Brian Dennehy: Versatile American actor dies at 81
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US actor Brian Dennehy, whose chiselled jaw and towering figure featured in dozens of films, has died at the age of 81 of natural causes.
On screen he played macho roles like the sheriff who jails Rambo in First Blood and portrayed the serial killer John Wayne Gacy in To Catch A Killer.
His work brought him a Golden Globe and six Emmy nominations.
But Dennehy was equally at home playing the classics on stage, and won two Tony Awards.
Hamilton creator Lin-Manuel Miranda paid tribute, external to the man on Twitter, saying: "Was lucky enough to see Brian Dennehy twice on stage, masterful in Love Letters, and monumentally heartbreaking in Death Of A Salesman. A colossus. What a loss."
Fellow American actor James Woods, who starred alongside him in Bestseller, mourned a "beloved friend and colleague", tweeting: "I've never laughed so hard as we did every day on the set or off."
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Born on 9 July 1938 in Bridgeport, Connecticut, he took up acting at the age of 14 in New York City where he studied at a high school in Brooklyn. He played the title role in a production of Macbeth.
A scholarship at Columbia University followed and then five years of service in the US Marines.
Physically, Dennehy was an imposing man, standing at 6ft 3in (1.9m). To fund his acting career in the 1960s he worked as a truck driver, a bartender and a salesman.
"I had to make a life inside those jobs, not just pretend," he told The New York Times in 1989.
Dennehy broke into film in 1977 with Semi-Tough, which starred Burt Reynolds and Kris Kristofferson. He was paid $10,000 a week for 10 weeks' work and it "looked like it was all the money in the world", he was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.
Other films included Gorky Park and Legal Eagles.
In 1991 came the TV movie To Catch A Killer for which he was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Special.
"I try to play villains as if they're good guys and good guys as if they're villains," he said in an interview the following year.
There were numerous roles in TV dramas including Dallas and Dynasty.
In 2007 he voiced the character of a rat called Django in the hit Pixar animation Ratatouille, delivering lines like "Now shut up and eat your garbage".
Dennehy's theatre work ranged from Shakespeare and Chekhov to the American greats like Miller and O'Neill: he won Tony Awards for Death Of A Salesman (1999) and Long Day's Journey Into Night (2003).
The 2000 television film adaptation of Death of a Salesman earned him a Golden Globe.
He died from natural causes not related to coronavirus at his Connecticut home on Wednesday evening, with his wife Jennifer and son Cormac by his side, his agent told AFP news agency.
Brian Dennehy is also survived by four other children, three of them from a previous marriage.