arakawa stopped answering emails that day. The couple’s cellphone communications have not yet been analyzed.

              Hackman’s pacemaker last showed signs of activity a week later, indicating an abnormal heart rhythm Feb. 18, the day he likely died, Jarrell said.
              Hackman was found in the home’s entryway, and Arakawa was found in a bathroom. Their bodies were decomposing with some mummification, a consequence of body type and climate in Santa Fe’s especially dry air at an elevation of nearly 7,200 feet (2,200 meters).
              The revelations about the manner of the couple’s deaths jolted Santa Fe, the state capital city known as a refuge for celebrities, artists and authors.
              “All of us that knew him should have been checking on him,” said Stuart Ashman, co-owner of Artes de Cuba gallery, who cherished his encounters with Hackman at a local Pilates exercise studio. “I had no idea. ... It’s just really sad. And that she died a week before him. My God.”
              Experts believe Hackman was severely impaired due to Alzheimer’s disease and unable to deal with his wife’s death in the last week of his life — or seek help after she died.
              “Their (the authorities’) explanation, I thought, was quite clear and plausible, said Dr. Victor Weedn, a forensic pathologist in Virginia. “I believe they really discovered what truly happened in this case.”

              Most older Americans with Alzheimer’s diesease and related dementias live at home, and many receive care from family or friends.
              Hantavirus typically is reported in spring and summer, often due to exposures that occur when people are near mouse droppings in homes, sheds or poorly ventilated areas. This is the first confirmed case of hantavirus in New Mexico this year.
              While hantavirus is found throughout the world, most cases in the U.S. have been found in western states. The virus can cause a severe and sometimes deadly lung infection.
              Jarrell said it was not known how quickly Arakawa died.

              One of the couple’s three dogs, a kelpie mix named Zinna, also was found dead in a crate in a bathroom closet near Arakawa, while two other dogs survived.
              Dogs do not get sick from hantavirus, said Erin Phipps, a veterinarian with the New Mexico Health Department. A necropsy will be done on the dog.
              The sheriff considers this an open investigation until they receive results of the dog’s necropsy and finish checking into data from personal cellphones retrieved from the home.
              Hackman, a Hollywood icon, won two Oscars during a storied career in films including “The French Connection,” “Hoosiers” and “Superman” from the 1960s until his retirement in the early 2000s.
              Arakawa, born in Hawaii, studied as a concert pianist, attended the University of Southern California and met Hackman in the mid-1980s while working at a California gym.
              Hackman dedicated much of his time in retirement to painting and writing novels far from Hollywood’s social circuit. He served for several years on the board of trustees at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, and he and Arakawa were investors in local businesses.


              Eat Us And Smile

              Cenk For America 2024!!

              Justice Democrats


              "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

              Comment

              Working...